High Breast Cancer Risk With Menopausal Hormone Therapy & Strong Family History

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Fri, 09/06/2024 - 12:04

 

TOPLINE:

The use of menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases breast cancer risk in women with a strong family history of breast cancer. These women have a striking cumulative risk of developing breast cancer (age, 50-80 years) of 22.4%, according to a new modelling study of UK women.

METHODOLOGY:

This was a modeling study integrating two data-sets of UK women: the BOADICEA dataset of age-specific breast cancer risk with family history and the Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, which covers relative risk for breast cancer with different types and durations of MHT.

Four different breast cancer family history profiles were:

  • “Average” family history of breast cancer has unknown affected family members;
  • “Modest” family history comprises a single first-degree relative with breast cancer at the age of 60 years.
  • “Intermediate” family history comprises a single first-degree relative who developed breast cancer at the age of 40 years.
  • “Strong” family history comprises two first-degree relatives who developed breast cancer at the age of 50 years.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The lowest risk category: “Average” family history with no MHT use has a cumulative breast cancer risk (age, 50-80 years) of 9.8% and a risk of dying from breast cancer of 1.7%. These risks rise with 5 years’ exposure to MHT (age, 50-55 years) to 11.0% and 1.8%, respectively.
  • The highest risk category: “Strong” family history with no MHT use has a cumulative breast cancer risk (age, 50-80 years) of 19.6% and a risk of dying from breast cancer of 3.2%. These risks rise with 5 years’ exposure to MHT (age, 50-55 years) to 22.4% and 3.5%, respectively.

IN PRACTICE:

The authors concluded that, “These integrated data will enable more accurate estimates of absolute and attributable risk associated with MHT exposure for women with a family history of breast cancer, informing shared decision-making.”

SOURCE:

The lead author is Catherine Huntley of the Institute of Cancer Research, London, England. The study appeared in the British Journal of General Practice.

LIMITATIONS:

Limitations included modeling study that did not directly measure individuals with combined risks.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by several sources including Cancer Research UK. The authors reported no conflicts of interest.

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

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TOPLINE:

The use of menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases breast cancer risk in women with a strong family history of breast cancer. These women have a striking cumulative risk of developing breast cancer (age, 50-80 years) of 22.4%, according to a new modelling study of UK women.

METHODOLOGY:

This was a modeling study integrating two data-sets of UK women: the BOADICEA dataset of age-specific breast cancer risk with family history and the Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, which covers relative risk for breast cancer with different types and durations of MHT.

Four different breast cancer family history profiles were:

  • “Average” family history of breast cancer has unknown affected family members;
  • “Modest” family history comprises a single first-degree relative with breast cancer at the age of 60 years.
  • “Intermediate” family history comprises a single first-degree relative who developed breast cancer at the age of 40 years.
  • “Strong” family history comprises two first-degree relatives who developed breast cancer at the age of 50 years.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The lowest risk category: “Average” family history with no MHT use has a cumulative breast cancer risk (age, 50-80 years) of 9.8% and a risk of dying from breast cancer of 1.7%. These risks rise with 5 years’ exposure to MHT (age, 50-55 years) to 11.0% and 1.8%, respectively.
  • The highest risk category: “Strong” family history with no MHT use has a cumulative breast cancer risk (age, 50-80 years) of 19.6% and a risk of dying from breast cancer of 3.2%. These risks rise with 5 years’ exposure to MHT (age, 50-55 years) to 22.4% and 3.5%, respectively.

IN PRACTICE:

The authors concluded that, “These integrated data will enable more accurate estimates of absolute and attributable risk associated with MHT exposure for women with a family history of breast cancer, informing shared decision-making.”

SOURCE:

The lead author is Catherine Huntley of the Institute of Cancer Research, London, England. The study appeared in the British Journal of General Practice.

LIMITATIONS:

Limitations included modeling study that did not directly measure individuals with combined risks.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by several sources including Cancer Research UK. The authors reported no conflicts of interest.

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

 

TOPLINE:

The use of menopausal hormone therapy (MHT) increases breast cancer risk in women with a strong family history of breast cancer. These women have a striking cumulative risk of developing breast cancer (age, 50-80 years) of 22.4%, according to a new modelling study of UK women.

METHODOLOGY:

This was a modeling study integrating two data-sets of UK women: the BOADICEA dataset of age-specific breast cancer risk with family history and the Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast Cancer, which covers relative risk for breast cancer with different types and durations of MHT.

Four different breast cancer family history profiles were:

  • “Average” family history of breast cancer has unknown affected family members;
  • “Modest” family history comprises a single first-degree relative with breast cancer at the age of 60 years.
  • “Intermediate” family history comprises a single first-degree relative who developed breast cancer at the age of 40 years.
  • “Strong” family history comprises two first-degree relatives who developed breast cancer at the age of 50 years.

TAKEAWAY:

  • The lowest risk category: “Average” family history with no MHT use has a cumulative breast cancer risk (age, 50-80 years) of 9.8% and a risk of dying from breast cancer of 1.7%. These risks rise with 5 years’ exposure to MHT (age, 50-55 years) to 11.0% and 1.8%, respectively.
  • The highest risk category: “Strong” family history with no MHT use has a cumulative breast cancer risk (age, 50-80 years) of 19.6% and a risk of dying from breast cancer of 3.2%. These risks rise with 5 years’ exposure to MHT (age, 50-55 years) to 22.4% and 3.5%, respectively.

IN PRACTICE:

The authors concluded that, “These integrated data will enable more accurate estimates of absolute and attributable risk associated with MHT exposure for women with a family history of breast cancer, informing shared decision-making.”

SOURCE:

The lead author is Catherine Huntley of the Institute of Cancer Research, London, England. The study appeared in the British Journal of General Practice.

LIMITATIONS:

Limitations included modeling study that did not directly measure individuals with combined risks.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by several sources including Cancer Research UK. The authors reported no conflicts of interest.

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

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Breast Cancer Hormone Therapy May Protect Against Dementia

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Changed
Fri, 09/06/2024 - 11:14

 

TOPLINE:

Hormone-modulating therapy for breast cancer may protect older women from Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, although the protective effect varies by age and race, with the greatest benefit seen in younger Black women.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Hormone-modulating therapy is widely used to treat hormone receptor–positive breast cancer, but the cognitive effects of the treatment, including a potential link to dementia, remain unclear.
  • To investigate, researchers used the SEER-Medicare linked database to identify women aged 65 years or older with breast cancer who did and did not receive hormone-modulating therapy within 3 years following their diagnosis.
  • The researchers excluded women with preexisting Alzheimer’s disease/dementia diagnoses or those who had received hormone-modulating therapy before their breast cancer diagnosis.
  • Analyses were adjusted for demographic, sociocultural, and clinical variables, and subgroup analyses evaluated the impact of age, race, and type of hormone-modulating therapy on Alzheimer’s disease/dementia risk.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the 18,808 women included in the analysis, 66% received hormone-modulating therapy and 34% did not. During the mean follow-up of 12 years, 24% of hormone-modulating therapy users and 28% of nonusers developed Alzheimer’s disease/dementia.
  • Overall, hormone-modulating therapy use (vs nonuse) was associated with a significant 7% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (hazard ratio [HR], 0.93; P = .005), with notable age and racial differences.
  • Hormone-modulating therapy use was associated with a 24% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia in Black women aged 65-74 years (HR, 0.76), but that protective effect decreased to 19% in Black women aged 75 years or older (HR, 0.81). White women aged 65-74 years who received hormone-modulating therapy (vs those who did not) had an 11% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (HR, 0.89), but the association disappeared among those aged 75 years or older (HR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.90-1.02). Other races demonstrated no significant association between hormone-modulating therapy use and Alzheimer’s disease/dementia.
  • Overall, the use of an aromatase inhibitor or a selective estrogen receptor modulator was associated with a significantly lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (HR, 0.93 and HR, 0.89, respectively).

IN PRACTICE:

Overall, the retrospective study found that “hormone therapy was associated with protection against [Alzheimer’s/dementia] in women aged 65 years or older with newly diagnosed breast cancer,” with the decrease in risk relatively greater for Black women and women younger than 75 years, the authors concluded.

“The results highlight the critical need for personalized breast cancer treatment plans that are tailored to the individual characteristics of each patient, particularly given the significantly higher likelihood (two to three times more) of Black women developing [Alzheimer’s/dementia], compared with their White counterparts,” the researchers added.
 

SOURCE:

The study, with first author Chao Cai, PhD, Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Outcomes Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, was published online on July 16 in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study included only women aged 65 years or older, limiting generalizability to younger women. The dataset lacked genetic information and laboratory data related to dementia. The duration of hormone-modulating therapy use beyond 3 years and specific formulations were not assessed. Potential confounders such as variations in chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery were not fully addressed.

DISCLOSURES:

Support for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health; Carolina Center on Alzheimer’s Disease and Minority Research pilot project; and the Dean’s Faculty Advancement Fund, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The authors reported no relevant disclosures.

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

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TOPLINE:

Hormone-modulating therapy for breast cancer may protect older women from Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, although the protective effect varies by age and race, with the greatest benefit seen in younger Black women.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Hormone-modulating therapy is widely used to treat hormone receptor–positive breast cancer, but the cognitive effects of the treatment, including a potential link to dementia, remain unclear.
  • To investigate, researchers used the SEER-Medicare linked database to identify women aged 65 years or older with breast cancer who did and did not receive hormone-modulating therapy within 3 years following their diagnosis.
  • The researchers excluded women with preexisting Alzheimer’s disease/dementia diagnoses or those who had received hormone-modulating therapy before their breast cancer diagnosis.
  • Analyses were adjusted for demographic, sociocultural, and clinical variables, and subgroup analyses evaluated the impact of age, race, and type of hormone-modulating therapy on Alzheimer’s disease/dementia risk.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the 18,808 women included in the analysis, 66% received hormone-modulating therapy and 34% did not. During the mean follow-up of 12 years, 24% of hormone-modulating therapy users and 28% of nonusers developed Alzheimer’s disease/dementia.
  • Overall, hormone-modulating therapy use (vs nonuse) was associated with a significant 7% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (hazard ratio [HR], 0.93; P = .005), with notable age and racial differences.
  • Hormone-modulating therapy use was associated with a 24% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia in Black women aged 65-74 years (HR, 0.76), but that protective effect decreased to 19% in Black women aged 75 years or older (HR, 0.81). White women aged 65-74 years who received hormone-modulating therapy (vs those who did not) had an 11% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (HR, 0.89), but the association disappeared among those aged 75 years or older (HR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.90-1.02). Other races demonstrated no significant association between hormone-modulating therapy use and Alzheimer’s disease/dementia.
  • Overall, the use of an aromatase inhibitor or a selective estrogen receptor modulator was associated with a significantly lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (HR, 0.93 and HR, 0.89, respectively).

IN PRACTICE:

Overall, the retrospective study found that “hormone therapy was associated with protection against [Alzheimer’s/dementia] in women aged 65 years or older with newly diagnosed breast cancer,” with the decrease in risk relatively greater for Black women and women younger than 75 years, the authors concluded.

“The results highlight the critical need for personalized breast cancer treatment plans that are tailored to the individual characteristics of each patient, particularly given the significantly higher likelihood (two to three times more) of Black women developing [Alzheimer’s/dementia], compared with their White counterparts,” the researchers added.
 

SOURCE:

The study, with first author Chao Cai, PhD, Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Outcomes Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, was published online on July 16 in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study included only women aged 65 years or older, limiting generalizability to younger women. The dataset lacked genetic information and laboratory data related to dementia. The duration of hormone-modulating therapy use beyond 3 years and specific formulations were not assessed. Potential confounders such as variations in chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery were not fully addressed.

DISCLOSURES:

Support for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health; Carolina Center on Alzheimer’s Disease and Minority Research pilot project; and the Dean’s Faculty Advancement Fund, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The authors reported no relevant disclosures.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Hormone-modulating therapy for breast cancer may protect older women from Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, although the protective effect varies by age and race, with the greatest benefit seen in younger Black women.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Hormone-modulating therapy is widely used to treat hormone receptor–positive breast cancer, but the cognitive effects of the treatment, including a potential link to dementia, remain unclear.
  • To investigate, researchers used the SEER-Medicare linked database to identify women aged 65 years or older with breast cancer who did and did not receive hormone-modulating therapy within 3 years following their diagnosis.
  • The researchers excluded women with preexisting Alzheimer’s disease/dementia diagnoses or those who had received hormone-modulating therapy before their breast cancer diagnosis.
  • Analyses were adjusted for demographic, sociocultural, and clinical variables, and subgroup analyses evaluated the impact of age, race, and type of hormone-modulating therapy on Alzheimer’s disease/dementia risk.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Among the 18,808 women included in the analysis, 66% received hormone-modulating therapy and 34% did not. During the mean follow-up of 12 years, 24% of hormone-modulating therapy users and 28% of nonusers developed Alzheimer’s disease/dementia.
  • Overall, hormone-modulating therapy use (vs nonuse) was associated with a significant 7% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (hazard ratio [HR], 0.93; P = .005), with notable age and racial differences.
  • Hormone-modulating therapy use was associated with a 24% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia in Black women aged 65-74 years (HR, 0.76), but that protective effect decreased to 19% in Black women aged 75 years or older (HR, 0.81). White women aged 65-74 years who received hormone-modulating therapy (vs those who did not) had an 11% lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (HR, 0.89), but the association disappeared among those aged 75 years or older (HR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.90-1.02). Other races demonstrated no significant association between hormone-modulating therapy use and Alzheimer’s disease/dementia.
  • Overall, the use of an aromatase inhibitor or a selective estrogen receptor modulator was associated with a significantly lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease/dementia (HR, 0.93 and HR, 0.89, respectively).

IN PRACTICE:

Overall, the retrospective study found that “hormone therapy was associated with protection against [Alzheimer’s/dementia] in women aged 65 years or older with newly diagnosed breast cancer,” with the decrease in risk relatively greater for Black women and women younger than 75 years, the authors concluded.

“The results highlight the critical need for personalized breast cancer treatment plans that are tailored to the individual characteristics of each patient, particularly given the significantly higher likelihood (two to three times more) of Black women developing [Alzheimer’s/dementia], compared with their White counterparts,” the researchers added.
 

SOURCE:

The study, with first author Chao Cai, PhD, Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Outcomes Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, was published online on July 16 in JAMA Network Open.

LIMITATIONS:

The study included only women aged 65 years or older, limiting generalizability to younger women. The dataset lacked genetic information and laboratory data related to dementia. The duration of hormone-modulating therapy use beyond 3 years and specific formulations were not assessed. Potential confounders such as variations in chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery were not fully addressed.

DISCLOSURES:

Support for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health; Carolina Center on Alzheimer’s Disease and Minority Research pilot project; and the Dean’s Faculty Advancement Fund, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The authors reported no relevant disclosures.

