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Follow our continuing CROI coverage

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Keep up to date with the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections home page for the latest in ID Practitioner's continuing reporting from the CROI meeting and our follow-ups afterward. You can also check out our archival coverage from last year's meeting.

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Keep up to date with the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections home page for the latest in ID Practitioner's continuing reporting from the CROI meeting and our follow-ups afterward. You can also check out our archival coverage from last year's meeting.

Keep up to date with the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections home page for the latest in ID Practitioner's continuing reporting from the CROI meeting and our follow-ups afterward. You can also check out our archival coverage from last year's meeting.

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Vaginal Ring Use Raises Risk for Certain STIs

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Use of combined contraceptive vaginal rings was associated with an increased risk for several types of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), based on data from a pair of studies presented at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

Previous research has shown that the use of a combined contraceptive vaginal ring (CCVR) may promote changes in immunity in the female genital tract by upregulating immune-related genes in the endocervix and immune mediators within the cervicovaginal fluid, wrote Amy Arceneaux, BS, a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, and colleagues.

The infection rates in the female genital tract can vary according to hormones in the local environment and continued safety analysis is needed as the use of CCVR continues to rise, the researchers noted.

In a retrospective chart review, the researchers assessed de-identified data from TriNetX, a patient database, including 30,796 women who received etonogestrel and ethinyl estradiol CCVRs without segesterone and an equal number who were using oral contraceptive pills (OCP) without vaginal hormones. Patients were matched for age, race, and ethnicity.

Overall use of CCVRs was significantly associated with an increased risk for Herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2; relative risk [RR], 1.790), acute vaginitis (RR, 1.722), subacute/chronic vaginitis (RR, 1.904), subacute/chronic vulvitis (RR, 1.969), acute vulvitis (RR, 1.894), candidiasis (RR, 1.464), trichomoniasis (RR, 2.162), and pelvic inflammatory disease (RR, 2.984; P < .0005 for all).

By contrast, use of CCVRs was significantly associated with a decreased risk for chlamydia (RR, 0.760; P = .047). No differences in risk appeared for gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV, or anogenital warts between the CCVR and OCP groups.

Another study presented at the meeting, led by Kathleen Karam, BS, also a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, focused on outcomes on vaginal health and infection risk in women who used CCVRs compared with women who did not use hormones.

The study by Ms. Karam and colleagues included de-identified TriNetX data for two cohorts of 274,743 women.

Overall, the researchers found a significantly increased risk for gonorrhea, HSV-2, vaginitis, vulvitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, anogenital warts, and candidiasis in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception, while the risk for chlamydia, syphilis, and HIV was decreased in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception.

“I was pleasantly surprised by the finding that the group of women using the hormonal contraception vaginal ring had decreased risk for HIV and syphilis infections,” said Kathleen L. Vincent, MD, of the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, and senior author on both studies, in an interview. She hypothesized that the estrogen released from the ring might have contributed to the decreased risk for those infections.

The findings of both studies were limited primarily by the retrospective design, but the results suggest a need for further study of the effect of local hormone delivery on the vaginal mucosa, the researchers wrote.

Although the study population was large, the lack of randomization can allow for differences in the behaviors or risk-taking of the groups, Dr. Vincent said in an interview.

“The fact that there were STIs that were increased and some that were decreased with use of the vaginal ring tells us that there were women with similar behaviors in both groups, or we might have seen STIs only in one group,” she said. “Additional research could be done to look at varying time courses of outcomes after initiation of the vaginal ring or to go more in-depth with matching the groups at baseline based on a history of risky behaviors,” she noted.
 

 

 

Data Inform Multipurpose Prevention Technology

Dr. Vincent and her colleague, Richard Pyles, PhD, have a 15-year history of studying vaginal drug and hormone effects on the vaginal mucosa in women and preclinical and cell models. “Based on that work, it was plausible for estrogen to be protective for several types of infections,” she said. The availability of TriNetX allowed the researchers to explore these relationships in a large database of women in the studies presented at the meeting. “We began with a basic science observation in an animal model and grew it into this clinical study because of the available TriNetX system that supported extensive medical record review,” Dr. Pyles noted.

The take-home messages from the current research remain that vaginal rings delivering hormones are indicated only for contraception or birth control, not for protection against STIs or HIV, and women at an increased risk for these infections should protect themselves by using condoms, Dr. Vincent said.

However, “the real clinical implication is for the future for the drugs that we call MPTs or multi-purpose prevention technologies,” Dr. Vincent said.

“This could be a vaginal ring that releases medications for birth control and prevention of HIV or an STI,” she explained.

The findings from the studies presented at the meeting have great potential for an MPT on which Dr. Vincent and Dr. Pyles are working that would provide protection against both HIV and pregnancy. “For HIV prevention, the hormonal vaginal ring components have potential to work synergistically with the HIV prevention drug rather than working against each other, and this could be realized as a need for less HIV prevention drug, and subsequently fewer potential side effects from that drug,” said Dr. Vincent.

The studies received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Use of combined contraceptive vaginal rings was associated with an increased risk for several types of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), based on data from a pair of studies presented at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

Previous research has shown that the use of a combined contraceptive vaginal ring (CCVR) may promote changes in immunity in the female genital tract by upregulating immune-related genes in the endocervix and immune mediators within the cervicovaginal fluid, wrote Amy Arceneaux, BS, a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, and colleagues.

The infection rates in the female genital tract can vary according to hormones in the local environment and continued safety analysis is needed as the use of CCVR continues to rise, the researchers noted.

In a retrospective chart review, the researchers assessed de-identified data from TriNetX, a patient database, including 30,796 women who received etonogestrel and ethinyl estradiol CCVRs without segesterone and an equal number who were using oral contraceptive pills (OCP) without vaginal hormones. Patients were matched for age, race, and ethnicity.

Overall use of CCVRs was significantly associated with an increased risk for Herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2; relative risk [RR], 1.790), acute vaginitis (RR, 1.722), subacute/chronic vaginitis (RR, 1.904), subacute/chronic vulvitis (RR, 1.969), acute vulvitis (RR, 1.894), candidiasis (RR, 1.464), trichomoniasis (RR, 2.162), and pelvic inflammatory disease (RR, 2.984; P < .0005 for all).

By contrast, use of CCVRs was significantly associated with a decreased risk for chlamydia (RR, 0.760; P = .047). No differences in risk appeared for gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV, or anogenital warts between the CCVR and OCP groups.

Another study presented at the meeting, led by Kathleen Karam, BS, also a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, focused on outcomes on vaginal health and infection risk in women who used CCVRs compared with women who did not use hormones.

The study by Ms. Karam and colleagues included de-identified TriNetX data for two cohorts of 274,743 women.

Overall, the researchers found a significantly increased risk for gonorrhea, HSV-2, vaginitis, vulvitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, anogenital warts, and candidiasis in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception, while the risk for chlamydia, syphilis, and HIV was decreased in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception.

“I was pleasantly surprised by the finding that the group of women using the hormonal contraception vaginal ring had decreased risk for HIV and syphilis infections,” said Kathleen L. Vincent, MD, of the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, and senior author on both studies, in an interview. She hypothesized that the estrogen released from the ring might have contributed to the decreased risk for those infections.

The findings of both studies were limited primarily by the retrospective design, but the results suggest a need for further study of the effect of local hormone delivery on the vaginal mucosa, the researchers wrote.

Although the study population was large, the lack of randomization can allow for differences in the behaviors or risk-taking of the groups, Dr. Vincent said in an interview.

“The fact that there were STIs that were increased and some that were decreased with use of the vaginal ring tells us that there were women with similar behaviors in both groups, or we might have seen STIs only in one group,” she said. “Additional research could be done to look at varying time courses of outcomes after initiation of the vaginal ring or to go more in-depth with matching the groups at baseline based on a history of risky behaviors,” she noted.
 

 

 

Data Inform Multipurpose Prevention Technology

Dr. Vincent and her colleague, Richard Pyles, PhD, have a 15-year history of studying vaginal drug and hormone effects on the vaginal mucosa in women and preclinical and cell models. “Based on that work, it was plausible for estrogen to be protective for several types of infections,” she said. The availability of TriNetX allowed the researchers to explore these relationships in a large database of women in the studies presented at the meeting. “We began with a basic science observation in an animal model and grew it into this clinical study because of the available TriNetX system that supported extensive medical record review,” Dr. Pyles noted.

The take-home messages from the current research remain that vaginal rings delivering hormones are indicated only for contraception or birth control, not for protection against STIs or HIV, and women at an increased risk for these infections should protect themselves by using condoms, Dr. Vincent said.

However, “the real clinical implication is for the future for the drugs that we call MPTs or multi-purpose prevention technologies,” Dr. Vincent said.

“This could be a vaginal ring that releases medications for birth control and prevention of HIV or an STI,” she explained.

The findings from the studies presented at the meeting have great potential for an MPT on which Dr. Vincent and Dr. Pyles are working that would provide protection against both HIV and pregnancy. “For HIV prevention, the hormonal vaginal ring components have potential to work synergistically with the HIV prevention drug rather than working against each other, and this could be realized as a need for less HIV prevention drug, and subsequently fewer potential side effects from that drug,” said Dr. Vincent.

The studies received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

Use of combined contraceptive vaginal rings was associated with an increased risk for several types of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), based on data from a pair of studies presented at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

Previous research has shown that the use of a combined contraceptive vaginal ring (CCVR) may promote changes in immunity in the female genital tract by upregulating immune-related genes in the endocervix and immune mediators within the cervicovaginal fluid, wrote Amy Arceneaux, BS, a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, and colleagues.

The infection rates in the female genital tract can vary according to hormones in the local environment and continued safety analysis is needed as the use of CCVR continues to rise, the researchers noted.

In a retrospective chart review, the researchers assessed de-identified data from TriNetX, a patient database, including 30,796 women who received etonogestrel and ethinyl estradiol CCVRs without segesterone and an equal number who were using oral contraceptive pills (OCP) without vaginal hormones. Patients were matched for age, race, and ethnicity.

Overall use of CCVRs was significantly associated with an increased risk for Herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2; relative risk [RR], 1.790), acute vaginitis (RR, 1.722), subacute/chronic vaginitis (RR, 1.904), subacute/chronic vulvitis (RR, 1.969), acute vulvitis (RR, 1.894), candidiasis (RR, 1.464), trichomoniasis (RR, 2.162), and pelvic inflammatory disease (RR, 2.984; P < .0005 for all).

By contrast, use of CCVRs was significantly associated with a decreased risk for chlamydia (RR, 0.760; P = .047). No differences in risk appeared for gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV, or anogenital warts between the CCVR and OCP groups.

Another study presented at the meeting, led by Kathleen Karam, BS, also a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, focused on outcomes on vaginal health and infection risk in women who used CCVRs compared with women who did not use hormones.

The study by Ms. Karam and colleagues included de-identified TriNetX data for two cohorts of 274,743 women.

Overall, the researchers found a significantly increased risk for gonorrhea, HSV-2, vaginitis, vulvitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, anogenital warts, and candidiasis in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception, while the risk for chlamydia, syphilis, and HIV was decreased in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception.

“I was pleasantly surprised by the finding that the group of women using the hormonal contraception vaginal ring had decreased risk for HIV and syphilis infections,” said Kathleen L. Vincent, MD, of the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, and senior author on both studies, in an interview. She hypothesized that the estrogen released from the ring might have contributed to the decreased risk for those infections.

The findings of both studies were limited primarily by the retrospective design, but the results suggest a need for further study of the effect of local hormone delivery on the vaginal mucosa, the researchers wrote.

Although the study population was large, the lack of randomization can allow for differences in the behaviors or risk-taking of the groups, Dr. Vincent said in an interview.

“The fact that there were STIs that were increased and some that were decreased with use of the vaginal ring tells us that there were women with similar behaviors in both groups, or we might have seen STIs only in one group,” she said. “Additional research could be done to look at varying time courses of outcomes after initiation of the vaginal ring or to go more in-depth with matching the groups at baseline based on a history of risky behaviors,” she noted.
 

 

 

Data Inform Multipurpose Prevention Technology

Dr. Vincent and her colleague, Richard Pyles, PhD, have a 15-year history of studying vaginal drug and hormone effects on the vaginal mucosa in women and preclinical and cell models. “Based on that work, it was plausible for estrogen to be protective for several types of infections,” she said. The availability of TriNetX allowed the researchers to explore these relationships in a large database of women in the studies presented at the meeting. “We began with a basic science observation in an animal model and grew it into this clinical study because of the available TriNetX system that supported extensive medical record review,” Dr. Pyles noted.

The take-home messages from the current research remain that vaginal rings delivering hormones are indicated only for contraception or birth control, not for protection against STIs or HIV, and women at an increased risk for these infections should protect themselves by using condoms, Dr. Vincent said.

However, “the real clinical implication is for the future for the drugs that we call MPTs or multi-purpose prevention technologies,” Dr. Vincent said.

“This could be a vaginal ring that releases medications for birth control and prevention of HIV or an STI,” she explained.

The findings from the studies presented at the meeting have great potential for an MPT on which Dr. Vincent and Dr. Pyles are working that would provide protection against both HIV and pregnancy. “For HIV prevention, the hormonal vaginal ring components have potential to work synergistically with the HIV prevention drug rather than working against each other, and this could be realized as a need for less HIV prevention drug, and subsequently fewer potential side effects from that drug,” said Dr. Vincent.

The studies received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Patients were matched for age, race, and ethnicity.<br/><br/>Overall use of CCVRs was significantly associated with an increased risk for Herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2; relative risk [RR], 1.790), acute vaginitis (RR, 1.722), subacute/chronic vaginitis (RR, 1.904), subacute/chronic vulvitis (RR, 1.969), acute vulvitis (RR, 1.894), candidiasis (RR, 1.464), trichomoniasis (RR, 2.162), and pelvic inflammatory disease (RR, 2.984; <i>P</i> &lt; .0005 for all).<br/><br/>By contrast, use of CCVRs was significantly associated with a decreased risk for chlamydia (RR, 0.760; <i>P</i> = .047). No differences in risk appeared for gonorrhea, syphilis, HIV, or anogenital warts between the CCVR and OCP groups.<br/><br/>Another study presented at the meeting, led by Kathleen Karam, BS, also a medical student at the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, focused on outcomes on vaginal health and infection risk in women who used CCVRs compared with women who did not use hormones.<br/><br/>The study by Ms. Karam and colleagues included de-identified TriNetX data for two cohorts of 274,743 women.<br/><br/>Overall, the researchers found a significantly increased risk for gonorrhea, HSV-2, vaginitis, vulvitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, anogenital warts, and candidiasis in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception, while the risk for chlamydia, syphilis, and HIV was decreased in women using CCVR compared with those using no hormonal contraception.<br/><br/>“I was pleasantly surprised by the finding that the group of women using the hormonal contraception vaginal ring had decreased risk for HIV and syphilis infections,” said Kathleen L. Vincent, MD, of the University of Texas Medical Branch John Sealy School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas, and senior author on both studies, in an interview. She hypothesized that the estrogen released from the ring might have contributed to the decreased risk for those infections.<br/><br/>The findings of both studies were limited primarily by the retrospective design, but the results suggest a need for further study of the effect of local hormone delivery on the vaginal mucosa, the researchers wrote.<br/><br/>Although the study population was large, the lack of randomization can allow for differences in the behaviors or risk-taking of the groups, Dr. Vincent said in an interview.<br/><br/>“The fact that there were STIs that were increased and some that were decreased with use of the vaginal ring tells us that there were women with similar behaviors in both groups, or we might have seen STIs only in one group,” she said. “Additional research could be done to look at varying time courses of outcomes after initiation of the vaginal ring or to go more in-depth with matching the groups at baseline based on a history of risky behaviors,” she noted.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Data Inform Multipurpose Prevention Technology </h2> <p>Dr. Vincent and her colleague, Richard Pyles, PhD, have a 15-year history of studying vaginal drug and hormone effects on the vaginal mucosa in women and preclinical and cell models. “Based on that work, it was plausible for estrogen to be protective for several types of infections,” she said. The availability of TriNetX allowed the researchers to explore these relationships in a large database of women in the studies presented at the meeting. “We began with a basic science observation in an animal model and grew it into this clinical study because of the available TriNetX system that supported extensive medical record review,” Dr. Pyles noted.</p> <p>The take-home messages from the current research remain that vaginal rings delivering hormones are indicated only for contraception or birth control, not for protection against STIs or HIV, and women at an increased risk for these infections should protect themselves by using condoms, Dr. Vincent said.<br/><br/>However, “the real clinical implication is for the future for the drugs that we call MPTs or multi-purpose prevention technologies,” Dr. Vincent said. <br/><br/>“This could be a vaginal ring that releases medications for birth control and prevention of HIV or an STI,” she explained.<br/><br/>The findings from the studies presented at the meeting have great potential for an MPT on which Dr. Vincent and Dr. Pyles are working that would provide protection against both HIV and pregnancy. “For HIV prevention, the hormonal vaginal ring components have potential to work synergistically with the HIV prevention drug rather than working against each other, and this could be realized as a need for less HIV prevention drug, and subsequently fewer potential side effects from that drug,” said Dr. Vincent. </p> <p>The studies received no outside funding. 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Gene Tests Could Predict if a Drug Will Work for a Patient

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What if there were tests that could tell you whether the following drugs were a good match for your patients: Antidepressants, statins, painkillers, anticlotting medicines, chemotherapy agents, HIV treatments, organ transplant antirejection drugs, proton pump inhibitors for heartburn, and more?

That’s quite a list. And that’s pharmacogenetics, testing patients for genetic differences that affect how well a given drug will work for them and what kind of side effects to expect.

“About 9 out of 10 people will have a genetic difference in their DNA that can impact how they respond to common medications,” said Emily J. Cicali, PharmD, a clinical associate at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy, Gainesville.

Dr. Cicali is the clinical director of UF Health’s MyRx, a virtual program that gives Florida and New Jersey residents access to pharmacogenetic (PGx) tests plus expert interpretation by the health system’s pharmacists. Genetic factors are thought to contribute to about 25% or more of inappropriate drug responses or adverse events, said Kristin Wiisanen, PharmD, dean of the College of Pharmacy at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in North Chicago.

“Pharmacogenetics helps consumers avoid drugs that may not work well for them or could cause serious adverse events. It’s personalized medicine,” Dr. Cicali said.

Through a cheek swab or blood sample, the MyRx program — and a growing number of health system programs, doctors’ offices, and home tests available across the United States — gives consumers a window on inherited gene variants that can affect how their body activates, metabolizes, and clears away medications from a long list of widely used drugs.

Why PGx Tests Can Have a Big Impact

These tests work by looking for genes that control drug metabolism.

“You have several different drug-metabolizing enzymes in your liver,” Dr. Cicali explained. “Pharmacogenetic tests look for gene variants that encode for these enzymes. If you’re an ultrarapid metabolizer, you have more of the enzymes that metabolize certain drugs, and there could be a risk the drug won’t work well because it doesn’t stay in the body long enough. On the other end of the spectrum, poor metabolizers have low levels of enzymes that affect certain drugs, so the drugs hang around longer and cause side effects.”

While pharmacogenetics is still considered an emerging science, it’s becoming more mainstream as test prices drop, insurance coverage expands, and an explosion of new research boosts understanding of gene-drug interactions, Dr. Wiisanen said.

Politicians are trying to extend its reach, too. The Right Drug Dose Now Act of 2024, introduced in Congress in late March, aims to accelerate the use of PGx by boosting public awareness and by inserting PGx test results into consumers’ electronic health records. (Though a similar bill died in a US House subcommittee in 2023.)

“The use of pharmacogenetic data to guide prescribing is growing rapidly,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “It’s becoming a routine part of drug therapy for many medications.”

What the Research Shows

When researchers sequenced the DNA of more than 10,000 Mayo Clinic patients, they made a discovery that might surprise many Americans: Gene variants that affect the effectiveness and safety of widely used drugs are not rare glitches. More than 99% of study participants had at least one. And 79% had three or more.

The Mayo-Baylor RIGHT 10K Study — one of the largest PGx studies ever conducted in the United States — looked at 77 gene variants, most involved with drug metabolism in the liver. Researchers focused closely on 13 with extensively studied, gene-based prescribing recommendations for 21 drugs including antidepressants, statins, pain killers, anticlotting medications for heart conditions, HIV treatments, chemotherapy agents, and antirejection drugs for organ transplants.

When researchers added participants’ genetic data to their electronic health records, they also sent semi-urgent alerts, which are alerts with the potential for severe harm, to the clinicians of 61 study volunteers. Over half changed patients’ drugs or doses.

The changes made a difference. One participant taking the pain drug tramadol turned out to be a poor metabolizer and was having dizzy spells because blood levels of the drug stayed high for long periods. Stopping tramadol stopped the dizziness. A participant taking escitalopram plus bupropion for major depression found out that the combo was likely ineffective because they metabolized escitalopram rapidly. A switch to a higher dose of bupropion alone put their depression into full remission.

“So many factors play into how you respond to medications,” said Mayo Clinic pharmacogenomics pharmacist Jessica Wright, PharmD, BCACP, one of the study authors. “Genetics is one of those pieces. Pharmacogenetic testing can reveal things that clinicians may not have been aware of or could help explain a patient’s exaggerated side effect.”

Pharmacogenetics is also called pharmacogenomics. The terms are often used interchangeably, even among PGx pharmacists, though the first refers to how individual genes influence drug response and the second to the effects of multiple genes, said Kelly E. Caudle, PharmD, PhD, an associate member of the Department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. Caudle is also co-principal investigator and director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC). The group creates, publishes, and posts evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for drugs with well-researched PGx influences.

By any name, PGx may help explain, predict, and sidestep unpredictable responses to a variety of drugs:

  • In a 2023 multicenter study of 6944 people from seven European countries in The Lancet, those given customized drug treatments based on a 12-gene PGx panel had 30% fewer side effects than those who didn’t get this personalized prescribing. People in the study were being treated for cancer, heart disease, and mental health issues, among other conditions.
  • In a 2023  from China’s Tongji University, Shanghai, of 650 survivors of strokes and transient ischemic attacks, those whose antiplatelet drugs (such as clopidogrel) were customized based on PGx testing had a lower risk for stroke and other vascular events in the next 90 days. The study was published in Frontiers in Pharmacology.
  • In a University of Pennsylvania  of 1944 adults with major depression, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, those whose antidepressants were guided by PGx test results were 28% more likely to go into remission during the first 24 weeks of treatment than those in a control group. But by 24 weeks, equal numbers were in remission. A 2023 Chinese  of 11 depression studies, published in BMC Psychiatry, came to a similar conclusion: PGx-guided antidepressant prescriptions may help people feel better quicker, perhaps by avoiding some of the usual trial-and-error of different depression drugs.
 

