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Tuesday, September 6, 2022

FDA warns against use of Mother's Touch baby formula

 

he U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Tuesday advised parents and caregivers against feeding Mother's Touch Formula to infants as the product has not undergone proper testing.

The directive comes as the United States recovers from a severe infant formula crunch that began with pandemic-led supply issues and worsened after Abbott closed its Michigan plant in February due to reports of bacterial contamination.

The Mother's Touch Formula is being marketed without U.S. clearance and has not been properly tested for the presence of potentially harmful bacteria, the FDA said.

The product has also not been tested to determine if it meets nutrient requirements, and contains label claims for seven nutrients that do not meet the requisite for infant formula.

The product is sold at local markets in Kinzers, Loganton, and Gap, Pennsylvania, and was available for purchase directly from the Mother's Touch website.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/FDA-warns-against-use-of-Mother-s-Touch-baby-formula--41707905/

Antipsychotic use associated with elevated risk of breast cancer

 A research team from the Center for Safe Medication Practice and Research (CSMPR), Department of Pharmacology and Pharmacy, LKS Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong (HKUMed) conducted the world's first systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies with over 2 million individuals and estimated a moderate association between antipsychotic use and breast cancer by over 30%. This highlights the importance of the risk-benefit assessment of antipsychotic prescription in high-risk patients. The findings are now published in Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences.

Antipsychotics are commonly prescribed for patients with a range of psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, ,  and dementia. Elevated  incidence has been consistently reported in patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and antipsychotic use are speculated to potentially explain at least part of the increased risk. Possible mechanisms include antipsychotic-induced hyperprolactinemia, antipsychotic-mediated weight gain and poorer lifestyle among antipsychotic users. With complex mechanism and multiple interacting risk factors, the evidence of the said association remains inconclusive. Therefore, researchers from CSMPR systematically reviewed and conducted a  to synthesize the existing evidence and determine the association between antipsychotic use and breast cancer.

Research findings

Nine  with over 2 million adults, including five cohort and four case-control studies, were included for the review and seven for the meta-analysis. All these studies were rated as high-quality (seven to nine out of 10 stars) according to Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, a standardized study quality assessment instrument.

This review found that six out of the nine studies had reported a significant association between the use of antipsychotic medications and an increased risk of breast cancer. The meta-analysis estimated a moderate positive association of an elevated risk of more than 30% among antipsychotic users. Some reviewed evidence further showed the extent of antipsychotic exposure, such as a longer duration of use, is associated with a higher risk of breast cancer, particularly for antipsychotics with prolactin-elevating properties. For example, a large Finnish case-control study used  to compare prolonged periods of prolactin-increasing antipsychotic use to those exposed for less than a year, which showed a significantly increased risk among those exposed for at least five years by nearly 60%.

Despite some limitations such as unmeasured confounding effects, this study highlights that breast cancer could be a potential but rare adverse event of antipsychotic medications. The elevated breast cancer risk may be explained by hyperprolactinemia and other complications possibly induced by antipsychotics, such as central obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

"With the increasingly prevalent use of antipsychotics worldwide, including off-label use, we believe a comprehensive clinical assessment should be made for patients based on the overall safety profile of antipsychotics before prescription," commented Dr. Francisco Lai Tsz-tsun, Research Assistant Professor of the Department of Pharmacology and Pharmacy, HKUMed, the corresponding author of this study.

Based on the findings of this study, antipsychotics with known prolactin-elevating properties should preferably be avoided in patients with risk factors of breast cancer. Appropriate counseling is warranted before prescribing prolactin-elevating antipsychotics, and prolactin level monitoring may be considered. Prompt management of antipsychotic-induced hyperprolactinemia is essential.


Explore further

Antipsychotic drugs may increase risk of breast cancer

More information: Janice Ching Nam Leung et al, Association of antipsychotic use with breast cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies with over 2 million individuals, Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences (2022). DOI: 10.1017/S2045796022000476
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-09-antipsychotic-elevated-breast-cancer.html

Stem cell-gene therapy shows promise in ALS safety trial

 Cedars-Sinai investigators have developed an investigational therapy using support cells and a protective protein that can be delivered past the blood-brain barrier. This combined stem cell and gene therapy can potentially protect diseased motor neurons in the spinal cord of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a fatal neurological disorder known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease.

In the first trial of its kind, the Cedars-Sinai team showed that delivery of this combined treatment is safe in humans. The findings were reported today in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Medicine.