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

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False-Positive Mammography Results Linked to Reduced Rates of Future Screenings

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Mon, 09/09/2024 - 14:43

 

TOPLINE:

Women who received false-positive mammography results were less likely to return for future screenings.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed more than three million screening mammograms from more than one million women aged between 40 and 73 years at nearly 200 facilities in the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium between 2005 and 2017.
  • Mammography results were classified as true negative or false positive; women who received false-positive results were either asked to come back for additional imaging, a short interval follow-up or biopsy recommendations.
  • The primary outcome was the probability of returning for routine screening within 9-30 months after a false-positive or true-negative result, adjusted for race, ethnicity, age, and time since the last mammogram.
  • Women with two screening mammograms within 5 years were also analyzed to evaluate the probability of returning for a third screening based on combinations of true-negative and false-positive results.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Nearly 10.0% (95% CI, 9.1%-10.5%) of women who received screening mammograms got a false-positive result, 5.8% (95% CI, 5.5%-6.2%) of whom needed immediate additional imaging, 2.7% (95% CI, 2.3%-3.2%) needed short-interval follow-up, and 1.3% (95% CI, 1.1%-1.4%) were recommended for a biopsy.
  • Women were more likely to return for screening after a true-negative result (76.9%) than after a false positive to obtain more data through additional imaging (72.4%), short-interval follow-ups (54.7%), or biopsy (61.0%).
  • Asian and Hispanic/Latinx women who received a false-positive result were much less likely to return for a screening than women of the same groups who received a true-negative result, with recommendations for short interval follow-up (decrease of 20-25 percentage points) or biopsy (decrease of 13-14 percentage points).
  • For women who had two screening mammograms within 5 years, receiving a false-positive result on the second was linked to a lower likelihood of returning for a third screening, regardless of results for the first.

IN PRACTICE:

“Physicians should educate their patients about the importance of continued screening after false-positive results, especially given the associated increased future risk for breast cancer,” study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Diana L. Miglioretti, PhD, of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of California, Davis, and published online on September 3 in Annals of Internal Medicine.

LIMITATIONS:

Women could receive care at facilities outside of the trial, which may have affected the accuracy of return rates. The study did not track a complete history of false-positive results. The study did not have information about how often physicians recommend screenings and did not account for other health conditions.

DISCLOSURES:

One coauthor reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Cancer Society, as well as consulting fees from the University of Florida, Gainesville.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

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

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TOPLINE:

Women who received false-positive mammography results were less likely to return for future screenings.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed more than three million screening mammograms from more than one million women aged between 40 and 73 years at nearly 200 facilities in the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium between 2005 and 2017.
  • Mammography results were classified as true negative or false positive; women who received false-positive results were either asked to come back for additional imaging, a short interval follow-up or biopsy recommendations.
  • The primary outcome was the probability of returning for routine screening within 9-30 months after a false-positive or true-negative result, adjusted for race, ethnicity, age, and time since the last mammogram.
  • Women with two screening mammograms within 5 years were also analyzed to evaluate the probability of returning for a third screening based on combinations of true-negative and false-positive results.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Nearly 10.0% (95% CI, 9.1%-10.5%) of women who received screening mammograms got a false-positive result, 5.8% (95% CI, 5.5%-6.2%) of whom needed immediate additional imaging, 2.7% (95% CI, 2.3%-3.2%) needed short-interval follow-up, and 1.3% (95% CI, 1.1%-1.4%) were recommended for a biopsy.
  • Women were more likely to return for screening after a true-negative result (76.9%) than after a false positive to obtain more data through additional imaging (72.4%), short-interval follow-ups (54.7%), or biopsy (61.0%).
  • Asian and Hispanic/Latinx women who received a false-positive result were much less likely to return for a screening than women of the same groups who received a true-negative result, with recommendations for short interval follow-up (decrease of 20-25 percentage points) or biopsy (decrease of 13-14 percentage points).
  • For women who had two screening mammograms within 5 years, receiving a false-positive result on the second was linked to a lower likelihood of returning for a third screening, regardless of results for the first.

IN PRACTICE:

“Physicians should educate their patients about the importance of continued screening after false-positive results, especially given the associated increased future risk for breast cancer,” study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Diana L. Miglioretti, PhD, of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of California, Davis, and published online on September 3 in Annals of Internal Medicine.

LIMITATIONS:

Women could receive care at facilities outside of the trial, which may have affected the accuracy of return rates. The study did not track a complete history of false-positive results. The study did not have information about how often physicians recommend screenings and did not account for other health conditions.

DISCLOSURES:

One coauthor reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Cancer Society, as well as consulting fees from the University of Florida, Gainesville.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

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

 

TOPLINE:

Women who received false-positive mammography results were less likely to return for future screenings.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed more than three million screening mammograms from more than one million women aged between 40 and 73 years at nearly 200 facilities in the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium between 2005 and 2017.
  • Mammography results were classified as true negative or false positive; women who received false-positive results were either asked to come back for additional imaging, a short interval follow-up or biopsy recommendations.
  • The primary outcome was the probability of returning for routine screening within 9-30 months after a false-positive or true-negative result, adjusted for race, ethnicity, age, and time since the last mammogram.
  • Women with two screening mammograms within 5 years were also analyzed to evaluate the probability of returning for a third screening based on combinations of true-negative and false-positive results.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Nearly 10.0% (95% CI, 9.1%-10.5%) of women who received screening mammograms got a false-positive result, 5.8% (95% CI, 5.5%-6.2%) of whom needed immediate additional imaging, 2.7% (95% CI, 2.3%-3.2%) needed short-interval follow-up, and 1.3% (95% CI, 1.1%-1.4%) were recommended for a biopsy.
  • Women were more likely to return for screening after a true-negative result (76.9%) than after a false positive to obtain more data through additional imaging (72.4%), short-interval follow-ups (54.7%), or biopsy (61.0%).
  • Asian and Hispanic/Latinx women who received a false-positive result were much less likely to return for a screening than women of the same groups who received a true-negative result, with recommendations for short interval follow-up (decrease of 20-25 percentage points) or biopsy (decrease of 13-14 percentage points).
  • For women who had two screening mammograms within 5 years, receiving a false-positive result on the second was linked to a lower likelihood of returning for a third screening, regardless of results for the first.

IN PRACTICE:

“Physicians should educate their patients about the importance of continued screening after false-positive results, especially given the associated increased future risk for breast cancer,” study authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Diana L. Miglioretti, PhD, of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of California, Davis, and published online on September 3 in Annals of Internal Medicine.

LIMITATIONS:

Women could receive care at facilities outside of the trial, which may have affected the accuracy of return rates. The study did not track a complete history of false-positive results. The study did not have information about how often physicians recommend screenings and did not account for other health conditions.

DISCLOSURES:

One coauthor reported receiving grants from the National Institutes of Health and the American Cancer Society, as well as consulting fees from the University of Florida, Gainesville.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

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

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Do Clonal Hematopoiesis and Mosaic Chromosomal Alterations Increase Solid Tumor Risk?

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Wed, 09/25/2024 - 06:41

Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) and mosaic chromosomal alterations (mCAs) are associated with an increased risk for breast cancer, and CHIP is associated with increased mortality in patients with colon cancer, according to the authors of new research.

These findings, drawn from almost 11,000 patients in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study, add further evidence that CHIP and mCA drive solid tumor risk, alongside known associations with hematologic malignancies, reported lead author Pinkal Desai, MD, associate professor of medicine and clinical director of molecular aging at Englander Institute for Precision Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York City, and colleagues.
 

How This Study Differs From Others of Breast Cancer Risk Factors

“The independent effect of CHIP and mCA on risk and mortality from solid tumors has not been elucidated due to lack of detailed data on mortality outcomes and risk factors,” the investigators wrote in Cancer, although some previous studies have suggested a link.

In particular, the investigators highlighted a 2022 UK Biobank study, which reported an association between CHIP and lung cancer and a borderline association with breast cancer that did not quite reach statistical significance.

But the UK Biobank study was confined to a UK population, Dr. Desai noted in an interview, and the data were less detailed than those in the present investigation.

“In terms of risk, the part that was lacking in previous studies was a comprehensive assessment of risk factors that increase risk for all these cancers,” Dr. Desai said. “For example, for breast cancer, we had very detailed data on [participants’] Gail risk score, which is known to impact breast cancer risk. We also had mammogram data and colonoscopy data.”

In an accompanying editorial, Koichi Takahashi, MD, PhD , and Nehali Shah, BS, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, pointed out the same UK Biobank findings, then noted that CHIP has also been linked with worse overall survival in unselected cancer patients. Still, they wrote, “the impact of CH on cancer risk and mortality remains controversial due to conflicting data and context‐dependent effects,” necessitating studies like this one by Dr. Desai and colleagues.
 

How Was the Relationship Between CHIP, MCA, and Solid Tumor Risk Assessed?

To explore possible associations between CHIP, mCA, and solid tumors, the investigators analyzed whole genome sequencing data from 10,866 women in the WHI, a multi-study program that began in 1992 and involved 161,808 women in both observational and clinical trial cohorts.

In 2002, the first big data release from the WHI suggested that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) increased breast cancer risk, leading to widespread reduction in HRT use.

More recent reports continue to shape our understanding of these risks, suggesting differences across cancer types. For breast cancer, the WHI data suggested that HRT-associated risk was largely driven by formulations involving progesterone and estrogen, whereas estrogen-only formulations, now more common, are generally considered to present an acceptable risk profile for suitable patients.

The new study accounted for this potential HRT-associated risk, including by adjusting for patients who received HRT, type of HRT received, and duration of HRT received. According to Desai, this approach is commonly used when analyzing data from the WHI, nullifying concerns about the potentially deleterious effects of the hormones used in the study.

“Our question was not ‘does HRT cause cancer?’ ” Dr. Desai said in an interview. “But HRT can be linked to breast cancer risk and has a potential to be a confounder, and hence the above methodology.

“So I can say that the confounding/effect modification that HRT would have contributed to in the relationship between exposure (CH and mCA) and outcome (cancer) is well adjusted for as described above. This is standard in WHI analyses,” she continued.

“Every Women’s Health Initiative analysis that comes out — not just for our study — uses a standard method ... where you account for hormonal therapy,” Dr. Desai added, again noting that many other potential risk factors were considered, enabling a “detailed, robust” analysis.

Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah agreed. “A notable strength of this study is its adjustment for many confounding factors,” they wrote. “The cohort’s well‐annotated data on other known cancer risk factors allowed for a robust assessment of CH’s independent risk.”
 

 

 

How Do Findings Compare With Those of the UK Biobank Study?

CHIP was associated with a 30% increased risk for breast cancer (hazard ratio [HR], 1.30; 95% CI, 1.03-1.64; P = .02), strengthening the borderline association reported by the UK Biobank study.

In contrast with the UK Biobank study, CHIP was not associated with lung cancer risk, although this may have been caused by fewer cases of lung cancer and a lack of male patients, Dr. Desai suggested.

“The discrepancy between the studies lies in the risk of lung cancer, although the point estimate in the current study suggested a positive association,” wrote Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah.

As in the UK Biobank study, CHIP was not associated with increased risk of developing colorectal cancer.

Mortality analysis, however, which was not conducted in the UK Biobank study, offered a new insight: Patients with existing colorectal cancer and CHIP had a significantly higher mortality risk than those without CHIP. Before stage adjustment, risk for mortality among those with colorectal cancer and CHIP was fourfold higher than those without CHIP (HR, 3.99; 95% CI, 2.41-6.62; P < .001). After stage adjustment, CHIP was still associated with a twofold higher mortality risk (HR, 2.50; 95% CI, 1.32-4.72; P = .004).

The investigators’ first mCA analyses, which employed a cell fraction cutoff greater than 3%, were unfruitful. But raising the cell fraction threshold to 5% in an exploratory analysis showed that autosomal mCA was associated with a 39% increased risk for breast cancer (HR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.06-1.83; P = .01). No such associations were found between mCA and colorectal or lung cancer, regardless of cell fraction threshold.

The original 3% cell fraction threshold was selected on the basis of previous studies reporting a link between mCA and hematologic malignancies at this cutoff, Dr. Desai said.

She and her colleagues said a higher 5% cutoff might be needed, as they suspected that the link between mCA and solid tumors may not be causal, requiring a higher mutation rate.
 

Why Do Results Differ Between These Types of Studies?

Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah suggested that one possible limitation of the new study, and an obstacle to comparing results with the UK Biobank study and others like it, goes beyond population heterogeneity; incongruent findings could also be explained by differences in whole genome sequencing (WGS) technique.

“Although WGS allows sensitive detection of mCA through broad genomic coverage, it is less effective at detecting CHIP with low variant allele frequency (VAF) due to its relatively shallow depth (30x),” they wrote. “Consequently, the prevalence of mCA (18.8%) was much higher than that of CHIP (8.3%) in this cohort, contrasting with other studies using deeper sequencing.” As a result, the present study may have underestimated CHIP prevalence because of shallow sequencing depth.

“This inconsistency is a common challenge in CH population studies due to the lack of standardized methodologies and the frequent reliance on preexisting data not originally intended for CH detection,” Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah said.

Even so, despite the “heavily context-dependent” nature of these reported risks, the body of evidence to date now offers a convincing biological rationale linking CH with cancer development and outcomes, they added.
 

 

 

How Do the CHIP- and mCA-associated Risks Differ Between Solid Tumors and Blood Cancers?

“[These solid tumor risks are] not causal in the way CHIP mutations are causal for blood cancers,” Dr. Desai said. “Here we are talking about solid tumor risk, and it’s kind of scattered. It’s not just breast cancer ... there’s also increased colon cancer mortality. So I feel these mutations are doing something different ... they are sort of an added factor.”

Specific mechanisms remain unclear, Dr. Desai said, although she speculated about possible impacts on the inflammatory state or alterations to the tumor microenvironment.

“These are blood cells, right?” Dr. Desai asked. “They’re everywhere, and they’re changing something inherently in these tumors.”
 

Future research and therapeutic development

Siddhartha Jaiswal, MD, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Pathology at Stanford University in California, whose lab focuses on clonal hematopoiesis, said the causality question is central to future research.

“The key question is, are these mutations acting because they alter the function of blood cells in some way to promote cancer risk, or is it reflective of some sort of shared etiology that’s not causal?” Dr. Jaiswal said in an interview.

Available data support both possibilities.

On one side, “reasonable evidence” supports the noncausal view, Dr. Jaiswal noted, because telomere length is one of the most common genetic risk factors for clonal hematopoiesis and also for solid tumors, suggesting a shared genetic factor. On the other hand, CHIP and mCA could be directly protumorigenic via conferred disturbances of immune cell function.

When asked if both causal and noncausal factors could be at play, Dr. Jaiswal said, “yeah, absolutely.”

The presence of a causal association could be promising from a therapeutic standpoint.

“If it turns out that this association is driven by a direct causal effect of the mutations, perhaps related to immune cell function or dysfunction, then targeting that dysfunction could be a therapeutic path to improve outcomes in people, and there’s a lot of interest in this,” Dr. Jaiswal said. He went on to explain how a trial exploring this approach via interleukin-8 inhibition in lung cancer fell short.

Yet earlier intervention may still hold promise, according to experts.

“[This study] provokes the hypothesis that CH‐targeted interventions could potentially reduce cancer risk in the future,” Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah said in their editorial.

The WHI program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and the Department of Health & Human Services. The investigators disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, AbbVie, Celgene, and others. Dr. Jaiswal reported stock equity in a company that has an interest in clonal hematopoiesis.

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

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Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) and mosaic chromosomal alterations (mCAs) are associated with an increased risk for breast cancer, and CHIP is associated with increased mortality in patients with colon cancer, according to the authors of new research.

These findings, drawn from almost 11,000 patients in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study, add further evidence that CHIP and mCA drive solid tumor risk, alongside known associations with hematologic malignancies, reported lead author Pinkal Desai, MD, associate professor of medicine and clinical director of molecular aging at Englander Institute for Precision Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York City, and colleagues.
 

How This Study Differs From Others of Breast Cancer Risk Factors

“The independent effect of CHIP and mCA on risk and mortality from solid tumors has not been elucidated due to lack of detailed data on mortality outcomes and risk factors,” the investigators wrote in Cancer, although some previous studies have suggested a link.

