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Impact of Primary Care Access on Mortality of Lung Cancer Patients in an Underserved Community

Su, Christopher T; Chau, Vincent; Halmos, Balazs; Shah, Chirag D; Gucalp, Rasim A; Packer, Stuart H; Wilson, Kevin; Rapkin, Bruce D; Perez-Soler, Roman; Cheng, Haiying
BACKGROUND:Lack of access to primary care physicians (PCPs) may be an important contributor to mortality differences attributed to race/ethnicity. This study examined the effects of primary care access on mortality of lung cancer patients in an underserved community. METHODS:Medical records of all newly diagnosed patients with primary lung cancer from 2012 to 2016 at a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated center in Bronx, New York were reviewed. Demographic data, PCP status, and residence in primary care shortage areas (PCSAs) were collected. Survival data from time of first imaging to death or the end of follow-up on January 1, 2018 were recorded. Survival analysis was performed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox hazards modeling. RESULTS:Among 1062 patients, 874 (82%) were PCSA residents, 314 (30%) were Hispanic, and 445 (42%) were African American. PCSA residents were likely Hispanics (P<0.001), African Americans (P<0.001), of lower income (P<0.001), and had advanced disease at diagnosis (P=0.01). Patients without established PCPs had more comorbidities (P=0.04), more advanced disease (P<0.001), and less in-network cancer treatment (P<0.001). PCSA residence (P=0.03, hazard ratio [HR]=1.27) and no established PCP (P<0.001, HR=1.50) were associated with increased mortality. In multivariable modeling, lack of established PCP remained a predictor of increased mortality (P=0.02, HR=1.25). DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Among newly diagnosed lung cancer patients, lack of established PCP is associated with increased mortality. Hispanics and African Americans increasingly resided in PCSAs, suggesting race/ethnicity mortality differences may be mediated by primary care shortage. Patients without PCPs had worse health outcomes. Effective health policy efforts to reduce mortality in lung cancer patients must include approaches to improve primary care access.
PMID: 30663997
ISSN: 1537-453x
CID: 3610372

Ascorbic acid leads to glycation and interferes with neurite outgrowth

Scheffler, Jonas; Bork, Kaya; Bezold, Veronika; Rosenstock, Philip; Gnanapragassam, Vinayaga S; Horstkorte, Rüdiger
Ascorbic acid better known as vitamin C, is a reducing carbohydrate needed for a variety of functions in the human body. The most important characteristic of ascorbic acid is the ability to donate two electrons, predestining it as a major player in balancing the physiological redox state and as a necessary cofactor in multiple enzymatic hydroxylation processes. Ascorbic acid can be reversibly oxidized in two steps, leading to semidehydroascorbic acid and dehydroascorbic acid, respectively. Further degradation is irreversible and generates highly reactive carbonyl-intermediates. These intermediates are able to induce glycation of proteins, a non-enzymatic and unspecific reaction of carbonyls with amino groups involved to several age-related diseases. In this study, we investigated the effect of ascorbic acid- and dehydroascorbic acid-induced glycation on PC12 cells, which represent a model for neuronal plasticity. We found that both applications of ascorbic acid or dehydroascorbic acid leads to glycation of cellular proteins, but that ascorbic acid interferes more with viability and neurite outgrowth compared with dehydroascorbic acid.
PMID: 30149062
ISSN: 1873-6815
CID: 4837622

Strategies to Fill the Gaps in Nutrition Education for Health Professionals through Continuing Medical Education

Johnston, Emily; Mathews, Tony; Aspry, Karen; Aggarwal, Monica; Gianos, Eugenia
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:Recent studies have documented that diet quality in the US is poor and linked to higher rates of cardiovascular disease (CVD), other non-communicable diseases, and total mortality. As a result, nutrition counseling in clinical practice is an evidence-based strategy endorsed by numerous stakeholders. However, medical nutrition education (MNE) in the US has been inadequate, and physician knowledge, competencies, and practices related to diet counseling have been documented to be insufficient. National scientific meetings and conferences offer opportunities to translate new scientific evidence, guidelines, and competencies to clinicians in attendance and to publicize this evidence widely. This review assessed the adequacy of, and trends in, nutrition education provided at recent major US scientific meetings that offer continuing medical education (CME), with a focus on CVD-related conferences. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:The authors found no reviews that have assessed the scope and type of nutrition-related educational programming at major conferences. We therefore investigated nutrition-related programming at CVD-related CME conferences in the US from 2013 to 2018. National scientific CVD-related conferences in the USA have offered variable amounts of programming related to practical applications of nutrition science. We did not observe an increase in nutrition-related offerings, despite the increase in diet-related diseases and the growing evidence base for the role of nutrition in the prevention and management of chronic disease. Increasing nutrition-related CME programming at national scientific meetings can lead to greater translation of nutrition evidence to patients by healthcare providers and improved health outcomes in the population.
PMID: 30820681
ISSN: 1534-6242
CID: 3698702