"Using stem cells is a powerful way to deliver important proteins to the brain or spinal cord that can't otherwise get through the ," said senior and corresponding author Clive Svendsen, Ph.D., professor of Biomedical Sciences and Medicine and executive director of the Cedars-Sinai Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute. "We were able to show that the engineered stem cell product can be safely transplanted in the human spinal cord. And after a one-time treatment, these cells can survive and produce an important protein for over three years that is known to protect  that die in ALS."

Aimed at preserving leg function in patients with ALS, the engineered cells are potentially a powerful therapeutic option for this disease that causes progressive muscle paralysis, robbing people of their ability to move, speak and breathe.

None of the 18 patients treated with the therapy—developed by Cedars-Sinai scientists—had  after the transplantation, according to the data.

The study used stem cells originally designed in Svendsen's laboratory to produce a protein called glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF). This protein can promote the survival of motor neurons, which are the cells that pass signals from the brain or spinal cord to a muscle to enable movement.

In patients with ALS, diseased glial cells can become less supportive of motor neurons, and these motor neurons progressively degenerate, causing paralysis.

By transplanting the engineered protein-producing stem cells in the central nervous system, where the compromised motor neurons are located, these stem cells can turn into new supportive glial cells and release the  GDNF, which together helps the motor neurons stay alive.

"GDNF on its own can't get through the blood-brain barrier, so transplanting stem cells releasing GDNF is a new method to help get the protein to where it needs to go to help protect the motor neurons," said Pablo Avalos, MD, co-lead author on the paper and associate director of Translational Medicine in the Cedars-Sinai Board of Governors Regenerative Medicine Institute. "Because they are engineered to release GDNF, we get a 'double whammy' approach where both the new cells and the protein could help dying motor neurons survive better in this disease."

Along with Avalos, Robert Baloh, MD, Ph.D., previously a professor of Neurology at Cedars-Sinai and now global head of neuroscience at Novartis, and J. Patrick Johnson, MD, co-medical director of the Spine Center at Cedars-Sinai, are co-lead authors on the publication.

The safety trial

The primary goal of the trial was to ensure that delivering the cells releasing GDNF to the spinal cord did not have any safety issues or negative effects on leg function.

Because patients with ALS usually lose strength in both legs at a similar rate, investigators transplanted the stem cell-gene product into only one side of the spinal cord so that the therapeutic effect on the treated leg could be directly compared to the untreated leg.

The team developed a novel injection device to safely deliver the stem cell-gene product, called CNS10-NPC-GDNF, to the spinal cord of patients.

After the transplantation, patients were followed for a year so the team could measure the strength in the treated and untreated legs. The goal of the trial was to test for safety, which was confirmed, as there was no negative effect of the cell transplant on muscle strength in the treated leg compared to the untreated leg.

"We're excited that we proved safety of this approach, but we need more patients to really evaluate efficacy, which is part of the next phase of the study," said Johnson, who is also the vice chair of Neurosurgery at Cedars-Sinai. "Proving that we have cells that can survive a long time and are safe in the patient is a key part in moving forward with this experimental treatment."

While there were no serious side effects, the team found that in some patients the cells went too high in the spinal cord, ending up in sensory areas, which may have led to instances of pain. They also saw benign growths associated with the cell transplantation in some cases. This will be addressed in future studies by deeper targeting and a different surgical approach, noted Svendsen.

Investigators expect to start a new study with more patients soon. They will be targeting lower in the  and enrolling patients at an earlier stage of the disease to increase the chances of seeing effects of the cells on the progression of ALS.

"We are very grateful to all the participants in the study," said Svendsen. "ALS is a very tough disease to treat, and this research gives us hope that we are getting closer to finding ways to slow down this disease."

The Cedars-Sinai team is also using the GDNF-secreting  in another clinical trial for ALS, transplanting the cells into a specific brain region, called the motor cortex that controls the initiation of movement in the hand. They have recently treated the first of 16 patients in the new study primarily aimed at demonstrating safety but also assessing if there are any effects on hand use over time.


Explore further

Cedars-Sinai receives approval to test novel combined stem cell and gene therapy for ALS patients

More information: Clive Svendsen, Transplantation of human neural progenitor cells secreting GDNF into the spinal cord of patients with ALS: a phase 1/2a trial, Nature Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41591-022-01956-3www.nature.com/articles/s41591-022-01956-3
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-09-stem-cell-gene-therapy-als-safety.html

New technique boosts online medical search results

 When looking for medical information on the internet, having the precise terminology makes the search fairly straightforward.