In particular, the investigators highlighted a 2022 UK Biobank study, which reported an association between CHIP and lung cancer and a borderline association with breast cancer that did not quite reach statistical significance.

But the UK Biobank study was confined to a UK population, Dr. Desai noted in an interview, and the data were less detailed than those in the present investigation.

“In terms of risk, the part that was lacking in previous studies was a comprehensive assessment of risk factors that increase risk for all these cancers,” Dr. Desai said. “For example, for breast cancer, we had very detailed data on [participants’] Gail risk score, which is known to impact breast cancer risk. We also had mammogram data and colonoscopy data.”

In an accompanying editorial, Koichi Takahashi, MD, PhD , and Nehali Shah, BS, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, pointed out the same UK Biobank findings, then noted that CHIP has also been linked with worse overall survival in unselected cancer patients. Still, they wrote, “the impact of CH on cancer risk and mortality remains controversial due to conflicting data and context‐dependent effects,” necessitating studies like this one by Dr. Desai and colleagues.
 

How Was the Relationship Between CHIP, MCA, and Solid Tumor Risk Assessed?

To explore possible associations between CHIP, mCA, and solid tumors, the investigators analyzed whole genome sequencing data from 10,866 women in the WHI, a multi-study program that began in 1992 and involved 161,808 women in both observational and clinical trial cohorts.

In 2002, the first big data release from the WHI suggested that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) increased breast cancer risk, leading to widespread reduction in HRT use.

More recent reports continue to shape our understanding of these risks, suggesting differences across cancer types. For breast cancer, the WHI data suggested that HRT-associated risk was largely driven by formulations involving progesterone and estrogen, whereas estrogen-only formulations, now more common, are generally considered to present an acceptable risk profile for suitable patients.

The new study accounted for this potential HRT-associated risk, including by adjusting for patients who received HRT, type of HRT received, and duration of HRT received. According to Desai, this approach is commonly used when analyzing data from the WHI, nullifying concerns about the potentially deleterious effects of the hormones used in the study.

“Our question was not ‘does HRT cause cancer?’ ” Dr. Desai said in an interview. “But HRT can be linked to breast cancer risk and has a potential to be a confounder, and hence the above methodology.

“So I can say that the confounding/effect modification that HRT would have contributed to in the relationship between exposure (CH and mCA) and outcome (cancer) is well adjusted for as described above. This is standard in WHI analyses,” she continued.

“Every Women’s Health Initiative analysis that comes out — not just for our study — uses a standard method ... where you account for hormonal therapy,” Dr. Desai added, again noting that many other potential risk factors were considered, enabling a “detailed, robust” analysis.

Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah agreed. “A notable strength of this study is its adjustment for many confounding factors,” they wrote. “The cohort’s well‐annotated data on other known cancer risk factors allowed for a robust assessment of CH’s independent risk.”
 

 

 

How Do Findings Compare With Those of the UK Biobank Study?

CHIP was associated with a 30% increased risk for breast cancer (hazard ratio [HR], 1.30; 95% CI, 1.03-1.64; P = .02), strengthening the borderline association reported by the UK Biobank study.

In contrast with the UK Biobank study, CHIP was not associated with lung cancer risk, although this may have been caused by fewer cases of lung cancer and a lack of male patients, Dr. Desai suggested.

“The discrepancy between the studies lies in the risk of lung cancer, although the point estimate in the current study suggested a positive association,” wrote Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah.

As in the UK Biobank study, CHIP was not associated with increased risk of developing colorectal cancer.

Mortality analysis, however, which was not conducted in the UK Biobank study, offered a new insight: Patients with existing colorectal cancer and CHIP had a significantly higher mortality risk than those without CHIP. Before stage adjustment, risk for mortality among those with colorectal cancer and CHIP was fourfold higher than those without CHIP (HR, 3.99; 95% CI, 2.41-6.62; P < .001). After stage adjustment, CHIP was still associated with a twofold higher mortality risk (HR, 2.50; 95% CI, 1.32-4.72; P = .004).

The investigators’ first mCA analyses, which employed a cell fraction cutoff greater than 3%, were unfruitful. But raising the cell fraction threshold to 5% in an exploratory analysis showed that autosomal mCA was associated with a 39% increased risk for breast cancer (HR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.06-1.83; P = .01). No such associations were found between mCA and colorectal or lung cancer, regardless of cell fraction threshold.

The original 3% cell fraction threshold was selected on the basis of previous studies reporting a link between mCA and hematologic malignancies at this cutoff, Dr. Desai said.

She and her colleagues said a higher 5% cutoff might be needed, as they suspected that the link between mCA and solid tumors may not be causal, requiring a higher mutation rate.
 

Why Do Results Differ Between These Types of Studies?

Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah suggested that one possible limitation of the new study, and an obstacle to comparing results with the UK Biobank study and others like it, goes beyond population heterogeneity; incongruent findings could also be explained by differences in whole genome sequencing (WGS) technique.

“Although WGS allows sensitive detection of mCA through broad genomic coverage, it is less effective at detecting CHIP with low variant allele frequency (VAF) due to its relatively shallow depth (30x),” they wrote. “Consequently, the prevalence of mCA (18.8%) was much higher than that of CHIP (8.3%) in this cohort, contrasting with other studies using deeper sequencing.” As a result, the present study may have underestimated CHIP prevalence because of shallow sequencing depth.

“This inconsistency is a common challenge in CH population studies due to the lack of standardized methodologies and the frequent reliance on preexisting data not originally intended for CH detection,” Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah said.

Even so, despite the “heavily context-dependent” nature of these reported risks, the body of evidence to date now offers a convincing biological rationale linking CH with cancer development and outcomes, they added.
 

 

 

How Do the CHIP- and mCA-associated Risks Differ Between Solid Tumors and Blood Cancers?

“[These solid tumor risks are] not causal in the way CHIP mutations are causal for blood cancers,” Dr. Desai said. “Here we are talking about solid tumor risk, and it’s kind of scattered. It’s not just breast cancer ... there’s also increased colon cancer mortality. So I feel these mutations are doing something different ... they are sort of an added factor.”

Specific mechanisms remain unclear, Dr. Desai said, although she speculated about possible impacts on the inflammatory state or alterations to the tumor microenvironment.

“These are blood cells, right?” Dr. Desai asked. “They’re everywhere, and they’re changing something inherently in these tumors.”
 

Future research and therapeutic development

Siddhartha Jaiswal, MD, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Pathology at Stanford University in California, whose lab focuses on clonal hematopoiesis, said the causality question is central to future research.

“The key question is, are these mutations acting because they alter the function of blood cells in some way to promote cancer risk, or is it reflective of some sort of shared etiology that’s not causal?” Dr. Jaiswal said in an interview.

Available data support both possibilities.

On one side, “reasonable evidence” supports the noncausal view, Dr. Jaiswal noted, because telomere length is one of the most common genetic risk factors for clonal hematopoiesis and also for solid tumors, suggesting a shared genetic factor. On the other hand, CHIP and mCA could be directly protumorigenic via conferred disturbances of immune cell function.

When asked if both causal and noncausal factors could be at play, Dr. Jaiswal said, “yeah, absolutely.”

The presence of a causal association could be promising from a therapeutic standpoint.

“If it turns out that this association is driven by a direct causal effect of the mutations, perhaps related to immune cell function or dysfunction, then targeting that dysfunction could be a therapeutic path to improve outcomes in people, and there’s a lot of interest in this,” Dr. Jaiswal said. He went on to explain how a trial exploring this approach via interleukin-8 inhibition in lung cancer fell short.

Yet earlier intervention may still hold promise, according to experts.

“[This study] provokes the hypothesis that CH‐targeted interventions could potentially reduce cancer risk in the future,” Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah said in their editorial.

The WHI program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and the Department of Health & Human Services. The investigators disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, AbbVie, Celgene, and others. Dr. Jaiswal reported stock equity in a company that has an interest in clonal hematopoiesis.

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

Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) and mosaic chromosomal alterations (mCAs) are associated with an increased risk for breast cancer, and CHIP is associated with increased mortality in patients with colon cancer, according to the authors of new research.

These findings, drawn from almost 11,000 patients in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study, add further evidence that CHIP and mCA drive solid tumor risk, alongside known associations with hematologic malignancies, reported lead author Pinkal Desai, MD, associate professor of medicine and clinical director of molecular aging at Englander Institute for Precision Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York City, and colleagues.
 

How This Study Differs From Others of Breast Cancer Risk Factors

“The independent effect of CHIP and mCA on risk and mortality from solid tumors has not been elucidated due to lack of detailed data on mortality outcomes and risk factors,” the investigators wrote in Cancer, although some previous studies have suggested a link.

In particular, the investigators highlighted a 2022 UK Biobank study, which reported an association between CHIP and lung cancer and a borderline association with breast cancer that did not quite reach statistical significance.

But the UK Biobank study was confined to a UK population, Dr. Desai noted in an interview, and the data were less detailed than those in the present investigation.

“In terms of risk, the part that was lacking in previous studies was a comprehensive assessment of risk factors that increase risk for all these cancers,” Dr. Desai said. “For example, for breast cancer, we had very detailed data on [participants’] Gail risk score, which is known to impact breast cancer risk. We also had mammogram data and colonoscopy data.”

In an accompanying editorial, Koichi Takahashi, MD, PhD , and Nehali Shah, BS, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, pointed out the same UK Biobank findings, then noted that CHIP has also been linked with worse overall survival in unselected cancer patients. Still, they wrote, “the impact of CH on cancer risk and mortality remains controversial due to conflicting data and context‐dependent effects,” necessitating studies like this one by Dr. Desai and colleagues.
 

How Was the Relationship Between CHIP, MCA, and Solid Tumor Risk Assessed?

To explore possible associations between CHIP, mCA, and solid tumors, the investigators analyzed whole genome sequencing data from 10,866 women in the WHI, a multi-study program that began in 1992 and involved 161,808 women in both observational and clinical trial cohorts.

In 2002, the first big data release from the WHI suggested that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) increased breast cancer risk, leading to widespread reduction in HRT use.

More recent reports continue to shape our understanding of these risks, suggesting differences across cancer types. For breast cancer, the WHI data suggested that HRT-associated risk was largely driven by formulations involving progesterone and estrogen, whereas estrogen-only formulations, now more common, are generally considered to present an acceptable risk profile for suitable patients.

The new study accounted for this potential HRT-associated risk, including by adjusting for patients who received HRT, type of HRT received, and duration of HRT received. According to Desai, this approach is commonly used when analyzing data from the WHI, nullifying concerns about the potentially deleterious effects of the hormones used in the study.

“Our question was not ‘does HRT cause cancer?’ ” Dr. Desai said in an interview. “But HRT can be linked to breast cancer risk and has a potential to be a confounder, and hence the above methodology.

“So I can say that the confounding/effect modification that HRT would have contributed to in the relationship between exposure (CH and mCA) and outcome (cancer) is well adjusted for as described above. This is standard in WHI analyses,” she continued.

“Every Women’s Health Initiative analysis that comes out — not just for our study — uses a standard method ... where you account for hormonal therapy,” Dr. Desai added, again noting that many other potential risk factors were considered, enabling a “detailed, robust” analysis.

Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah agreed. “A notable strength of this study is its adjustment for many confounding factors,” they wrote. “The cohort’s well‐annotated data on other known cancer risk factors allowed for a robust assessment of CH’s independent risk.”
 

 

 

How Do Findings Compare With Those of the UK Biobank Study?

CHIP was associated with a 30% increased risk for breast cancer (hazard ratio [HR], 1.30; 95% CI, 1.03-1.64; P = .02), strengthening the borderline association reported by the UK Biobank study.

In contrast with the UK Biobank study, CHIP was not associated with lung cancer risk, although this may have been caused by fewer cases of lung cancer and a lack of male patients, Dr. Desai suggested.

“The discrepancy between the studies lies in the risk of lung cancer, although the point estimate in the current study suggested a positive association,” wrote Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah.

As in the UK Biobank study, CHIP was not associated with increased risk of developing colorectal cancer.

Mortality analysis, however, which was not conducted in the UK Biobank study, offered a new insight: Patients with existing colorectal cancer and CHIP had a significantly higher mortality risk than those without CHIP. Before stage adjustment, risk for mortality among those with colorectal cancer and CHIP was fourfold higher than those without CHIP (HR, 3.99; 95% CI, 2.41-6.62; P < .001). After stage adjustment, CHIP was still associated with a twofold higher mortality risk (HR, 2.50; 95% CI, 1.32-4.72; P = .004).

The investigators’ first mCA analyses, which employed a cell fraction cutoff greater than 3%, were unfruitful. But raising the cell fraction threshold to 5% in an exploratory analysis showed that autosomal mCA was associated with a 39% increased risk for breast cancer (HR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.06-1.83; P = .01). No such associations were found between mCA and colorectal or lung cancer, regardless of cell fraction threshold.

The original 3% cell fraction threshold was selected on the basis of previous studies reporting a link between mCA and hematologic malignancies at this cutoff, Dr. Desai said.

She and her colleagues said a higher 5% cutoff might be needed, as they suspected that the link between mCA and solid tumors may not be causal, requiring a higher mutation rate.
 

Why Do Results Differ Between These Types of Studies?

Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah suggested that one possible limitation of the new study, and an obstacle to comparing results with the UK Biobank study and others like it, goes beyond population heterogeneity; incongruent findings could also be explained by differences in whole genome sequencing (WGS) technique.

“Although WGS allows sensitive detection of mCA through broad genomic coverage, it is less effective at detecting CHIP with low variant allele frequency (VAF) due to its relatively shallow depth (30x),” they wrote. “Consequently, the prevalence of mCA (18.8%) was much higher than that of CHIP (8.3%) in this cohort, contrasting with other studies using deeper sequencing.” As a result, the present study may have underestimated CHIP prevalence because of shallow sequencing depth.

“This inconsistency is a common challenge in CH population studies due to the lack of standardized methodologies and the frequent reliance on preexisting data not originally intended for CH detection,” Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah said.

Even so, despite the “heavily context-dependent” nature of these reported risks, the body of evidence to date now offers a convincing biological rationale linking CH with cancer development and outcomes, they added.
 

 

 

How Do the CHIP- and mCA-associated Risks Differ Between Solid Tumors and Blood Cancers?

“[These solid tumor risks are] not causal in the way CHIP mutations are causal for blood cancers,” Dr. Desai said. “Here we are talking about solid tumor risk, and it’s kind of scattered. It’s not just breast cancer ... there’s also increased colon cancer mortality. So I feel these mutations are doing something different ... they are sort of an added factor.”

Specific mechanisms remain unclear, Dr. Desai said, although she speculated about possible impacts on the inflammatory state or alterations to the tumor microenvironment.

“These are blood cells, right?” Dr. Desai asked. “They’re everywhere, and they’re changing something inherently in these tumors.”
 

Future research and therapeutic development

Siddhartha Jaiswal, MD, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Pathology at Stanford University in California, whose lab focuses on clonal hematopoiesis, said the causality question is central to future research.

“The key question is, are these mutations acting because they alter the function of blood cells in some way to promote cancer risk, or is it reflective of some sort of shared etiology that’s not causal?” Dr. Jaiswal said in an interview.

Available data support both possibilities.

On one side, “reasonable evidence” supports the noncausal view, Dr. Jaiswal noted, because telomere length is one of the most common genetic risk factors for clonal hematopoiesis and also for solid tumors, suggesting a shared genetic factor. On the other hand, CHIP and mCA could be directly protumorigenic via conferred disturbances of immune cell function.

When asked if both causal and noncausal factors could be at play, Dr. Jaiswal said, “yeah, absolutely.”

