Age-Specific Prevalence and Incidence of Dementia Diagnoses among Older US Adults with Schizophrenia

T. Scott Stroup, Mark Olfson, Cecilia Huang, Melanie M. Wall, Terry Goldberg, Davangere P. Devanand, Tobias Gerhard 09/02/2021

Importance: People with schizophrenia are at high risk of receiving a diagnosis of dementia.


A best-worst scaling experiment to identify patient-centered claims-based outcomes for evaluation of pediatric antipsychotic monitoring programs

Thomas I. Mackie, Katherine M. Kovacs, Cassandra Simmel, Stephen Crystal, Sheree Neese-Todd, Ayse Akincigil 09/01/2021

Objective: This article employs a best-worst scaling (BWS) experiment to identify the claims-based outcomes that matter most to patients and other relevant parties when evaluating pediatric antipsychotic monitoring programs in the United States.


Thirty-Year Trends in Graft Survival After Heart Transplant: Modeled Analyses of a Transplant Registry

Marlena E. Sabatino, Matthew L. Williams, Ike S. Okwuosa, Ehimare Akhabue, Jung Hyun Kim, Mark J. Russo, Soko Setoguchi 09/01/2021

Background: Heart failure is an epidemic in the United States, and transplantation remains the most definitive therapy. We describe multidecade trends in posttransplant graft survival, adjusted for concurrent changes in the population, over the 30 years antecedent to the most recent heart allocation policy change…


Large-Scale New Jersey Prison Releases During COVID-19: Experiences of Released Prisoners with Substance Use Disorders

Peter Treitler, MSW, Madeline H. Bono, PsyM, Brendan Saloner, PhD, Stephen Crystal, PhD 08/18/2021

Large-Scale New Jersey Prison Releases During COVID-19: Experiences of Released Prisoners with Substance Use Disorders


Use of hydroxychloroquine, remdesivir, and dexamethasone among adults hospitalized with covid-19 in the united states: A retrospective cohort study

Hemalkumar B. Mehta, Huijun An, Kathleen M. Andersen, Omar Mansour, Vithal Madhira, Emaan S. Rashidi, Benjamin Bates, Soko Setoguchi, Corey Joseph, Paul T. Kocis, Richard Moffitt, Tellen D. Bennett, Christopher G. Chute, Brian T. Garibaldi, G. Caleb Alexander 08/17/2021

Background: Relatively little is known about the use patterns of potential pharmacologic treatments of COVID-19 in the United States. Objective: To use the National COVID Cohort Collaborative (N3C), a large, multicenter, longitudinal cohort, to characterize the use of hydroxychloroquine, remdesivir, and dexamethasone, overall as well as across individuals, health systems, and time…


Biologic switching among nonsystemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis patients: A cohort study in the childhood arthritis and rheumatology research alliance registry

Melissa L. Mannion, Fenglong Xie, Daniel B. Horton, Sarah Ringold, Colleen K. Correll, Anne Dennos and Timothy Beukelman for the CARRA Registry Investigators 08/01/2021

Objective: Biologic medications have significantly improved disease control and outcomes of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Current treatment recommendations suggest escalating therapy, including changing biologics if needed, when inactive or low disease activity is not attained. The patterns and reasons for switching biologics in clinical practice in North America are not well described…


COVID-19 controlled human infection studies: Worries about local community impact and demands for local engagement

Kyungdo Lee, Nir Eyal 08/01/2021

Abstract: In spring, summer and autumn 2020, one abiding argument against controlled human infection (CHI) studies of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines has been their impact on local communities. Leading scientists and bioethicists expressed concern about undue usage of local residents’ direly needed scarce resources at a time of great need and even about their unintended infection. They recommended either avoiding CHI trials or engaging local communities before conducting any CHIs…


Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of Motivational Interviewing with Sexual Minority Male Couples to Reduce Drug Use and Sexual Risk: The Couples Health Project