Incidence of Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors in the United States from 2001-2015: A United States Cancer Statistics Analysis of 50 States

Patel, Nicolas; Benipal, Bikramjit
Introduction Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) was once a mislabeled cancer with inaccurate incidence data in the United States (US). Since the discovery of a gain of function mutation in kit, the proper identification of GIST has greatly improved. Given this inaccuracy in prior GIST incidence, our goal in this study was to evaluate the true incidence of GIST in at-risk populations in all 50 states. Methods The United States Cancer Statistics (USCS) was used to obtain data for GISTs from 2001 to 2015. Incidence analysis was done for sex, race, stage, primary location, and US regional location. Results The overall incidence of GISTs from 2001-2015 was 0.70 per 100,000 people per year. Overall incidence rates were greatest for each stratification of males, blacks, localized disease, primary location in the stomach, and the Northeast. The incidence in blacks increased with an annual percent change (APC) of 6.27 between 2001 and 2015. Between 2001 and 2015, the incidence of localized disease and GISTs with a primary location in the stomach increased with APCs of 8.90 and 6.25, respectively. In the Northeast, between 2001 and 2003, the incidence initially increased expeditiously (APC 13.35); however, after 2003, the incidence continued to rise but no longer at the same rapid rate (APC 3.05). Conclusion In our study, we investigated the incidence of GISTs using data from the USCS database for all 50 states in the US. We found an alarming rise in the incidence in blacks, localized disease, the stomach, and those in the Northeast. Ultimately, further studies are required to identify risk factors for the development of GISTs; however, our study will serve as a template to help guide those studies.
PMCID:6478492
PMID: 31037234
ISSN: 2168-8184
CID: 3981722

Assessment of Cardiovascular Disease Risk and Therapeutic Patterns among Urban Black Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients

McFarlane, Isabel M; Zhaz Leon, Su Yien; Bhamra, Manjeet S; Burza, Aaliya; Waite, Stephen Anthony; Rodriguez Alvarez, Milena; Koci, Kristaq; Taklalsingh, Nicholas; Kaplan, Ian; Pathiparampil, Joshy; Kabani, Naureen; Watler, Elsie; Sorrento, Cristina S; Frefer, Mosab; Vaitkus, Vytas; Green, Jason; Matthew, Keron; Arroyo-Mercado, Fray; Lyo, Helen; Soliman, Faisal; Sanchez, Randolph A; Reyes, Felix M; Ozeri, David J; Dronamraju, Veena; Trevisonno, Michael; Grant, Christon; Clerger, Guerrier; Amin, Khabbab; Freeman, Latoya; Dawkins, Makeda; Lopez, Diana Lenis; Smerling, Jonathan; Gondal, Irfan; Dellinger, Elaine; Paltoo, Karen; Bhat, Hina; Kolla, Srinivas
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients have nearly twice the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared to the general population. We aimed to assess, in a predominantly Black population, the prevalence of traditional and RA-specific CVD risk factors and therapeutic patterns. Utilizing ICD codes, we identified 503 RA patients ≥18 years old who were seen from 2010 to 2017. Of them, 88.5% were Black, 87.9% were women and 29.4% were smokers. CVD risk factors (obesity, diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia) were higher than in previously reported White RA cohorts. Eighty-seven percent of the patients had at least one traditional CVD risk factor, 37% had three or more traditional CVD risk factors and 58% had RA-specific risk factors (seropositive RA, >10 years of disease, joint erosions, elevated inflammatory markers, extra-articular disease, body mass index (BMI) < 20). CV outcomes (coronary artery disease/myocardial infarction, heart failure, atrial fibrillation and stroke) were comparable to published reports. Higher steroid use, which increases CVD risk, and lesser utilization of biologics (decrease CV risk) were also observed. Our Black RA cohort had higher rates of traditional CVD risk factors, in addition to chronic inflammation from aggressive RA, which places our patients at a higher risk for CVD outcomes, calling for revised risk stratification strategies and effective interventions to address comorbidities in this vulnerable population.
PMCID:6410013
PMID: 30791646
ISSN: 2076-3271
CID: 5861272

Improving Provider Adoption With Adaptive Clinical Decision Support Surveillance: An Observational Study