The presence of a causal association could be promising from a therapeutic standpoint.

“If it turns out that this association is driven by a direct causal effect of the mutations, perhaps related to immune cell function or dysfunction, then targeting that dysfunction could be a therapeutic path to improve outcomes in people, and there’s a lot of interest in this,” Dr. Jaiswal said. He went on to explain how a trial exploring this approach via interleukin-8 inhibition in lung cancer fell short.

Yet earlier intervention may still hold promise, according to experts.

“[This study] provokes the hypothesis that CH‐targeted interventions could potentially reduce cancer risk in the future,” Dr. Takahashi and Ms. Shah said in their editorial.

The WHI program is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institutes of Health; and the Department of Health & Human Services. The investigators disclosed relationships with Eli Lilly, AbbVie, Celgene, and others. Dr. Jaiswal reported stock equity in a company that has an interest in clonal hematopoiesis.

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

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UCSF Favors Pricey Doctoral Program for Nurse-Midwives Amid Maternal Care Crisis

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Wed, 09/04/2024 - 14:29

 

One of California’s two programs for training nurse-midwives has stopped admitting students while it revamps its curriculum to offer only doctoral degrees, a move that’s drawn howls of protest from alumni, health policy experts, and faculty who accuse the University of California of putting profits above public health needs.

The University of California San Francisco’s (UCSF) renowned nursing school will graduate its final class of certified nurse-midwives in the spring of 2025. Then the university will cancel its 2-year master’s program in nurse-midwifery, along with other nursing disciplines, in favor of a 3-year doctor of nursing practice, or DNP, degree. The change will pause UCSF’s nearly 5 decades–long training of nurse-midwives until at least 2025 and will more than double the cost to students.

State Assembly member Mia Bonta, who chairs the health committee, said she was “disheartened” to learn that UCSF was eliminating its master’s nurse-midwifery program and feared the additional time and costs to get a doctorate would deter potential applicants. “Instead of adding hurdles, we need to be building and expanding a pipeline of culturally and racially concordant providers to support improved birth outcomes, especially for Black and Latina birthing people,” she said in an email.

The switch to doctoral education is part of a national movement to require all advanced-practice registered nurses, including nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners, to earn doctoral degrees, Kristen Bole, a UCSF spokesperson, said in response to written questions. The doctoral training will feature additional classes in leadership and quality improvement.

But the movement, which dates to 2004, has not caught on the way the American Association of Colleges of Nursing envisioned when it called for doctorate-level education to be required for entry-level advanced nursing practice by 2015. That deadline came and went. Now, an acute need for maternal health practitioners has some universities moving in the other direction.

This year, Rutgers University reinstated the nurse-midwifery master’s training it had eliminated in 2016. The University of Alabama at Birmingham also restarted its master’s in nurse-midwifery program in 2022 after a 25-year hiatus. In addition, George Washington University in Washington, DC, Loyola University in New Orleans, and the University of Nevada in Las Vagas added master’s training in nurse-midwifery.

UCSF estimates tuition and fees will cost $152,000 for a 3-year doctoral degree in midwifery, compared with $65,000 for a 2-year master’s. Studies show that 71% of nursing master’s students and 74% of nursing doctoral students rely on student loans, and nurses with doctorates earn negligibly or no more than nurses with master’s degrees.

Kim Q. Dau, who ran UCSF’s nurse-midwifery program for a decade, resigned in June because she was uncomfortable with the elimination of the master’s in favor of a doctoral requirement, she said, which is at odds with the state’s workforce needs and unnecessary for clinical practice.

“They’ll be equally prepared clinically but at more expense to the student and with a greater time investment,” she said.

Nurse-midwives are registered nurses with graduate degrees in nurse-midwifery. Licensed in all 50 states, they work mostly in hospitals and can perform abortions and prescribe medications, though they are also trained in managing labor pain with showers, massage, and other natural means. Certified midwives, by contrast, study midwifery at the graduate level outside of nursing schools and are licensed only in some states. Certified professional midwives attend births outside of hospitals.

The California Nurse-Midwives Association also criticized UCSF’s program change, which comes amid a national maternal mortality crisis, a serious shortage of obstetric providers, and a growing reliance on midwives. According to the 2022 “White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis” report, the United States has the highest maternal mortality rate of any developed nation and needs thousands more midwives and other women’s health providers to bridge the swelling gap.

Ginger Breedlove, founder and CEO of Grow Midwives, a national consulting firm, likened UCSF’s switch from master’s to doctoral training to “an earthquake.”

“Why are we delaying the entry of essential care providers by making them go to an additional year of school, which adds nothing to their clinical preparedness or safety to serve the community?” asked Ms. Breedlove, a past president of the American College of Nurse-Midwives. “Why they have chosen this during one of the worst workforce shortages combined with the worst maternal health crisis we have had in 50 years is beyond my imagination.”

A 2020 report published in Nursing Outlook failed to find that advanced-practice registered nurses with doctorates were more clinically proficient than those with master’s degrees. “Unfortunately, to date, the data are sparse,” it concluded.

The American College of Nurse-Midwives also denounced the doctoral requirement, as have trade associations for neonatal nurse practitioners and neonatal nurses, citing “the lack of scientific evidence that ... doctoral-level education is beneficial to patients, practitioners, or society.”

There is no evidence that doctoral-level nurse-midwives will provide better care, Ms. Breedlove said.

“This is profit over purpose,” she added.

Ms. Bole disputed Ms. Breedlove’s accusation of a profit motive. Asked for reasons for the change, she offered broad statements: “The decision to upgrade our program was made to ensure that our graduates are prepared for the challenges they will face in the evolving health care landscape.”

Like Ms. Breedlove, Liz Donnelly, vice chair of the health policy committee for the California Nurse-Midwives Association, worries that UCSF’s switch to a doctoral degree will exacerbate the twin crises of maternal mortality and a shrinking obstetrics workforce across California and the nation.

On average, 10-12 nurse-midwives graduated from the UCSF master’s program each year over the past decade, Ms. Bole said. California’s remaining master’s program in nurse-midwifery is at California State University in Fullerton, south of Los Angeles, and it graduated 8 nurse-midwives in 2023 and 11 in 2024.

More than half of rural counties in the United States lacked obstetric care in 2018, according to a Government Accountability Office report.

In some parts of California, expectant mothers must drive 2 hours for care, said Bethany Sasaki, who runs Midtown Nurse Midwives, a Sacramento birth center. It has had to stop accepting new clients because it cannot find midwives.

Ms. Donnelly predicted the closure of UCSF’s midwifery program will significantly reduce the number of nurse-midwives entering the workforce and will inhibit people with fewer resources from attending the program. “Specifically, I think it’s going to reduce folks of color, people from rural communities, people from poor communities,” she said.

UCSF’s change will also likely undercut efforts to train providers from diverse backgrounds.

Natasha, a 37-year-old Afro-Puerto Rican mother of two, has spent a decade preparing to train as a nurse-midwife so she could help women like herself through pregnancy and childbirth. She asked to be identified only by her first name out of fear of reducing her chances of graduate school admission.

The UCSF program’s pause, plus the added time and expense to get a doctoral degree, has muddied her career path.

“The master’s was just the perfect program,” said Natasha, who lives in the Bay Area and cannot travel to the other end of the state to attend California State University-Fullerton. “I’m frustrated, and I feel deflated. I now have to find another career path.”

This article was produced by KFF Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care FoundationKFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

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One of California’s two programs for training nurse-midwives has stopped admitting students while it revamps its curriculum to offer only doctoral degrees, a move that’s drawn howls of protest from alumni, health policy experts, and faculty who accuse the University of California of putting profits above public health needs.

The University of California San Francisco’s (UCSF) renowned nursing school will graduate its final class of certified nurse-midwives in the spring of 2025. Then the university will cancel its 2-year master’s program in nurse-midwifery, along with other nursing disciplines, in favor of a 3-year doctor of nursing practice, or DNP, degree. The change will pause UCSF’s nearly 5 decades–long training of nurse-midwives until at least 2025 and will more than double the cost to students.

State Assembly member Mia Bonta, who chairs the health committee, said she was “disheartened” to learn that UCSF was eliminating its master’s nurse-midwifery program and feared the additional time and costs to get a doctorate would deter potential applicants. “Instead of adding hurdles, we need to be building and expanding a pipeline of culturally and racially concordant providers to support improved birth outcomes, especially for Black and Latina birthing people,” she said in an email.

The switch to doctoral education is part of a national movement to require all advanced-practice registered nurses, including nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners, to earn doctoral degrees, Kristen Bole, a UCSF spokesperson, said in response to written questions. The doctoral training will feature additional classes in leadership and quality improvement.

But the movement, which dates to 2004, has not caught on the way the American Association of Colleges of Nursing envisioned when it called for doctorate-level education to be required for entry-level advanced nursing practice by 2015. That deadline came and went. Now, an acute need for maternal health practitioners has some universities moving in the other direction.

This year, Rutgers University reinstated the nurse-midwifery master’s training it had eliminated in 2016. The University of Alabama at Birmingham also restarted its master’s in nurse-midwifery program in 2022 after a 25-year hiatus. In addition, George Washington University in Washington, DC, Loyola University in New Orleans, and the University of Nevada in Las Vagas added master’s training in nurse-midwifery.

UCSF estimates tuition and fees will cost $152,000 for a 3-year doctoral degree in midwifery, compared with $65,000 for a 2-year master’s. Studies show that 71% of nursing master’s students and 74% of nursing doctoral students rely on student loans, and nurses with doctorates earn negligibly or no more than nurses with master’s degrees.

Kim Q. Dau, who ran UCSF’s nurse-midwifery program for a decade, resigned in June because she was uncomfortable with the elimination of the master’s in favor of a doctoral requirement, she said, which is at odds with the state’s workforce needs and unnecessary for clinical practice.

“They’ll be equally prepared clinically but at more expense to the student and with a greater time investment,” she said.

Nurse-midwives are registered nurses with graduate degrees in nurse-midwifery. Licensed in all 50 states, they work mostly in hospitals and can perform abortions and prescribe medications, though they are also trained in managing labor pain with showers, massage, and other natural means. Certified midwives, by contrast, study midwifery at the graduate level outside of nursing schools and are licensed only in some states. Certified professional midwives attend births outside of hospitals.

The California Nurse-Midwives Association also criticized UCSF’s program change, which comes amid a national maternal mortality crisis, a serious shortage of obstetric providers, and a growing reliance on midwives. According to the 2022 “White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis” report, the United States has the highest maternal mortality rate of any developed nation and needs thousands more midwives and other women’s health providers to bridge the swelling gap.

Ginger Breedlove, founder and CEO of Grow Midwives, a national consulting firm, likened UCSF’s switch from master’s to doctoral training to “an earthquake.”

“Why are we delaying the entry of essential care providers by making them go to an additional year of school, which adds nothing to their clinical preparedness or safety to serve the community?” asked Ms. Breedlove, a past president of the American College of Nurse-Midwives. “Why they have chosen this during one of the worst workforce shortages combined with the worst maternal health crisis we have had in 50 years is beyond my imagination.”

A 2020 report published in Nursing Outlook failed to find that advanced-practice registered nurses with doctorates were more clinically proficient than those with master’s degrees. “Unfortunately, to date, the data are sparse,” it concluded.

The American College of Nurse-Midwives also denounced the doctoral requirement, as have trade associations for neonatal nurse practitioners and neonatal nurses, citing “the lack of scientific evidence that ... doctoral-level education is beneficial to patients, practitioners, or society.”

There is no evidence that doctoral-level nurse-midwives will provide better care, Ms. Breedlove said.

“This is profit over purpose,” she added.

Ms. Bole disputed Ms. Breedlove’s accusation of a profit motive. Asked for reasons for the change, she offered broad statements: “The decision to upgrade our program was made to ensure that our graduates are prepared for the challenges they will face in the evolving health care landscape.”

Like Ms. Breedlove, Liz Donnelly, vice chair of the health policy committee for the California Nurse-Midwives Association, worries that UCSF’s switch to a doctoral degree will exacerbate the twin crises of maternal mortality and a shrinking obstetrics workforce across California and the nation.

On average, 10-12 nurse-midwives graduated from the UCSF master’s program each year over the past decade, Ms. Bole said. California’s remaining master’s program in nurse-midwifery is at California State University in Fullerton, south of Los Angeles, and it graduated 8 nurse-midwives in 2023 and 11 in 2024.

More than half of rural counties in the United States lacked obstetric care in 2018, according to a Government Accountability Office report.

In some parts of California, expectant mothers must drive 2 hours for care, said Bethany Sasaki, who runs Midtown Nurse Midwives, a Sacramento birth center. It has had to stop accepting new clients because it cannot find midwives.

Ms. Donnelly predicted the closure of UCSF’s midwifery program will significantly reduce the number of nurse-midwives entering the workforce and will inhibit people with fewer resources from attending the program. “Specifically, I think it’s going to reduce folks of color, people from rural communities, people from poor communities,” she said.

UCSF’s change will also likely undercut efforts to train providers from diverse backgrounds.

Natasha, a 37-year-old Afro-Puerto Rican mother of two, has spent a decade preparing to train as a nurse-midwife so she could help women like herself through pregnancy and childbirth. She asked to be identified only by her first name out of fear of reducing her chances of graduate school admission.

The UCSF program’s pause, plus the added time and expense to get a doctoral degree, has muddied her career path.

“The master’s was just the perfect program,” said Natasha, who lives in the Bay Area and cannot travel to the other end of the state to attend California State University-Fullerton. “I’m frustrated, and I feel deflated. I now have to find another career path.”

This article was produced by KFF Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care FoundationKFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

 

One of California’s two programs for training nurse-midwives has stopped admitting students while it revamps its curriculum to offer only doctoral degrees, a move that’s drawn howls of protest from alumni, health policy experts, and faculty who accuse the University of California of putting profits above public health needs.

The University of California San Francisco’s (UCSF) renowned nursing school will graduate its final class of certified nurse-midwives in the spring of 2025. Then the university will cancel its 2-year master’s program in nurse-midwifery, along with other nursing disciplines, in favor of a 3-year doctor of nursing practice, or DNP, degree. The change will pause UCSF’s nearly 5 decades–long training of nurse-midwives until at least 2025 and will more than double the cost to students.

State Assembly member Mia Bonta, who chairs the health committee, said she was “disheartened” to learn that UCSF was eliminating its master’s nurse-midwifery program and feared the additional time and costs to get a doctorate would deter potential applicants. “Instead of adding hurdles, we need to be building and expanding a pipeline of culturally and racially concordant providers to support improved birth outcomes, especially for Black and Latina birthing people,” she said in an email.

The switch to doctoral education is part of a national movement to require all advanced-practice registered nurses, including nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners, to earn doctoral degrees, Kristen Bole, a UCSF spokesperson, said in response to written questions. The doctoral training will feature additional classes in leadership and quality improvement.

But the movement, which dates to 2004, has not caught on the way the American Association of Colleges of Nursing envisioned when it called for doctorate-level education to be required for entry-level advanced nursing practice by 2015. That deadline came and went. Now, an acute need for maternal health practitioners has some universities moving in the other direction.

This year, Rutgers University reinstated the nurse-midwifery master’s training it had eliminated in 2016. The University of Alabama at Birmingham also restarted its master’s in nurse-midwifery program in 2022 after a 25-year hiatus. In addition, George Washington University in Washington, DC, Loyola University in New Orleans, and the University of Nevada in Las Vagas added master’s training in nurse-midwifery.