But what if the person doing the searching doesn't know the exact , or wants to see what other information may be available without using technical terms? Will internet queries yield any useful results—or worse, will they produce incomplete or downright incorrect information?

A Cornell-led group of researchers has developed a search method that employs  and  to identify terms that are semantically similar to those for cancer screening tests, but in colloquial language.

"If the traditional way of searching for information is by using those official names or concepts, then it will lead to some bias in identifying the content because many people on the internet aren't familiar with official medical vocabularies," said Chau Tong, a postdoctoral associate in the Department of Communication, in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

Tong is lead author of "Search Term Identification Methods for Computational Health Communication: Word Embedding and Network Approach for Health Content on YouTube," which published Aug. 30 in the open-access journal JMIR Medical Informatics.

Drew Margolin, associate professor of communication, is the paper's senior author. Also contributing was Jeff Niederdeppe, professor of communication; Teairah Taylor, doctoral student in the field of communication; Andy J. King, associate professor at the University of Utah; Rumi Chunara, associate professor of global public health, computer science and engineering at New York University; and Natalie Dunbar, graduate student at Iowa State University.

This research stemmed from a four-year National Institutes of Health grant that Margolin, Niederdeppe and King received in March 2021 to work on ways to monitor and evaluate public information and communication disparities regarding screening for colorectal cancer (CRC). Tong is a member of Niederdeppe's research lab.

The disease disproportionately affects African Americans; according to a 2019 study by the American Association for Cancer Research, the overall CRC mortality rate in the U.S. was 14.8 deaths per 100,000 people, but the rate was 20.9 per 100,000 for Black people and 14.7 per 100,000 for white people.

"The question we asked with the grant was, 'Are there messages or aspects of social media that can be used to increase information, increase access, increase screening rates—something that would kind of [have] helped to equal that out?'" Margolin said.

Margolin's group chose YouTube—which more than 80% of Americans use at least sporadically—as the  for their study. Starting by searching off "colonoscopy," the group retrieved a set of 250 videos. They then employed word embedding—using neural network modeling to identify words that appear in similar contexts to the main term—to come up with an additional 4,304 related videos.

The group found that colon prep brand names (Miralax, Suprep, Plenvu) were often found in user-generated content, where the word "colonoscopy" may not have been used.

"These findings," Tong said, "highlight the value of innovative, data-informed research strategies that can expand the conventional data-collection and analysis pipelines, to cover a range of user-generated health content. This can uncover information disparities that could negatively impact important health equity outcomes."

The group did similar searches using seed terms "FOBT" (fecal occult blood test, another colon cancer screen), "mammogram" and "pap smear," the latter two being screens for breast and cervical cancer, respectively. They found similar results to the colonoscopy searches, retrieving a range of new videos using words that were semantically close to the seed term.

Margolin said the group's goal is to adapt this technique in platforms other than YouTube, which suggests related relevant videos based on user behavior, making it more likely that a user will find useful content after an initial search.

Margolin thinks computational health researchers should think about this alternative search protocol.

"We don't need to do computational research on YouTube to find out what hospitals have to say about colonoscopy," he said. "The whole purpose of this is to find out what someone who's not certified to talk about colonoscopy will say. For example, a random person is telling you about what happened when they did their 'prep' (for a colonoscopy), but maybe they didn't use the word 'colonoscopy.'"

"They're telling a story," he said. "Now you're getting what social media can reveal."

More information: Chau Tong et al, Search Term Identification Methods for Computational Health Communication: Word Embedding and Network Approach for Health Content on YouTube, JMIR Medical Informatics (2022). DOI: 10.2196/37862

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-09-technique-boosts-online-medical-results.html

Psychiatric mental health nurse practitioners helped offset drop in psychiatrists for Medicare patients

 The mental health system is increasingly reliant on psychiatric mental health nurse practitioners (PMHNPs) to meet the psychiatric needs of Medicare patients, according to a new study led by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

"We were surprised by the degree to which PMHNPs are the de facto mental health prescribers in parts of the country," said corresponding author Michael Barnett, associate professor of health policy and management at Harvard Chan School. "In the states where PMHNPs have no restrictions on prescribing medications, these providers account for 50% of all mental health prescriber visits in rural areas, which was much greater than we had anticipated."

The study will be published in the September 2022 issue of Health Affairs.

Mental health access is a public health crisis that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated. While demand for  is soaring, the supply of psychiatrists accepting insurance is dropping, particularly in .