Khan, Sundas; Richardson, Safiya; Liu, Andrew; Mechery, Vinodh; McCullagh, Lauren; Schachter, Andy; Pardo, Salvatore; McGinn, Thomas
BACKGROUND:Successful clinical decision support (CDS) tools can help use evidence-based medicine to effectively improve patient outcomes. However, the impact of these tools has been limited by low provider adoption due to overtriggering, leading to alert fatigue. We developed a tracking mechanism for monitoring trigger (percent of total visits for which the tool triggers) and adoption (percent of completed tools) rates of a complex CDS tool based on the Wells criteria for pulmonary embolism (PE). OBJECTIVE:We aimed to monitor and evaluate the adoption and trigger rates of the tool and assess whether ongoing tool modifications would improve adoption rates. METHODS:As part of a larger clinical trial, a CDS tool was developed using the Wells criteria to calculate pretest probability for PE at 2 tertiary centers' emergency departments (EDs). The tool had multiple triggers: any order for D-dimer, computed tomography (CT) of the chest with intravenous contrast, CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA), ventilation-perfusion scan, or lower extremity Doppler ultrasound. A tracking dashboard was developed using Tableau to monitor real-time trigger and adoption rates. Based on initial low provider adoption rates of the tool, we conducted small focus groups with key ED providers to elicit barriers to tool use. We identified overtriggering of the tool for non-PE-related evaluations and inability to order CT testing for intermediate-risk patients. Thus, the tool was modified to allow CT testing for the intermediate-risk group and not to trigger for CT chest with intravenous contrast orders. A dialogue box, "Are you considering PE for this patient?" was added before the tool triggered to account for CTPAs ordered for aortic dissection evaluation. RESULTS:In the ED of tertiary center 1, 95,295 patients visited during the academic year. The tool triggered for an average of 509 patients per month (average trigger rate 2036/30,234, 6.73%) before the modifications, reducing to 423 patients per month (average trigger rate 1629/31,361, 5.22%). In the ED of tertiary center 2, 88,956 patients visited during the academic year, with the tool triggering for about 473 patients per month (average trigger rate 1892/29,706, 6.37%) before the modifications and for about 400 per month (average trigger rate 1534/30,006, 5.12%) afterward. The modifications resulted in a significant 4.5- and 3-fold increase in provider adoption rates in tertiary centers 1 and 2, respectively. The modifications increased the average monthly adoption rate from 23.20/360 (6.5%) tools to 81.60/280.20 (29.3%) tools and 46.60/318.80 (14.7%) tools to 111.20/263.40 (42.6%) tools in centers 1 and 2, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:Close postimplementation monitoring of CDS tools may help improve provider adoption. Adaptive modifications based on user feedback may increase targeted CDS with lower trigger rates, reducing alert fatigue and increasing provider adoption. Iterative improvements and a postimplementation monitoring dashboard can significantly improve adoption rates.
PMCID:6401673
PMID: 30785410
ISSN: 2292-9495
CID: 4996132

Diet and psoriasis

Pona, Adrian; Haidari, Wasim; Kolli, Sree S; Feldman, Steven R
BACKGROUND:Patients with psoriasis have a growing interest in managing their disease through diet. OBJECTIVE:This review paper aims to analyze dietary interventions for psoriasis and their outcome. METHODS:Terms "psoriasis AND diet" were used to search PubMed database and 63 articles describing dietary changes influencing psoriasis were selected. RESULTS:Low calorie diet (LCD) improves Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) and Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) in conjunction with topical or systemic therapy, although LCD was unsuccessful in maintaining disease remission when patients discontinued concomitant cyclosporine or methotrexate therapy. A fish oil diet improved baseline PASI of 7.7 to 5.3 at three months and 2.6 at 6 months compared to control (PASI: 8.9, 7.8, and 7.8, respectively). A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study investigating selenium supplementation in psoriasis provided no PASI improvement. Zinc supplementation with concomitant betamethasone valerate 0.0025% ointment in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study provided a mean PASI of 11.2 in the intervention group and 8.0 in the control group with no significant difference between both arms. Gluten free diet and vitamin D supplementation were also efficacious dietary changes although results were mixed. CONCLUSIONS:Dietary changes alone do not cause a large effect in psoriasis but may become an important adjunct to current first line treatments.
PMID: 30865402
ISSN: 1087-2108
CID: 5505522

