HIV Preventive Gel Begins Testing With $350,000 Grant

 A gel designed to protect heterosexuals from the transmission of HIV will be tested for safety at the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute (LA BioMed), at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, funded by a $350,000 grant.

The grant will be used for 180 volunteers, women age 18-40, to participate in a 12-week evaluation of the gel’s absorption and safety of absorption into women’s tissue. The study will be conducted at LA BioMed and an additional four sites.

The grant is supported by the International Partnership for Microbicides (IPM) a nonprofit global initiative to develop products for the reduction of HIV transmission and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).

“IPM is committed to providing women with an affordable and self-initiating HIV-prevention strategy. The organization’s goal is to reduce the cycle of infection that has led to the deaths of more than 25 million people worldwide and orphaned more than 15 million children since 1981,” Dr. Susan Ballagh said, as she begun her recruitment of volunteers for LA BioMed’s study.

“If this gel is found to be safe, further testing will be undertaken to determine its effectiveness in preventing the transmission of HIV,” she concluded.

For more information on the study or how to become a part of it, visit: www.labiomed.com or call (310) 222-3840.

Controversial Studies Trigger Drop Off in Osteoporosis Treatment, Dr. Disputes

Dr. Angelo Malamis said that 90 percent of his patients who have undergone a treatment called balloon kyphoplasty for vertebral fractures report significant reductions in pain and disability.

But the number of kyphoplasty referrals Malamis has received from primary care doctors has dropped sharply since two controversial studies were published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine. In findings that have been disputed by two medical societies, researchers reported that a procedure related to kyphoplasty was not significantly better than a placebo-like procedure in reducing pain and disability.

The North American Spine Society and the Society of Interventional Radiology have pointed to flaws in both studies. And earlier studies, published over 15 years, found major benefits to kyphoplasty and a related procedure called vertebroplasty.

“We’re missing opportunities for patients to receive a safe and effective treatment that can significantly reduce their pain and disability,” said Malamis, an interventional radiologist.

The procedures are used to treat vertebral compression fractures in patients with osteoporosis and other conditions that result in brittle bones. In a vertebroplasty, an acrylic cement is injected into a fractured vertebra. In a kyphoplasty, a balloon-tipped catheter first is inserted into the fracture. The balloon is inflated to restore the height and shape of the vertebra before the cement is injected.

Neva Nelson, 74, of Naperville, Ill., said a kyphoplasty that Malamis performed in October, 2009, has greatly reduced her pain in a vertebra in her lower back that she fractured after falling on ice. Before her kyphoplasty, Nelson had to sit on cushions. Walking, and especially standing, were painful. “I had to do something,” she said. “I could not go on like that.”

Nelson said that since undergoing her kyphoplasty, “I don’t have to worry about my back any more.”

In the controversial studies, patients were randomly assigned to receive a vertebroplasty or a placebo-like “sham” procedure. In the sham procedure, patients received an injection of anesthetic, but no cement.

However, patients in severe pain are reluctant to enroll in a trial where there’s a 50 percent chance of receiving a sham treatment. In one of the studies, researchers had to screen 1,813 patients to enroll just 131 subjects. In the other study, only 78 of 219 eligible patients were enrolled. This low enrollment rate raises the possibility that the patients who did enroll were not representative.

Patients experience the greatest pain during the first three months after a compression fracture. Thereafter, pain gradually subsides. Thus, a vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty provides the greatest benefit when performed within a week or two of the fracture. But the studies enrolled patients up to 12 months after fractures.

In addition to reducing pain and disability, a kyphoplasty can reduce the risk of subsequent fractures by improving the angle and height of the spine. The studies evaluated vertebroplasty alone, and did not include the more innovative and very different kyphoplasty procedure.

Malamis suggests the medical community wait for the results of additional studies now underway before passing final judgment on vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty. In the mean time, he notes that Medicare still covers the procedures.

Malamis is an assistant professor in the Department of Radiology at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

For more information, visit: www.meddean.luc.edu/.

USPSTF Recommends Biennial Mammograms Postponed ‘Till Age 50

The U.S. Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF) has recommended postponing the initial mammography from age 40 to 50-years-old, to reduce the harm associated with a false positive.

“The harms resulting from screening for breast cancer include psychological harms, unnecessary imaging tests and biopsies in women without cancer and inconvenience due to false-positive screening results. Furthermore, one must also consider the harms associated with treatment of cancer that would not become clinically apparent during a woman’s lifetime (overdiagnosis), as well as the harms of unnecessary earlier treatment of breast cancer that would have become clinically apparent but would not have shortened a woman’s life,” according to USPSTF’s recommendation statement.

“Adequate evidence suggests that the overall harms associated with mammography are moderate for every age group considered, although the main components of the harms shift over time. Although false-positives test results, overdiagnosis and unnecessary earlier treatment are problems for all age groups, false-positive results are more common for women aged 40 to 49 years, whereas overdiagnosis is a greater concern for women in the older age groups,” written in the statement.

USPSTF recommended against routine screening mammographies in women aged 40-49-years-old, citing it to be an individual decision and not a national mandate.

The report also recommended limiting screening to a biennial schedule for women 50-74-years-old; as well as reducing screening after age 74 to an individual’s choice.

“My message to women is simple. Mammograms have always been an important life-saving tool in the fight against breast cancer, and they still are today,” said Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius in a statement.

“We will continue to recommend it and the health plans have indicated that they will do the same. If the healthcare provider recommends a mammogram for a patient, they intend to cover that payment,” said Sebelius.

HHS’s Website lists USPSTF recommendations as the “gold standard” with insurance companies routinely using the recommendations to govern covered practices, according to CNN.com article.

Despite HHS’ calm response many feel this may be an indication of what future healthcare

“This is how rationing begins. This is the little toes in the edge of the water. And this is where you start getting a bureaucrat between you and your physician,” said Representative Marsha Blackburn [R-TN].

For more information and the complete USPSTF recommendation, visit:www.ahrq.gov/clinic/uspstf/uspsbrca.htm.

Editor’s Note: What is your response to USPSTF’s recommendation? What will be your advice to patients and women around the nation?

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