 

PGx checks are already strongly recommended or considered routine before some medications are prescribed. These include abacavir (Ziagen), an antiviral treatment for HIV that can have severe side effects in people with one gene variant.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommends genetic testing for people with colon cancer before starting the drug irinotecan (Camptosar), which can cause severe diarrhea and raise infection risk in people with a gene variant that slows the drug’s elimination from the body.

Genetic testing is also recommended by the FDA for people with acute lymphoblastic leukemia before receiving the chemotherapy drug mercaptopurine (Purinethol) because a gene variant that affects drug processing can trigger serious side effects and raise the risk for infection at standard dosages.

“One of the key benefits of pharmacogenomic testing is in preventing adverse drug reactions,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “Testing of the thiopurine methyltransferase enzyme to guide dosing with 6-mercaptopurine or azathioprine can help prevent myelosuppression, a serious adverse drug reaction caused by lower production of blood cells in bone marrow.”

When, Why, and How to Test

“A family doctor should consider a PGx test if a patient is planning on taking a medication for which there is a CPIC guideline with a dosing recommendation,” said Teri Klein, PhD, professor of biomedical data science at Stanford University in California, and principal investigator at PharmGKB, an online resource funded by the NIH that provides information for healthcare practitioners, researchers, and consumers about PGx. Affiliated with CPIC, it’s based at Stanford University.

You might also consider it for patients already on a drug who are “not responding or experiencing side effects,” Dr. Caudle said.

Here’s how four PGx experts suggest consumers and physicians approach this option.

Find a Test

More than a dozen PGx tests are on the market — some only a provider can order, others a consumer can order after a review by their provider or by a provider from the testing company. Some of the tests (using saliva) may be administered at home, while blood tests are done in a doctor’s office or laboratory. Companies that offer the tests include ARUP LaboratoriesGenomindLabcorpMayo Clinic LaboratoriesMyriad NeurosciencePrecision Sciences Inc.Tempus, and OneOme, but there are many others online. (Keep in mind that many laboratories offer “lab-developed tests” — created for use in a single laboratory — but these can be harder to verify. “The FDA regulates pharmacogenomic testing in laboratories,” Dr. Wiisanen said, “but many of the regulatory parameters are still being defined.”)

Because PGx is so new, there is no official list of recommended tests. So you’ll have to do a little homework. You can check that the laboratory is accredited by searching for it in the NIH Genetic Testing Laboratory Registry database. Beyond that, you’ll have to consult other evidence-based resources to confirm that the drug you’re interested in has research-backed data about specific gene variants (alleles) that affect metabolism as well as research-based clinical guidelines for using PGx results to make prescribing decisions.

The CPIC’s guidelines include dosing and alternate drug recommendations for more than 100 antidepressants, chemotherapy drugs, the antiplatelet and anticlotting drugs clopidogrel and warfarin, local anesthetics, antivirals and antibacterials, pain killers and anti-inflammatory drugs, and some cholesterol-lowering statins such as lovastatin and fluvastatin.

For help figuring out if a test looks for the right gene variants, Dr. Caudle and Dr. Wright recommended checking with the Association for Molecular Pathology’s website. The group published a brief list of best practices for pharmacogenomic testing in 2019. And it keeps a list of gene variants (alleles) that should be included in tests. Clinical guidelines from the CPIC and other groups, available on PharmGKB’s website, also list gene variants that affect the metabolism of the drug.

 

 

Consider Cost

The price tag for a test is typically several hundred dollars — but it can run as high as $1000-$2500. And health insurance doesn’t always pick up the tab.

In a 2023 University of Florida study of more than 1000 insurance claims for PGx testing, the number reimbursed varied from 72% for a pain diagnosis to 52% for cardiology to 46% for psychiatry.

Medicare covers some PGx testing when a consumer and their providers meet certain criteria, including whether a drug being considered has a significant gene-drug interaction. California’s Medi-Cal health insurance program covers PGx as do Medicaid programs in some states, including Arkansas and Rhode Island. You can find state-by-state coverage information on the Genetics Policy Hub’s website.

Understand the Results

As more insurers cover PGx, Dr. Klein and Dr. Wiisanen say the field will grow and more providers will use it to inform prescribing. But some health systems aren’t waiting.

In addition to UF Health’s MyRx, PGx is part of personalized medicine programs at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Endeavor Health in Chicago, the Mayo Clinic, the University of California, San FranciscoSanford Health in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

Beyond testing, they offer a very useful service: A consult with a pharmacogenetics pharmacist to review the results and explain what they mean for a consumer’s current and future medications.

Physicians and curious consumers can also consult CPIC’s guidelines, which give recommendations about how to interpret the results of a PGx test, said Dr. Klein, a co-principal investigator at CPIC. CPIC has a grading system for both the evidence that supports the recommendation (high, moderate, or weak) and the recommendation itself (strong, moderate, or optional).

Currently, labeling for 456 prescription drugs sold in the United States includes some type of PGx information, according to the FDA’s Table of Pharmacogenomic Biomarkers in Drug Labeling and an annotated guide from PharmGKB.

Just 108 drug labels currently tell doctors and patients what to do with the information — such as requiring or suggesting testing or offering prescribing recommendations, according to PharmGKB. In contrast, PharmGKB’s online resources include evidence-based clinical guidelines for 201 drugs from CPIC and from professional PGx societies in the Netherlands, Canada, France, and elsewhere.

Consumers and physicians can also look for a pharmacist with pharmacogenetics training in their area or through a nearby medical center to learn more, Dr. Wright suggested. And while consumers can test without working with their own physician, the experts advise against it. Don’t stop or change the dose of medications you already take on your own, they say . And do work with your primary care practitioner or specialist to get tested and understand how the results fit into the bigger picture of how your body responds to your medications.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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What if there were tests that could tell you whether the following drugs were a good match for your patients: Antidepressants, statins, painkillers, anticlotting medicines, chemotherapy agents, HIV treatments, organ transplant antirejection drugs, proton pump inhibitors for heartburn, and more?

That’s quite a list. And that’s pharmacogenetics, testing patients for genetic differences that affect how well a given drug will work for them and what kind of side effects to expect.

“About 9 out of 10 people will have a genetic difference in their DNA that can impact how they respond to common medications,” said Emily J. Cicali, PharmD, a clinical associate at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy, Gainesville.

Dr. Cicali is the clinical director of UF Health’s MyRx, a virtual program that gives Florida and New Jersey residents access to pharmacogenetic (PGx) tests plus expert interpretation by the health system’s pharmacists. Genetic factors are thought to contribute to about 25% or more of inappropriate drug responses or adverse events, said Kristin Wiisanen, PharmD, dean of the College of Pharmacy at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in North Chicago.

“Pharmacogenetics helps consumers avoid drugs that may not work well for them or could cause serious adverse events. It’s personalized medicine,” Dr. Cicali said.

Through a cheek swab or blood sample, the MyRx program — and a growing number of health system programs, doctors’ offices, and home tests available across the United States — gives consumers a window on inherited gene variants that can affect how their body activates, metabolizes, and clears away medications from a long list of widely used drugs.

Why PGx Tests Can Have a Big Impact

These tests work by looking for genes that control drug metabolism.

“You have several different drug-metabolizing enzymes in your liver,” Dr. Cicali explained. “Pharmacogenetic tests look for gene variants that encode for these enzymes. If you’re an ultrarapid metabolizer, you have more of the enzymes that metabolize certain drugs, and there could be a risk the drug won’t work well because it doesn’t stay in the body long enough. On the other end of the spectrum, poor metabolizers have low levels of enzymes that affect certain drugs, so the drugs hang around longer and cause side effects.”

While pharmacogenetics is still considered an emerging science, it’s becoming more mainstream as test prices drop, insurance coverage expands, and an explosion of new research boosts understanding of gene-drug interactions, Dr. Wiisanen said.

Politicians are trying to extend its reach, too. The Right Drug Dose Now Act of 2024, introduced in Congress in late March, aims to accelerate the use of PGx by boosting public awareness and by inserting PGx test results into consumers’ electronic health records. (Though a similar bill died in a US House subcommittee in 2023.)

“The use of pharmacogenetic data to guide prescribing is growing rapidly,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “It’s becoming a routine part of drug therapy for many medications.”

What the Research Shows

When researchers sequenced the DNA of more than 10,000 Mayo Clinic patients, they made a discovery that might surprise many Americans: Gene variants that affect the effectiveness and safety of widely used drugs are not rare glitches. More than 99% of study participants had at least one. And 79% had three or more.

The Mayo-Baylor RIGHT 10K Study — one of the largest PGx studies ever conducted in the United States — looked at 77 gene variants, most involved with drug metabolism in the liver. Researchers focused closely on 13 with extensively studied, gene-based prescribing recommendations for 21 drugs including antidepressants, statins, pain killers, anticlotting medications for heart conditions, HIV treatments, chemotherapy agents, and antirejection drugs for organ transplants.

When researchers added participants’ genetic data to their electronic health records, they also sent semi-urgent alerts, which are alerts with the potential for severe harm, to the clinicians of 61 study volunteers. Over half changed patients’ drugs or doses.

The changes made a difference. One participant taking the pain drug tramadol turned out to be a poor metabolizer and was having dizzy spells because blood levels of the drug stayed high for long periods. Stopping tramadol stopped the dizziness. A participant taking escitalopram plus bupropion for major depression found out that the combo was likely ineffective because they metabolized escitalopram rapidly. A switch to a higher dose of bupropion alone put their depression into full remission.

“So many factors play into how you respond to medications,” said Mayo Clinic pharmacogenomics pharmacist Jessica Wright, PharmD, BCACP, one of the study authors. “Genetics is one of those pieces. Pharmacogenetic testing can reveal things that clinicians may not have been aware of or could help explain a patient’s exaggerated side effect.”

Pharmacogenetics is also called pharmacogenomics. The terms are often used interchangeably, even among PGx pharmacists, though the first refers to how individual genes influence drug response and the second to the effects of multiple genes, said Kelly E. Caudle, PharmD, PhD, an associate member of the Department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. Caudle is also co-principal investigator and director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC). The group creates, publishes, and posts evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for drugs with well-researched PGx influences.

By any name, PGx may help explain, predict, and sidestep unpredictable responses to a variety of drugs:

  • In a 2023 multicenter study of 6944 people from seven European countries in The Lancet, those given customized drug treatments based on a 12-gene PGx panel had 30% fewer side effects than those who didn’t get this personalized prescribing. People in the study were being treated for cancer, heart disease, and mental health issues, among other conditions.
  • In a 2023  from China’s Tongji University, Shanghai, of 650 survivors of strokes and transient ischemic attacks, those whose antiplatelet drugs (such as clopidogrel) were customized based on PGx testing had a lower risk for stroke and other vascular events in the next 90 days. The study was published in Frontiers in Pharmacology.
  • In a University of Pennsylvania  of 1944 adults with major depression, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, those whose antidepressants were guided by PGx test results were 28% more likely to go into remission during the first 24 weeks of treatment than those in a control group. But by 24 weeks, equal numbers were in remission. A 2023 Chinese  of 11 depression studies, published in BMC Psychiatry, came to a similar conclusion: PGx-guided antidepressant prescriptions may help people feel better quicker, perhaps by avoiding some of the usual trial-and-error of different depression drugs.
 

 

PGx checks are already strongly recommended or considered routine before some medications are prescribed. These include abacavir (Ziagen), an antiviral treatment for HIV that can have severe side effects in people with one gene variant.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommends genetic testing for people with colon cancer before starting the drug irinotecan (Camptosar), which can cause severe diarrhea and raise infection risk in people with a gene variant that slows the drug’s elimination from the body.

Genetic testing is also recommended by the FDA for people with acute lymphoblastic leukemia before receiving the chemotherapy drug mercaptopurine (Purinethol) because a gene variant that affects drug processing can trigger serious side effects and raise the risk for infection at standard dosages.

“One of the key benefits of pharmacogenomic testing is in preventing adverse drug reactions,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “Testing of the thiopurine methyltransferase enzyme to guide dosing with 6-mercaptopurine or azathioprine can help prevent myelosuppression, a serious adverse drug reaction caused by lower production of blood cells in bone marrow.”

When, Why, and How to Test

“A family doctor should consider a PGx test if a patient is planning on taking a medication for which there is a CPIC guideline with a dosing recommendation,” said Teri Klein, PhD, professor of biomedical data science at Stanford University in California, and principal investigator at PharmGKB, an online resource funded by the NIH that provides information for healthcare practitioners, researchers, and consumers about PGx. Affiliated with CPIC, it’s based at Stanford University.

You might also consider it for patients already on a drug who are “not responding or experiencing side effects,” Dr. Caudle said.

Here’s how four PGx experts suggest consumers and physicians approach this option.

Find a Test

More than a dozen PGx tests are on the market — some only a provider can order, others a consumer can order after a review by their provider or by a provider from the testing company. Some of the tests (using saliva) may be administered at home, while blood tests are done in a doctor’s office or laboratory. Companies that offer the tests include ARUP LaboratoriesGenomindLabcorpMayo Clinic LaboratoriesMyriad NeurosciencePrecision Sciences Inc.Tempus, and OneOme, but there are many others online. (Keep in mind that many laboratories offer “lab-developed tests” — created for use in a single laboratory — but these can be harder to verify. “The FDA regulates pharmacogenomic testing in laboratories,” Dr. Wiisanen said, “but many of the regulatory parameters are still being defined.”)

Because PGx is so new, there is no official list of recommended tests. So you’ll have to do a little homework. You can check that the laboratory is accredited by searching for it in the NIH Genetic Testing Laboratory Registry database. Beyond that, you’ll have to consult other evidence-based resources to confirm that the drug you’re interested in has research-backed data about specific gene variants (alleles) that affect metabolism as well as research-based clinical guidelines for using PGx results to make prescribing decisions.

The CPIC’s guidelines include dosing and alternate drug recommendations for more than 100 antidepressants, chemotherapy drugs, the antiplatelet and anticlotting drugs clopidogrel and warfarin, local anesthetics, antivirals and antibacterials, pain killers and anti-inflammatory drugs, and some cholesterol-lowering statins such as lovastatin and fluvastatin.

For help figuring out if a test looks for the right gene variants, Dr. Caudle and Dr. Wright recommended checking with the Association for Molecular Pathology’s website. The group published a brief list of best practices for pharmacogenomic testing in 2019. And it keeps a list of gene variants (alleles) that should be included in tests. Clinical guidelines from the CPIC and other groups, available on PharmGKB’s website, also list gene variants that affect the metabolism of the drug.

 

 

Consider Cost

The price tag for a test is typically several hundred dollars — but it can run as high as $1000-$2500. And health insurance doesn’t always pick up the tab.

In a 2023 University of Florida study of more than 1000 insurance claims for PGx testing, the number reimbursed varied from 72% for a pain diagnosis to 52% for cardiology to 46% for psychiatry.

Medicare covers some PGx testing when a consumer and their providers meet certain criteria, including whether a drug being considered has a significant gene-drug interaction. California’s Medi-Cal health insurance program covers PGx as do Medicaid programs in some states, including Arkansas and Rhode Island. You can find state-by-state coverage information on the Genetics Policy Hub’s website.

Understand the Results

As more insurers cover PGx, Dr. Klein and Dr. Wiisanen say the field will grow and more providers will use it to inform prescribing. But some health systems aren’t waiting.

In addition to UF Health’s MyRx, PGx is part of personalized medicine programs at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Endeavor Health in Chicago, the Mayo Clinic, the University of California, San FranciscoSanford Health in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

Beyond testing, they offer a very useful service: A consult with a pharmacogenetics pharmacist to review the results and explain what they mean for a consumer’s current and future medications.

Physicians and curious consumers can also consult CPIC’s guidelines, which give recommendations about how to interpret the results of a PGx test, said Dr. Klein, a co-principal investigator at CPIC. CPIC has a grading system for both the evidence that supports the recommendation (high, moderate, or weak) and the recommendation itself (strong, moderate, or optional).

Currently, labeling for 456 prescription drugs sold in the United States includes some type of PGx information, according to the FDA’s Table of Pharmacogenomic Biomarkers in Drug Labeling and an annotated guide from PharmGKB.

Just 108 drug labels currently tell doctors and patients what to do with the information — such as requiring or suggesting testing or offering prescribing recommendations, according to PharmGKB. In contrast, PharmGKB’s online resources include evidence-based clinical guidelines for 201 drugs from CPIC and from professional PGx societies in the Netherlands, Canada, France, and elsewhere.

Consumers and physicians can also look for a pharmacist with pharmacogenetics training in their area or through a nearby medical center to learn more, Dr. Wright suggested. And while consumers can test without working with their own physician, the experts advise against it. Don’t stop or change the dose of medications you already take on your own, they say . And do work with your primary care practitioner or specialist to get tested and understand how the results fit into the bigger picture of how your body responds to your medications.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

What if there were tests that could tell you whether the following drugs were a good match for your patients: Antidepressants, statins, painkillers, anticlotting medicines, chemotherapy agents, HIV treatments, organ transplant antirejection drugs, proton pump inhibitors for heartburn, and more?

That’s quite a list. And that’s pharmacogenetics, testing patients for genetic differences that affect how well a given drug will work for them and what kind of side effects to expect.

“About 9 out of 10 people will have a genetic difference in their DNA that can impact how they respond to common medications,” said Emily J. Cicali, PharmD, a clinical associate at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy, Gainesville.

Dr. Cicali is the clinical director of UF Health’s MyRx, a virtual program that gives Florida and New Jersey residents access to pharmacogenetic (PGx) tests plus expert interpretation by the health system’s pharmacists. Genetic factors are thought to contribute to about 25% or more of inappropriate drug responses or adverse events, said Kristin Wiisanen, PharmD, dean of the College of Pharmacy at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in North Chicago.

“Pharmacogenetics helps consumers avoid drugs that may not work well for them or could cause serious adverse events. It’s personalized medicine,” Dr. Cicali said.

Through a cheek swab or blood sample, the MyRx program — and a growing number of health system programs, doctors’ offices, and home tests available across the United States — gives consumers a window on inherited gene variants that can affect how their body activates, metabolizes, and clears away medications from a long list of widely used drugs.

Why PGx Tests Can Have a Big Impact

These tests work by looking for genes that control drug metabolism.

“You have several different drug-metabolizing enzymes in your liver,” Dr. Cicali explained. “Pharmacogenetic tests look for gene variants that encode for these enzymes. If you’re an ultrarapid metabolizer, you have more of the enzymes that metabolize certain drugs, and there could be a risk the drug won’t work well because it doesn’t stay in the body long enough. On the other end of the spectrum, poor metabolizers have low levels of enzymes that affect certain drugs, so the drugs hang around longer and cause side effects.”

While pharmacogenetics is still considered an emerging science, it’s becoming more mainstream as test prices drop, insurance coverage expands, and an explosion of new research boosts understanding of gene-drug interactions, Dr. Wiisanen said.

Politicians are trying to extend its reach, too. The Right Drug Dose Now Act of 2024, introduced in Congress in late March, aims to accelerate the use of PGx by boosting public awareness and by inserting PGx test results into consumers’ electronic health records. (Though a similar bill died in a US House subcommittee in 2023.)

“The use of pharmacogenetic data to guide prescribing is growing rapidly,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “It’s becoming a routine part of drug therapy for many medications.”

What the Research Shows

When researchers sequenced the DNA of more than 10,000 Mayo Clinic patients, they made a discovery that might surprise many Americans: Gene variants that affect the effectiveness and safety of widely used drugs are not rare glitches. More than 99% of study participants had at least one. And 79% had three or more.

The Mayo-Baylor RIGHT 10K Study — one of the largest PGx studies ever conducted in the United States — looked at 77 gene variants, most involved with drug metabolism in the liver. Researchers focused closely on 13 with extensively studied, gene-based prescribing recommendations for 21 drugs including antidepressants, statins, pain killers, anticlotting medications for heart conditions, HIV treatments, chemotherapy agents, and antirejection drugs for organ transplants.

When researchers added participants’ genetic data to their electronic health records, they also sent semi-urgent alerts, which are alerts with the potential for severe harm, to the clinicians of 61 study volunteers. Over half changed patients’ drugs or doses.

The changes made a difference. One participant taking the pain drug tramadol turned out to be a poor metabolizer and was having dizzy spells because blood levels of the drug stayed high for long periods. Stopping tramadol stopped the dizziness. A participant taking escitalopram plus bupropion for major depression found out that the combo was likely ineffective because they metabolized escitalopram rapidly. A switch to a higher dose of bupropion alone put their depression into full remission.

“So many factors play into how you respond to medications,” said Mayo Clinic pharmacogenomics pharmacist Jessica Wright, PharmD, BCACP, one of the study authors. “Genetics is one of those pieces. Pharmacogenetic testing can reveal things that clinicians may not have been aware of or could help explain a patient’s exaggerated side effect.”

Pharmacogenetics is also called pharmacogenomics. The terms are often used interchangeably, even among PGx pharmacists, though the first refers to how individual genes influence drug response and the second to the effects of multiple genes, said Kelly E. Caudle, PharmD, PhD, an associate member of the Department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. Caudle is also co-principal investigator and director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium (CPIC). The group creates, publishes, and posts evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for drugs with well-researched PGx influences.

By any name, PGx may help explain, predict, and sidestep unpredictable responses to a variety of drugs:

  • In a 2023 multicenter study of 6944 people from seven European countries in The Lancet, those given customized drug treatments based on a 12-gene PGx panel had 30% fewer side effects than those who didn’t get this personalized prescribing. People in the study were being treated for cancer, heart disease, and mental health issues, among other conditions.
  • In a 2023  from China’s Tongji University, Shanghai, of 650 survivors of strokes and transient ischemic attacks, those whose antiplatelet drugs (such as clopidogrel) were customized based on PGx testing had a lower risk for stroke and other vascular events in the next 90 days. The study was published in Frontiers in Pharmacology.
  • In a University of Pennsylvania  of 1944 adults with major depression, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, those whose antidepressants were guided by PGx test results were 28% more likely to go into remission during the first 24 weeks of treatment than those in a control group. But by 24 weeks, equal numbers were in remission. A 2023 Chinese  of 11 depression studies, published in BMC Psychiatry, came to a similar conclusion: PGx-guided antidepressant prescriptions may help people feel better quicker, perhaps by avoiding some of the usual trial-and-error of different depression drugs.
 

 

PGx checks are already strongly recommended or considered routine before some medications are prescribed. These include abacavir (Ziagen), an antiviral treatment for HIV that can have severe side effects in people with one gene variant.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommends genetic testing for people with colon cancer before starting the drug irinotecan (Camptosar), which can cause severe diarrhea and raise infection risk in people with a gene variant that slows the drug’s elimination from the body.

Genetic testing is also recommended by the FDA for people with acute lymphoblastic leukemia before receiving the chemotherapy drug mercaptopurine (Purinethol) because a gene variant that affects drug processing can trigger serious side effects and raise the risk for infection at standard dosages.