Clinical outcomes of Î’-blocker therapy in cocaine-associated heart failure

Lopez, Persio D; Akinlonu, Adedoyin; Mene-Afejuku, Tuoyo O; Dumancas, Carissa; Saeed, Mohammed; Cativo, Eder H; Visco, Ferdinand; Mushiyev, Savi; Pekler, Gerald
BACKGROUND:Cocaine is associated with deleterious effects in the heart, including HFrEF. Although β-blockers are recommended for this condition in other populations, their use is discouraged in cocaine users due to the possibility of exacerbating cocaine-related cardiovascular complications. This study was designed to determine if patients with heart failure and a reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) who continue to use cocaine have better outcomes when they receive β-blocker therapy than when they do not. METHODS:We performed a retrospective analysis of 72 β-blocker-naïve patients with HFrEF and active cocaine use. Patients who were prescribed β-blockers as part of their therapy were compared to those who were not, and clinical and structural outcomes were compared after 12 months of treatment. RESULTS:When patients with HFrEF and active cocaine use received β-blocker therapy, they were more likely to have an improvement in their New York Heart Association functional class (p = 0.0106) and left ventricular ejection fraction (p = 0.0031) than when they did not receive β-antagonists. In addition, the risk of cocaine-related cardiovascular events (p = 0.0086) and of heart failure hospitalizations (p = 0.0383) was significantly lower in patients who received β-blockade than those who did not. CONCLUSIONS:β-Blocker therapy is associated with improvement in the exercise tolerance and the left ventricular ejection fraction in patients with HFrEF and active cocaine use. They are also associated with a lower incidence of cocaine-related cardiovascular events and HFrEF-related readmissions.
PMID: 30146248
ISSN: 1874-1754
CID: 3255692

Use of online opioid overdose prevention training for first-year medical students: A comparative analysis of online versus in-person training

Berland, Noah; Lugassy, Daniel; Fox, Aaron; Goldfeld, Keith; Oh, So-Young; Tofighi, Babak; Hanley, Kathleen
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:In response to the opioid epidemic and efforts to expand substance use education in medical school, the authors introduced opioid overdose prevention training (OOPT) with naloxone for all first-year medical students (MS1s) as an adjunct to required basic life support training (BLST). The authors previously demonstrated improved knowledge and preparedness following in-person OOPT with BLST; however, it remains unclear whether online-administered OOPT would produce comparable results. In this study, the authors perform a retrospective comparison of online-administered OOPT with in-person-administered OOPT. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To compare the educational outcomes: knowledge, preparedness, and attitudes, for online versus in-person OOPT. METHODS:In-person OOPT was administered in 2014 and 2015 during BLST, whereas online OOPT was administered in 2016 during BLST pre-work. MS1s completed pre- and post-training tests covering 3 measures: knowledge (11-point scale), attitudes (66-point scale), and preparedness (60-point scale) to respond to an opioid overdose. Online scores from 2016 and in-person scores from 2015 were compared across all 3 measures using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) methods. RESULTS:After controlling for pre-test scores, there were statistical, but no meaningful, differences across all measures for in-person- and online-administered training. The estimated differences were knowledge: -0.05 (0.5%) points (95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.47, 0.36); attitudes: 0.65 (1.0%) points (95% CI: -0.22, 1.51); and preparedness: 2.16 (3.6%) points (95% CI: 1.04, 3.28). CONCLUSIONS:The educational outcomes of online-administered OOPT compared with in-person-administered OOPT were not meaningfully different. These results support the use of online-administered OOPT. As our study was retrospective, based on data collected over multiple years, further investigation is needed in a randomized controlled setting, to better understand the educational differences of in-person and online training. Further expanding OOPT to populations beyond medical students would further improve generalizability.
PMID: 30767715
ISSN: 1547-0164
CID: 3656442

A randomized trial of a multi-level intervention to increase water access and appeal in community recreation centers

Lawman, Hannah G; Lofton, Xavier; Grossman, Sara; Root, Mica; Perez, Meka; Tasian, Gregory; Patel, Anisha
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Improving children's tap water intake and reducing sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is beneficial for health and health equity, particularly in low-income communities and communities of color. Existing community level interventions to improve the intake of tap water have predominantly occurred in schools and have focused on promoting water consumption in cafeterias during lunch or snack periods. METHODS:The "Hydrate Philly" intervention was developed to target multiple environmental and social factors to improve tap water consumption in community recreation centers in low-income communities: replacing old and unappealing water fountains with appealing water-bottle-filling "hydration stations", conducting water safety testing and publicizing results, disseminating reusable water bottles, promoting tap water, and discouraging SSB consumption. Efficacy of the intervention will be tested through a group-randomized controlled trial (n = 28 centers) of the intervention's impact on center-level water fountain/station use as measured by flow meters during a youth summer camp program primarily for children aged 6-12 years. Intervention impact on the primary outcome (use of drinking water sources) will be examined with a difference-in-differences approach using an ordinary least squares regression model for analysis at the center level. Secondary outcomes include SSBs brought to summer camp, reusable and single-use bottled water use, program trash, and recreation center staff SSB consumption. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Multilevel approaches are needed to increase tap water intake and decrease SSB consumption among low-income and minority youth beyond school and meal settings. The current study describes the Hydrate Philly intervention, the study design, and baseline characteristics of recreation centers participating in the study. ClinicalTrials.gov Registration: #NCT03637465.
PMID: 30771559
ISSN: 1559-2030
CID: 3708592