UCSF estimates tuition and fees will cost $152,000 for a 3-year doctoral degree in midwifery, compared with $65,000 for a 2-year master’s. Studies show that 71% of nursing master’s students and 74% of nursing doctoral students rely on student loans, and nurses with doctorates earn negligibly or no more than nurses with master’s degrees.

Kim Q. Dau, who ran UCSF’s nurse-midwifery program for a decade, resigned in June because she was uncomfortable with the elimination of the master’s in favor of a doctoral requirement, she said, which is at odds with the state’s workforce needs and unnecessary for clinical practice.

“They’ll be equally prepared clinically but at more expense to the student and with a greater time investment,” she said.

Nurse-midwives are registered nurses with graduate degrees in nurse-midwifery. Licensed in all 50 states, they work mostly in hospitals and can perform abortions and prescribe medications, though they are also trained in managing labor pain with showers, massage, and other natural means. Certified midwives, by contrast, study midwifery at the graduate level outside of nursing schools and are licensed only in some states. Certified professional midwives attend births outside of hospitals.

The California Nurse-Midwives Association also criticized UCSF’s program change, which comes amid a national maternal mortality crisis, a serious shortage of obstetric providers, and a growing reliance on midwives. According to the 2022 “White House Blueprint for Addressing the Maternal Health Crisis” report, the United States has the highest maternal mortality rate of any developed nation and needs thousands more midwives and other women’s health providers to bridge the swelling gap.

Ginger Breedlove, founder and CEO of Grow Midwives, a national consulting firm, likened UCSF’s switch from master’s to doctoral training to “an earthquake.”

“Why are we delaying the entry of essential care providers by making them go to an additional year of school, which adds nothing to their clinical preparedness or safety to serve the community?” asked Ms. Breedlove, a past president of the American College of Nurse-Midwives. “Why they have chosen this during one of the worst workforce shortages combined with the worst maternal health crisis we have had in 50 years is beyond my imagination.”

A 2020 report published in Nursing Outlook failed to find that advanced-practice registered nurses with doctorates were more clinically proficient than those with master’s degrees. “Unfortunately, to date, the data are sparse,” it concluded.

The American College of Nurse-Midwives also denounced the doctoral requirement, as have trade associations for neonatal nurse practitioners and neonatal nurses, citing “the lack of scientific evidence that ... doctoral-level education is beneficial to patients, practitioners, or society.”

There is no evidence that doctoral-level nurse-midwives will provide better care, Ms. Breedlove said.

“This is profit over purpose,” she added.

Ms. Bole disputed Ms. Breedlove’s accusation of a profit motive. Asked for reasons for the change, she offered broad statements: “The decision to upgrade our program was made to ensure that our graduates are prepared for the challenges they will face in the evolving health care landscape.”

Like Ms. Breedlove, Liz Donnelly, vice chair of the health policy committee for the California Nurse-Midwives Association, worries that UCSF’s switch to a doctoral degree will exacerbate the twin crises of maternal mortality and a shrinking obstetrics workforce across California and the nation.

On average, 10-12 nurse-midwives graduated from the UCSF master’s program each year over the past decade, Ms. Bole said. California’s remaining master’s program in nurse-midwifery is at California State University in Fullerton, south of Los Angeles, and it graduated 8 nurse-midwives in 2023 and 11 in 2024.

More than half of rural counties in the United States lacked obstetric care in 2018, according to a Government Accountability Office report.

In some parts of California, expectant mothers must drive 2 hours for care, said Bethany Sasaki, who runs Midtown Nurse Midwives, a Sacramento birth center. It has had to stop accepting new clients because it cannot find midwives.

Ms. Donnelly predicted the closure of UCSF’s midwifery program will significantly reduce the number of nurse-midwives entering the workforce and will inhibit people with fewer resources from attending the program. “Specifically, I think it’s going to reduce folks of color, people from rural communities, people from poor communities,” she said.

UCSF’s change will also likely undercut efforts to train providers from diverse backgrounds.

Natasha, a 37-year-old Afro-Puerto Rican mother of two, has spent a decade preparing to train as a nurse-midwife so she could help women like herself through pregnancy and childbirth. She asked to be identified only by her first name out of fear of reducing her chances of graduate school admission.

The UCSF program’s pause, plus the added time and expense to get a doctoral degree, has muddied her career path.

“The master’s was just the perfect program,” said Natasha, who lives in the Bay Area and cannot travel to the other end of the state to attend California State University-Fullerton. “I’m frustrated, and I feel deflated. I now have to find another career path.”

This article was produced by KFF Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care FoundationKFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

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Listeriosis During Pregnancy Can Be Fatal for the Fetus

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Wed, 09/04/2024 - 13:34

 

Listeriosis during pregnancy, when invasive, can be fatal for the fetus, with a rate of fetal loss or neonatal death of 29%, investigators reported in an article alerting clinicians to this condition.

The article was prompted when the Reproductive Infectious Diseases team at The University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, “received many phone calls from concerned doctors and patients after the plant-based milk recall in early July,” Jeffrey Man Hay Wong, MD, told this news organization. “With such concerns, we updated our British Columbia guidelines for our patients but quickly realized that our recommendations would be useful across the country.”

The article was published online in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.


 

Five Key Points

Dr. Wong and colleagues provided the following five points and recommendations:

First, invasive listeriosis (bacteremia or meningitis) in pregnancy can have major fetal consequences, including fetal loss or neonatal death in 29% of cases. Affected patients can be asymptomatic or experience gastrointestinal symptoms, myalgias, fevers, acute respiratory distress syndrome, or sepsis.

Second, pregnant people should avoid foods at a high risk for Listeria monocytogenes contamination, including unpasteurized dairy products, luncheon meats, refrigerated meat spreads, and prepared salads. They also should stay aware of Health Canada recalls.

Third, it is not necessary to investigate or treat patients who may have ingested contaminated food but are asymptomatic. Listeriosis can present at 2-3 months after exposure because the incubation period can be as long as 70 days.

Fourth, for patients with mild gastroenteritis or flu-like symptoms who may have ingested contaminated food, obtaining blood cultures or starting a 2-week course of oral amoxicillin (500 mg, three times daily) could be considered.

Fifth, for patients with fever and possible exposure to L monocytogenes, blood cultures should be drawn immediately, and high-dose ampicillin should be initiated, along with electronic fetal heart rate monitoring.

“While choosing safer foods in pregnancy is recommended, it is most important to be aware of Health Canada food recalls and pay attention to symptoms if you’ve ingested these foods,” said Dr. Wong. “Working with the BC Centre for Disease Control, our teams are actively monitoring for cases of listeriosis in pregnancy here in British Columbia.

“Thankfully,” he said, “there haven’t been any confirmed cases in British Columbia related to the plant-based milk recall, though the bacteria’s incubation period can be up to 70 days in pregnancy.”
 

No Increase Suspected

Commenting on the article, Khady Diouf, MD, director of global obstetrics and gynecology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said, “It summarizes the main management, which is based mostly on expert opinion.”

US clinicians also should be reminded about listeriosis in pregnancy, she noted, pointing to “helpful guidance” from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Although the United States similarly experienced a recent listeriosis outbreak resulting from contaminated deli meats, both Dr. Wong and Dr. Diouf said that these outbreaks do not seem to signal an increase in listeriosis cases overall.

“Food-borne listeriosis seems to come in waves,” said Dr. Wong. “At a public health level, we certainly have better surveillance programs for Listeria infections. In 2023, Health Canada updated its Policy on L monocytogenes in ready-to-eat foods, which emphasizes the good manufacturing practices recommended for food processing environments to identify outbreaks earlier.”

“I think we get these recalls yearly, and this has been the case for as long as I can remember,” Dr. Diouf agreed.

No funding was declared, and the authors declared no relevant financial relationships.

 

 

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

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Listeriosis during pregnancy, when invasive, can be fatal for the fetus, with a rate of fetal loss or neonatal death of 29%, investigators reported in an article alerting clinicians to this condition.

The article was prompted when the Reproductive Infectious Diseases team at The University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, “received many phone calls from concerned doctors and patients after the plant-based milk recall in early July,” Jeffrey Man Hay Wong, MD, told this news organization. “With such concerns, we updated our British Columbia guidelines for our patients but quickly realized that our recommendations would be useful across the country.”

The article was published online in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.


 

Five Key Points

Dr. Wong and colleagues provided the following five points and recommendations:

First, invasive listeriosis (bacteremia or meningitis) in pregnancy can have major fetal consequences, including fetal loss or neonatal death in 29% of cases. Affected patients can be asymptomatic or experience gastrointestinal symptoms, myalgias, fevers, acute respiratory distress syndrome, or sepsis.

Second, pregnant people should avoid foods at a high risk for Listeria monocytogenes contamination, including unpasteurized dairy products, luncheon meats, refrigerated meat spreads, and prepared salads. They also should stay aware of Health Canada recalls.

Third, it is not necessary to investigate or treat patients who may have ingested contaminated food but are asymptomatic. Listeriosis can present at 2-3 months after exposure because the incubation period can be as long as 70 days.

Fourth, for patients with mild gastroenteritis or flu-like symptoms who may have ingested contaminated food, obtaining blood cultures or starting a 2-week course of oral amoxicillin (500 mg, three times daily) could be considered.

Fifth, for patients with fever and possible exposure to L monocytogenes, blood cultures should be drawn immediately, and high-dose ampicillin should be initiated, along with electronic fetal heart rate monitoring.

“While choosing safer foods in pregnancy is recommended, it is most important to be aware of Health Canada food recalls and pay attention to symptoms if you’ve ingested these foods,” said Dr. Wong. “Working with the BC Centre for Disease Control, our teams are actively monitoring for cases of listeriosis in pregnancy here in British Columbia.

“Thankfully,” he said, “there haven’t been any confirmed cases in British Columbia related to the plant-based milk recall, though the bacteria’s incubation period can be up to 70 days in pregnancy.”
 

No Increase Suspected

Commenting on the article, Khady Diouf, MD, director of global obstetrics and gynecology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said, “It summarizes the main management, which is based mostly on expert opinion.”

US clinicians also should be reminded about listeriosis in pregnancy, she noted, pointing to “helpful guidance” from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Although the United States similarly experienced a recent listeriosis outbreak resulting from contaminated deli meats, both Dr. Wong and Dr. Diouf said that these outbreaks do not seem to signal an increase in listeriosis cases overall.

“Food-borne listeriosis seems to come in waves,” said Dr. Wong. “At a public health level, we certainly have better surveillance programs for Listeria infections. In 2023, Health Canada updated its Policy on L monocytogenes in ready-to-eat foods, which emphasizes the good manufacturing practices recommended for food processing environments to identify outbreaks earlier.”

“I think we get these recalls yearly, and this has been the case for as long as I can remember,” Dr. Diouf agreed.

No funding was declared, and the authors declared no relevant financial relationships.

 

 

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

 

Listeriosis during pregnancy, when invasive, can be fatal for the fetus, with a rate of fetal loss or neonatal death of 29%, investigators reported in an article alerting clinicians to this condition.

The article was prompted when the Reproductive Infectious Diseases team at The University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, “received many phone calls from concerned doctors and patients after the plant-based milk recall in early July,” Jeffrey Man Hay Wong, MD, told this news organization. “With such concerns, we updated our British Columbia guidelines for our patients but quickly realized that our recommendations would be useful across the country.”

The article was published online in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.


 

Five Key Points

Dr. Wong and colleagues provided the following five points and recommendations:

First, invasive listeriosis (bacteremia or meningitis) in pregnancy can have major fetal consequences, including fetal loss or neonatal death in 29% of cases. Affected patients can be asymptomatic or experience gastrointestinal symptoms, myalgias, fevers, acute respiratory distress syndrome, or sepsis.

Second, pregnant people should avoid foods at a high risk for Listeria monocytogenes contamination, including unpasteurized dairy products, luncheon meats, refrigerated meat spreads, and prepared salads. They also should stay aware of Health Canada recalls.

Third, it is not necessary to investigate or treat patients who may have ingested contaminated food but are asymptomatic. Listeriosis can present at 2-3 months after exposure because the incubation period can be as long as 70 days.

Fourth, for patients with mild gastroenteritis or flu-like symptoms who may have ingested contaminated food, obtaining blood cultures or starting a 2-week course of oral amoxicillin (500 mg, three times daily) could be considered.

Fifth, for patients with fever and possible exposure to L monocytogenes, blood cultures should be drawn immediately, and high-dose ampicillin should be initiated, along with electronic fetal heart rate monitoring.

“While choosing safer foods in pregnancy is recommended, it is most important to be aware of Health Canada food recalls and pay attention to symptoms if you’ve ingested these foods,” said Dr. Wong. “Working with the BC Centre for Disease Control, our teams are actively monitoring for cases of listeriosis in pregnancy here in British Columbia.

“Thankfully,” he said, “there haven’t been any confirmed cases in British Columbia related to the plant-based milk recall, though the bacteria’s incubation period can be up to 70 days in pregnancy.”
 

No Increase Suspected

Commenting on the article, Khady Diouf, MD, director of global obstetrics and gynecology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said, “It summarizes the main management, which is based mostly on expert opinion.”

US clinicians also should be reminded about listeriosis in pregnancy, she noted, pointing to “helpful guidance” from the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Although the United States similarly experienced a recent listeriosis outbreak resulting from contaminated deli meats, both Dr. Wong and Dr. Diouf said that these outbreaks do not seem to signal an increase in listeriosis cases overall.

“Food-borne listeriosis seems to come in waves,” said Dr. Wong. “At a public health level, we certainly have better surveillance programs for Listeria infections. In 2023, Health Canada updated its Policy on L monocytogenes in ready-to-eat foods, which emphasizes the good manufacturing practices recommended for food processing environments to identify outbreaks earlier.”

“I think we get these recalls yearly, and this has been the case for as long as I can remember,” Dr. Diouf agreed.

No funding was declared, and the authors declared no relevant financial relationships.

 

 

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

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Balloon Catheters May Reduce Blood Loss in Women with Placenta Accreta Spectrum Disorder

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Wed, 08/28/2024 - 14:21

Prophylactic placement of balloon catheters or sheaths prior to planned cesarean delivery may reduce blood loss in women with placenta accreta spectrum disorder, according to a new systematic review of more than 5,000 individuals.

Placenta accreta spectrum disorder occurs when the endometrial-myometrial interface of the uterus is damaged, wrote Lisanne R. Bonsen, MD, of Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands, and colleagues. As a result, the placenta fails to detach at the time of birth and can result in life-threatening postpartum hemorrhage, the researchers said.

The greater the depth of placental invasiveness, the more severe the maternal outcomes, the researchers noted. Previous cesarean delivery is the primary risk factor for placenta accreta spectrum disorder, and the incidence has increased along with the increased rates of cesarean delivery on a global level, they explained.

More research is needed on intrapartum strategies to improve maternal outcomes, and prophylactic radiologic intervention to reduce perioperative blood loss has been explored, the researchers wrote. However, placenta accreta spectrum disorder remains relatively rare in most pregnancy settings, and data on the effect of prophylactic radiologic interventions to reduce bleeding in this high-risk population are limited they said.

In the review published in Obstetrics & Gynecology, the researchers analyzed data from 50 studies of prophylactic radiologic interventions (48 observational studies and 2 randomized, controlled trials) including 5,962 women.

The primary outcome was perioperative blood loss; secondary outcomes included the number of red blood cells transferred within 24 hours after delivery, maternal mortality, adverse events related to the interventions, and surgical complications.

Blood loss was significantly lower in the intervention groups compared with the control groups for patients who underwent distal balloon occlusion (30 studies), proximal balloon occlusion (14 studies), or uterine artery embolization (5 studies), with mean differences in blood loss of 406 mL, 1,041 mL, and 936 mL, respectively.