“One of the key benefits of pharmacogenomic testing is in preventing adverse drug reactions,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “Testing of the thiopurine methyltransferase enzyme to guide dosing with 6-mercaptopurine or azathioprine can help prevent myelosuppression, a serious adverse drug reaction caused by lower production of blood cells in bone marrow.”

When, Why, and How to Test

“A family doctor should consider a PGx test if a patient is planning on taking a medication for which there is a CPIC guideline with a dosing recommendation,” said Teri Klein, PhD, professor of biomedical data science at Stanford University in California, and principal investigator at PharmGKB, an online resource funded by the NIH that provides information for healthcare practitioners, researchers, and consumers about PGx. Affiliated with CPIC, it’s based at Stanford University.

You might also consider it for patients already on a drug who are “not responding or experiencing side effects,” Dr. Caudle said.

Here’s how four PGx experts suggest consumers and physicians approach this option.

Find a Test

More than a dozen PGx tests are on the market — some only a provider can order, others a consumer can order after a review by their provider or by a provider from the testing company. Some of the tests (using saliva) may be administered at home, while blood tests are done in a doctor’s office or laboratory. Companies that offer the tests include ARUP LaboratoriesGenomindLabcorpMayo Clinic LaboratoriesMyriad NeurosciencePrecision Sciences Inc.Tempus, and OneOme, but there are many others online. (Keep in mind that many laboratories offer “lab-developed tests” — created for use in a single laboratory — but these can be harder to verify. “The FDA regulates pharmacogenomic testing in laboratories,” Dr. Wiisanen said, “but many of the regulatory parameters are still being defined.”)

Because PGx is so new, there is no official list of recommended tests. So you’ll have to do a little homework. You can check that the laboratory is accredited by searching for it in the NIH Genetic Testing Laboratory Registry database. Beyond that, you’ll have to consult other evidence-based resources to confirm that the drug you’re interested in has research-backed data about specific gene variants (alleles) that affect metabolism as well as research-based clinical guidelines for using PGx results to make prescribing decisions.

The CPIC’s guidelines include dosing and alternate drug recommendations for more than 100 antidepressants, chemotherapy drugs, the antiplatelet and anticlotting drugs clopidogrel and warfarin, local anesthetics, antivirals and antibacterials, pain killers and anti-inflammatory drugs, and some cholesterol-lowering statins such as lovastatin and fluvastatin.

For help figuring out if a test looks for the right gene variants, Dr. Caudle and Dr. Wright recommended checking with the Association for Molecular Pathology’s website. The group published a brief list of best practices for pharmacogenomic testing in 2019. And it keeps a list of gene variants (alleles) that should be included in tests. Clinical guidelines from the CPIC and other groups, available on PharmGKB’s website, also list gene variants that affect the metabolism of the drug.

 

 

Consider Cost

The price tag for a test is typically several hundred dollars — but it can run as high as $1000-$2500. And health insurance doesn’t always pick up the tab.

In a 2023 University of Florida study of more than 1000 insurance claims for PGx testing, the number reimbursed varied from 72% for a pain diagnosis to 52% for cardiology to 46% for psychiatry.

Medicare covers some PGx testing when a consumer and their providers meet certain criteria, including whether a drug being considered has a significant gene-drug interaction. California’s Medi-Cal health insurance program covers PGx as do Medicaid programs in some states, including Arkansas and Rhode Island. You can find state-by-state coverage information on the Genetics Policy Hub’s website.

Understand the Results

As more insurers cover PGx, Dr. Klein and Dr. Wiisanen say the field will grow and more providers will use it to inform prescribing. But some health systems aren’t waiting.

In addition to UF Health’s MyRx, PGx is part of personalized medicine programs at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Endeavor Health in Chicago, the Mayo Clinic, the University of California, San FranciscoSanford Health in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

Beyond testing, they offer a very useful service: A consult with a pharmacogenetics pharmacist to review the results and explain what they mean for a consumer’s current and future medications.

Physicians and curious consumers can also consult CPIC’s guidelines, which give recommendations about how to interpret the results of a PGx test, said Dr. Klein, a co-principal investigator at CPIC. CPIC has a grading system for both the evidence that supports the recommendation (high, moderate, or weak) and the recommendation itself (strong, moderate, or optional).

Currently, labeling for 456 prescription drugs sold in the United States includes some type of PGx information, according to the FDA’s Table of Pharmacogenomic Biomarkers in Drug Labeling and an annotated guide from PharmGKB.

Just 108 drug labels currently tell doctors and patients what to do with the information — such as requiring or suggesting testing or offering prescribing recommendations, according to PharmGKB. In contrast, PharmGKB’s online resources include evidence-based clinical guidelines for 201 drugs from CPIC and from professional PGx societies in the Netherlands, Canada, France, and elsewhere.

Consumers and physicians can also look for a pharmacist with pharmacogenetics training in their area or through a nearby medical center to learn more, Dr. Wright suggested. And while consumers can test without working with their own physician, the experts advise against it. Don’t stop or change the dose of medications you already take on your own, they say . And do work with your primary care practitioner or specialist to get tested and understand how the results fit into the bigger picture of how your body responds to your medications.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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And that’s pharmacogenetics, testing patients for genetic differences that affect how well a given drug will work for them and what kind of side effects to expect.<br/><br/>“About 9 out of 10 people will have a genetic difference in their DNA that can impact how they respond to common medications,” said <a href="https://pharmacy.ufl.edu/profile/cicali-emily/">Emily J. Cicali</a>, PharmD, a clinical associate at the University of Florida College of Pharmacy, Gainesville.<br/><br/>Dr. Cicali is the clinical director of UF Health’s <a href="https://myrxcares.com/">MyRx</a>, a virtual program that gives Florida and New Jersey residents access to pharmacogenetic (PGx) tests plus expert interpretation by the health system’s pharmacists. Genetic factors are thought to contribute to about 25% or more of inappropriate drug responses or adverse events, said <a href="https://www.rosalindfranklin.edu/academics/faculty/kristin-wiisanen/">Kristin Wiisanen, PharmD</a>, dean of the College of Pharmacy at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science in North Chicago.<br/><br/><span class="tag metaDescription">“Pharmacogenetics helps consumers avoid drugs that may not work well for them or could cause serious adverse events. It’s personalized medicine,”</span> Dr. Cicali said.<br/><br/>Through a cheek swab or blood sample, the MyRx program — and a growing number of health system programs, doctors’ offices, and home tests available across the United States — gives consumers a window on inherited gene variants that can affect how their body activates, metabolizes, and clears away medications from a long list of widely used drugs.</p> <h2>Why PGx Tests Can Have a Big Impact</h2> <p>These tests work by looking for genes that control drug metabolism.</p> <p>“You have several different drug-metabolizing enzymes in your liver,” Dr. Cicali explained. “Pharmacogenetic tests look for gene variants that encode for these enzymes. If you’re an ultrarapid metabolizer, you have more of the enzymes that metabolize certain drugs, and there could be a risk the drug won’t work well because it doesn’t stay in the body long enough. On the other end of the spectrum, poor metabolizers have low levels of enzymes that affect certain drugs, so the drugs hang around longer and cause side effects.”<br/><br/>While pharmacogenetics is still considered an emerging science, it’s becoming more mainstream as test prices drop, insurance coverage expands, and an explosion of new research boosts understanding of gene-drug interactions, Dr. Wiisanen said.<br/><br/>Politicians are trying to extend its reach, too. The <a href="https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/BILLS-118hr7848ih">Right Drug Dose Now Act of 2024</a>, introduced in Congress in late March, aims to accelerate the use of PGx by boosting public awareness and by inserting PGx test results into consumers’ electronic health records. (Though a <a href="https://www.billtrack50.com/billdetail/1463909">similar bill died</a> in a US House subcommittee in 2023.)<br/><br/>“The use of pharmacogenetic data to guide prescribing is growing rapidly,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “It’s becoming a routine part of drug therapy for many medications.”</p> <h2>What the Research Shows</h2> <p>When researchers sequenced the DNA of more than 10,000 Mayo Clinic patients, they made a discovery that might <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/genetics/articles/10.3389/fgene.2022.1085994/full">surprise many Americans</a>: Gene variants that affect the effectiveness and safety of widely used drugs are not rare glitches. More than 99% of study participants had at least one. And 79% had three or more.</p> <p>The Mayo-Baylor RIGHT 10K <a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35331649/">Study</a> — one of the largest PGx studies ever conducted in the United States — looked at 77 gene variants, most involved with drug metabolism in the liver. Researchers focused closely on 13 with extensively studied, gene-based prescribing recommendations for 21 drugs including antidepressants, statins, pain killers, anticlotting medications for heart conditions, HIV treatments, chemotherapy agents, and antirejection drugs for organ transplants.<br/><br/>When researchers added participants’ genetic data to their electronic health records, they also sent semi-urgent alerts, which are alerts with the potential for severe harm, to the clinicians of 61 study volunteers. Over half changed patients’ drugs or doses.<br/><br/>The changes made a difference. One participant taking the pain drug tramadol turned out to be a poor metabolizer and was having dizzy spells because blood levels of the drug stayed high for long periods. Stopping tramadol stopped the dizziness. A participant taking escitalopram plus bupropion for major depression found out that the combo was likely ineffective because they metabolized escitalopram rapidly. A switch to a higher dose of bupropion alone put their depression into full remission.<br/><br/>“So many factors play into how you respond to medications,” said Mayo Clinic pharmacogenomics pharmacist <a href="https://www.mayo.edu/research/centers-programs/center-individualized-medicine/about/faculty-staff?letter=w">Jessica Wright</a>, PharmD, BCACP, one of the study authors. “Genetics is one of those pieces. Pharmacogenetic testing can reveal things that clinicians may not have been aware of or could help explain a patient’s exaggerated side effect.”<br/><br/>Pharmacogenetics is also called pharmacogenomics. The terms are often used interchangeably, even among PGx pharmacists, though the first refers to how individual genes influence drug response and the second to the effects of multiple genes, said <a href="https://cpicpgx.org/about-us/">Kelly E. Caudle</a>, PharmD, PhD, an associate member of the Department of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. Caudle is also co-principal investigator and director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded <a href="https://cpicpgx.org/">Clinical Pharmacogenetics Implementation Consortium</a> (CPIC). The group creates, publishes, and posts evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for drugs with well-researched PGx influences.<br/><br/>By any name, PGx may help explain, predict, and sidestep unpredictable responses to a variety of drugs:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>In a 2023 multicenter <a href="https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(22)01841-4/abstract">study</a> of 6944 people from seven European countries in <em>The Lancet</em>, those given customized drug treatments based on a 12-gene PGx panel had 30% fewer side effects than those who didn’t get this personalized prescribing. People in the study were being treated for cancer, heart disease, and mental health issues, among other conditions.</li> <li>In a 2023  from China’s Tongji University, Shanghai, of 650 survivors of strokes and transient ischemic attacks, those whose antiplatelet drugs (such as clopidogrel) were customized based on PGx testing had a lower risk for stroke and other vascular events in the next 90 days. The study was published in Frontiers in Pharmacology.</li> <li>In a University of Pennsylvania  of 1944 adults with major depression, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, those whose antidepressants were guided by PGx test results were 28% more likely to go into remission during the first 24 weeks of treatment than those in a control group. But by 24 weeks, equal numbers were in remission. A 2023 Chinese  of 11 depression studies, published in BMC Psychiatry, came to a similar conclusion: PGx-guided antidepressant prescriptions may help people feel better quicker, perhaps by avoiding some of the usual trial-and-error of different depression drugs.</li> </ul> <p>PGx checks are already strongly recommended or considered routine before some medications are prescribed. These include abacavir (Ziagen), an antiviral treatment for HIV that can have severe side effects in people with one gene variant.<br/><br/>The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommends genetic testing for people with colon cancer before starting the drug irinotecan (Camptosar), which can cause severe diarrhea and raise infection risk in people with a gene variant that slows the drug’s elimination from the body.<br/><br/>Genetic testing is also recommended by the FDA for people with acute lymphoblastic leukemia before receiving the chemotherapy drug mercaptopurine (Purinethol) because a gene variant that affects drug processing can trigger serious side effects and raise the risk for infection at standard dosages.<br/><br/>“One of the key benefits of pharmacogenomic testing is in preventing adverse drug reactions,” Dr. Wiisanen said. “Testing of the thiopurine methyltransferase enzyme to guide dosing with 6-mercaptopurine or azathioprine can help prevent myelosuppression, a serious adverse drug reaction caused by lower production of blood cells in bone marrow.”</p> <h2>When, Why, and How to Test</h2> <p>“A family doctor should consider a PGx test if a patient is planning on taking a medication for which there is a CPIC guideline with a dosing recommendation,” said <a href="https://profiles.stanford.edu/teri-klein">Teri Klein</a>, PhD, professor of biomedical data science at Stanford University in California, and principal investigator at <a href="https://www.pharmgkb.org/whatIsPharmgkb">PharmGKB</a>, an online resource funded by the NIH that provides information for healthcare practitioners, researchers, and consumers about PGx. Affiliated with CPIC, it’s based at Stanford University.</p> <p>You might also consider it for patients already on a drug who are “not responding or experiencing side effects,” Dr. Caudle said.<br/><br/>Here’s how four PGx experts suggest consumers and physicians approach this option.</p> <h2>Find a Test</h2> <p>More than a dozen PGx tests are on the market — some only a provider can order, others a consumer can order after a review by their provider or by a provider from the testing company. Some of the tests (using saliva) may be administered at home, while blood tests are done in a doctor’s office or laboratory. Companies that offer the tests include <a href="https://www.aruplab.com/genetics/tests/pharmacogenetics">ARUP Laboratories</a>, <a href="https://genomind.com/solutions/pharmacogenetic-testing/">Genomind</a>, <a href="https://www.labcorp.com/tests/512143/cytochrome-p450-2c9-genotyping">Labcorp</a>, <a href="https://www.mayocliniclabs.com/test-catalog/overview/610057">Mayo Clinic Laboratories</a>, <a href="https://genesight.com/product/">Myriad Neuroscience</a>, <a href="https://clarityxdna.com/?gc_id=17492095649&amp;h_ad_id=610067938514&amp;gad_source=1&amp;gclid=EAIaIQobChMInL-po97vhQMVmmJHAR2t_A94EAAYASAAEgIWLfD_BwE">Precision Sciences Inc.</a>, <a href="https://www.tempus.com/patients/neuro-psych/genetic-test-k-a/?utm_source=afhmarketing&amp;utm_medium=googlesearch&amp;utm_campaign=nonbrandpgx&amp;utm_term=genetic%20medication%20testing&amp;utm_content=697344252144&amp;device=c&amp;gad_source=1&amp;gclid=EAIaIQobChMInL-po97vhQMVmmJHAR2t_A94EAMYASAAEgIW3fD_BwE">Tempus</a>, and <a href="https://oneome.com/">OneOme</a>, but there are many others online. (Keep in mind that many laboratories offer “lab-developed tests” — created for use in a single laboratory — but these can be harder to verify. “The FDA regulates pharmacogenomic testing in laboratories,” Dr. Wiisanen said, “but many of the regulatory parameters are still being defined.”)<br/><br/>Because PGx is so new, there is no official list of recommended tests. So you’ll have to do a little homework. You can <a href="https://ascpt.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cpt.1432">check</a> that the laboratory is accredited by searching for it in the <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gtr/">NIH Genetic Testing Laboratory Registry</a> database. Beyond that, you’ll have to consult other evidence-based resources to confirm that the drug you’re interested in has research-backed data about specific gene variants (alleles) that affect metabolism as well as research-based clinical guidelines for using PGx results to make prescribing decisions.<br/><br/>The CPIC’s <a href="https://www.pharmgkb.org/guidelineAnnotations">guidelines</a> include dosing and alternate drug recommendations for more than 100 antidepressants, chemotherapy drugs, the antiplatelet and anticlotting drugs clopidogrel and warfarin, local anesthetics, antivirals and antibacterials, pain killers and anti-inflammatory drugs, and some cholesterol-lowering statins such as lovastatin and fluvastatin.<br/><br/>For help figuring out if a test looks for the right gene variants, Dr. Caudle and Dr. Wright recommended checking with the <a href="https://www.amp.org/">Association for Molecular Pathology</a>’s website. The group published a brief list of best practices for pharmacogenomic testing in 2019. And it keeps a <a href="https://www.pharmgkb.org/ampAllelesToTest">list</a> of gene variants (alleles) that should be included in tests. Clinical guidelines from the CPIC and other groups, available on <a href="https://www.pharmgkb.org/guidelineAnnotations">PharmGKB’s website</a>, also list gene variants that affect the metabolism of the drug.</p> <h2>Consider Cost</h2> <p>The price tag for a test is typically several hundred dollars — but it can run as high as $1000-$2500. And health insurance doesn’t always pick up the tab.</p> <p>In a 2023 University of Florida <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pharmacology/articles/10.3389/fphar.2023.1179364/full">study</a> of more than 1000 insurance claims for PGx testing, the number reimbursed varied from 72% for a pain diagnosis to 52% for cardiology to 46% for psychiatry.<br/><br/><a href="https://www.ashp.org/advocacy-and-issues/key-issues/other-issues/additional-advocacy-efforts/ashp-issue-brief-cms-releases-a-future-lcd-for-pharmacogenomics-testing?loginreturnUrl=SSOCheckOnly">Medicare</a> covers some PGx testing when a consumer and their providers meet certain criteria, including whether a drug being considered has a significant gene-drug interaction. <a href="https://www.gov.ca.gov/2023/10/07/governor-newsom-issues-legislative-update-10-7-23/">California’s Medi-Cal</a> health insurance program covers PGx as do Medicaid programs in some states, including <a href="https://geneticspolicy.nccrcg.org/medicaid-policy/arkansas/">Arkansas</a> and <a href="https://geneticspolicy.nccrcg.org/medicaid-policy/rhode-island/">Rhode Island</a>. You can find state-by-state coverage information on the <a href="https://geneticspolicy.nccrcg.org/medicaid-coverage/">Genetics Policy Hub</a>’s website.</p> <h2>Understand the Results</h2> <p>As more insurers cover PGx, Dr. Klein and Dr. Wiisanen say the field will grow and more providers will use it to inform prescribing. But some health systems aren’t waiting.</p> <p>In addition to UF Health’s MyRx, PGx is part of personalized medicine programs at the <a href="https://www.pennmedicine.org/for-patients-and-visitors/find-a-program-or-service/translational-medicine-and-human-genetics/pharmacogenetics">University of Pennsylvania</a> in Philadelphia, <a href="https://www.northshore.org/personalized-medicine/">Endeavor Health</a> in Chicago, the <a href="https://www.mayo.edu/research/centers-programs/center-individualized-medicine/patient-care/pharmacogenomics">Mayo Clinic</a>, the <a href="https://pharmacy.ucsf.edu/news/2023/05/ucsf-launches-first-pharmacogenomics-testing-service-california">University of California, San Francisco</a>, <a href="https://imagenetics.sanfordhealth.org/">Sanford Health</a> in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and <a href="https://www.stjude.org/research/departments/pharmacy-pharmaceutical-sciences/pharmaceutical-sciences/pharmacogenomics-program.html">St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital</a> in Memphis, Tennessee.<br/><br/>Beyond testing, they offer a very useful service: A consult with a pharmacogenetics pharmacist to review the results and explain what they mean for a consumer’s current and future medications.<br/><br/>Physicians and curious consumers can also consult CPIC’s guidelines, which give recommendations about how to interpret the results of a PGx test, said Dr. Klein, a co-principal investigator at CPIC. CPIC has a grading system for both the evidence that supports the recommendation (high, moderate, or weak) and the recommendation itself (strong, moderate, or optional).<br/><br/>Currently, labeling for 456 prescription drugs sold in the United States includes some type of PGx information, according to the FDA’s <a href="https://www.fda.gov/drugs/science-and-research-drugs/table-pharmacogenomic-biomarkers-drug-labeling">Table of Pharmacogenomic Biomarkers in Drug Labeling</a> and an <a href="https://www.pharmgkb.org/fdaLabelAnnotations">annotated guide</a> from PharmGKB.<br/><br/>Just 108 drug labels currently tell doctors and patients what to do with the information — such as requiring or suggesting testing or offering prescribing recommendations, according to PharmGKB. In contrast, PharmGKB’s <a href="https://www.pharmgkb.org/guidelineAnnotations">online resources</a> include evidence-based clinical guidelines for 201 drugs from CPIC and from professional PGx societies in the Netherlands, Canada, France, and elsewhere.<br/><br/>Consumers and physicians can also look for a pharmacist with pharmacogenetics training in their area or through a nearby medical center to learn more, Dr. Wright suggested. And while consumers can test without working with their own physician, the experts advise against it. Don’t stop or change the dose of medications you already take on your own, they say . And do work with your primary care practitioner or specialist to get tested and understand how the results fit into the bigger picture of how your body responds to your medications.</p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/new-gene-tests-can-predict-if-drug-will-work-patient-2024a1000a8f">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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New HIV Infections After Vampire Facials at Unlicensed Spa

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Wed, 05/22/2024 - 17:08

At least three clients of an unlicensed spa in New Mexico contracted HIV after receiving platelet-rich plasma (PRP) microneedling facials, according to an investigation by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The investigation, spanning 5 years with parts of it still ongoing, has resulted in the closure of the spa and is raising questions about public safety in cosmetic clinics.

Though transmission of HIV by unsterile injection practices is a known risk, this is the first time it has been linked to cosmetic injection services, said Anna Stadelman-Behar, PhD, MPH, of the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service.

Sometimes called a vampire facial, the PRP treatment involves taking a patient’s own blood and separating it in a centrifuge. The portion containing a high concentration of platelets is then reinjected with a syringe or microneedling device.

“The idea is that when you inject this concentrated amount of platelets, the growth factors that the platelets release help to stimulate the regenerative nature of that area,” said Anthony Rossi, MD, professor of dermatology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, and attending dermatologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

The infections under investigation first came to light when a woman was diagnosed with HIV with no known risk factors for the disease other than exposure to microneedling facials at a cosmetic spa.

The New Mexico Department of Health and the CDC launched an investigation of the spa and discovered a litany of “gross violations of infection control practices,” said Dr. Stadelman-Behar.
 

Infection-Control Violations

At the spa in New Mexico, investigators found:

  • On a kitchen counter, a centrifuge, a heating dry bath, and a rack of unlabeled tubes containing blood
  • In a refrigerator, unlabeled tubes of blood and medical injectables including botox and lidocaine stored along with food
  • Unwrapped syringes in drawers, on counters, and discarded in regular trash cans
  • No autoclave for steam sterilization on the premises
  • Only surface cleaning for procedure equipment with ammonium chloride disinfecting spray and benzalkonium chloride disinfecting wipes after each client visit
  • Disposable electric desiccator tips cleaned only by alcohol immersion to be reused

The spa’s owner operated without appropriate licenses at multiple locations and did not have an appointment scheduling system that stored client contact information.