To assess how the mental health workforce and patient population have changed over time, Barnett and his colleagues analyzed fee-for-service Medicare claims during 2011–2019. The team focused on the number of PMHNPs and psychiatrists billing Medicare, the volume of outpatient and psychiatric services by provider group, and how these numbers varied by rurality and scope-of-practice regulations, which can restrict whether a PMHNP is able to prescribe medications.

The findings showed that PMHNPs provided nearly 1 in 3 mental health prescriber visits to Medicare patients nationally by 2019. The number of PMHNPs also increased 162% during 2011–2019, while psychiatrists billing Medicare dropped by 6%. During this period, without growth in the PMHNP workforce, there would have been a decline of nearly 30% in mental health specialist visits in Medicare. Instead, the drop was 12%.

"This work puts the spotlight on PMHNPs as a critical part of the mental health workforce," said Barnett. "This is so important because we desperately need new solutions to address the current mental health crisis in this country. Policy that targets the PMHNP  could be a key part of the national effort to expand mental health access."

More information: Trends In Mental Health Care Delivery By Psychiatrists And Nurse Practitioners In Medicare, 2011–19, Health Affairs (2022). DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2022.00289

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2022-09-growth-psychiatric-mental-health-nurse.html

Premier Unit Contigo to Acquire Contracts With 900K Providers and Licenses to Cost Containment Tech

 Premier, Inc. (NASDAQ: PINC) subsidiary Contigo Health, LLC, a provider of comprehensive services that optimize employee health benefits, today announced an agreement to acquire key assets from TRPN Direct Pay, Inc. and Devon Health, Inc. (collectively, TRPN) for $177.5 million in cash. Acquired assets will include contracts with more than 900,000 providers across 4.1 million U.S. locations, including acute care hospitals, surgery centers, physicians, ancillary facilities, MRI centers, laboratories, radiology centers, urgent care clinics, home health services, durable medical equipment suppliers, chiropractors, physical therapists and mental health practitioners. Under the terms of the agreement, Contigo Health also will license TRPN’s proprietary cost containment technology.

Contigo Health, which collaborates directly with self-funded employer health plans and health systems to improve employee access to high-quality healthcare, plans to leverage the acquired TRPN assets to develop the provider contracts into a new out-of-network wrap product named Contigo Health® ConfigureNet™. This new product is expected to complement and help grow Contigo Health’s health plan administration products, improving access to quality healthcare and reducing the cost of medical claims through pre-negotiated discounts with its network providers. Claims will be aligned to the network provider’s contracted rate through an electronic data interchange to help ensure a rapid and seamless process for health plans and providers alike.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/premier-inc-subsidiary-contigo-health-212100635.html

Illumina to appeal after European Commission prohibits $7.1 billion GRAIL acquisition

 Illumina announced Tuesday it plans to appeal the European Commission's decision to prohibit the DNA sequencing firm's multibillion-dollar acquisition of cancer detection company GRAIL.

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The European Commission announced its decision earlier Tuesday, saying Illumina "did not offer remedies sufficient" to address the body's competition-related concerns. The regulatory body first opened an investigation into Illumina's $7.1 billion acquisition of GRAIL in July 2021, expressing concern the deal would negatively impact competition and innovation in the market for multi-cancer early detection tests.

"With this transaction, Illumina would have an incentive to cut off GRAIL's rivals from accessing its technology, or otherwise disadvantage them," Margrethe Vestager, the European Union's commissioner for competition, said in a statement. "It is vital to preserve competition between early cancer detection test developers at this critical stage of development."

Illumina has maintained its GRAIL deal would not hurt competition and would promote innovation in the market.

"We are disappointed with the European Commission's decision prohibiting us from acquiring GRAIL back to Illumina," the company's general counsel, Charles Dadswell, said in a statement. "Illumina can make GRAIL's life-saving multi-cancer early detection test more available, more affordable, and more access – saving lives and lowering healthcare costs."

Illumina announced in 2020 it would acquire its former subsidiary. The company completed its purchase of GRAIL about a year later in 2021 amid the European Commission's probe and a challenge from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

In anticipation of a divestment order from the European Commission, the DNA sequencing company said it will start "reviewing strategic alternatives" for GRAIL in case the order "is not stayed" during the appeal process.

Last week, an administrative law judge ruled in the company's favor in the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's case challenging the GRAIL deal. The FTC moved to appeal that ruling Friday. 

https://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/illumina-appeal-european-commission-prohibits-7-billion-grail-acquisition