Results were similar with lower blood loss for intervention patients compared with controls in subgroup analyses of different types of placenta accreta spectrum disorder and those with placenta accreta spectrum disorder confirmed post partum.

Across the 35 studies that included data on blood transfusions, women who underwent any prophylactic radiologic intervention averaged fewer red blood cell units transferred than women who had no radiologic intervention, with a mean difference of 1.13, 1.90, and 1.86 units for distal prophylactic balloon occlusion, proximal prophylactic balloon occlusion, and prophylactic uterine artery embolization, respectively.

Data on adverse events related to the interventions were limited, but noted in approximately 2% of patients who underwent distal or proximal prophylactic balloon occlusion, and 45% of patients who underwent prophylactic uterine artery embolization. One maternal death was reported and attributed to diffuse intravascular coagulation. Three cardiac arrests occurred in control patients across different studies and all were successfully resuscitated.

Most of the studies did not report data on the researchers’ predefined secondary outcomes, including shock, transfer to a higher level of care, coagulopathy, organ dysfunction, and patient-reported outcomes.
 

What Works Best

“Our main analysis reveals differences in outcomes among the three interventions, with proximal balloon occlusion demonstrating the strongest effect,” the researchers wrote. “Our results show a blood loss reduction of 406 mL by distal prophylactic balloon occlusion. An explanation for the differences between the results of prophylactic balloon occlusion–distal and prophylactic balloon occlusion–proximal could be that implementing occlusion at a distal level may be less effective because of bleeding from the collateral circulation,” they said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the observational design of most of the studies, variation in measurements of blood loss among studies and in inclusion criteria, and insufficient adverse event data to draw conclusions about safety, the researchers noted. More research is needed to examine efficacy and safety of the interventions according to different sensitivities of placenta accreta spectrum disorder, they added.

Results Support Judicious Intervention

“Although previous studies showed mixed results, our meta-analysis demonstrated that prophylactic radiologic interventions, particularly balloon occlusion (both distal and proximal), were associated with reduced perioperative blood loss and less red blood cell unit transfusion; this was most pronounced in women with confirmed placenta percreta,” Bonsen said in an interview. However, the heterogeneity across the included studies prevents generalizations about the overall effects of the interventions across different severities of placenta accreta spectrum disorder, she said.*

Despite these limitations, the overview of the currently available evidence provides insights for clinical decision making, said Bonsen. “Our study highlights that, if we were to be certain of the diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum disorder antepartum, prophylactic radiologic intervention could help reduce peripartum blood loss,” she said.

Risks vs Benefits

“Given the challenges in performing randomized surgical trials in a pregnant patient population with an uncommon disorder, this level of evidence provides important data to assist with clinical decision making in patients with placenta accreta spectrum disorder,” despite the limitations of the observational studies, wrote Jocelyn S. Chapman, MD, and Arianna M. Cassidy, MD, both affiliated with the Multidisciplinary Approach to Placenta Accreta Spectrum Disorder Service (MAPS) at the University of California, San Francisco, in an accompanying editorial.

Previous research has shown an increased risk of severe maternal morbidity among women with placenta accreta spectrum disorder and previous intervention strategies have involved protocols, surgical techniques, and management strategies, they wrote.

Uterine artery embolization after cesarean delivery also has been associated with reduced hemorrhage and no adverse events, but this procedure was not included in the studies reviewed and is best conducted in a delivery setup not available in many hospital systems, the editorialists noted.

The current study illustrates the value of prophylactic balloon occlusion and placement of vascular sheaths to reduce blood loss and blood transfusion, but the risk of thrombosis and lumbosacral pain must be considered, they said. These risks may be a reasonable trade-off to avoid severe blood loss and ICU care, and to preserve the uterus, Chapman and Cassidy added.

“However, we would urge continued critical appraisal of each placenta accreta spectrum disorder case with a multidisciplinary team to evaluate the available evidence-based strategies most likely to mitigate clinically relevant complications while minimizing the introduction of new ones,” the editorialists concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Chapman and Dr. Cassidy had no financial conflicts to disclose.

*This story was updated on August 28, 2024.

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Prophylactic placement of balloon catheters or sheaths prior to planned cesarean delivery may reduce blood loss in women with placenta accreta spectrum disorder, according to a new systematic review of more than 5,000 individuals.

Placenta accreta spectrum disorder occurs when the endometrial-myometrial interface of the uterus is damaged, wrote Lisanne R. Bonsen, MD, of Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands, and colleagues. As a result, the placenta fails to detach at the time of birth and can result in life-threatening postpartum hemorrhage, the researchers said.

The greater the depth of placental invasiveness, the more severe the maternal outcomes, the researchers noted. Previous cesarean delivery is the primary risk factor for placenta accreta spectrum disorder, and the incidence has increased along with the increased rates of cesarean delivery on a global level, they explained.

More research is needed on intrapartum strategies to improve maternal outcomes, and prophylactic radiologic intervention to reduce perioperative blood loss has been explored, the researchers wrote. However, placenta accreta spectrum disorder remains relatively rare in most pregnancy settings, and data on the effect of prophylactic radiologic interventions to reduce bleeding in this high-risk population are limited they said.

In the review published in Obstetrics & Gynecology, the researchers analyzed data from 50 studies of prophylactic radiologic interventions (48 observational studies and 2 randomized, controlled trials) including 5,962 women.

The primary outcome was perioperative blood loss; secondary outcomes included the number of red blood cells transferred within 24 hours after delivery, maternal mortality, adverse events related to the interventions, and surgical complications.

Blood loss was significantly lower in the intervention groups compared with the control groups for patients who underwent distal balloon occlusion (30 studies), proximal balloon occlusion (14 studies), or uterine artery embolization (5 studies), with mean differences in blood loss of 406 mL, 1,041 mL, and 936 mL, respectively.

Results were similar with lower blood loss for intervention patients compared with controls in subgroup analyses of different types of placenta accreta spectrum disorder and those with placenta accreta spectrum disorder confirmed post partum.

Across the 35 studies that included data on blood transfusions, women who underwent any prophylactic radiologic intervention averaged fewer red blood cell units transferred than women who had no radiologic intervention, with a mean difference of 1.13, 1.90, and 1.86 units for distal prophylactic balloon occlusion, proximal prophylactic balloon occlusion, and prophylactic uterine artery embolization, respectively.

Data on adverse events related to the interventions were limited, but noted in approximately 2% of patients who underwent distal or proximal prophylactic balloon occlusion, and 45% of patients who underwent prophylactic uterine artery embolization. One maternal death was reported and attributed to diffuse intravascular coagulation. Three cardiac arrests occurred in control patients across different studies and all were successfully resuscitated.

Most of the studies did not report data on the researchers’ predefined secondary outcomes, including shock, transfer to a higher level of care, coagulopathy, organ dysfunction, and patient-reported outcomes.
 

What Works Best

“Our main analysis reveals differences in outcomes among the three interventions, with proximal balloon occlusion demonstrating the strongest effect,” the researchers wrote. “Our results show a blood loss reduction of 406 mL by distal prophylactic balloon occlusion. An explanation for the differences between the results of prophylactic balloon occlusion–distal and prophylactic balloon occlusion–proximal could be that implementing occlusion at a distal level may be less effective because of bleeding from the collateral circulation,” they said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the observational design of most of the studies, variation in measurements of blood loss among studies and in inclusion criteria, and insufficient adverse event data to draw conclusions about safety, the researchers noted. More research is needed to examine efficacy and safety of the interventions according to different sensitivities of placenta accreta spectrum disorder, they added.

Results Support Judicious Intervention

“Although previous studies showed mixed results, our meta-analysis demonstrated that prophylactic radiologic interventions, particularly balloon occlusion (both distal and proximal), were associated with reduced perioperative blood loss and less red blood cell unit transfusion; this was most pronounced in women with confirmed placenta percreta,” Bonsen said in an interview. However, the heterogeneity across the included studies prevents generalizations about the overall effects of the interventions across different severities of placenta accreta spectrum disorder, she said.*

Despite these limitations, the overview of the currently available evidence provides insights for clinical decision making, said Bonsen. “Our study highlights that, if we were to be certain of the diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum disorder antepartum, prophylactic radiologic intervention could help reduce peripartum blood loss,” she said.

Risks vs Benefits

“Given the challenges in performing randomized surgical trials in a pregnant patient population with an uncommon disorder, this level of evidence provides important data to assist with clinical decision making in patients with placenta accreta spectrum disorder,” despite the limitations of the observational studies, wrote Jocelyn S. Chapman, MD, and Arianna M. Cassidy, MD, both affiliated with the Multidisciplinary Approach to Placenta Accreta Spectrum Disorder Service (MAPS) at the University of California, San Francisco, in an accompanying editorial.

Previous research has shown an increased risk of severe maternal morbidity among women with placenta accreta spectrum disorder and previous intervention strategies have involved protocols, surgical techniques, and management strategies, they wrote.

Uterine artery embolization after cesarean delivery also has been associated with reduced hemorrhage and no adverse events, but this procedure was not included in the studies reviewed and is best conducted in a delivery setup not available in many hospital systems, the editorialists noted.

The current study illustrates the value of prophylactic balloon occlusion and placement of vascular sheaths to reduce blood loss and blood transfusion, but the risk of thrombosis and lumbosacral pain must be considered, they said. These risks may be a reasonable trade-off to avoid severe blood loss and ICU care, and to preserve the uterus, Chapman and Cassidy added.

“However, we would urge continued critical appraisal of each placenta accreta spectrum disorder case with a multidisciplinary team to evaluate the available evidence-based strategies most likely to mitigate clinically relevant complications while minimizing the introduction of new ones,” the editorialists concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Chapman and Dr. Cassidy had no financial conflicts to disclose.

*This story was updated on August 28, 2024.

Prophylactic placement of balloon catheters or sheaths prior to planned cesarean delivery may reduce blood loss in women with placenta accreta spectrum disorder, according to a new systematic review of more than 5,000 individuals.

Placenta accreta spectrum disorder occurs when the endometrial-myometrial interface of the uterus is damaged, wrote Lisanne R. Bonsen, MD, of Leiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands, and colleagues. As a result, the placenta fails to detach at the time of birth and can result in life-threatening postpartum hemorrhage, the researchers said.

The greater the depth of placental invasiveness, the more severe the maternal outcomes, the researchers noted. Previous cesarean delivery is the primary risk factor for placenta accreta spectrum disorder, and the incidence has increased along with the increased rates of cesarean delivery on a global level, they explained.

More research is needed on intrapartum strategies to improve maternal outcomes, and prophylactic radiologic intervention to reduce perioperative blood loss has been explored, the researchers wrote. However, placenta accreta spectrum disorder remains relatively rare in most pregnancy settings, and data on the effect of prophylactic radiologic interventions to reduce bleeding in this high-risk population are limited they said.

In the review published in Obstetrics & Gynecology, the researchers analyzed data from 50 studies of prophylactic radiologic interventions (48 observational studies and 2 randomized, controlled trials) including 5,962 women.

The primary outcome was perioperative blood loss; secondary outcomes included the number of red blood cells transferred within 24 hours after delivery, maternal mortality, adverse events related to the interventions, and surgical complications.

Blood loss was significantly lower in the intervention groups compared with the control groups for patients who underwent distal balloon occlusion (30 studies), proximal balloon occlusion (14 studies), or uterine artery embolization (5 studies), with mean differences in blood loss of 406 mL, 1,041 mL, and 936 mL, respectively.

Results were similar with lower blood loss for intervention patients compared with controls in subgroup analyses of different types of placenta accreta spectrum disorder and those with placenta accreta spectrum disorder confirmed post partum.

Across the 35 studies that included data on blood transfusions, women who underwent any prophylactic radiologic intervention averaged fewer red blood cell units transferred than women who had no radiologic intervention, with a mean difference of 1.13, 1.90, and 1.86 units for distal prophylactic balloon occlusion, proximal prophylactic balloon occlusion, and prophylactic uterine artery embolization, respectively.

Data on adverse events related to the interventions were limited, but noted in approximately 2% of patients who underwent distal or proximal prophylactic balloon occlusion, and 45% of patients who underwent prophylactic uterine artery embolization. One maternal death was reported and attributed to diffuse intravascular coagulation. Three cardiac arrests occurred in control patients across different studies and all were successfully resuscitated.

Most of the studies did not report data on the researchers’ predefined secondary outcomes, including shock, transfer to a higher level of care, coagulopathy, organ dysfunction, and patient-reported outcomes.
 

What Works Best

“Our main analysis reveals differences in outcomes among the three interventions, with proximal balloon occlusion demonstrating the strongest effect,” the researchers wrote. “Our results show a blood loss reduction of 406 mL by distal prophylactic balloon occlusion. An explanation for the differences between the results of prophylactic balloon occlusion–distal and prophylactic balloon occlusion–proximal could be that implementing occlusion at a distal level may be less effective because of bleeding from the collateral circulation,” they said.

The findings were limited by several factors including the observational design of most of the studies, variation in measurements of blood loss among studies and in inclusion criteria, and insufficient adverse event data to draw conclusions about safety, the researchers noted. More research is needed to examine efficacy and safety of the interventions according to different sensitivities of placenta accreta spectrum disorder, they added.

Results Support Judicious Intervention

“Although previous studies showed mixed results, our meta-analysis demonstrated that prophylactic radiologic interventions, particularly balloon occlusion (both distal and proximal), were associated with reduced perioperative blood loss and less red blood cell unit transfusion; this was most pronounced in women with confirmed placenta percreta,” Bonsen said in an interview. However, the heterogeneity across the included studies prevents generalizations about the overall effects of the interventions across different severities of placenta accreta spectrum disorder, she said.*

Despite these limitations, the overview of the currently available evidence provides insights for clinical decision making, said Bonsen. “Our study highlights that, if we were to be certain of the diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum disorder antepartum, prophylactic radiologic intervention could help reduce peripartum blood loss,” she said.

Risks vs Benefits

“Given the challenges in performing randomized surgical trials in a pregnant patient population with an uncommon disorder, this level of evidence provides important data to assist with clinical decision making in patients with placenta accreta spectrum disorder,” despite the limitations of the observational studies, wrote Jocelyn S. Chapman, MD, and Arianna M. Cassidy, MD, both affiliated with the Multidisciplinary Approach to Placenta Accreta Spectrum Disorder Service (MAPS) at the University of California, San Francisco, in an accompanying editorial.

Previous research has shown an increased risk of severe maternal morbidity among women with placenta accreta spectrum disorder and previous intervention strategies have involved protocols, surgical techniques, and management strategies, they wrote.

Uterine artery embolization after cesarean delivery also has been associated with reduced hemorrhage and no adverse events, but this procedure was not included in the studies reviewed and is best conducted in a delivery setup not available in many hospital systems, the editorialists noted.

The current study illustrates the value of prophylactic balloon occlusion and placement of vascular sheaths to reduce blood loss and blood transfusion, but the risk of thrombosis and lumbosacral pain must be considered, they said. These risks may be a reasonable trade-off to avoid severe blood loss and ICU care, and to preserve the uterus, Chapman and Cassidy added.

“However, we would urge continued critical appraisal of each placenta accreta spectrum disorder case with a multidisciplinary team to evaluate the available evidence-based strategies most likely to mitigate clinically relevant complications while minimizing the introduction of new ones,” the editorialists concluded.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Chapman and Dr. Cassidy had no financial conflicts to disclose.

*This story was updated on August 28, 2024.