Investigators contacted as many people as they could find and launched a large-scale community outreach effort to find more. 

In total, four clients and one intimate partner of a client were diagnosed with HIV during the investigation, but one client and her partner were determined to likely have been infected before the spa visit.

It is not clear whether the infections were due to unlabeled contaminated blood products being given to the wrong client or contamination on shared needles. Investigators did not have the authority to collect specimens during their site visit that would have allowed them to study that.

“We can’t definitively say what the route of contamination was,” noted Dr. Stadelman-Behar.

Anne Chapas, MD, a board-certified dermatologist, and instructor at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, added that just because a procedure is cosmetic, that doesn’t mean it is not medical. “Personally, I feel it should only be done by medical practitioners who understand the risks.”
 

 

 

A Medical Procedure

PRP microneedling has been used extensively in orthopedic surgery to promote joint regeneration. For the past 10 years, it has also been used in dermatology to treat hair loss from alopecia, to augment wound healing, and cosmetically to reduce facial wrinkles.

It is generally done in a doctor’s office or medical spa, and the procedure takes about half an hour.

Dr. Stadelman-Behar said that this ongoing investigation highlights the importance of front-line healthcare workers using their clinical expertise to help identify potential new routes of transmission for infections. “It was provider-led intuition that sparked this investigation, so it’s important to let the department of health know if there is something amiss with any of the exposures that the patient might have had,” she said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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At least three clients of an unlicensed spa in New Mexico contracted HIV after receiving platelet-rich plasma (PRP) microneedling facials, according to an investigation by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The investigation, spanning 5 years with parts of it still ongoing, has resulted in the closure of the spa and is raising questions about public safety in cosmetic clinics.

Though transmission of HIV by unsterile injection practices is a known risk, this is the first time it has been linked to cosmetic injection services, said Anna Stadelman-Behar, PhD, MPH, of the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service.

Sometimes called a vampire facial, the PRP treatment involves taking a patient’s own blood and separating it in a centrifuge. The portion containing a high concentration of platelets is then reinjected with a syringe or microneedling device.

“The idea is that when you inject this concentrated amount of platelets, the growth factors that the platelets release help to stimulate the regenerative nature of that area,” said Anthony Rossi, MD, professor of dermatology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, and attending dermatologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

The infections under investigation first came to light when a woman was diagnosed with HIV with no known risk factors for the disease other than exposure to microneedling facials at a cosmetic spa.

The New Mexico Department of Health and the CDC launched an investigation of the spa and discovered a litany of “gross violations of infection control practices,” said Dr. Stadelman-Behar.
 

Infection-Control Violations

At the spa in New Mexico, investigators found:

  • On a kitchen counter, a centrifuge, a heating dry bath, and a rack of unlabeled tubes containing blood
  • In a refrigerator, unlabeled tubes of blood and medical injectables including botox and lidocaine stored along with food
  • Unwrapped syringes in drawers, on counters, and discarded in regular trash cans
  • No autoclave for steam sterilization on the premises
  • Only surface cleaning for procedure equipment with ammonium chloride disinfecting spray and benzalkonium chloride disinfecting wipes after each client visit
  • Disposable electric desiccator tips cleaned only by alcohol immersion to be reused

The spa’s owner operated without appropriate licenses at multiple locations and did not have an appointment scheduling system that stored client contact information.

Investigators contacted as many people as they could find and launched a large-scale community outreach effort to find more. 

In total, four clients and one intimate partner of a client were diagnosed with HIV during the investigation, but one client and her partner were determined to likely have been infected before the spa visit.

It is not clear whether the infections were due to unlabeled contaminated blood products being given to the wrong client or contamination on shared needles. Investigators did not have the authority to collect specimens during their site visit that would have allowed them to study that.

“We can’t definitively say what the route of contamination was,” noted Dr. Stadelman-Behar.

Anne Chapas, MD, a board-certified dermatologist, and instructor at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, added that just because a procedure is cosmetic, that doesn’t mean it is not medical. “Personally, I feel it should only be done by medical practitioners who understand the risks.”
 

 

 

A Medical Procedure

PRP microneedling has been used extensively in orthopedic surgery to promote joint regeneration. For the past 10 years, it has also been used in dermatology to treat hair loss from alopecia, to augment wound healing, and cosmetically to reduce facial wrinkles.

It is generally done in a doctor’s office or medical spa, and the procedure takes about half an hour.

Dr. Stadelman-Behar said that this ongoing investigation highlights the importance of front-line healthcare workers using their clinical expertise to help identify potential new routes of transmission for infections. “It was provider-led intuition that sparked this investigation, so it’s important to let the department of health know if there is something amiss with any of the exposures that the patient might have had,” she said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

At least three clients of an unlicensed spa in New Mexico contracted HIV after receiving platelet-rich plasma (PRP) microneedling facials, according to an investigation by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The investigation, spanning 5 years with parts of it still ongoing, has resulted in the closure of the spa and is raising questions about public safety in cosmetic clinics.

Though transmission of HIV by unsterile injection practices is a known risk, this is the first time it has been linked to cosmetic injection services, said Anna Stadelman-Behar, PhD, MPH, of the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service.

Sometimes called a vampire facial, the PRP treatment involves taking a patient’s own blood and separating it in a centrifuge. The portion containing a high concentration of platelets is then reinjected with a syringe or microneedling device.

“The idea is that when you inject this concentrated amount of platelets, the growth factors that the platelets release help to stimulate the regenerative nature of that area,” said Anthony Rossi, MD, professor of dermatology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, and attending dermatologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

The infections under investigation first came to light when a woman was diagnosed with HIV with no known risk factors for the disease other than exposure to microneedling facials at a cosmetic spa.

The New Mexico Department of Health and the CDC launched an investigation of the spa and discovered a litany of “gross violations of infection control practices,” said Dr. Stadelman-Behar.
 

Infection-Control Violations

At the spa in New Mexico, investigators found:

  • On a kitchen counter, a centrifuge, a heating dry bath, and a rack of unlabeled tubes containing blood
  • In a refrigerator, unlabeled tubes of blood and medical injectables including botox and lidocaine stored along with food
  • Unwrapped syringes in drawers, on counters, and discarded in regular trash cans
  • No autoclave for steam sterilization on the premises
  • Only surface cleaning for procedure equipment with ammonium chloride disinfecting spray and benzalkonium chloride disinfecting wipes after each client visit
  • Disposable electric desiccator tips cleaned only by alcohol immersion to be reused

The spa’s owner operated without appropriate licenses at multiple locations and did not have an appointment scheduling system that stored client contact information.

Investigators contacted as many people as they could find and launched a large-scale community outreach effort to find more. 

In total, four clients and one intimate partner of a client were diagnosed with HIV during the investigation, but one client and her partner were determined to likely have been infected before the spa visit.

It is not clear whether the infections were due to unlabeled contaminated blood products being given to the wrong client or contamination on shared needles. Investigators did not have the authority to collect specimens during their site visit that would have allowed them to study that.

“We can’t definitively say what the route of contamination was,” noted Dr. Stadelman-Behar.

Anne Chapas, MD, a board-certified dermatologist, and instructor at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, added that just because a procedure is cosmetic, that doesn’t mean it is not medical. “Personally, I feel it should only be done by medical practitioners who understand the risks.”
 

 

 

A Medical Procedure

PRP microneedling has been used extensively in orthopedic surgery to promote joint regeneration. For the past 10 years, it has also been used in dermatology to treat hair loss from alopecia, to augment wound healing, and cosmetically to reduce facial wrinkles.

It is generally done in a doctor’s office or medical spa, and the procedure takes about half an hour.

Dr. Stadelman-Behar said that this ongoing investigation highlights the importance of front-line healthcare workers using their clinical expertise to help identify potential new routes of transmission for infections. “It was provider-led intuition that sparked this investigation, so it’s important to let the department of health know if there is something amiss with any of the exposures that the patient might have had,” she said.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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<root generator="drupal.xsl" gversion="1.7"> <header> <fileName>167954</fileName> <TBEID>0C04FF29.SIG</TBEID> <TBUniqueIdentifier>MD_0C04FF29</TBUniqueIdentifier> <newsOrJournal>News</newsOrJournal> <publisherName>Frontline Medical Communications</publisherName> <storyname/> <articleType>2</articleType> <TBLocation>QC Done-All Pubs</TBLocation> <QCDate>20240507T121819</QCDate> <firstPublished>20240507T122508</firstPublished> <LastPublished>20240507T122508</LastPublished> <pubStatus qcode="stat:"/> <embargoDate/> <killDate/> <CMSDate>20240507T122508</CMSDate> <articleSource/> <facebookInfo/> <meetingNumber/> <byline>Brian Owens</byline> <bylineText>BRIAN OWENS</bylineText> <bylineFull>BRIAN OWENS</bylineFull> <bylineTitleText/> <USOrGlobal/> <wireDocType/> <newsDocType/> <journalDocType/> <linkLabel/> <pageRange/> <citation/> <quizID/> <indexIssueDate/> <itemClass qcode="ninat:text"/> <provider qcode="provider:imng"> <name>IMNG Medical Media</name> <rightsInfo> <copyrightHolder> <name>Frontline Medical News</name> </copyrightHolder> <copyrightNotice>Copyright (c) 2015 Frontline Medical News, a Frontline Medical Communications Inc. company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>At least three clients of an unlicensed spa in New Mexico contracted HIV after receiving platelet-rich plasma (PRP) microneedling facials, according to an inves</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>Though transmission of HIV by unsterile injection practices is a known risk, this is the first time it has been linked to cosmetic injection services.</teaser> <title>New HIV Infections After Vampire Facials at Unlicensed Spa</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>skin</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>idprac</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>13</term> <term canonical="true">20</term> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">318</term> <term>319</term> <term>203</term> <term>234</term> <term>177</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>New HIV Infections After Vampire Facials at Unlicensed Spa</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>At least three clients of an unlicensed spa in New Mexico contracted HIV after receiving platelet-rich plasma (PRP) microneedling facials, according to <a href="https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/wr/mm7316a3.htm?s_cid=mm7316a3_w">an investigation</a> by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).</p> <p>The investigation, spanning 5 years with parts of it still ongoing, has resulted in the closure of the spa and is raising questions about public safety in cosmetic clinics.<br/><br/>Though transmission of HIV by unsterile injection practices is a known risk, this is the first time it has been linked to cosmetic injection services, shared Anna Stadelman-Behar, MD, of the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service.<br/><br/>Sometimes called a vampire facial, the PRP treatment involves taking a patient’s own blood and separating it in a centrifuge. The portion containing a high concentration of platelets is then reinjected with a syringe or microneedling device.<br/><br/>“The idea is that when you inject this concentrated amount of platelets, the growth factors that the platelets release help to stimulate the regenerative nature of that area,” said Anthony Rossi, MD, professor of dermatology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, and attending dermatologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.<br/><br/>The infections under investigation first came to light when a woman was diagnosed with HIV with no known risk factors for the disease other than exposure to microneedling facials at a cosmetic spa.<br/><br/>The New Mexico Department of Health and the CDC launched an investigation of the spa and discovered a litany of “gross violations of infection control practices,” said Dr. Stadelman-Behar.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Infection-Control Violations</h2> <p>At the spa in New Mexico, investigators found:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>On a kitchen counter, a centrifuge, a heating dry bath, and a rack of unlabeled tubes containing blood</li> <li>In a refrigerator, unlabeled tubes of blood and medical injectables including botox and lidocaine stored along with food</li> <li>Unwrapped syringes in drawers, on counters, and discarded in regular trash cans</li> <li>No autoclave for steam sterilization on the premises</li> <li>Only surface cleaning for procedure equipment with ammonium chloride disinfecting spray and benzalkonium chloride disinfecting wipes after each client visit</li> <li>Disposable electric desiccator tips cleaned only by alcohol immersion to be reused</li> </ul> <p>The spa’s owner operated without appropriate licenses at multiple locations and did not have an appointment scheduling system that stored client contact information.<br/><br/>Investigators contacted as many people as they could find and launched a large-scale community outreach effort to find more. <br/><br/>In total, four clients and one intimate partner of a client were diagnosed with HIV during the investigation, but one client and her partner were determined to likely have been infected before the spa visit.<br/><br/>It is not clear whether the infections were due to unlabeled contaminated blood products being given to the wrong client or contamination on shared needles. Investigators did not have the authority to collect specimens during their site visit that would have allowed them to study that.<br/><br/>“We can’t definitively say what the route of contamination was,” noted Dr. Stadelman-Behar.<br/><br/>Anne Chapas, MD, a board-certified dermatologist, and instructor at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, added that just because a procedure is cosmetic, that doesn’t mean it is not medical. “Personally, I feel it should only be done by medical practitioners who understand the risks.”<br/><br/></p> <h2>A Medical Procedure</h2> <p>PRP microneedling has been used extensively in orthopedic surgery to promote joint regeneration. For the past 10 years, it has also been used in dermatology to treat hair loss from alopecia, to augment wound healing, and cosmetically to reduce facial wrinkles.</p> <p>It is generally done in a doctor’s office or medical spa, and the procedure takes about half an hour.<br/><br/>Dr. Stadelman-Behar said that this ongoing investigation highlights the importance of front-line healthcare workers using their clinical expertise to help identify potential new routes of transmission for infections. “It was provider-led intuition that sparked this investigation, so it’s important to let the department of health know if there is something amiss with any of the exposures that the patient might have had,” she said.</p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/new-hiv-infections-after-vampire-facials-unlicensed-spa-2024a10008k7">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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New Contraindications to Coadministration of Atazanavir

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 05/06/2024 - 17:03

The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) this week recommended new contraindications on the coadministration of the protease inhibitor atazanavir (Reyataz, Bristol-Myers Squibb) with antineoplastic agents encorafenib and ivosidenib (atazanavir may significantly increase blood levels and thus side effects), and with the anticonvulsants carbamazepine, phenobarbital, and phenytoin (which may decrease serum levels of atazanavir). 

The new rules alter sections 4.3 and 4.5 of the summary of product characteristics (SmPC) to reclassify drug–drug interactions with the new contraindications.

Atazanavir is an orally administered drug, used in combination with low-dose ritonavir (Norvir) to boost its pharmacokinetics. It is indicated for the treatment of HIV-1 infected adults and pediatric patients 3 months of age and older in combination with other antiretroviral medicinal products. A combination preparation boosted with cobicistat (Evotaz) is also available.

The drug is an azapeptide HIV-1 protease inhibitor (PI) that selectively inhibits the virus-specific processing of viral Gag-Pol proteins in HIV-1 infected cells, thus preventing formation of mature virions and infection of other cells. This prevents the virus from multiplying and slows the spread of infection. Based on available virological and clinical data from adult patients, no benefit is expected in patients with HIV strains resistant to multiple protease inhibitors (four or more PI mutations).

Therapy with atazanavir is intended to be initiated by a physician experienced in the management of HIV infection, with the choice of atazanavir in treatment-experienced adult and pediatric patients based on individual viral resistance testing and the patient’s treatment history. The standard dose is 300 mg atazanavir taken with 100 mg ritonavir once daily with food.

Atazanavir is already contraindicated in combination or coadministration with a wide variety of other agents:

  • Coadministration with simvastatin or lovastatin [statins – risk of increased blood levels with atazanavir].
  • Combination with the anti-TB antibiotic rifampicin.
  • Combination with the PDE5 inhibitor sildenafil when used for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension only.
  • Coadministration with substrates of the CYP3A4 isoform of cytochrome P450 that have narrow therapeutic windows (eg, quetiapine, lurasidone, alfuzosin, astemizole, terfenadine, cisapride, pimozide, quinidine, bepridil, triazolam, oral midazolam, lomitapide, and ergot alkaloids).
  • Coadministration with grazoprevir-containing products, including elbasvir/grazoprevir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; atazanavir increases its blood levels).
  • Coadministration with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; increased hepatotoxicity due to increased bilirubin concentration).
  • Coadministration with products containing St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum).

The EMA said detailed recommendations for the use of atazanavir will be described in the updated SmPC, which will be published in the revised European public assessment report after a decision on this change to the marketing authorization has been granted by the European Commission.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) this week recommended new contraindications on the coadministration of the protease inhibitor atazanavir (Reyataz, Bristol-Myers Squibb) with antineoplastic agents encorafenib and ivosidenib (atazanavir may significantly increase blood levels and thus side effects), and with the anticonvulsants carbamazepine, phenobarbital, and phenytoin (which may decrease serum levels of atazanavir). 

The new rules alter sections 4.3 and 4.5 of the summary of product characteristics (SmPC) to reclassify drug–drug interactions with the new contraindications.

Atazanavir is an orally administered drug, used in combination with low-dose ritonavir (Norvir) to boost its pharmacokinetics. It is indicated for the treatment of HIV-1 infected adults and pediatric patients 3 months of age and older in combination with other antiretroviral medicinal products. A combination preparation boosted with cobicistat (Evotaz) is also available.

The drug is an azapeptide HIV-1 protease inhibitor (PI) that selectively inhibits the virus-specific processing of viral Gag-Pol proteins in HIV-1 infected cells, thus preventing formation of mature virions and infection of other cells. This prevents the virus from multiplying and slows the spread of infection. Based on available virological and clinical data from adult patients, no benefit is expected in patients with HIV strains resistant to multiple protease inhibitors (four or more PI mutations).

Therapy with atazanavir is intended to be initiated by a physician experienced in the management of HIV infection, with the choice of atazanavir in treatment-experienced adult and pediatric patients based on individual viral resistance testing and the patient’s treatment history. The standard dose is 300 mg atazanavir taken with 100 mg ritonavir once daily with food.

Atazanavir is already contraindicated in combination or coadministration with a wide variety of other agents:

  • Coadministration with simvastatin or lovastatin [statins – risk of increased blood levels with atazanavir].
  • Combination with the anti-TB antibiotic rifampicin.
  • Combination with the PDE5 inhibitor sildenafil when used for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension only.
  • Coadministration with substrates of the CYP3A4 isoform of cytochrome P450 that have narrow therapeutic windows (eg, quetiapine, lurasidone, alfuzosin, astemizole, terfenadine, cisapride, pimozide, quinidine, bepridil, triazolam, oral midazolam, lomitapide, and ergot alkaloids).
  • Coadministration with grazoprevir-containing products, including elbasvir/grazoprevir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; atazanavir increases its blood levels).
  • Coadministration with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; increased hepatotoxicity due to increased bilirubin concentration).
  • Coadministration with products containing St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum).

The EMA said detailed recommendations for the use of atazanavir will be described in the updated SmPC, which will be published in the revised European public assessment report after a decision on this change to the marketing authorization has been granted by the European Commission.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) this week recommended new contraindications on the coadministration of the protease inhibitor atazanavir (Reyataz, Bristol-Myers Squibb) with antineoplastic agents encorafenib and ivosidenib (atazanavir may significantly increase blood levels and thus side effects), and with the anticonvulsants carbamazepine, phenobarbital, and phenytoin (which may decrease serum levels of atazanavir). 

The new rules alter sections 4.3 and 4.5 of the summary of product characteristics (SmPC) to reclassify drug–drug interactions with the new contraindications.

Atazanavir is an orally administered drug, used in combination with low-dose ritonavir (Norvir) to boost its pharmacokinetics. It is indicated for the treatment of HIV-1 infected adults and pediatric patients 3 months of age and older in combination with other antiretroviral medicinal products. A combination preparation boosted with cobicistat (Evotaz) is also available.

The drug is an azapeptide HIV-1 protease inhibitor (PI) that selectively inhibits the virus-specific processing of viral Gag-Pol proteins in HIV-1 infected cells, thus preventing formation of mature virions and infection of other cells. This prevents the virus from multiplying and slows the spread of infection. Based on available virological and clinical data from adult patients, no benefit is expected in patients with HIV strains resistant to multiple protease inhibitors (four or more PI mutations).

Therapy with atazanavir is intended to be initiated by a physician experienced in the management of HIV infection, with the choice of atazanavir in treatment-experienced adult and pediatric patients based on individual viral resistance testing and the patient’s treatment history. The standard dose is 300 mg atazanavir taken with 100 mg ritonavir once daily with food.

Atazanavir is already contraindicated in combination or coadministration with a wide variety of other agents:

  • Coadministration with simvastatin or lovastatin [statins – risk of increased blood levels with atazanavir].
  • Combination with the anti-TB antibiotic rifampicin.
  • Combination with the PDE5 inhibitor sildenafil when used for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension only.
  • Coadministration with substrates of the CYP3A4 isoform of cytochrome P450 that have narrow therapeutic windows (eg, quetiapine, lurasidone, alfuzosin, astemizole, terfenadine, cisapride, pimozide, quinidine, bepridil, triazolam, oral midazolam, lomitapide, and ergot alkaloids).
  • Coadministration with grazoprevir-containing products, including elbasvir/grazoprevir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; atazanavir increases its blood levels).
  • Coadministration with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; increased hepatotoxicity due to increased bilirubin concentration).
  • Coadministration with products containing St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum).

The EMA said detailed recommendations for the use of atazanavir will be described in the updated SmPC, which will be published in the revised European public assessment report after a decision on this change to the marketing authorization has been granted by the European Commission.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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<root generator="drupal.xsl" gversion="1.7"> <header> <fileName>167924</fileName> <TBEID>0C04FE8A.SIG</TBEID> <TBUniqueIdentifier>MD_0C04FE8A</TBUniqueIdentifier> <newsOrJournal>News</newsOrJournal> <publisherName>Frontline Medical Communications</publisherName> <storyname/> <articleType>2</articleType> <TBLocation>QC Done-All Pubs</TBLocation> <QCDate>20240502T150447</QCDate> <firstPublished>20240506T092544</firstPublished> <LastPublished>20240506T092544</LastPublished> <pubStatus qcode="stat:"/> <embargoDate/> <killDate/> <CMSDate>20240506T092544</CMSDate> <articleSource/> <facebookInfo/> <meetingNumber/> <byline>Sheena Meredith</byline> <bylineText>SHEENA MEREDITH</bylineText> <bylineFull>SHEENA MEREDITH</bylineFull> <bylineTitleText/> <USOrGlobal/> <wireDocType/> <newsDocType/> <journalDocType/> <linkLabel/> <pageRange/> <citation/> <quizID/> <indexIssueDate/> <itemClass qcode="ninat:text"/> <provider qcode="provider:imng"> <name>IMNG Medical Media</name> <rightsInfo> <copyrightHolder> <name>Frontline Medical News</name> </copyrightHolder> <copyrightNotice>Copyright (c) 2015 Frontline Medical News, a Frontline Medical Communications Inc. company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) this week recommended new contraindications on the coadministra</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>The HIV medication has a host of new contraindications and drug interaction warnings.</teaser> <title>New Contraindications to Coadministration of Atazanavir</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>idprac</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>15</term> <term canonical="true">20</term> <term>21</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term>234</term> <term>226</term> <term canonical="true">318</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>New Contraindications to Coadministration of Atazanavir</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p><br/><br/>The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) this week recommended new contraindications on the coadministration of the protease inhibitor <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://reference.medscape.com/drug/reyataz-atazanavir-342608">atazanavir</a></span> (Reyataz, Bristol-Myers Squibb) with antineoplastic agents encorafenib and ivosidenib (atazanavir may significantly increase blood levels and thus side effects), and with the anticonvulsants <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://reference.medscape.com/drug/tegretol-xr-equetro-carbamazepine-343005">carbamazepine</a></span>, phenobarbital, and phenytoin (which may decrease serum levels of atazanavir). <br/><br/>The new rules alter sections 4.3 and 4.5 of the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/documents/product-information/reyataz-epar-product-information_en.pdf">summary of product characteristics</a></span> (SmPC) to reclassify drug–drug interactions with the new contraindications.<br/><br/>Atazanavir is an orally administered drug, used in combination with low-dose ritonavir (Norvir) to boost its pharmacokinetics. It is indicated for the treatment of HIV-1 infected adults and pediatric patients 3 months of age and older in combination with other antiretroviral medicinal products. A combination preparation boosted with cobicistat (Evotaz) is also available.<br/><br/>The drug is an azapeptide HIV-1 protease inhibitor (PI) that selectively inhibits the virus-specific processing of viral Gag-Pol proteins in HIV-1 infected cells, thus preventing formation of mature virions and infection of other cells. This prevents the virus from multiplying and slows the spread of infection. Based on available virological and clinical data from adult patients, no benefit is expected in patients with HIV strains resistant to multiple protease inhibitors (four or more PI mutations).<br/><br/>Therapy with atazanavir is intended to be initiated by a physician experienced in the management of HIV infection, with the choice of atazanavir in treatment-experienced adult and pediatric patients based on individual viral resistance testing and the patient’s treatment history. The standard dose is 300 mg atazanavir taken with 100 mg ritonavir once daily with food.<br/><br/>Atazanavir is already contraindicated in combination or coadministration with a wide variety of other agents:</p> <ul class="body"> <li>Coadministration with simvastatin or lovastatin [statins – risk of increased blood levels with atazanavir].</li> <li>Combination with the anti-TB antibiotic rifampicin.</li> <li>Combination with the PDE5 inhibitor sildenafil when used for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension only.</li> <li>Coadministration with substrates of the CYP3A4 isoform of cytochrome P450 that have narrow therapeutic windows (eg, quetiapine, lurasidone, <span class="Hyperlink">alfuzosin</span>, astemizole, terfenadine, <span class="Hyperlink">cisapride</span>, pimozide, quinidine, bepridil, triazolam, oral midazolam, lomitapide, and ergot alkaloids).</li> <li>Coadministration with grazoprevir-containing products, including elbasvir/grazoprevir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; atazanavir increases its blood levels).</li> <li>Coadministration with glecaprevir/pibrentasvir fixed dose combination (hepatitis C drug combination; increased hepatotoxicity due to increased <span class="Hyperlink">bilirubin</span> concentration).</li> <li>Coadministration with products containing St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum).</li> </ul> <p>The EMA said detailed recommendations for the use of atazanavir will be described in the updated SmPC, which will be published in the revised European public assessment report after a decision on this change to the marketing authorization has been granted by the European Commission.<span class="end"/></p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/new-contraindications-coadministration-atazanavir-2024a100087a">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Metabolic Dysfunction–Associated Steatotic Liver Disease Plus HIV Ups Risk for CVD but Not Liver Disease

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 06/14/2024 - 18:07

 

TOPLINE:

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) co-occurring with HIV infection does not appear to increase the risk for cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) compared with MASLD alone. However, the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) is significantly increased among patients with MASLD and HIV, a large study suggested.

METHODOLOGY:

  • MASLD is highly prevalent in people living with HIV, but the impact of HIV on liver and cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in people with MASLD remains unclear.
  • To investigate, researchers created a propensity score-matched cohort of veterans with noncirrhotic MASLD, with and without HIV (920 patients in each group).
  • They evaluated the incidence of cirrhosis, HCC, and MACE, as well as overall survival, among the two groups. They also assessed these outcomes in MASLD patients with HIV on the basis of whether they were on antiretroviral therapy (ART).

TAKEAWAY:

  • During a median follow-up of 10.4 years in the MASLD with HIV group and 11.8 years in the MASLD-only group, the overall incidence of cirrhosis and HCC was similar in MASLD with vs without HIV (cirrhosis: 0.97 vs 1.06 per 100 person-years, P = .54; HCC: 0.26 vs 0.17 per 100,000 person-years, P = .23), regardless of ART use.
  • In contrast, the incidence of MACE was significantly higher in MASLD with vs without HIV (5.18 vs 4.48 per 100 person-years, P = .03). The incidence also was higher in patients with MASLD and HIV who were not on ART compared with those on ART (5.83 vs 4.7 per 100 person-years, P = .07).
  • Compared with MASLD without HIV, the overall 5-year survival was significantly lower in MASLD with HIV (91.3% vs 85.7%). In MASLD with HIV, receipt of ART was associated with a significantly higher 5-year survival than no ART (87.4% vs 81.6%).

IN PRACTICE:

“Ensuring timely and appropriate initiation of HIV treatment is critical in patients with MASLD who have concurrent HIV infection, as well as optimizing metabolic comorbidities that may also contribute to increased risks of CVD and increased mortality,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study, led by Robert J. Wong, MD, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, was published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study cohort consisted predominantly of older men, which may limit generalizability to women and younger populations. Metabolic comorbidities are more common in veterans compared with the general population, potentially affecting the generalizability of the CVD risk findings.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by an investigator-initiated research grant from Theratechnologies. Wong has received funding for his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Durect Corporation and has served as a consultant for Gilead Sciences.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) co-occurring with HIV infection does not appear to increase the risk for cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) compared with MASLD alone. However, the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) is significantly increased among patients with MASLD and HIV, a large study suggested.

METHODOLOGY:

  • MASLD is highly prevalent in people living with HIV, but the impact of HIV on liver and cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in people with MASLD remains unclear.
  • To investigate, researchers created a propensity score-matched cohort of veterans with noncirrhotic MASLD, with and without HIV (920 patients in each group).
  • They evaluated the incidence of cirrhosis, HCC, and MACE, as well as overall survival, among the two groups. They also assessed these outcomes in MASLD patients with HIV on the basis of whether they were on antiretroviral therapy (ART).

TAKEAWAY:

  • During a median follow-up of 10.4 years in the MASLD with HIV group and 11.8 years in the MASLD-only group, the overall incidence of cirrhosis and HCC was similar in MASLD with vs without HIV (cirrhosis: 0.97 vs 1.06 per 100 person-years, P = .54; HCC: 0.26 vs 0.17 per 100,000 person-years, P = .23), regardless of ART use.
  • In contrast, the incidence of MACE was significantly higher in MASLD with vs without HIV (5.18 vs 4.48 per 100 person-years, P = .03). The incidence also was higher in patients with MASLD and HIV who were not on ART compared with those on ART (5.83 vs 4.7 per 100 person-years, P = .07).
  • Compared with MASLD without HIV, the overall 5-year survival was significantly lower in MASLD with HIV (91.3% vs 85.7%). In MASLD with HIV, receipt of ART was associated with a significantly higher 5-year survival than no ART (87.4% vs 81.6%).

IN PRACTICE:

“Ensuring timely and appropriate initiation of HIV treatment is critical in patients with MASLD who have concurrent HIV infection, as well as optimizing metabolic comorbidities that may also contribute to increased risks of CVD and increased mortality,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study, led by Robert J. Wong, MD, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, was published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study cohort consisted predominantly of older men, which may limit generalizability to women and younger populations. Metabolic comorbidities are more common in veterans compared with the general population, potentially affecting the generalizability of the CVD risk findings.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by an investigator-initiated research grant from Theratechnologies. Wong has received funding for his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Durect Corporation and has served as a consultant for Gilead Sciences.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) co-occurring with HIV infection does not appear to increase the risk for cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) compared with MASLD alone. However, the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) is significantly increased among patients with MASLD and HIV, a large study suggested.

METHODOLOGY:

  • MASLD is highly prevalent in people living with HIV, but the impact of HIV on liver and cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in people with MASLD remains unclear.
  • To investigate, researchers created a propensity score-matched cohort of veterans with noncirrhotic MASLD, with and without HIV (920 patients in each group).
  • They evaluated the incidence of cirrhosis, HCC, and MACE, as well as overall survival, among the two groups. They also assessed these outcomes in MASLD patients with HIV on the basis of whether they were on antiretroviral therapy (ART).

TAKEAWAY:

  • During a median follow-up of 10.4 years in the MASLD with HIV group and 11.8 years in the MASLD-only group, the overall incidence of cirrhosis and HCC was similar in MASLD with vs without HIV (cirrhosis: 0.97 vs 1.06 per 100 person-years, P = .54; HCC: 0.26 vs 0.17 per 100,000 person-years, P = .23), regardless of ART use.
  • In contrast, the incidence of MACE was significantly higher in MASLD with vs without HIV (5.18 vs 4.48 per 100 person-years, P = .03). The incidence also was higher in patients with MASLD and HIV who were not on ART compared with those on ART (5.83 vs 4.7 per 100 person-years, P = .07).
  • Compared with MASLD without HIV, the overall 5-year survival was significantly lower in MASLD with HIV (91.3% vs 85.7%). In MASLD with HIV, receipt of ART was associated with a significantly higher 5-year survival than no ART (87.4% vs 81.6%).

IN PRACTICE:

“Ensuring timely and appropriate initiation of HIV treatment is critical in patients with MASLD who have concurrent HIV infection, as well as optimizing metabolic comorbidities that may also contribute to increased risks of CVD and increased mortality,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study, led by Robert J. Wong, MD, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, was published online in the American Journal of Gastroenterology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study cohort consisted predominantly of older men, which may limit generalizability to women and younger populations. Metabolic comorbidities are more common in veterans compared with the general population, potentially affecting the generalizability of the CVD risk findings.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was supported by an investigator-initiated research grant from Theratechnologies. Wong has received funding for his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Durect Corporation and has served as a consultant for Gilead Sciences.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) co-occurring with HIV infection does not appear to increase the risk for cirrhosis or hepatocel</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <title>Metabolic Dysfunction–Associated Steatotic Liver Disease Plus HIV Ups Risk for CVD but Not Liver Disease</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>card</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>endo</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>idprac</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>GIHOLD</publicationCode> <pubIssueName>January 2014</pubIssueName> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> <journalTitle/> <journalFullTitle/> <copyrightStatement/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>5</term> <term>34</term> <term>15</term> <term canonical="true">20</term> <term>21</term> </publications> <sections> <term>27970</term> <term canonical="true">39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term>193</term> <term>239</term> <term>226</term> <term>234</term> <term>194</term> <term canonical="true">318</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Metabolic Dysfunction–Associated Steatotic Liver Disease Plus HIV Ups Risk for CVD but Not Liver Disease</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <h2>TOPLINE:</h2> <p>Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) co-occurring with <span class="Hyperlink">HIV infection</span> does not appear to increase the risk for <span class="Hyperlink">cirrhosis</span> or <span class="Hyperlink">hepatocellular carcinoma</span> (HCC) compared with MASLD alone. However, the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) is significantly increased among patients with MASLD and HIV, a large study suggested.</p> <h2>METHODOLOGY:</h2> <ul class="body"> <li>MASLD is highly prevalent in people living with HIV, but the impact of HIV on liver and cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in people with MASLD remains unclear.</li> <li>To investigate, researchers created a propensity score-matched cohort of veterans with noncirrhotic MASLD, with and without HIV (920 patients in each group).</li> <li>They evaluated the incidence of cirrhosis, HCC, and MACE, as well as overall survival, among the two groups. They also assessed these outcomes in MASLD patients with HIV on the basis of whether they were on antiretroviral therapy (ART).</li> </ul> <h2>TAKEAWAY:</h2> <ul class="body"> <li>During a median follow-up of 10.4 years in the MASLD with HIV group and 11.8 years in the MASLD-only group, the overall incidence of cirrhosis and HCC was similar in MASLD with vs without HIV (cirrhosis: 0.97 vs 1.06 per 100 person-years, <em>P</em> = .54; HCC: 0.26 vs 0.17 per 100,000 person-years, <em>P</em> = .23), regardless of ART use.</li> </ul> <ul class="body"> <li>In contrast, the incidence of MACE was significantly higher in MASLD with vs without HIV (5.18 vs 4.48 per 100 person-years, <em>P</em> = .03). The incidence also was higher in patients with MASLD and HIV who were not on ART compared with those on ART (5.83 vs 4.7 per 100 person-years, <em>P</em> = .07).</li> </ul> <ul class="body"> <li>Compared with MASLD without HIV, the overall 5-year survival was significantly lower in MASLD with HIV (91.3% vs 85.7%). In MASLD with HIV, receipt of ART was associated with a significantly higher 5-year survival than no ART (87.4% vs 81.6%).</li> </ul> <h2>IN PRACTICE:</h2> <p>“Ensuring timely and appropriate initiation of HIV treatment is critical in patients with MASLD who have concurrent HIV infection, as well as optimizing metabolic comorbidities that may also contribute to increased risks of CVD and increased mortality,” the authors wrote.</p> <h2>SOURCE:</h2> <p>The study, led by Robert J. Wong, MD, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, was <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://journals.lww.com/ajg/pages/articleviewer.aspx?year=9900&amp;issue=00000&amp;article=01063&amp;type=Abstract">published online</a></span> in the <em>American Journal of Gastroenterology</em>.</p> <h2>LIMITATIONS:</h2> <p>The study cohort consisted predominantly of older men, which may limit generalizability to women and younger populations. Metabolic comorbidities are more common in veterans compared with the general population, potentially affecting the generalizability of the CVD risk findings.</p> <h2>DISCLOSURES:</h2> <p>The study was supported by an investigator-initiated research grant from Theratechnologies. Wong has received funding for his institution from Gilead Sciences, Exact Sciences, and Durect Corporation and has served as a consultant for Gilead Sciences.<br/><br/></p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/metabolic-dysfunction-associated-steatotic-liver-disease-2024a1000849?src=">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <ul class="body"> <li>Compared with MASLD without HIV, the overall 5-year survival was significantly lower in MASLD with HIV, likely becuase of comorbidities.</li> </ul> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Is It Time to Stop Using the Term AIDS?

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 04/15/2024 - 17:25

The acronym AIDS is redundant, loaded with stigma, and potentially harmful, according to a group of specialists who suggest replacing the term with “advanced HIV.”

The acronym AIDS has “outlived its usefulness and we should transition toward a more descriptive language that aligns with contemporary challenges in HIV,” reports Isaac Núñez, MD, from the Department of Medical Education, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán in Mexico City, Mexico, and colleagues.

People generally associate the acronym AIDS with patients who have no available treatment options and a short life expectancy, said Dr. Núñez. That mischaracterization may affect treatment decisions by patients and clinicians and could result in exaggerated infection-control measures.

Using the HIV/AIDS combination erroneously implies equivalence and can mislead the public and clinicians, which the authors explained in their Viewpoint article published in The Lancet HIV.
 

Original Reason for the Term

AIDS, which stands for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, was coined in 1982 by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to name a disease with an unknown cause that affected people with weakened cell-mediated immunity.

“When HIV was found to be the cause of the disease (labeled HIV in 1986), the term AIDS, strictly speaking, became unnecessary,” Dr. Núñez said.

AIDS was originally intended as a case definition for surveillance purposes, and treatment decisions were based on whether patients met the case definition for AIDS, he pointed out.

“The fact that some people still do so in this day and age shows that this is not only unhelpful, but misleading and even harmful,” he noted. Without the label AIDS, clinicians can focus on whether and for how long people have been on treatment, whether they recently switched treatment, and other factors that will help determine appropriate care.
 

Some Organizations Removed AIDS From Their Names

Some organizations have already removed AIDS from their names. For example, the International AIDS Society–USA, which issues guidelines on antiretroviral treatment, changed its name to the International Antiviral Society–USA. 

In 2017, the name of AIDS.gov was changed to HIV.gov. In its explanation, the group wrote, “Today, people with HIV who are diagnosed early, linked to care, start antiretroviral therapy, and take it as prescribed can achieve life-long viral suppression that prevents HIV infection from progressing to AIDS.”

A different view on the term AIDS comes from Greg Millett, MPH, vice president at the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and the director of amfAR’s Public Policy Office. 

Although he believes that AIDS is an anachronistic term, as a researcher for more than 30 years in the field; a policy director in Washington; a scientist; and a person living with HIV, “it feels like a distinction without a difference. At least from where I sit, there are far more pressing issues that we’re facing as an HIV community,” Millett shared. 

For instance, “we’re seeing that global, as well as domestic, HIV funding is in, by far, the most precarious position that I’ve ever seen in the field. Calling it AIDS or HIV makes no difference in trying to alleviate that jeopardy,” he said.

Millett also said that the stigma and persecution and, in some cases, criminalization of people living with HIV or AIDS is pervasive and won’t go away with a name change, which is a point the authors also acknowledged.

“We need to focus on the social determinants of health,” he said. “That is the thing that is going to move the needle among people living with HIV, not nomenclature.”

Millett likens the argument to the one between Black and African American. “As a Black American, I remember fierce debates in the early ‘90s over whether we should be called African Americans or Blacks. Some argued that African American carried greater dignity and would help with self-esteem and address inequities by emphasizing that we are American. Many others said that it doesn’t make a difference.”

“It is clear that being called African American has not fixed intractable issues like poverty, structural racism, or inequities in incarceration,” he pointed out.
 

 

 

End the Epidemic, Not the Name 

The authors misinterpret the impact of the term on stigma, said James W. Curran, MD, MPH, dean emeritus of the Rollins School of Public Health and professor of epidemiology and global health at Emory University, both in Atlanta, Georgia. The term AIDS “is more likely attributed to the fatal nature of the infection itself,” without treatment, he explained, and the mode of transmission, exacerbated by homophobia.

“The term has been in widespread use for 40 years and recognized worldwide,” Dr. Curran, who led the nation’s efforts in the battle against HIV and AIDS at the CDC for 15 years before joining Emory as dean, said.

He also worries about the continued trajectory of lives lost: “Over 35 million people worldwide have perished from HIV/AIDS, including over 500,000 per year now.”

Meanwhile, “global programs such as PEPFAR [the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief] are under fire and threatened by Congress as no longer necessary. Removing AIDS from the terminology may add to confusion,” making people think “that the epidemic is over,” he said.

Although the authors argue that keeping the term may cause harm, eliminating it might worsen a different kind of harm. “There is a risk that abolishing the term will further de-emphasize the importance of the problem, with no significant impact on stigma,” Dr. Curran added.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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The acronym AIDS is redundant, loaded with stigma, and potentially harmful, according to a group of specialists who suggest replacing the term with “advanced HIV.”

The acronym AIDS has “outlived its usefulness and we should transition toward a more descriptive language that aligns with contemporary challenges in HIV,” reports Isaac Núñez, MD, from the Department of Medical Education, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán in Mexico City, Mexico, and colleagues.

People generally associate the acronym AIDS with patients who have no available treatment options and a short life expectancy, said Dr. Núñez. That mischaracterization may affect treatment decisions by patients and clinicians and could result in exaggerated infection-control measures.

Using the HIV/AIDS combination erroneously implies equivalence and can mislead the public and clinicians, which the authors explained in their Viewpoint article published in The Lancet HIV.
 

Original Reason for the Term

AIDS, which stands for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, was coined in 1982 by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to name a disease with an unknown cause that affected people with weakened cell-mediated immunity.

“When HIV was found to be the cause of the disease (labeled HIV in 1986), the term AIDS, strictly speaking, became unnecessary,” Dr. Núñez said.

AIDS was originally intended as a case definition for surveillance purposes, and treatment decisions were based on whether patients met the case definition for AIDS, he pointed out.

“The fact that some people still do so in this day and age shows that this is not only unhelpful, but misleading and even harmful,” he noted. Without the label AIDS, clinicians can focus on whether and for how long people have been on treatment, whether they recently switched treatment, and other factors that will help determine appropriate care.
 

Some Organizations Removed AIDS From Their Names

Some organizations have already removed AIDS from their names. For example, the International AIDS Society–USA, which issues guidelines on antiretroviral treatment, changed its name to the International Antiviral Society–USA. 

In 2017, the name of AIDS.gov was changed to HIV.gov. In its explanation, the group wrote, “Today, people with HIV who are diagnosed early, linked to care, start antiretroviral therapy, and take it as prescribed can achieve life-long viral suppression that prevents HIV infection from progressing to AIDS.”

A different view on the term AIDS comes from Greg Millett, MPH, vice president at the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and the director of amfAR’s Public Policy Office. 

Although he believes that AIDS is an anachronistic term, as a researcher for more than 30 years in the field; a policy director in Washington; a scientist; and a person living with HIV, “it feels like a distinction without a difference. At least from where I sit, there are far more pressing issues that we’re facing as an HIV community,” Millett shared. 

For instance, “we’re seeing that global, as well as domestic, HIV funding is in, by far, the most precarious position that I’ve ever seen in the field. Calling it AIDS or HIV makes no difference in trying to alleviate that jeopardy,” he said.

Millett also said that the stigma and persecution and, in some cases, criminalization of people living with HIV or AIDS is pervasive and won’t go away with a name change, which is a point the authors also acknowledged.

“We need to focus on the social determinants of health,” he said. “That is the thing that is going to move the needle among people living with HIV, not nomenclature.”

Millett likens the argument to the one between Black and African American. “As a Black American, I remember fierce debates in the early ‘90s over whether we should be called African Americans or Blacks. Some argued that African American carried greater dignity and would help with self-esteem and address inequities by emphasizing that we are American. Many others said that it doesn’t make a difference.”

“It is clear that being called African American has not fixed intractable issues like poverty, structural racism, or inequities in incarceration,” he pointed out.
 

 

 

End the Epidemic, Not the Name 

The authors misinterpret the impact of the term on stigma, said James W. Curran, MD, MPH, dean emeritus of the Rollins School of Public Health and professor of epidemiology and global health at Emory University, both in Atlanta, Georgia. The term AIDS “is more likely attributed to the fatal nature of the infection itself,” without treatment, he explained, and the mode of transmission, exacerbated by homophobia.

“The term has been in widespread use for 40 years and recognized worldwide,” Dr. Curran, who led the nation’s efforts in the battle against HIV and AIDS at the CDC for 15 years before joining Emory as dean, said.

He also worries about the continued trajectory of lives lost: “Over 35 million people worldwide have perished from HIV/AIDS, including over 500,000 per year now.”