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Optimizing Likelihood of Treatment for Postpartum Depression: Assessment of Barriers to Care

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Tue, 08/27/2024 - 12:34

I have written in my first two columns of 2024 about how the obstacles for women to access perinatal mental healthcare are not well understood. This is despite an almost uniform adoption of screening practices for postpartum depression (PPD) over the last 10-15 years in the United States, the approval and off-label use of effective pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments for PPD, and the growing numbers of perinatal access programs across the country in various states and hospitals.

I want to revisit this topic because I believe it is extremely important that we get to a better understanding of the obstacles postpartum patients experience so we can flatten the curve with respect to the perinatal treatment cascade. It turns out that screening is easy but accessing care for those with a positive screen with significant depressive symptoms is an entirely distinct outcome.

Recently, a group of investigators examined the barriers to identifying and treating women for PPD. In a meta-analysis that included 32 reviews, the researchers analyzed the barriers women face when they seek help, access care, and engage in treatment for mental health issues while pregnant or in the postpartum period. The researchers found women have a wide variety of barriers to seeking and accessing care related to societal, political, organizational, interpersonal, healthcare professional, and individual factors at every level of the care pathway. In total, the researchers categorized barriers into six overarching themes and 62 sub-themes, and I want to highlight a few of the biggest contributors below.

In the meta-analysis, a major contributor to deciding to consult with a healthcare professional was a lack of understanding of what constituted a perinatal mental illness. This lack of understanding led women to ignore or minimize their symptoms. Others said that the cost of travel or arranging childcare were factors that prevented them from making an appointment with a provider. Some women reported that their healthcare professionals’ normalization of their symptoms was a barrier in the early stages of the care pathway, and others were unclear about the role a healthcare professional played in involving social services and removing their child from their care, or feared being judged as a bad mom.

One of the major societal factors identified in the study is the stigma associated with PPD. It is unfortunate that for so many postpartum patients, an extraordinary stigma associated with PPD still persists despite efforts from a large number of stakeholders, including the scientific community, advocacy groups, and celebrities who have publicly come out and described their experiences with PPD. For so many postpartum patients, there is an inability to let go of the stigma, shame, humiliation, and isolation associated with the suffering that goes along with PPD.

Another factor identified in the study as being an obstacle to care was a lack of a network to help postpartum patients navigate the shifting roles associated with new parenthood, which is magnified if a patient has developed major depressive disorder. This is why a strong social support network is critical to help women navigate the novelty of being a new mom. We were aware of this as a field nearly 30 years ago when Michael W. O’Hara, PhD, published a paper in the Archives of General Psychiatry noting that social support was an important predictor for risk of PPD.

When we talk with patients in clinic, and even when we interviewed subjects for our upcoming documentary More Than Blue, which will be completed in the fall of 2024, women in the postpartum period have cited the navigation of our current healthcare system as one of the greatest obstacles to getting care. Suffering from PPD and being handed a book of potential providers, absent someone helping to navigate that referral system, is really asking a new mom to climb a very tall mountain. Additionally, moms living in rural areas likely don’t have the sort of access to perinatal mental health services that women in more urban areas do.

It becomes increasingly clear that it is not the lack of availability of effective treatments that is the problem. As I’ve mentioned in previous columns, the last 15 years has given us a much greater understanding of the effectiveness of antidepressants as well as nonpharmacologic psychotherapies for women who may not want to be on a medicine. We now have very effective psychotherapies and there’s excitement about other new treatments that may have a role in the treatment of postpartum depression, including the use of neurosteroids, ketamine or esketamine, and psychedelics or neuromodulation such as transcranial magnetic stimulation. There is also no dearth of both well-studied treatments and even new and effective treatments that, as we move toward precision reproductive psychiatry, may be useful in tailoring treatment for patients.

If we’re looking to understand the anatomy of the perinatal treatment cascade, finally systematically evaluating these barriers may lead us down a path to understand how to build the bridge to postpartum wellness for women who are suffering. While what’s on the horizon is very exciting, we still have yet to address these barriers that prevent women from accessing this expanding array of treatment options. That is, in fact, the challenge to patients, their families, advocacy groups, political organizations, and society in general. The bridging of that gap is a burden that we all share as we try to mitigate the suffering associated with such an exquisitely treatable illness while access to treatment still feels beyond reach of so many postpartum persons around us.

As we continue our research on new treatments, we should keep in mind that they will be of no value unless we understand how to facilitate access to these treatments for the greatest number of patients. This endeavor really highlights the importance of health services research and implementation science, and that we need to be partnering early and often with colleagues if we are to truly achieve this goal.

Dr. Cohen is the director of the Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in Boston, which provides information resources and conducts clinical care and research in reproductive mental health. He has been a consultant to manufacturers of psychiatric medications. Full disclosure information for Dr. Cohen is available at womensmentalhealth.org. Email Dr. Cohen at obnews@mdedge.com

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I have written in my first two columns of 2024 about how the obstacles for women to access perinatal mental healthcare are not well understood. This is despite an almost uniform adoption of screening practices for postpartum depression (PPD) over the last 10-15 years in the United States, the approval and off-label use of effective pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments for PPD, and the growing numbers of perinatal access programs across the country in various states and hospitals.

I want to revisit this topic because I believe it is extremely important that we get to a better understanding of the obstacles postpartum patients experience so we can flatten the curve with respect to the perinatal treatment cascade. It turns out that screening is easy but accessing care for those with a positive screen with significant depressive symptoms is an entirely distinct outcome.

Recently, a group of investigators examined the barriers to identifying and treating women for PPD. In a meta-analysis that included 32 reviews, the researchers analyzed the barriers women face when they seek help, access care, and engage in treatment for mental health issues while pregnant or in the postpartum period. The researchers found women have a wide variety of barriers to seeking and accessing care related to societal, political, organizational, interpersonal, healthcare professional, and individual factors at every level of the care pathway. In total, the researchers categorized barriers into six overarching themes and 62 sub-themes, and I want to highlight a few of the biggest contributors below.

In the meta-analysis, a major contributor to deciding to consult with a healthcare professional was a lack of understanding of what constituted a perinatal mental illness. This lack of understanding led women to ignore or minimize their symptoms. Others said that the cost of travel or arranging childcare were factors that prevented them from making an appointment with a provider. Some women reported that their healthcare professionals’ normalization of their symptoms was a barrier in the early stages of the care pathway, and others were unclear about the role a healthcare professional played in involving social services and removing their child from their care, or feared being judged as a bad mom.

One of the major societal factors identified in the study is the stigma associated with PPD. It is unfortunate that for so many postpartum patients, an extraordinary stigma associated with PPD still persists despite efforts from a large number of stakeholders, including the scientific community, advocacy groups, and celebrities who have publicly come out and described their experiences with PPD. For so many postpartum patients, there is an inability to let go of the stigma, shame, humiliation, and isolation associated with the suffering that goes along with PPD.

Another factor identified in the study as being an obstacle to care was a lack of a network to help postpartum patients navigate the shifting roles associated with new parenthood, which is magnified if a patient has developed major depressive disorder. This is why a strong social support network is critical to help women navigate the novelty of being a new mom. We were aware of this as a field nearly 30 years ago when Michael W. O’Hara, PhD, published a paper in the Archives of General Psychiatry noting that social support was an important predictor for risk of PPD.

When we talk with patients in clinic, and even when we interviewed subjects for our upcoming documentary More Than Blue, which will be completed in the fall of 2024, women in the postpartum period have cited the navigation of our current healthcare system as one of the greatest obstacles to getting care. Suffering from PPD and being handed a book of potential providers, absent someone helping to navigate that referral system, is really asking a new mom to climb a very tall mountain. Additionally, moms living in rural areas likely don’t have the sort of access to perinatal mental health services that women in more urban areas do.

It becomes increasingly clear that it is not the lack of availability of effective treatments that is the problem. As I’ve mentioned in previous columns, the last 15 years has given us a much greater understanding of the effectiveness of antidepressants as well as nonpharmacologic psychotherapies for women who may not want to be on a medicine. We now have very effective psychotherapies and there’s excitement about other new treatments that may have a role in the treatment of postpartum depression, including the use of neurosteroids, ketamine or esketamine, and psychedelics or neuromodulation such as transcranial magnetic stimulation. There is also no dearth of both well-studied treatments and even new and effective treatments that, as we move toward precision reproductive psychiatry, may be useful in tailoring treatment for patients.

If we’re looking to understand the anatomy of the perinatal treatment cascade, finally systematically evaluating these barriers may lead us down a path to understand how to build the bridge to postpartum wellness for women who are suffering. While what’s on the horizon is very exciting, we still have yet to address these barriers that prevent women from accessing this expanding array of treatment options. That is, in fact, the challenge to patients, their families, advocacy groups, political organizations, and society in general. The bridging of that gap is a burden that we all share as we try to mitigate the suffering associated with such an exquisitely treatable illness while access to treatment still feels beyond reach of so many postpartum persons around us.

As we continue our research on new treatments, we should keep in mind that they will be of no value unless we understand how to facilitate access to these treatments for the greatest number of patients. This endeavor really highlights the importance of health services research and implementation science, and that we need to be partnering early and often with colleagues if we are to truly achieve this goal.

Dr. Cohen is the director of the Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in Boston, which provides information resources and conducts clinical care and research in reproductive mental health. He has been a consultant to manufacturers of psychiatric medications. Full disclosure information for Dr. Cohen is available at womensmentalhealth.org. Email Dr. Cohen at obnews@mdedge.com

I have written in my first two columns of 2024 about how the obstacles for women to access perinatal mental healthcare are not well understood. This is despite an almost uniform adoption of screening practices for postpartum depression (PPD) over the last 10-15 years in the United States, the approval and off-label use of effective pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments for PPD, and the growing numbers of perinatal access programs across the country in various states and hospitals.

I want to revisit this topic because I believe it is extremely important that we get to a better understanding of the obstacles postpartum patients experience so we can flatten the curve with respect to the perinatal treatment cascade. It turns out that screening is easy but accessing care for those with a positive screen with significant depressive symptoms is an entirely distinct outcome.

Recently, a group of investigators examined the barriers to identifying and treating women for PPD. In a meta-analysis that included 32 reviews, the researchers analyzed the barriers women face when they seek help, access care, and engage in treatment for mental health issues while pregnant or in the postpartum period. The researchers found women have a wide variety of barriers to seeking and accessing care related to societal, political, organizational, interpersonal, healthcare professional, and individual factors at every level of the care pathway. In total, the researchers categorized barriers into six overarching themes and 62 sub-themes, and I want to highlight a few of the biggest contributors below.

In the meta-analysis, a major contributor to deciding to consult with a healthcare professional was a lack of understanding of what constituted a perinatal mental illness. This lack of understanding led women to ignore or minimize their symptoms. Others said that the cost of travel or arranging childcare were factors that prevented them from making an appointment with a provider. Some women reported that their healthcare professionals’ normalization of their symptoms was a barrier in the early stages of the care pathway, and others were unclear about the role a healthcare professional played in involving social services and removing their child from their care, or feared being judged as a bad mom.

One of the major societal factors identified in the study is the stigma associated with PPD. It is unfortunate that for so many postpartum patients, an extraordinary stigma associated with PPD still persists despite efforts from a large number of stakeholders, including the scientific community, advocacy groups, and celebrities who have publicly come out and described their experiences with PPD. For so many postpartum patients, there is an inability to let go of the stigma, shame, humiliation, and isolation associated with the suffering that goes along with PPD.

Another factor identified in the study as being an obstacle to care was a lack of a network to help postpartum patients navigate the shifting roles associated with new parenthood, which is magnified if a patient has developed major depressive disorder. This is why a strong social support network is critical to help women navigate the novelty of being a new mom. We were aware of this as a field nearly 30 years ago when Michael W. O’Hara, PhD, published a paper in the Archives of General Psychiatry noting that social support was an important predictor for risk of PPD.

When we talk with patients in clinic, and even when we interviewed subjects for our upcoming documentary More Than Blue, which will be completed in the fall of 2024, women in the postpartum period have cited the navigation of our current healthcare system as one of the greatest obstacles to getting care. Suffering from PPD and being handed a book of potential providers, absent someone helping to navigate that referral system, is really asking a new mom to climb a very tall mountain. Additionally, moms living in rural areas likely don’t have the sort of access to perinatal mental health services that women in more urban areas do.

It becomes increasingly clear that it is not the lack of availability of effective treatments that is the problem. As I’ve mentioned in previous columns, the last 15 years has given us a much greater understanding of the effectiveness of antidepressants as well as nonpharmacologic psychotherapies for women who may not want to be on a medicine. We now have very effective psychotherapies and there’s excitement about other new treatments that may have a role in the treatment of postpartum depression, including the use of neurosteroids, ketamine or esketamine, and psychedelics or neuromodulation such as transcranial magnetic stimulation. There is also no dearth of both well-studied treatments and even new and effective treatments that, as we move toward precision reproductive psychiatry, may be useful in tailoring treatment for patients.

If we’re looking to understand the anatomy of the perinatal treatment cascade, finally systematically evaluating these barriers may lead us down a path to understand how to build the bridge to postpartum wellness for women who are suffering. While what’s on the horizon is very exciting, we still have yet to address these barriers that prevent women from accessing this expanding array of treatment options. That is, in fact, the challenge to patients, their families, advocacy groups, political organizations, and society in general. The bridging of that gap is a burden that we all share as we try to mitigate the suffering associated with such an exquisitely treatable illness while access to treatment still feels beyond reach of so many postpartum persons around us.

As we continue our research on new treatments, we should keep in mind that they will be of no value unless we understand how to facilitate access to these treatments for the greatest number of patients. This endeavor really highlights the importance of health services research and implementation science, and that we need to be partnering early and often with colleagues if we are to truly achieve this goal.

Dr. Cohen is the director of the Ammon-Pinizzotto Center for Women’s Mental Health at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in Boston, which provides information resources and conducts clinical care and research in reproductive mental health. He has been a consultant to manufacturers of psychiatric medications. Full disclosure information for Dr. Cohen is available at womensmentalhealth.org. Email Dr. Cohen at obnews@mdedge.com

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The Battle Against Recurrent UTIs in Welsh Women

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Tue, 09/03/2024 - 05:00

 

TOPLINE:

The prevalence of recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTIs) and the use of antibiotics for prevention are substantial among women in Wales, particularly among those over the age of 57 years. A high level of resistance to two recommended antibiotics was observed, suggesting that more frequent urine cultures could better guide antibiotic selection for treatment and prophylaxis.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The researchers conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study using a large databank of patients in Wales to describe the characteristics and urine profiles of women with rUTIs between 2010 and 2022.
  • They created two cohorts: One with 92,213 women (median age, 60 years) who experienced rUTIs, defined as two or more acute episodes within 6 months or three or more acute episodes within 12 months.
  • Another cohort comprised of 26,862 women (median age, 71 years) were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics, which was defined as receiving three or more consecutive prescriptions of the same UTI-specific antibiotic (trimethoprim, nitrofurantoin, or cefalexin), with intervals of 21-56 days between prescriptions.
  • Urine culture results in the 12 months before a rUTI diagnosis and 18 months before prophylactic antibiotic initiation and all urine culture results within 7 days of an acute UTI were analyzed to assess antibiotic resistance patterns.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall, 6% of women had rUTIs, 1.7% of which were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics with proportions increasing sharply after age 57.
  • Nearly half of the women (49%) who were prescribed a prophylactic antibiotic qualified as having rUTIs in the 18 months before initiation.
  • This study showed that 80.8% of women with rUTIs had a urine culture result documented in the 12 months preceding the diagnosis.
  • More than half (64%) of the women taking prophylactic antibiotics had a urine culture result documented before starting treatment, and 18% of those prescribed trimethoprim had resistance to the antibiotic.

IN PRACTICE:

“More frequent urine cultures in the workup of rUTI diagnosis and prophylactic antibiotic initiation could better inform antibiotic choice,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Leigh Sanyaolu, BSc (Hons), MRCS, MRCGP, PGDip, a general practitioner from the Division of Population Medicine and PRIME Centre Wales at Cardiff University in Cardiff, and was published online in the British Journal of General Practice.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s reliance on electronic health records may have led to coding errors and missing data. The diagnosis of UTIs may have been difficult in older women with increased frailty as they can have fewer specific symptoms and asymptomatic bacteriuria, which can be misdiagnosed as a UTI.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was supported by Health and Care Research Wales. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

The prevalence of recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTIs) and the use of antibiotics for prevention are substantial among women in Wales, particularly among those over the age of 57 years. A high level of resistance to two recommended antibiotics was observed, suggesting that more frequent urine cultures could better guide antibiotic selection for treatment and prophylaxis.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The researchers conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study using a large databank of patients in Wales to describe the characteristics and urine profiles of women with rUTIs between 2010 and 2022.
  • They created two cohorts: One with 92,213 women (median age, 60 years) who experienced rUTIs, defined as two or more acute episodes within 6 months or three or more acute episodes within 12 months.
  • Another cohort comprised of 26,862 women (median age, 71 years) were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics, which was defined as receiving three or more consecutive prescriptions of the same UTI-specific antibiotic (trimethoprim, nitrofurantoin, or cefalexin), with intervals of 21-56 days between prescriptions.
  • Urine culture results in the 12 months before a rUTI diagnosis and 18 months before prophylactic antibiotic initiation and all urine culture results within 7 days of an acute UTI were analyzed to assess antibiotic resistance patterns.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall, 6% of women had rUTIs, 1.7% of which were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics with proportions increasing sharply after age 57.
  • Nearly half of the women (49%) who were prescribed a prophylactic antibiotic qualified as having rUTIs in the 18 months before initiation.
  • This study showed that 80.8% of women with rUTIs had a urine culture result documented in the 12 months preceding the diagnosis.
  • More than half (64%) of the women taking prophylactic antibiotics had a urine culture result documented before starting treatment, and 18% of those prescribed trimethoprim had resistance to the antibiotic.

IN PRACTICE:

“More frequent urine cultures in the workup of rUTI diagnosis and prophylactic antibiotic initiation could better inform antibiotic choice,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Leigh Sanyaolu, BSc (Hons), MRCS, MRCGP, PGDip, a general practitioner from the Division of Population Medicine and PRIME Centre Wales at Cardiff University in Cardiff, and was published online in the British Journal of General Practice.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s reliance on electronic health records may have led to coding errors and missing data. The diagnosis of UTIs may have been difficult in older women with increased frailty as they can have fewer specific symptoms and asymptomatic bacteriuria, which can be misdiagnosed as a UTI.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was supported by Health and Care Research Wales. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

The prevalence of recurrent urinary tract infections (rUTIs) and the use of antibiotics for prevention are substantial among women in Wales, particularly among those over the age of 57 years. A high level of resistance to two recommended antibiotics was observed, suggesting that more frequent urine cultures could better guide antibiotic selection for treatment and prophylaxis.

METHODOLOGY:

  • The researchers conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study using a large databank of patients in Wales to describe the characteristics and urine profiles of women with rUTIs between 2010 and 2022.
  • They created two cohorts: One with 92,213 women (median age, 60 years) who experienced rUTIs, defined as two or more acute episodes within 6 months or three or more acute episodes within 12 months.
  • Another cohort comprised of 26,862 women (median age, 71 years) were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics, which was defined as receiving three or more consecutive prescriptions of the same UTI-specific antibiotic (trimethoprim, nitrofurantoin, or cefalexin), with intervals of 21-56 days between prescriptions.
  • Urine culture results in the 12 months before a rUTI diagnosis and 18 months before prophylactic antibiotic initiation and all urine culture results within 7 days of an acute UTI were analyzed to assess antibiotic resistance patterns.

TAKEAWAY:

  • Overall, 6% of women had rUTIs, 1.7% of which were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics with proportions increasing sharply after age 57.
  • Nearly half of the women (49%) who were prescribed a prophylactic antibiotic qualified as having rUTIs in the 18 months before initiation.
  • This study showed that 80.8% of women with rUTIs had a urine culture result documented in the 12 months preceding the diagnosis.
  • More than half (64%) of the women taking prophylactic antibiotics had a urine culture result documented before starting treatment, and 18% of those prescribed trimethoprim had resistance to the antibiotic.

IN PRACTICE:

“More frequent urine cultures in the workup of rUTI diagnosis and prophylactic antibiotic initiation could better inform antibiotic choice,” the authors wrote.

SOURCE:

The study was led by Leigh Sanyaolu, BSc (Hons), MRCS, MRCGP, PGDip, a general practitioner from the Division of Population Medicine and PRIME Centre Wales at Cardiff University in Cardiff, and was published online in the British Journal of General Practice.

LIMITATIONS:

The study’s reliance on electronic health records may have led to coding errors and missing data. The diagnosis of UTIs may have been difficult in older women with increased frailty as they can have fewer specific symptoms and asymptomatic bacteriuria, which can be misdiagnosed as a UTI.

DISCLOSURES:

This work was supported by Health and Care Research Wales. The authors declared no conflicts of interest.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Elinzanetant Reduces Menopausal Symptoms

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 08/23/2024 - 15:39

 

TOPLINE: 

Elinzanetant significantly reduced the frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms in menopausal women by week 12. The drug also improved sleep disturbances and menopause-related quality of life, with a favorable safety profile.

METHODOLOGY:  

  • Researchers conducted two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trials (OASIS 1 and 2) across 77 sites in the United States, Europe, Canada, and Israel.
  • A total of 796 postmenopausal participants aged 40-65 years experiencing moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms were included.
  • Participants received either 120 mg of elinzanetant or a placebo once daily for 12 weeks, followed by elinzanetant for an additional 14 weeks.
  • Primary outcomes measured were changes in frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms from baseline to weeks 4 and 12, using an electronic hot flash daily diary.
  • Secondary outcomes included changes in sleep disturbances and menopause-related quality of life, assessed using the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Sleep Disturbance–Short Form 8b (PROMIS SD SF 8b) and Menopause-Specific Quality of Life (MENQOL) questionnaires.

TAKEAWAY:  

  • Elinzanetant significantly reduced the frequency of vasomotor symptoms by week 4 (OASIS 1: −3.3 [95% CI, −4.5 to −2.1]; OASIS 2: −3.0 [95% CI, −4.4 to −1.7]; P < .001).
  • By week 12, elinzanetant further reduced vasomotor symptom frequency (OASIS 1: −3.2 [95% CI, −4.8 to −1.6]; OASIS 2: −3.2 [95% CI, −4.6 to −1.9]; P < .001).
  • Elinzanetant improved sleep disturbances, with significant reductions in PROMIS SD-SF 8b total T scores at week 12 (OASIS 1: −5.6 [95% CI, −7.2 to −4.0]; OASIS 2: −4.3 [95% CI, −5.8 to −2.9]; P < .001).
  • Menopause-related quality of life also improved significantly with elinzanetant, as indicated by reductions in MENQOL total scores at week 12 (OASIS 1: −0.4 [95% CI, −0.6 to −0.2]; OASIS 2: − 0.3 [95% CI, −0.5 to − 0.1]; P = .0059).

IN PRACTICE:

“These results have clinically relevant implications because vasomotor symptoms often pose significant impacts on menopausal individual’s overall health, everyday activities, sleep, quality of life, and work productivity,” wrote the study authors.

SOURCE:

The studies were led by JoAnn V. Pinkerton, MD, MSCP, University of Virginia Health in Charlottesville, and James A. Simon, MD, MSCP, George Washington University in Washington, DC. The results were published online in JAMA.

LIMITATIONS: 

The OASIS 1 and 2 trials included only postmenopausal individuals, which may limit the generalizability of the findings to other populations. The study relied on patient-reported outcomes, which can be influenced by subjective perception and may introduce bias. The placebo response observed in the trials is consistent with that seen in other vasomotor symptom studies, potentially affecting the interpretation of the results. Further research is needed to assess the long-term safety and efficacy of elinzanetant beyond the 26-week treatment period.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Pinkerton received grants from Bayer Pharmaceuticals to the University of Virginia and consulting fees from Bayer Pharmaceutical. Dr. Simon reported grants from Bayer Healthcare, AbbVie, Daré Bioscience, Mylan, and Myovant/Sumitomo and personal fees from Astellas Pharma, Ascend Therapeutics, California Institute of Integral Studies, Femasys, Khyra, Madorra, Mayne Pharma, Pfizer, Pharmavite, Scynexis Inc, Vella Bioscience, and Bayer. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE: 

Elinzanetant significantly reduced the frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms in menopausal women by week 12. The drug also improved sleep disturbances and menopause-related quality of life, with a favorable safety profile.

METHODOLOGY:  

  • Researchers conducted two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trials (OASIS 1 and 2) across 77 sites in the United States, Europe, Canada, and Israel.
  • A total of 796 postmenopausal participants aged 40-65 years experiencing moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms were included.
  • Participants received either 120 mg of elinzanetant or a placebo once daily for 12 weeks, followed by elinzanetant for an additional 14 weeks.
  • Primary outcomes measured were changes in frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms from baseline to weeks 4 and 12, using an electronic hot flash daily diary.
  • Secondary outcomes included changes in sleep disturbances and menopause-related quality of life, assessed using the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Sleep Disturbance–Short Form 8b (PROMIS SD SF 8b) and Menopause-Specific Quality of Life (MENQOL) questionnaires.

TAKEAWAY:  

  • Elinzanetant significantly reduced the frequency of vasomotor symptoms by week 4 (OASIS 1: −3.3 [95% CI, −4.5 to −2.1]; OASIS 2: −3.0 [95% CI, −4.4 to −1.7]; P < .001).
  • By week 12, elinzanetant further reduced vasomotor symptom frequency (OASIS 1: −3.2 [95% CI, −4.8 to −1.6]; OASIS 2: −3.2 [95% CI, −4.6 to −1.9]; P < .001).
  • Elinzanetant improved sleep disturbances, with significant reductions in PROMIS SD-SF 8b total T scores at week 12 (OASIS 1: −5.6 [95% CI, −7.2 to −4.0]; OASIS 2: −4.3 [95% CI, −5.8 to −2.9]; P < .001).
  • Menopause-related quality of life also improved significantly with elinzanetant, as indicated by reductions in MENQOL total scores at week 12 (OASIS 1: −0.4 [95% CI, −0.6 to −0.2]; OASIS 2: − 0.3 [95% CI, −0.5 to − 0.1]; P = .0059).

IN PRACTICE:

“These results have clinically relevant implications because vasomotor symptoms often pose significant impacts on menopausal individual’s overall health, everyday activities, sleep, quality of life, and work productivity,” wrote the study authors.

SOURCE:

The studies were led by JoAnn V. Pinkerton, MD, MSCP, University of Virginia Health in Charlottesville, and James A. Simon, MD, MSCP, George Washington University in Washington, DC. The results were published online in JAMA.

LIMITATIONS: 

The OASIS 1 and 2 trials included only postmenopausal individuals, which may limit the generalizability of the findings to other populations. The study relied on patient-reported outcomes, which can be influenced by subjective perception and may introduce bias. The placebo response observed in the trials is consistent with that seen in other vasomotor symptom studies, potentially affecting the interpretation of the results. Further research is needed to assess the long-term safety and efficacy of elinzanetant beyond the 26-week treatment period.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Pinkerton received grants from Bayer Pharmaceuticals to the University of Virginia and consulting fees from Bayer Pharmaceutical. Dr. Simon reported grants from Bayer Healthcare, AbbVie, Daré Bioscience, Mylan, and Myovant/Sumitomo and personal fees from Astellas Pharma, Ascend Therapeutics, California Institute of Integral Studies, Femasys, Khyra, Madorra, Mayne Pharma, Pfizer, Pharmavite, Scynexis Inc, Vella Bioscience, and Bayer. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE: 

Elinzanetant significantly reduced the frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms in menopausal women by week 12. The drug also improved sleep disturbances and menopause-related quality of life, with a favorable safety profile.

METHODOLOGY:  

  • Researchers conducted two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trials (OASIS 1 and 2) across 77 sites in the United States, Europe, Canada, and Israel.
  • A total of 796 postmenopausal participants aged 40-65 years experiencing moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms were included.
  • Participants received either 120 mg of elinzanetant or a placebo once daily for 12 weeks, followed by elinzanetant for an additional 14 weeks.
  • Primary outcomes measured were changes in frequency and severity of vasomotor symptoms from baseline to weeks 4 and 12, using an electronic hot flash daily diary.
  • Secondary outcomes included changes in sleep disturbances and menopause-related quality of life, assessed using the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Sleep Disturbance–Short Form 8b (PROMIS SD SF 8b) and Menopause-Specific Quality of Life (MENQOL) questionnaires.

TAKEAWAY:  

  • Elinzanetant significantly reduced the frequency of vasomotor symptoms by week 4 (OASIS 1: −3.3 [95% CI, −4.5 to −2.1]; OASIS 2: −3.0 [95% CI, −4.4 to −1.7]; P < .001).
  • By week 12, elinzanetant further reduced vasomotor symptom frequency (OASIS 1: −3.2 [95% CI, −4.8 to −1.6]; OASIS 2: −3.2 [95% CI, −4.6 to −1.9]; P < .001).
  • Elinzanetant improved sleep disturbances, with significant reductions in PROMIS SD-SF 8b total T scores at week 12 (OASIS 1: −5.6 [95% CI, −7.2 to −4.0]; OASIS 2: −4.3 [95% CI, −5.8 to −2.9]; P < .001).
  • Menopause-related quality of life also improved significantly with elinzanetant, as indicated by reductions in MENQOL total scores at week 12 (OASIS 1: −0.4 [95% CI, −0.6 to −0.2]; OASIS 2: − 0.3 [95% CI, −0.5 to − 0.1]; P = .0059).

IN PRACTICE:

“These results have clinically relevant implications because vasomotor symptoms often pose significant impacts on menopausal individual’s overall health, everyday activities, sleep, quality of life, and work productivity,” wrote the study authors.

SOURCE:

The studies were led by JoAnn V. Pinkerton, MD, MSCP, University of Virginia Health in Charlottesville, and James A. Simon, MD, MSCP, George Washington University in Washington, DC. The results were published online in JAMA.

LIMITATIONS: 

The OASIS 1 and 2 trials included only postmenopausal individuals, which may limit the generalizability of the findings to other populations. The study relied on patient-reported outcomes, which can be influenced by subjective perception and may introduce bias. The placebo response observed in the trials is consistent with that seen in other vasomotor symptom studies, potentially affecting the interpretation of the results. Further research is needed to assess the long-term safety and efficacy of elinzanetant beyond the 26-week treatment period.

DISCLOSURES:

Dr. Pinkerton received grants from Bayer Pharmaceuticals to the University of Virginia and consulting fees from Bayer Pharmaceutical. Dr. Simon reported grants from Bayer Healthcare, AbbVie, Daré Bioscience, Mylan, and Myovant/Sumitomo and personal fees from Astellas Pharma, Ascend Therapeutics, California Institute of Integral Studies, Femasys, Khyra, Madorra, Mayne Pharma, Pfizer, Pharmavite, Scynexis Inc, Vella Bioscience, and Bayer. Additional disclosures are noted in the original article.

This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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