Meanwhile, “global programs such as PEPFAR [the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief] are under fire and threatened by Congress as no longer necessary. Removing AIDS from the terminology may add to confusion,” making people think “that the epidemic is over,” he said.

Although the authors argue that keeping the term may cause harm, eliminating it might worsen a different kind of harm. “There is a risk that abolishing the term will further de-emphasize the importance of the problem, with no significant impact on stigma,” Dr. Curran added.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

The acronym AIDS is redundant, loaded with stigma, and potentially harmful, according to a group of specialists who suggest replacing the term with “advanced HIV.”

The acronym AIDS has “outlived its usefulness and we should transition toward a more descriptive language that aligns with contemporary challenges in HIV,” reports Isaac Núñez, MD, from the Department of Medical Education, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán in Mexico City, Mexico, and colleagues.

People generally associate the acronym AIDS with patients who have no available treatment options and a short life expectancy, said Dr. Núñez. That mischaracterization may affect treatment decisions by patients and clinicians and could result in exaggerated infection-control measures.

Using the HIV/AIDS combination erroneously implies equivalence and can mislead the public and clinicians, which the authors explained in their Viewpoint article published in The Lancet HIV.
 

Original Reason for the Term

AIDS, which stands for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, was coined in 1982 by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to name a disease with an unknown cause that affected people with weakened cell-mediated immunity.

“When HIV was found to be the cause of the disease (labeled HIV in 1986), the term AIDS, strictly speaking, became unnecessary,” Dr. Núñez said.

AIDS was originally intended as a case definition for surveillance purposes, and treatment decisions were based on whether patients met the case definition for AIDS, he pointed out.

“The fact that some people still do so in this day and age shows that this is not only unhelpful, but misleading and even harmful,” he noted. Without the label AIDS, clinicians can focus on whether and for how long people have been on treatment, whether they recently switched treatment, and other factors that will help determine appropriate care.
 

Some Organizations Removed AIDS From Their Names

Some organizations have already removed AIDS from their names. For example, the International AIDS Society–USA, which issues guidelines on antiretroviral treatment, changed its name to the International Antiviral Society–USA. 

In 2017, the name of AIDS.gov was changed to HIV.gov. In its explanation, the group wrote, “Today, people with HIV who are diagnosed early, linked to care, start antiretroviral therapy, and take it as prescribed can achieve life-long viral suppression that prevents HIV infection from progressing to AIDS.”

A different view on the term AIDS comes from Greg Millett, MPH, vice president at the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and the director of amfAR’s Public Policy Office. 

Although he believes that AIDS is an anachronistic term, as a researcher for more than 30 years in the field; a policy director in Washington; a scientist; and a person living with HIV, “it feels like a distinction without a difference. At least from where I sit, there are far more pressing issues that we’re facing as an HIV community,” Millett shared. 

For instance, “we’re seeing that global, as well as domestic, HIV funding is in, by far, the most precarious position that I’ve ever seen in the field. Calling it AIDS or HIV makes no difference in trying to alleviate that jeopardy,” he said.

Millett also said that the stigma and persecution and, in some cases, criminalization of people living with HIV or AIDS is pervasive and won’t go away with a name change, which is a point the authors also acknowledged.

“We need to focus on the social determinants of health,” he said. “That is the thing that is going to move the needle among people living with HIV, not nomenclature.”

Millett likens the argument to the one between Black and African American. “As a Black American, I remember fierce debates in the early ‘90s over whether we should be called African Americans or Blacks. Some argued that African American carried greater dignity and would help with self-esteem and address inequities by emphasizing that we are American. Many others said that it doesn’t make a difference.”

“It is clear that being called African American has not fixed intractable issues like poverty, structural racism, or inequities in incarceration,” he pointed out.
 

 

 

End the Epidemic, Not the Name 

The authors misinterpret the impact of the term on stigma, said James W. Curran, MD, MPH, dean emeritus of the Rollins School of Public Health and professor of epidemiology and global health at Emory University, both in Atlanta, Georgia. The term AIDS “is more likely attributed to the fatal nature of the infection itself,” without treatment, he explained, and the mode of transmission, exacerbated by homophobia.

“The term has been in widespread use for 40 years and recognized worldwide,” Dr. Curran, who led the nation’s efforts in the battle against HIV and AIDS at the CDC for 15 years before joining Emory as dean, said.

He also worries about the continued trajectory of lives lost: “Over 35 million people worldwide have perished from HIV/AIDS, including over 500,000 per year now.”

Meanwhile, “global programs such as PEPFAR [the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief] are under fire and threatened by Congress as no longer necessary. Removing AIDS from the terminology may add to confusion,” making people think “that the epidemic is over,” he said.

Although the authors argue that keeping the term may cause harm, eliminating it might worsen a different kind of harm. “There is a risk that abolishing the term will further de-emphasize the importance of the problem, with no significant impact on stigma,” Dr. Curran added.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>The acronym AIDS has “outlived its usefulness and we should transition toward a more descriptive language that aligns with contemporary challenges in HIV,” repo</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>AIDS, a term that originated in the early 1980s, does not reflect the current treatment approach, experts suggest.</teaser> <title>Is It Time to Stop Using the Term AIDS?</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>idprac</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>21</term> <term>15</term> <term canonical="true">20</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term canonical="true">318</term> <term>231</term> <term>234</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Is It Time to Stop Using the Term AIDS?</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>The acronym AIDS is redundant, loaded with stigma, and potentially harmful, according to a group of specialists who suggest replacing the term with “advanced HIV.”</p> <p><span class="tag metaDescription">The acronym AIDS has “outlived its usefulness and we should transition toward a more descriptive language that aligns with contemporary challenges in HIV,” reports Isaac Núñez, MD, from the Department of Medical Education, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán in Mexico City,</span> Mexico, and colleagues.<br/><br/>People generally associate the acronym AIDS with patients who have no available treatment options and a short life expectancy, said Dr. Núñez. That mischaracterization may affect treatment decisions by patients and clinicians and could result in exaggerated infection-control measures.<br/><br/>Using the HIV/AIDS combination erroneously implies equivalence and can mislead the public and clinicians, which the authors explained in their Viewpoint article <a href="https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanhiv/article/PIIS2352-3018(23)00331-4/abstract">published</a> in <em>The Lancet HIV</em>.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Original Reason for the Term</h2> <p>AIDS, which stands for <a href="https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/965086-overview">acquired immunodeficiency syndrome</a>, was coined in 1982 by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to name a disease with an unknown cause that affected people with weakened cell-mediated immunity.</p> <p>“When HIV was found to be the cause of the disease (labeled HIV in 1986), the term AIDS, strictly speaking, became unnecessary,” Dr. Núñez said.<br/><br/>AIDS was originally intended as a case definition for surveillance purposes, and treatment decisions were based on whether patients met the case definition for AIDS, he pointed out.<br/><br/>“The fact that some people still do so in this day and age shows that this is not only unhelpful, but misleading and even harmful,” he noted. Without the label AIDS, clinicians can focus on whether and for how long people have been on treatment, whether they recently switched treatment, and other factors that will help determine appropriate care.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Some Organizations Removed AIDS From Their Names</h2> <p>Some organizations have already removed AIDS from their names. For example, the International AIDS Society–USA, which issues guidelines on antiretroviral treatment, changed its name to the International Antiviral Society–USA. </p> <p>In 2017, the name of AIDS.gov was changed to <a href="https://www.hiv.gov/blog/we-are-changing-our-name-to-hiv-gov">HIV.gov</a>. In its explanation, the group wrote, “Today, people with HIV who are diagnosed early, linked to care, start antiretroviral therapy, and take it as prescribed can achieve life-long viral suppression that prevents <a href="https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/211316-overview">HIV infection</a> from progressing to AIDS.”<br/><br/>A different view on the term AIDS comes from Greg Millett, MPH, vice president at the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) and the director of amfAR’s Public Policy Office. <br/><br/>Although he believes that AIDS is an anachronistic term, as a researcher for more than 30 years in the field; a policy director in Washington; a scientist; and a person living with HIV, “it feels like a distinction without a difference. At least from where I sit, there are far more pressing issues that we’re facing as an HIV community,” Millett shared. <br/><br/>For instance, “we’re seeing that global, as well as domestic, HIV funding is in, by far, the most precarious position that I’ve ever seen in the field. Calling it AIDS or HIV makes no difference in trying to alleviate that jeopardy,” he said.<br/><br/>Millett also said that the stigma and persecution and, in some cases, criminalization of people living with HIV or AIDS is pervasive and won’t go away with a name change, which is a point the authors also acknowledged.<br/><br/>“We need to focus on the social determinants of health,” he said. “That is the thing that is going to move the needle among people living with HIV, not nomenclature.”<br/><br/>Millett likens the argument to the one between Black and African American. “As a Black American, I remember fierce debates in the early ‘90s over whether we should be called African Americans or Blacks. Some argued that African American carried greater dignity and would help with self-esteem and address inequities by emphasizing that we are American. Many others said that it doesn’t make a difference.”<br/><br/>“It is clear that being called African American has not fixed intractable issues like poverty, structural racism, or inequities in incarceration,” he pointed out.<br/><br/></p> <h2>End the Epidemic, Not the Name </h2> <p>The authors misinterpret the impact of the term on stigma, said James W. Curran, MD, MPH, dean emeritus of the Rollins School of Public Health and professor of epidemiology and global health at Emory University, both in Atlanta, Georgia. The term AIDS “is more likely attributed to the fatal nature of the infection itself,” without treatment, he explained, and the mode of transmission, exacerbated by homophobia.</p> <p>“The term has been in widespread use for 40 years and recognized worldwide,” Dr. Curran, who led the nation’s efforts in the battle against HIV and AIDS at the CDC for 15 years before joining Emory as dean, said.<br/><br/>He also worries about the continued trajectory of lives lost: “Over 35 million people worldwide have perished from HIV/AIDS, including over 500,000 per year now.”<br/><br/>Meanwhile, “global programs such as <a href="https://www.state.gov/pepfar/">PEPFAR</a> [the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief] are under fire and threatened by Congress as no longer necessary. Removing AIDS from the terminology may add to confusion,” making people think “that the epidemic is over,” he said.<br/><br/>Although the authors argue that keeping the term may cause harm, eliminating it might worsen a different kind of harm. “There is a risk that abolishing the term will further de-emphasize the importance of the problem, with no significant impact on stigma,” Dr. Curran added.<span class="end"/></p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/time-stop-using-term-aids-2024a10006rd">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Next Gen Smart Pills Could Transform Personalized Care

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Tue, 03/19/2024 - 15:31

On a November morning in 2022, James Messenger opened wide and swallowed a capsule like no other.

Messenger was no stranger to taking pills.

He’d first experimented with prescription opioids as a teenager in Morgantown, West Virginia, battled addiction on-and-off since, and known more than 70 people who had fatally overdosed. So, when asked to test a new “smart pill” that could detect an overdose in progress and call for help, he didn’t hesitate to join the study.

“I’ve lost pretty much every good friend I’ve ever had to this,” said Mr. Messenger. “This pill could save a lot of lives.”

The new Vitals Monitoring capsule he tested is just one example in a growing effort to radically rethink what the humble pill is capable of.

As far back as 1965, scientists introduced the Heidelberg capsule, an electronic pill that measured acidity from within the gut. In 1994, the University of Buffalo coined the term “smart pill” with a device promising to ferry medicine to a precise spot in the intestine, “like the tiny ship in the film Fantastic Voyage.” And in 2001, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first video capsule endoscope, a miniature-camera-toting pill that enabled noninvasive imaging of the small intestine.

Despite these milestones, the smart pill revolution has been slow to catch on due to cost, technological limitations, and some resistance among clinicians and patients.

But now, nearly 300 iterations are in various stages of development, according to a 2022 analysis. Advances in materials, imaging, and artificial intelligence (AI) are helping address everything from sleep apnea to HIV/AIDS to gut disorders via real-time tracking and real-time help.

“These technologies could enable us to shift the paradigm from ‘Let’s wait until the patient comes to us and find out what happened’ to ‘Let’s see how things are changing in real time, intervene now, and personalize that intervention,’ ” said Peter Chai, MD, associate professor of emergency medicine and health technology researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
 

Tracking Vitals From the Inside Out

Already, overdose-reversal agents like naloxone are saving lives. But more than 60% of overdoses occur when no one is around to administer them.

“While we need to focus on treatment, we also need to come up with more acute ways to save individuals when treatment doesn’t work or relapse occurs,” said James J. Mahoney III, PhD, director of addictions research at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute at West Virginia University (WVU), Morgantown.

Enter Celero Systems, a Massachusetts-based digital health company that has developed a vitamin-sized capsule packed with tiny sensors, microprocessors, and a radio antenna. It can measure breathing, heart rate, and core temperature — all from deep within the gut.

Respiratory distress is a hallmark early sign of an overdose. But it can be hard to monitor from a distance, especially in populations without access to a charged smartwatch.

Dr. Mahoney imagines a day when patients at risk could be given a weekly pill like Celero’s. If their respiratory rate drops below a dangerous level, it could alert loved ones or, better yet, release an overdose-reversal drug.

“It’s early days,” stressed Dr. Mahoney, whose team has been conducting pilot tests of the pill. “But initial data look promising.”

For one study, published in the journal Device in November 2023, the research team administered an overdose of fentanyl to anesthetized pigs with the pill in their stomachs. The capsule was able to detect respiratory depression within a minute and alert researchers via their laptop in time to step in.

When they gave the pill to 10 volunteers undergoing sleep studies at WVU, they found it could detect respiration rate with an accuracy of 93% compared with external monitoring devices — a feature that could also help diagnose sleep apnea or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease without expensive, intrusive tests.

Accuracy for heart rate was nearly 97%.

In another yet-to-be published trial, Dr. Mahoney tested the device with 10 volunteers in a residential treatment center to determine how well it could be tolerated.

Among the participants was Mr. Messenger, who said the thought of being tracked didn’t bother him.

“It was simple — just like taking a multivitamin,” said Mr. Messenger, now 34, sober, and working as a peer recovery support specialist at a hospital in his hometown. “It could be a great way to keep people alive long enough for them to get their head wrapped around the idea of treatment.”
 

 

 

Boosting Medication Adherence

At Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dr. Chai is experimenting with a different smart pill — one he believes could help curb the ongoing HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Developed by Florida-based etectRx, the ID-Cap consists of a gelatin capsule embedded with a tiny radiofrequency transmitter, similar to the kind in retail antitheft devices. The capsule can be filled with a variety of medications. When swallowed, stomach acid dissolves the gel and activates the transmitter, which sends a signal to a receiver on a smartwatch, smartphone, or wall-mounted reader to confirm the medication was taken. If it isn’t, the patient’s smartphone or smart speaker might nudge them with a reminder or a family member might be notified.

In recent trials of men at a high risk for HIV, the system improved adherence to the once-daily prevention regimen pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by double digits.

“PrEP is almost 99% effective in preventing HIV, but you have to take it,” said Dr. Chai, who led the trials. “That seems like such a simple thing, but anyone who is chronically on medication can tell you just how difficult it can be.”

The pill is not the first designed to improve adherence. In 2017, the FDA approved the first digital ingestion tracking system, Abilify MyCite, for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But its maker, Proteus Digital Health, filed for bankruptcy in 2020 after struggling to recruit patients willing to be tracked. (Some expressed privacy concerns. Others disliked the uncomfortable patch that received and forwarded the signal.)

More recent designs have been streamlined to ditch the patch, said etectRx senior vice president of operations Chris Carnes, PhD. And the cost of making a pill this kind of “smart” has come down to about a dollar.

So far, said Dr. Chai, in the patients he’s worked with, perceived benefits generally outweigh privacy concerns.

Studies are now underway in patients with heart disease and tuberculosis, and the company hopes to move into the aging and memory care space where medication-adherence is a serious problem.

“For us, or any company in this space, to succeed, you have to have a strong business case,” said Dr. Carnes. “If family members can keep their loved ones at home a little longer at an additional cost of $30 a month, that’s a no-brainer.”
 

Pillcams 2.0

Twenty-three years ago, the first video capsule endoscopy made it possible to image the small intestine via a tiny camera you swallow.

Such “pillcams” offered a more patient-friendly way to diagnose small bowel disorders, such as gastrointestinal bleeding and Crohn’s disease. Rather than undergoing sedation or anesthesia, as required during tube-based endoscopy, patients can go about their day as the pill painlessly passes through their gastrointestinal (GI) tract, capturing and recording data and images.

But the pills have their downsides.

Because they move passively, driven by movement in the intestine, they can miss trouble spots. Their ability to image the esophagus, stomach, and colon has proven limited. And unlike other procedures, like colonoscopy, they can’t intervene with therapy, like removing polyps.

The pillcam “had so much promise, to sort of revolutionize endoscopy, but it never really got the adoption that it seemed like it might,” said Andrew Meltzer, MD, professor of emergency medicine at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington.

That could soon change, he said, thanks to advances in locomotion and AI.

In a recent study of 40 patients, Dr. Meltzer tested a new magnetically controlled capsule endoscopy. Standing at a patient’s side, he could use a joystick to steer the pill around the stomach, capturing images in real time.

The pilot study, published in June 2023, found that the pill clearly identified six key stomach landmarks accurately 95% of the time and didn’t miss any lesions caught with traditional endoscopy. Notably, 80% of the patients preferred the pillcam over the tube.

“They are awake. They can go to work as soon as they leave. And it’s easy for them to tolerate,” Dr. Meltzer said.

More research is necessary, but Dr. Meltzer believes the technology could be particularly useful in the emergency department, allowing doctors to rule out high-risk bleeds in the stomach on the spot without admitting patients unnecessarily or making them return for a traditional scope.

“It has the potential to increase screening and provide more cost-effective care in emergencies,” he said.

It could also be useful in the telemedicine space, allowing a doctor to “drive” the pill from afar to diagnose a distant patient.

Someday, AI could enable the capsule to drive itself, so a doctor could merely press a button and wait. Or it could be adapted to treat what it finds, like administering a drug or cauterizing a bleed.

“If we can come up with a Mars rover which can explore other planets, we should be able to have something that can explore the stomach remotely,” Dr. Meltzer said.
 

 

 

Swallowing the Future

At the California Institute of Technology, researchers have developed a “location-aware” smart pill that uses magnetic fields to help pinpoint its location in the twists and turns of intestines. This could be useful for monitoring food in the GI tract to determine why things aren’t moving.

Other researchers are using AI models to enhance the transmission of video from inside the body and reduce the time it takes to interpret images.

One group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed a vibrating weight loss capsule designed to stimulate receptors in the gut to signal the brain that the person is full.

Not everyone is a fan of the smart-pill revolution. Some critics have raised concerns about privacy. Others fear that doctors risk yielding too much power to technology. Even those who are excited about the pills’ possibilities temper their optimism with caution.

None of these smart pills have gone mainstream yet in clinical practice, said Vivek Kaul, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, and secretary general of the World Gastroenterology Organization.

Clinical validation, accessibility, and insurance coverage “will be critical in shaping their role,” he said. “But overall, it would be fair to state that this technology has come of age and the future is bright.”
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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On a November morning in 2022, James Messenger opened wide and swallowed a capsule like no other.

Messenger was no stranger to taking pills.

He’d first experimented with prescription opioids as a teenager in Morgantown, West Virginia, battled addiction on-and-off since, and known more than 70 people who had fatally overdosed. So, when asked to test a new “smart pill” that could detect an overdose in progress and call for help, he didn’t hesitate to join the study.

“I’ve lost pretty much every good friend I’ve ever had to this,” said Mr. Messenger. “This pill could save a lot of lives.”

The new Vitals Monitoring capsule he tested is just one example in a growing effort to radically rethink what the humble pill is capable of.

As far back as 1965, scientists introduced the Heidelberg capsule, an electronic pill that measured acidity from within the gut. In 1994, the University of Buffalo coined the term “smart pill” with a device promising to ferry medicine to a precise spot in the intestine, “like the tiny ship in the film Fantastic Voyage.” And in 2001, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first video capsule endoscope, a miniature-camera-toting pill that enabled noninvasive imaging of the small intestine.

Despite these milestones, the smart pill revolution has been slow to catch on due to cost, technological limitations, and some resistance among clinicians and patients.

But now, nearly 300 iterations are in various stages of development, according to a 2022 analysis. Advances in materials, imaging, and artificial intelligence (AI) are helping address everything from sleep apnea to HIV/AIDS to gut disorders via real-time tracking and real-time help.

“These technologies could enable us to shift the paradigm from ‘Let’s wait until the patient comes to us and find out what happened’ to ‘Let’s see how things are changing in real time, intervene now, and personalize that intervention,’ ” said Peter Chai, MD, associate professor of emergency medicine and health technology researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
 

Tracking Vitals From the Inside Out

Already, overdose-reversal agents like naloxone are saving lives. But more than 60% of overdoses occur when no one is around to administer them.

“While we need to focus on treatment, we also need to come up with more acute ways to save individuals when treatment doesn’t work or relapse occurs,” said James J. Mahoney III, PhD, director of addictions research at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute at West Virginia University (WVU), Morgantown.

Enter Celero Systems, a Massachusetts-based digital health company that has developed a vitamin-sized capsule packed with tiny sensors, microprocessors, and a radio antenna. It can measure breathing, heart rate, and core temperature — all from deep within the gut.

Respiratory distress is a hallmark early sign of an overdose. But it can be hard to monitor from a distance, especially in populations without access to a charged smartwatch.

Dr. Mahoney imagines a day when patients at risk could be given a weekly pill like Celero’s. If their respiratory rate drops below a dangerous level, it could alert loved ones or, better yet, release an overdose-reversal drug.

“It’s early days,” stressed Dr. Mahoney, whose team has been conducting pilot tests of the pill. “But initial data look promising.”

For one study, published in the journal Device in November 2023, the research team administered an overdose of fentanyl to anesthetized pigs with the pill in their stomachs. The capsule was able to detect respiratory depression within a minute and alert researchers via their laptop in time to step in.

When they gave the pill to 10 volunteers undergoing sleep studies at WVU, they found it could detect respiration rate with an accuracy of 93% compared with external monitoring devices — a feature that could also help diagnose sleep apnea or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease without expensive, intrusive tests.

Accuracy for heart rate was nearly 97%.

In another yet-to-be published trial, Dr. Mahoney tested the device with 10 volunteers in a residential treatment center to determine how well it could be tolerated.

Among the participants was Mr. Messenger, who said the thought of being tracked didn’t bother him.

“It was simple — just like taking a multivitamin,” said Mr. Messenger, now 34, sober, and working as a peer recovery support specialist at a hospital in his hometown. “It could be a great way to keep people alive long enough for them to get their head wrapped around the idea of treatment.”
 

 

 

Boosting Medication Adherence

At Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dr. Chai is experimenting with a different smart pill — one he believes could help curb the ongoing HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Developed by Florida-based etectRx, the ID-Cap consists of a gelatin capsule embedded with a tiny radiofrequency transmitter, similar to the kind in retail antitheft devices. The capsule can be filled with a variety of medications. When swallowed, stomach acid dissolves the gel and activates the transmitter, which sends a signal to a receiver on a smartwatch, smartphone, or wall-mounted reader to confirm the medication was taken. If it isn’t, the patient’s smartphone or smart speaker might nudge them with a reminder or a family member might be notified.

In recent trials of men at a high risk for HIV, the system improved adherence to the once-daily prevention regimen pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by double digits.

“PrEP is almost 99% effective in preventing HIV, but you have to take it,” said Dr. Chai, who led the trials. “That seems like such a simple thing, but anyone who is chronically on medication can tell you just how difficult it can be.”

The pill is not the first designed to improve adherence. In 2017, the FDA approved the first digital ingestion tracking system, Abilify MyCite, for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But its maker, Proteus Digital Health, filed for bankruptcy in 2020 after struggling to recruit patients willing to be tracked. (Some expressed privacy concerns. Others disliked the uncomfortable patch that received and forwarded the signal.)

More recent designs have been streamlined to ditch the patch, said etectRx senior vice president of operations Chris Carnes, PhD. And the cost of making a pill this kind of “smart” has come down to about a dollar.

So far, said Dr. Chai, in the patients he’s worked with, perceived benefits generally outweigh privacy concerns.

Studies are now underway in patients with heart disease and tuberculosis, and the company hopes to move into the aging and memory care space where medication-adherence is a serious problem.

“For us, or any company in this space, to succeed, you have to have a strong business case,” said Dr. Carnes. “If family members can keep their loved ones at home a little longer at an additional cost of $30 a month, that’s a no-brainer.”
 

Pillcams 2.0

Twenty-three years ago, the first video capsule endoscopy made it possible to image the small intestine via a tiny camera you swallow.

Such “pillcams” offered a more patient-friendly way to diagnose small bowel disorders, such as gastrointestinal bleeding and Crohn’s disease. Rather than undergoing sedation or anesthesia, as required during tube-based endoscopy, patients can go about their day as the pill painlessly passes through their gastrointestinal (GI) tract, capturing and recording data and images.

But the pills have their downsides.

Because they move passively, driven by movement in the intestine, they can miss trouble spots. Their ability to image the esophagus, stomach, and colon has proven limited. And unlike other procedures, like colonoscopy, they can’t intervene with therapy, like removing polyps.

The pillcam “had so much promise, to sort of revolutionize endoscopy, but it never really got the adoption that it seemed like it might,” said Andrew Meltzer, MD, professor of emergency medicine at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington.

That could soon change, he said, thanks to advances in locomotion and AI.

In a recent study of 40 patients, Dr. Meltzer tested a new magnetically controlled capsule endoscopy. Standing at a patient’s side, he could use a joystick to steer the pill around the stomach, capturing images in real time.

The pilot study, published in June 2023, found that the pill clearly identified six key stomach landmarks accurately 95% of the time and didn’t miss any lesions caught with traditional endoscopy. Notably, 80% of the patients preferred the pillcam over the tube.

“They are awake. They can go to work as soon as they leave. And it’s easy for them to tolerate,” Dr. Meltzer said.

More research is necessary, but Dr. Meltzer believes the technology could be particularly useful in the emergency department, allowing doctors to rule out high-risk bleeds in the stomach on the spot without admitting patients unnecessarily or making them return for a traditional scope.

“It has the potential to increase screening and provide more cost-effective care in emergencies,” he said.

It could also be useful in the telemedicine space, allowing a doctor to “drive” the pill from afar to diagnose a distant patient.

Someday, AI could enable the capsule to drive itself, so a doctor could merely press a button and wait. Or it could be adapted to treat what it finds, like administering a drug or cauterizing a bleed.

“If we can come up with a Mars rover which can explore other planets, we should be able to have something that can explore the stomach remotely,” Dr. Meltzer said.
 

 

 

Swallowing the Future

At the California Institute of Technology, researchers have developed a “location-aware” smart pill that uses magnetic fields to help pinpoint its location in the twists and turns of intestines. This could be useful for monitoring food in the GI tract to determine why things aren’t moving.

Other researchers are using AI models to enhance the transmission of video from inside the body and reduce the time it takes to interpret images.

One group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed a vibrating weight loss capsule designed to stimulate receptors in the gut to signal the brain that the person is full.

Not everyone is a fan of the smart-pill revolution. Some critics have raised concerns about privacy. Others fear that doctors risk yielding too much power to technology. Even those who are excited about the pills’ possibilities temper their optimism with caution.

None of these smart pills have gone mainstream yet in clinical practice, said Vivek Kaul, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, and secretary general of the World Gastroenterology Organization.

Clinical validation, accessibility, and insurance coverage “will be critical in shaping their role,” he said. “But overall, it would be fair to state that this technology has come of age and the future is bright.”
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

On a November morning in 2022, James Messenger opened wide and swallowed a capsule like no other.

Messenger was no stranger to taking pills.

He’d first experimented with prescription opioids as a teenager in Morgantown, West Virginia, battled addiction on-and-off since, and known more than 70 people who had fatally overdosed. So, when asked to test a new “smart pill” that could detect an overdose in progress and call for help, he didn’t hesitate to join the study.

“I’ve lost pretty much every good friend I’ve ever had to this,” said Mr. Messenger. “This pill could save a lot of lives.”

The new Vitals Monitoring capsule he tested is just one example in a growing effort to radically rethink what the humble pill is capable of.

As far back as 1965, scientists introduced the Heidelberg capsule, an electronic pill that measured acidity from within the gut. In 1994, the University of Buffalo coined the term “smart pill” with a device promising to ferry medicine to a precise spot in the intestine, “like the tiny ship in the film Fantastic Voyage.” And in 2001, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first video capsule endoscope, a miniature-camera-toting pill that enabled noninvasive imaging of the small intestine.

Despite these milestones, the smart pill revolution has been slow to catch on due to cost, technological limitations, and some resistance among clinicians and patients.

But now, nearly 300 iterations are in various stages of development, according to a 2022 analysis. Advances in materials, imaging, and artificial intelligence (AI) are helping address everything from sleep apnea to HIV/AIDS to gut disorders via real-time tracking and real-time help.

“These technologies could enable us to shift the paradigm from ‘Let’s wait until the patient comes to us and find out what happened’ to ‘Let’s see how things are changing in real time, intervene now, and personalize that intervention,’ ” said Peter Chai, MD, associate professor of emergency medicine and health technology researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
 

Tracking Vitals From the Inside Out

Already, overdose-reversal agents like naloxone are saving lives. But more than 60% of overdoses occur when no one is around to administer them.

“While we need to focus on treatment, we also need to come up with more acute ways to save individuals when treatment doesn’t work or relapse occurs,” said James J. Mahoney III, PhD, director of addictions research at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute at West Virginia University (WVU), Morgantown.

Enter Celero Systems, a Massachusetts-based digital health company that has developed a vitamin-sized capsule packed with tiny sensors, microprocessors, and a radio antenna. It can measure breathing, heart rate, and core temperature — all from deep within the gut.

Respiratory distress is a hallmark early sign of an overdose. But it can be hard to monitor from a distance, especially in populations without access to a charged smartwatch.

Dr. Mahoney imagines a day when patients at risk could be given a weekly pill like Celero’s. If their respiratory rate drops below a dangerous level, it could alert loved ones or, better yet, release an overdose-reversal drug.

“It’s early days,” stressed Dr. Mahoney, whose team has been conducting pilot tests of the pill. “But initial data look promising.”

For one study, published in the journal Device in November 2023, the research team administered an overdose of fentanyl to anesthetized pigs with the pill in their stomachs. The capsule was able to detect respiratory depression within a minute and alert researchers via their laptop in time to step in.

When they gave the pill to 10 volunteers undergoing sleep studies at WVU, they found it could detect respiration rate with an accuracy of 93% compared with external monitoring devices — a feature that could also help diagnose sleep apnea or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease without expensive, intrusive tests.

Accuracy for heart rate was nearly 97%.

In another yet-to-be published trial, Dr. Mahoney tested the device with 10 volunteers in a residential treatment center to determine how well it could be tolerated.

Among the participants was Mr. Messenger, who said the thought of being tracked didn’t bother him.

“It was simple — just like taking a multivitamin,” said Mr. Messenger, now 34, sober, and working as a peer recovery support specialist at a hospital in his hometown. “It could be a great way to keep people alive long enough for them to get their head wrapped around the idea of treatment.”
 

 

 

Boosting Medication Adherence

At Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dr. Chai is experimenting with a different smart pill — one he believes could help curb the ongoing HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Developed by Florida-based etectRx, the ID-Cap consists of a gelatin capsule embedded with a tiny radiofrequency transmitter, similar to the kind in retail antitheft devices. The capsule can be filled with a variety of medications. When swallowed, stomach acid dissolves the gel and activates the transmitter, which sends a signal to a receiver on a smartwatch, smartphone, or wall-mounted reader to confirm the medication was taken. If it isn’t, the patient’s smartphone or smart speaker might nudge them with a reminder or a family member might be notified.

In recent trials of men at a high risk for HIV, the system improved adherence to the once-daily prevention regimen pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by double digits.

“PrEP is almost 99% effective in preventing HIV, but you have to take it,” said Dr. Chai, who led the trials. “That seems like such a simple thing, but anyone who is chronically on medication can tell you just how difficult it can be.”

The pill is not the first designed to improve adherence. In 2017, the FDA approved the first digital ingestion tracking system, Abilify MyCite, for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But its maker, Proteus Digital Health, filed for bankruptcy in 2020 after struggling to recruit patients willing to be tracked. (Some expressed privacy concerns. Others disliked the uncomfortable patch that received and forwarded the signal.)

More recent designs have been streamlined to ditch the patch, said etectRx senior vice president of operations Chris Carnes, PhD. And the cost of making a pill this kind of “smart” has come down to about a dollar.

So far, said Dr. Chai, in the patients he’s worked with, perceived benefits generally outweigh privacy concerns.

Studies are now underway in patients with heart disease and tuberculosis, and the company hopes to move into the aging and memory care space where medication-adherence is a serious problem.

“For us, or any company in this space, to succeed, you have to have a strong business case,” said Dr. Carnes. “If family members can keep their loved ones at home a little longer at an additional cost of $30 a month, that’s a no-brainer.”
 

Pillcams 2.0

Twenty-three years ago, the first video capsule endoscopy made it possible to image the small intestine via a tiny camera you swallow.

Such “pillcams” offered a more patient-friendly way to diagnose small bowel disorders, such as gastrointestinal bleeding and Crohn’s disease. Rather than undergoing sedation or anesthesia, as required during tube-based endoscopy, patients can go about their day as the pill painlessly passes through their gastrointestinal (GI) tract, capturing and recording data and images.

But the pills have their downsides.

Because they move passively, driven by movement in the intestine, they can miss trouble spots. Their ability to image the esophagus, stomach, and colon has proven limited. And unlike other procedures, like colonoscopy, they can’t intervene with therapy, like removing polyps.

The pillcam “had so much promise, to sort of revolutionize endoscopy, but it never really got the adoption that it seemed like it might,” said Andrew Meltzer, MD, professor of emergency medicine at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington.

That could soon change, he said, thanks to advances in locomotion and AI.

In a recent study of 40 patients, Dr. Meltzer tested a new magnetically controlled capsule endoscopy. Standing at a patient’s side, he could use a joystick to steer the pill around the stomach, capturing images in real time.

The pilot study, published in June 2023, found that the pill clearly identified six key stomach landmarks accurately 95% of the time and didn’t miss any lesions caught with traditional endoscopy. Notably, 80% of the patients preferred the pillcam over the tube.

“They are awake. They can go to work as soon as they leave. And it’s easy for them to tolerate,” Dr. Meltzer said.

More research is necessary, but Dr. Meltzer believes the technology could be particularly useful in the emergency department, allowing doctors to rule out high-risk bleeds in the stomach on the spot without admitting patients unnecessarily or making them return for a traditional scope.

“It has the potential to increase screening and provide more cost-effective care in emergencies,” he said.

It could also be useful in the telemedicine space, allowing a doctor to “drive” the pill from afar to diagnose a distant patient.

Someday, AI could enable the capsule to drive itself, so a doctor could merely press a button and wait. Or it could be adapted to treat what it finds, like administering a drug or cauterizing a bleed.

“If we can come up with a Mars rover which can explore other planets, we should be able to have something that can explore the stomach remotely,” Dr. Meltzer said.
 

 

 

Swallowing the Future

At the California Institute of Technology, researchers have developed a “location-aware” smart pill that uses magnetic fields to help pinpoint its location in the twists and turns of intestines. This could be useful for monitoring food in the GI tract to determine why things aren’t moving.

Other researchers are using AI models to enhance the transmission of video from inside the body and reduce the time it takes to interpret images.

One group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed a vibrating weight loss capsule designed to stimulate receptors in the gut to signal the brain that the person is full.

Not everyone is a fan of the smart-pill revolution. Some critics have raised concerns about privacy. Others fear that doctors risk yielding too much power to technology. Even those who are excited about the pills’ possibilities temper their optimism with caution.

None of these smart pills have gone mainstream yet in clinical practice, said Vivek Kaul, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, and secretary general of the World Gastroenterology Organization.

Clinical validation, accessibility, and insurance coverage “will be critical in shaping their role,” he said. “But overall, it would be fair to state that this technology has come of age and the future is bright.”
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>Despite these milestones, the smart pill revolution has been slow to catch on due to cost, technological limitations, and some resistance among clinicians and p</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>New smart pills suggest real-time, individual tracking could be a reality for patients.</teaser> <title>Next Gen Smart Pills Could Transform Personalized Care</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>cpn</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>idprac</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>15</term> <term canonical="true">21</term> <term>9</term> <term>20</term> </publications> <sections> <term canonical="true">39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term>174</term> <term>318</term> <term>50122</term> <term canonical="true">280</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Next Gen Smart Pills Could Transform Personalized Care</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>On a November morning in 2022, James Messenger opened wide and swallowed a capsule like no other.</p> <p>Messenger was no stranger to taking pills.<br/><br/>He’d first experimented with prescription opioids as a teenager in Morgantown, West Virginia, battled addiction on-and-off since, and known more than 70 people who had fatally overdosed. So, when asked to test a new “smart pill” that could detect an overdose in progress and call for help, he didn’t hesitate to join the study.<br/><br/>“I’ve lost pretty much every good friend I’ve ever had to this,” said Mr. Messenger. “This pill could save a lot of lives.”<br/><br/>The new <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.einpresswire.com/article/672304107/celero-announces-publication-of-first-in-human-trial-of-an-ingestible-vitals-monitoring-pill">Vitals Monitoring</a></span> capsule he tested is just one example in a growing effort to radically rethink what the humble pill is capable of.<br/><br/>As far back as 1965, scientists introduced the Heidelberg capsule, an electronic pill that measured acidity from within the <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S002235491534942X">gut</a></span>. In 1994, the University of Buffalo coined the term “<span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/1994/03/3207.html">smart pill</a></span>” with a device promising to ferry medicine to a precise spot in the intestine, “like the tiny ship in the film Fantastic Voyage.” And in 2001, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first video <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5438796/">capsule endoscope</a></span>, a miniature-camera-toting pill that enabled noninvasive imaging of the small intestine.<br/><br/><span class="tag metaDescription">Despite these milestones, the smart pill revolution has been slow to catch on due to cost, technological limitations, and some resistance among clinicians and patients.</span><br/><br/>But now, nearly 300 iterations are in various stages of development, according to a 2022 <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9415622/">analysis</a></span>. Advances in materials, imaging, and artificial intelligence (AI) are helping address everything from sleep apnea to HIV/AIDS to gut disorders via real-time tracking and real-time help.<br/><br/>“These technologies could enable us to shift the paradigm from ‘Let’s wait until the patient comes to us and find out what happened’ to ‘Let’s see how things are changing in real time, intervene now, and personalize that intervention,’ ” said Peter Chai, MD, associate professor of emergency medicine and health technology researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Tracking Vitals From the Inside Out</h2> <p>Already, overdose-reversal agents like naloxone are saving lives. But more than 60% of overdoses occur when no one is around to administer them.</p> <p>“While we need to focus on treatment, we also need to come up with more acute ways to save individuals when treatment doesn’t work or relapse occurs,” said James J. Mahoney III, PhD, director of addictions research at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute at West Virginia University (WVU), Morgantown.<br/><br/>Enter <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.celerosystems.com/">Celero Systems</a></span>, a Massachusetts-based digital health company that has developed a vitamin-sized capsule packed with tiny sensors, microprocessors, and a radio antenna. It can measure breathing, heart rate, and core temperature — all from deep within the gut.<br/><br/>Respiratory distress is a hallmark early sign of an overdose. But it can be hard to monitor from a distance, especially in populations without access to a charged smartwatch.<br/><br/>Dr. Mahoney imagines a day when patients at risk could be given a weekly pill like Celero’s. If their respiratory rate drops below a dangerous level, it could alert loved ones or, better yet, release an overdose-reversal drug.<br/><br/>“It’s early days,” stressed Dr. Mahoney, whose team has been conducting pilot tests of the pill. “But initial data look promising.”<br/><br/>For one <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.cell.com/device/fulltext/S2666-9986(23)00184-9">study</a></span>, published in the journal <em>Device</em> in November 2023, the research team administered an overdose of fentanyl to anesthetized pigs with the pill in their stomachs. The capsule was able to detect respiratory depression within a minute and alert researchers via their laptop in time to step in.<br/><br/>When they gave the pill to 10 volunteers undergoing sleep studies at WVU, they found it could detect respiration rate with an accuracy of 93% compared with external monitoring devices — a feature that could also help diagnose sleep apnea or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease without expensive, intrusive tests.<br/><br/>Accuracy for heart rate was nearly 97%.<br/><br/>In another yet-to-be published trial, Dr. Mahoney tested the device with 10 volunteers in a residential treatment center to determine how well it could be tolerated.<br/><br/>Among the participants was Mr. Messenger, who said the thought of being tracked didn’t bother him.<br/><br/>“It was simple — just like taking a multivitamin,” said Mr. Messenger, now 34, sober, and working as a peer recovery support specialist at a hospital in his hometown. “It could be a great way to keep people alive long enough for them to get their head wrapped around the idea of treatment.”<br/><br/></p> <h2>Boosting Medication Adherence</h2> <p>At Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dr. Chai is experimenting with a different smart pill — one he believes could help curb the ongoing HIV/AIDS epidemic.</p> <p>Developed by Florida-based <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://etectrx.com/">etectRx</a></span>, the ID-Cap consists of a gelatin capsule embedded with a tiny radiofrequency transmitter, similar to the kind in retail antitheft devices. The capsule can be filled with a variety of medications. When swallowed, stomach acid dissolves the gel and activates the transmitter, which sends a signal to a receiver on a smartwatch, smartphone, or wall-mounted reader to confirm the medication was taken. If it isn’t, the patient’s smartphone or smart speaker might nudge them with a reminder or a family member might be notified.<br/><br/>In recent trials of men at a high risk for HIV, the system improved adherence to the once-daily prevention regimen pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by double digits.<br/><br/>“PrEP is almost 99% effective in preventing HIV, but you have to take it,” said Dr. Chai, who led the trials. “That seems like such a simple thing, but anyone who is chronically on medication can tell you just how difficult it can be.”<br/><br/>The pill is not the first designed to improve adherence. In 2017, the FDA approved the first digital ingestion tracking system, Abilify MyCite, for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But its maker, Proteus Digital Health, filed for bankruptcy in 2020 after struggling to recruit patients willing to be tracked. (Some expressed privacy concerns. Others disliked the uncomfortable patch that received and forwarded the signal.)<br/><br/>More recent designs have been streamlined to ditch the patch, said etectRx senior vice president of operations Chris Carnes, PhD. And the cost of making a pill this kind of “smart” has come down to about a dollar.<br/><br/>So far, said Dr. Chai, in the patients he’s worked with, perceived benefits generally outweigh privacy concerns.<br/><br/>Studies are now underway in patients with heart disease and tuberculosis, and the company hopes to move into the aging and memory care space where medication-adherence is a serious problem.<br/><br/>“For us, or any company in this space, to succeed, you have to have a strong business case,” said Dr. Carnes. “If family members can keep their loved ones at home a little longer at an additional cost of $30 a month, that’s a no-brainer.”<br/><br/></p> <h2>Pillcams 2.0</h2> <p>Twenty-three years ago, the first video capsule endoscopy made it possible to image the small intestine via a tiny camera you swallow.</p> <p>Such “pillcams” offered a more patient-friendly way to diagnose small bowel disorders, such as gastrointestinal bleeding and Crohn’s disease. Rather than undergoing sedation or anesthesia, as required during tube-based endoscopy, patients can go about their day as the pill painlessly passes through their gastrointestinal (GI) tract, capturing and recording data and images.<br/><br/>But the pills have their downsides.<br/><br/>Because they move passively, driven by movement in the intestine, they can miss trouble spots. Their ability to image the esophagus, stomach, and colon has proven limited. And unlike other procedures, like colonoscopy, they can’t intervene with therapy, like removing polyps.<br/><br/>The pillcam “had so much promise, to sort of revolutionize endoscopy, but it never really got the adoption that it seemed like it might,” said Andrew Meltzer, MD, professor of emergency medicine at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Washington.<br/><br/>That could soon change, he said, thanks to advances in locomotion and AI.<br/><br/>In a recent study of 40 patients, Dr. Meltzer tested a new magnetically controlled capsule endoscopy. Standing at a patient’s side, he could use a joystick to steer the pill around the stomach, capturing images in real time.<br/><br/>The <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.igiejournal.org/article/S2949-7086(23)00052-3/fulltext">pilot study</a></span>, published in June 2023, found that the pill clearly identified six key stomach landmarks accurately 95% of the time and didn’t miss any lesions caught with traditional endoscopy. Notably, 80% of the patients preferred the pillcam over the tube.<br/><br/>“They are awake. They can go to work as soon as they leave. And it’s easy for them to tolerate,” Dr. Meltzer said.<br/><br/>More research is necessary, but Dr. Meltzer believes the technology could be particularly useful in the emergency department, allowing doctors to rule out high-risk bleeds in the stomach on the spot without admitting patients unnecessarily or making them return for a traditional scope.<br/><br/>“It has the potential to increase screening and provide more cost-effective care in emergencies,” he said.<br/><br/>It could also be useful in the telemedicine space, allowing a doctor to “drive” the pill from afar to diagnose a distant patient.<br/><br/>Someday, AI could enable the capsule to drive itself, so a doctor could merely press a button and wait. Or it could be adapted to treat what it finds, like administering a drug or cauterizing a bleed.<br/><br/>“If we can come up with a Mars rover which can explore other planets, we should be able to have something that can explore the stomach remotely,” Dr. Meltzer said.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Swallowing the Future</h2> <p>At the California Institute of Technology, researchers have developed a “location-aware” <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.caltech.edu/about/news/a-gps-for-smart-pills">smart pill</a></span> that uses magnetic fields to help pinpoint its location in the twists and turns of intestines. This could be useful for monitoring food in the GI tract to determine why things aren’t moving.</p> <p>Other researchers are using AI models to enhance the transmission of video from inside the body and reduce the time it takes to interpret images.<br/><br/>One group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed a vibrating weight loss <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://news.mit.edu/2023/engineers-develop-vibrating-ingestible-capsule-1222">capsule</a></span> designed to stimulate receptors in the gut to signal the brain that the person is full.<br/><br/>Not everyone is a fan of the smart-pill revolution. Some critics have raised concerns about privacy. Others fear that doctors risk yielding too much power to technology. Even those who are excited about the pills’ possibilities temper their optimism with caution.<br/><br/>None of these smart pills have gone mainstream yet in clinical practice, said Vivek Kaul, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, and secretary general of the World Gastroenterology Organization.<br/><br/>Clinical validation, accessibility, and insurance coverage “will be critical in shaping their role,” he said. “But overall, it would be fair to state that this technology has come of age and the future is bright.”<br/><br/></p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/next-gen-smart-pills-will-transform-personalized-care-2024a10004tm">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Semaglutide Curbs MASLD Severity in People Living With HIV

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 22:29

Semaglutide improved metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) among people living with HIV, and in some cases resolved it completely, according to results from the SLIM LIVER study presented by the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) at this year’s Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver.

Furthermore, although muscle volume decreased with weight loss, participants did not experience significant changes in muscle quality or physical function.
 

‘A First’

SLIM LIVER is the first study evaluating semaglutide as a treatment of MASLD among people living with HIV.

The phase 2b, single-arm pilot study enrolled adults living with HIV who were virally suppressed and had central adiposity, insulin resistance or prediabetes, and steatotic liver disease.

Participants self-injected semaglutide weekly at increasing doses until they reached a 1-mg dose at week 4. At 24 weeks, the study team assessed changes in participants’ intra-hepatic triglyceride content using magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction.

The primary analysis results from SLIM LIVER were reported in an oral presentation, “Semaglutide Reduces Metabolic-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease in People With HIV: The SLIM LIVER Study,” on March 5 by Jordan E. Lake, MD, MSc, of UTHealth Houston.

A subgroup analysis of the study was provided in a poster, “Effects of Semaglutide on Muscle Structure and Function in the SLIM LIVER Study,” presented on March 4 by Grace L. Ditzenberger, PT, DPT, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.

In the primary analysis, the median age of the 49 participants was 52 years, 43% were women (cisgender and transgender), the mean body mass index was 35, 39% were Hispanic and 33% were Black/African American, and 82% were taking antiretroviral therapy that included an integrase inhibitor.

Liver fat was reduced by an average of 31%, with 29% of participants experiencing a complete resolution (5% or less liver fat) of MASLD. They also experienced weight loss, reduced fasting blood glucose, and reduced fasting triglycerides, consistent with effects observed in studies of semaglutide in people without HIV.

The sub-analysis of the 46 participants for whom muscle measurements were available showed that muscle volume (measured in the psoas) decreased but with no significant change in physical function.

Semaglutide was generally well tolerated, with an adverse event profile similar to that seen in individuals without HIV.

The most common adverse events were gastrointestinal (ie, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain). Two participants experienced more significant adverse events possibly related to semaglutide but were able to continue in the study.

All participants completed the full 24 weeks of therapy at the originally prescribed dose.
 

Potential Impact

“Even at the low dose of 1 mg every week, most participants lost significant weight, and weight loss was closely associated with improvements in MASLD,” Dr. Lake said. “Additional research will assess the secondary effects of semaglutide on systemic inflammation and metabolism and determine whether semaglutide may have unique risks or benefits for people living with HIV.”

“These findings have the potential to have a significant impact on the health and quality of life of people living with HIV,” added ACTG Chair Judith Currier, MD, MSc, University of California Los Angeles.

The SLIM LIVER study was sponsored by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), with additional funding from UTHealth Houston McGovern School of Medicine. ACTG is a clinical trials network focused on HIV and other infectious diseases, funded by NIAID and collaborating institutes of the US National Institutes of Health.

No conflicts of interest were reported.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Semaglutide improved metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) among people living with HIV, and in some cases resolved it completely, according to results from the SLIM LIVER study presented by the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) at this year’s Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver.

Furthermore, although muscle volume decreased with weight loss, participants did not experience significant changes in muscle quality or physical function.
 

‘A First’

SLIM LIVER is the first study evaluating semaglutide as a treatment of MASLD among people living with HIV.

The phase 2b, single-arm pilot study enrolled adults living with HIV who were virally suppressed and had central adiposity, insulin resistance or prediabetes, and steatotic liver disease.

Participants self-injected semaglutide weekly at increasing doses until they reached a 1-mg dose at week 4. At 24 weeks, the study team assessed changes in participants’ intra-hepatic triglyceride content using magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction.

The primary analysis results from SLIM LIVER were reported in an oral presentation, “Semaglutide Reduces Metabolic-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease in People With HIV: The SLIM LIVER Study,” on March 5 by Jordan E. Lake, MD, MSc, of UTHealth Houston.

A subgroup analysis of the study was provided in a poster, “Effects of Semaglutide on Muscle Structure and Function in the SLIM LIVER Study,” presented on March 4 by Grace L. Ditzenberger, PT, DPT, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.

In the primary analysis, the median age of the 49 participants was 52 years, 43% were women (cisgender and transgender), the mean body mass index was 35, 39% were Hispanic and 33% were Black/African American, and 82% were taking antiretroviral therapy that included an integrase inhibitor.

Liver fat was reduced by an average of 31%, with 29% of participants experiencing a complete resolution (5% or less liver fat) of MASLD. They also experienced weight loss, reduced fasting blood glucose, and reduced fasting triglycerides, consistent with effects observed in studies of semaglutide in people without HIV.

The sub-analysis of the 46 participants for whom muscle measurements were available showed that muscle volume (measured in the psoas) decreased but with no significant change in physical function.

Semaglutide was generally well tolerated, with an adverse event profile similar to that seen in individuals without HIV.

The most common adverse events were gastrointestinal (ie, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain). Two participants experienced more significant adverse events possibly related to semaglutide but were able to continue in the study.

All participants completed the full 24 weeks of therapy at the originally prescribed dose.
 

Potential Impact

“Even at the low dose of 1 mg every week, most participants lost significant weight, and weight loss was closely associated with improvements in MASLD,” Dr. Lake said. “Additional research will assess the secondary effects of semaglutide on systemic inflammation and metabolism and determine whether semaglutide may have unique risks or benefits for people living with HIV.”

“These findings have the potential to have a significant impact on the health and quality of life of people living with HIV,” added ACTG Chair Judith Currier, MD, MSc, University of California Los Angeles.

The SLIM LIVER study was sponsored by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), with additional funding from UTHealth Houston McGovern School of Medicine. ACTG is a clinical trials network focused on HIV and other infectious diseases, funded by NIAID and collaborating institutes of the US National Institutes of Health.

No conflicts of interest were reported.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Semaglutide improved metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) among people living with HIV, and in some cases resolved it completely, according to results from the SLIM LIVER study presented by the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) at this year’s Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver.

Furthermore, although muscle volume decreased with weight loss, participants did not experience significant changes in muscle quality or physical function.
 

‘A First’

SLIM LIVER is the first study evaluating semaglutide as a treatment of MASLD among people living with HIV.

The phase 2b, single-arm pilot study enrolled adults living with HIV who were virally suppressed and had central adiposity, insulin resistance or prediabetes, and steatotic liver disease.

Participants self-injected semaglutide weekly at increasing doses until they reached a 1-mg dose at week 4. At 24 weeks, the study team assessed changes in participants’ intra-hepatic triglyceride content using magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction.

The primary analysis results from SLIM LIVER were reported in an oral presentation, “Semaglutide Reduces Metabolic-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease in People With HIV: The SLIM LIVER Study,” on March 5 by Jordan E. Lake, MD, MSc, of UTHealth Houston.

A subgroup analysis of the study was provided in a poster, “Effects of Semaglutide on Muscle Structure and Function in the SLIM LIVER Study,” presented on March 4 by Grace L. Ditzenberger, PT, DPT, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.

In the primary analysis, the median age of the 49 participants was 52 years, 43% were women (cisgender and transgender), the mean body mass index was 35, 39% were Hispanic and 33% were Black/African American, and 82% were taking antiretroviral therapy that included an integrase inhibitor.

Liver fat was reduced by an average of 31%, with 29% of participants experiencing a complete resolution (5% or less liver fat) of MASLD. They also experienced weight loss, reduced fasting blood glucose, and reduced fasting triglycerides, consistent with effects observed in studies of semaglutide in people without HIV.

The sub-analysis of the 46 participants for whom muscle measurements were available showed that muscle volume (measured in the psoas) decreased but with no significant change in physical function.

Semaglutide was generally well tolerated, with an adverse event profile similar to that seen in individuals without HIV.

The most common adverse events were gastrointestinal (ie, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain). Two participants experienced more significant adverse events possibly related to semaglutide but were able to continue in the study.

All participants completed the full 24 weeks of therapy at the originally prescribed dose.
 

Potential Impact

“Even at the low dose of 1 mg every week, most participants lost significant weight, and weight loss was closely associated with improvements in MASLD,” Dr. Lake said. “Additional research will assess the secondary effects of semaglutide on systemic inflammation and metabolism and determine whether semaglutide may have unique risks or benefits for people living with HIV.”

“These findings have the potential to have a significant impact on the health and quality of life of people living with HIV,” added ACTG Chair Judith Currier, MD, MSc, University of California Los Angeles.

The SLIM LIVER study was sponsored by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), with additional funding from UTHealth Houston McGovern School of Medicine. ACTG is a clinical trials network focused on HIV and other infectious diseases, funded by NIAID and collaborating institutes of the US National Institutes of Health.

No conflicts of interest were reported.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, copied, or otherwise reproduced or distributed without the prior written permission of Frontline Medical Communications Inc.</copyrightNotice> </rightsInfo> </provider> <abstract/> <metaDescription>Semaglutide improved metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) among people living with HIV, and in some cases resolved it completely, ac</metaDescription> <articlePDF/> <teaserImage/> <teaser>Most participants lost significant weight and weight loss was closely associated with improvements in MASLD.</teaser> <title>Semaglutide Curbs MASLD Severity in People Living With HIV</title> <deck/> <disclaimer/> <AuthorList/> <articleURL/> <doi/> <pubMedID/> <publishXMLStatus/> <publishXMLVersion>1</publishXMLVersion> <useEISSN>0</useEISSN> <urgency/> <pubPubdateYear/> <pubPubdateMonth/> <pubPubdateDay/> <pubVolume/> <pubNumber/> <wireChannels/> <primaryCMSID/> <CMSIDs/> <keywords/> <seeAlsos/> <publications_g> <publicationData> <publicationCode>endo</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>fp</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>im</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> <publicationData> <publicationCode>idprac</publicationCode> <pubIssueName/> <pubArticleType/> <pubTopics/> <pubCategories/> <pubSections/> </publicationData> </publications_g> <publications> <term>34</term> <term>15</term> <term canonical="true">21</term> <term>20</term> </publications> <sections> <term>53</term> <term canonical="true">39313</term> </sections> <topics> <term>239</term> <term>205</term> <term canonical="true">226</term> <term>261</term> <term>318</term> </topics> <links/> </header> <itemSet> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>Main</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title>Semaglutide Curbs MASLD Severity in People Living With HIV</title> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> <p>Semaglutide improved metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) among people living with HIV, and in some cases resolved it completely, according to results from the SLIM LIVER study presented by the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG) at this year’s <a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewcollection/37447">Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting</a> in Denver.</p> <p>Furthermore, although muscle volume decreased with weight loss, participants did not experience significant changes in muscle quality or physical function.<br/><br/></p> <h2>‘A First’</h2> <p>SLIM LIVER is the first study evaluating semaglutide as a treatment of MASLD among people living with HIV.</p> <p>The phase 2b, single-arm <a href="https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04216589">pilot study</a> enrolled adults living with HIV who were virally suppressed and had central adiposity, insulin resistance or prediabetes, and steatotic liver disease.<br/><br/>Participants self-injected semaglutide weekly at increasing doses until they reached a 1-mg dose at week 4. At 24 weeks, the study team assessed changes in participants’ intra-hepatic triglyceride content using magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction.<br/><br/>The primary analysis results from SLIM LIVER were reported in an oral presentation, “Semaglutide Reduces Metabolic-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease in People With HIV: The SLIM LIVER Study,” on March 5 by Jordan E. Lake, MD, MSc, of UTHealth Houston.<br/><br/>A subgroup analysis of the study was provided in a poster, “Effects of Semaglutide on Muscle Structure and Function in the SLIM LIVER Study,” presented on March 4 by Grace L. Ditzenberger, PT, DPT, of the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora.<br/><br/>In the primary analysis, the median age of the 49 participants was 52 years, 43% were women (cisgender and transgender), the mean body mass index was 35, 39% were Hispanic and 33% were Black/African American, and 82% were taking antiretroviral therapy that included an integrase inhibitor.<br/><br/>Liver fat was reduced by an average of 31%, with 29% of participants experiencing a complete resolution (5% or less liver fat) of MASLD. They also experienced weight loss, reduced fasting blood glucose, and reduced fasting triglycerides, consistent with effects observed in studies of semaglutide in people without HIV.<br/><br/>The sub-analysis of the 46 participants for whom muscle measurements were available showed that muscle volume (measured in the psoas) decreased but with no significant change in physical function.<br/><br/>Semaglutide was generally well tolerated, with an adverse event profile similar to that seen in individuals without HIV.<br/><br/>The most common adverse events were gastrointestinal (ie, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain). Two participants experienced more significant adverse events possibly related to semaglutide but were able to continue in the study.<br/><br/>All participants completed the full 24 weeks of therapy at the originally prescribed dose.<br/><br/></p> <h2>Potential Impact</h2> <p>“Even at the low dose of 1 mg every week, most participants lost significant weight, and weight loss was closely associated with improvements in MASLD,” Dr. Lake said. “Additional research will assess the secondary effects of semaglutide on systemic inflammation and metabolism and determine whether semaglutide may have unique risks or benefits for people living with HIV.”</p> <p>“These findings have the potential to have a significant impact on the health and quality of life of people living with HIV,” added ACTG Chair Judith Currier, MD, MSc, University of California Los Angeles.<br/><br/>The SLIM LIVER study was sponsored by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), with additional funding from UTHealth Houston McGovern School of Medicine. ACTG is a clinical trials network focused on HIV and other infectious diseases, funded by NIAID and collaborating institutes of the US National Institutes of Health.<br/><br/>No conflicts of interest were reported.<br/><br/></p> <p> <em>A version of this article appeared on <span class="Hyperlink"><a href="https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/semaglutide-curbs-masld-severity-people-living-hiv-2024a10004jq?src=">Medscape.com</a></span>.</em> </p> </itemContent> </newsItem> <newsItem> <itemMeta> <itemRole>teaser</itemRole> <itemClass>text</itemClass> <title/> <deck/> </itemMeta> <itemContent> </itemContent> </newsItem> </itemSet></root>
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Nurse-Led Strategy Reduces Cholesterol, BP in HIV

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 03/14/2024 - 07:40

 

TOPLINE:

A multicomponent strategy of nurse-led communication, home blood pressure monitoring, evidence-based treatment algorithms, and electronic health record tools improved systolic blood pressure (SBP) and non–high-density lipoprotein (non-HDL) cholesterol levels in people living with HIV.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Investigators assessed if EXTRA-CVD, a nurse-led multicomponent intervention for preventing cardiovascular diseases (CVD), could effectively improve SBP and non-HDL cholesterol levels in people living with HIV whose viral replication has been controlled effectively using antiretroviral therapy.
  • They recruited 297 individuals (median age, 59 years; 20.9% women) from three academic HIV clinics in the United States with an HIV-1 viral load < 200 copies/mL who were diagnosed with both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia.
  • Participants were randomly assigned to either the EXTRA-CVD intervention group or a control group comprising individuals who received general prevention education.
  • SBP (the primary outcome) was calculated as the mean of two SBP measurements obtained 1 minute apart, and non-HDL cholesterol (the secondary outcome) was calculated as total cholesterol minus HDL cholesterol.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Participants in the intervention vs control group reported having significantly lower SBP as early as 4 months after the nurse-led strategy (mean difference, −6.4 mm Hg; P = .002), with the improvements sustaining until 12 months (mean difference, −4.2 mm Hg; P = .04).
  • At 12 months, participants in the intervention group showed a 16.9-mg/dL (P < .001) reduction in non-HDL cholesterol levels compared with those in the control group.
  • The nurse-led strategy led to a greater reduction in SBP in women with HIV vs men living with HIV (5.9 mm Hg greater SBP difference at 12 months), with the difference being clinically meaningful but not statistically significant.
  • This nurse-led strategy did not increase the risk for adverse events in people living with HIV.

IN PRACTICE:

“Although the EXTRA-CVD intervention was limited to BP and cholesterol, nurse-led case management might be beneficial for a range of other primary care conditions in HIV clinics. If HIV clinics choose to implement EXTRA-CVD, they might consider adding staff trained in other chronic comorbidities and/or health promotion activities,” the authors noted.

SOURCE:

This study was led by Christopher T. Longenecker, MD, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, and published online on March 5, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

Because this trial was conducted at well-resourced, major academic HIV clinics, the results may not be applicable to other populations, such as smaller community-based clinics or HIV care outside the United States. The sensitivity analyses performed in this study may not have fully accounted for the bias introduced by the differential attrition in the intervention group.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The authors declared receiving grants and personal fees from or having other ties with the NIH and other sources.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

A multicomponent strategy of nurse-led communication, home blood pressure monitoring, evidence-based treatment algorithms, and electronic health record tools improved systolic blood pressure (SBP) and non–high-density lipoprotein (non-HDL) cholesterol levels in people living with HIV.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Investigators assessed if EXTRA-CVD, a nurse-led multicomponent intervention for preventing cardiovascular diseases (CVD), could effectively improve SBP and non-HDL cholesterol levels in people living with HIV whose viral replication has been controlled effectively using antiretroviral therapy.
  • They recruited 297 individuals (median age, 59 years; 20.9% women) from three academic HIV clinics in the United States with an HIV-1 viral load < 200 copies/mL who were diagnosed with both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia.
  • Participants were randomly assigned to either the EXTRA-CVD intervention group or a control group comprising individuals who received general prevention education.
  • SBP (the primary outcome) was calculated as the mean of two SBP measurements obtained 1 minute apart, and non-HDL cholesterol (the secondary outcome) was calculated as total cholesterol minus HDL cholesterol.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Participants in the intervention vs control group reported having significantly lower SBP as early as 4 months after the nurse-led strategy (mean difference, −6.4 mm Hg; P = .002), with the improvements sustaining until 12 months (mean difference, −4.2 mm Hg; P = .04).
  • At 12 months, participants in the intervention group showed a 16.9-mg/dL (P < .001) reduction in non-HDL cholesterol levels compared with those in the control group.
  • The nurse-led strategy led to a greater reduction in SBP in women with HIV vs men living with HIV (5.9 mm Hg greater SBP difference at 12 months), with the difference being clinically meaningful but not statistically significant.
  • This nurse-led strategy did not increase the risk for adverse events in people living with HIV.

IN PRACTICE:

“Although the EXTRA-CVD intervention was limited to BP and cholesterol, nurse-led case management might be beneficial for a range of other primary care conditions in HIV clinics. If HIV clinics choose to implement EXTRA-CVD, they might consider adding staff trained in other chronic comorbidities and/or health promotion activities,” the authors noted.

SOURCE:

This study was led by Christopher T. Longenecker, MD, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, and published online on March 5, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

Because this trial was conducted at well-resourced, major academic HIV clinics, the results may not be applicable to other populations, such as smaller community-based clinics or HIV care outside the United States. The sensitivity analyses performed in this study may not have fully accounted for the bias introduced by the differential attrition in the intervention group.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The authors declared receiving grants and personal fees from or having other ties with the NIH and other sources.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

A multicomponent strategy of nurse-led communication, home blood pressure monitoring, evidence-based treatment algorithms, and electronic health record tools improved systolic blood pressure (SBP) and non–high-density lipoprotein (non-HDL) cholesterol levels in people living with HIV.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Investigators assessed if EXTRA-CVD, a nurse-led multicomponent intervention for preventing cardiovascular diseases (CVD), could effectively improve SBP and non-HDL cholesterol levels in people living with HIV whose viral replication has been controlled effectively using antiretroviral therapy.
  • They recruited 297 individuals (median age, 59 years; 20.9% women) from three academic HIV clinics in the United States with an HIV-1 viral load < 200 copies/mL who were diagnosed with both hypertension and hypercholesterolemia.
  • Participants were randomly assigned to either the EXTRA-CVD intervention group or a control group comprising individuals who received general prevention education.
  • SBP (the primary outcome) was calculated as the mean of two SBP measurements obtained 1 minute apart, and non-HDL cholesterol (the secondary outcome) was calculated as total cholesterol minus HDL cholesterol.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Participants in the intervention vs control group reported having significantly lower SBP as early as 4 months after the nurse-led strategy (mean difference, −6.4 mm Hg; P = .002), with the improvements sustaining until 12 months (mean difference, −4.2 mm Hg; P = .04).
  • At 12 months, participants in the intervention group showed a 16.9-mg/dL (P < .001) reduction in non-HDL cholesterol levels compared with those in the control group.
  • The nurse-led strategy led to a greater reduction in SBP in women with HIV vs men living with HIV (5.9 mm Hg greater SBP difference at 12 months), with the difference being clinically meaningful but not statistically significant.
  • This nurse-led strategy did not increase the risk for adverse events in people living with HIV.

IN PRACTICE:

“Although the EXTRA-CVD intervention was limited to BP and cholesterol, nurse-led case management might be beneficial for a range of other primary care conditions in HIV clinics. If HIV clinics choose to implement EXTRA-CVD, they might consider adding staff trained in other chronic comorbidities and/or health promotion activities,” the authors noted.

SOURCE:

This study was led by Christopher T. Longenecker, MD, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, and published online on March 5, 2024, in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

Because this trial was conducted at well-resourced, major academic HIV clinics, the results may not be applicable to other populations, such as smaller community-based clinics or HIV care outside the United States. The sensitivity analyses performed in this study may not have fully accounted for the bias introduced by the differential attrition in the intervention group.

DISCLOSURES:

This study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The authors declared receiving grants and personal fees from or having other ties with the NIH and other sources.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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