Tyrel J. Starks, Trinae Adebayo, Kory D. Kyre, Brett M. Millar, Mark J. Stratton Jr., Monica Gandhi & Karen S. Ingersoll 07/23/2021

Abstract: A randomized controlled trial evaluated the preliminary efficacy of a dyadically-delivered motivational interviewing (MI) intervention to reduce drug use and sexual risk in a sample of 50 sexual minority (cis)male (SMM) couples. In each couple, at least one partner was aged 18–29; reported drug use and sexual HIV transmission risk; and was HIV-negative. Couples were randomized to either the three-session MI intervention or an attention-matched control, with follow-up surveys completed at 3- and 6-months post-baseline. Between-group differences for all outcomes were non-significant in the overall sample. Subsequent moderation analyses indicated the intervention significantly reduced illicit drug use (excluding marijuana) at 3-month follow-up when either respondents (B = − 1.96; interval rate ratio—IRR 0.02–1.22; p = .001), their partners (B = − 2.60; IRR 0.01–0.64; p = .004), or both (B = − 2.38; IRR 0.01–0.80; p = .001) reported high levels of baseline use. The intervention also reduced condomless anal sex (CAS) with casual partners when both partners reported high frequency baseline CAS (B = − 2.54; IRR 0.01–0.83; p = .047). Findings provide initial evidence of the potential for MI to address drug use and sexual risk-taking among SMM couples at highest risk.


Income Shocks and Out-of-Pocket Health Care Spending: Implications for Single-Mother Families

Irina B. Grafova, Alan C. Monheit & Rizie Kumar 07/06/2021

Abstract: We examine how out-of-pocket health care spending by single-mother families responds to income losses. We use eleven two-year panels of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey for the period 2004–2015 and apply the correlated random effects estimation approach. We categorize income in relation to the federal poverty line (FPL): poor or near-poor (less than 125% of the FPL); low income (125 to 199% of the FPL); middle income (200 to 399% of the FPL); and high income (400% of the FPL or more). Income losses among high-income single-mother families lead a decline in out-of-pocket spending toward office-based care and emergency room care of $119–$138 and $30–$60, respectively. Among middle-income single-mother families, income losses lead to a $30 decline in out-of-pocket spending toward family emergency room care and a $45–$91 decline in mother’s out-of-pocket spending toward prescription medications. Further research should examine whether these declines compromise health status of single-mother family members…


Spatiotemporal Analysis of the Association Between Pain Management Clinic Laws and Opioid Prescribing and Overdose Deaths

Magdalena Cerdá, Katherine Wheeler-Martin, Emilie Bruzelius, William Ponicki, Paul Gruenewald, Christine Mauro, Stephen Crystal, Corey S. Davis, Katherine Keyes, Deborah Hasin, Kara E. Rudolph, Silvia S. Martins 07/03/2021

Abstract: Pain management clinic (PMC) laws were enacted by 12 states to promote appropriate opioid prescribing, but their impact is inadequately understood. We analyzed county-level opioid overdose deaths (National Vital Statistics System) and patients filling long-duration (≥30 day) or high-dose (≥90 morphine milligram equivalents per day) opioid prescriptions (IQVIA, Inc.) in the United States in 2010-2018…


Higher CSF sTNFR1-related proteins associate with better prognosis in very early Alzheimer’s disease

William T. Hu, Tugba Ozturk, Alexander Kollhoff, Whitney Wharton, J. Christina Howell 06/28/2021

Abstract: Neuroinflammation is associated with Alzheimer’s disease, but the application of cerebrospinal fluid measures of inflammatory proteins may be limited by overlapping pathways and relationships between them. In this work, we measure 15 cerebrospinal proteins related to microglial and T-cell functions, and show them to reproducibly form functionally-related groups within and across diagnostic categories in 382 participants from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuro-imaging Initiative as well participants from two independent cohorts…


Depression as a risk factor for incident ischemic stroke among hiv-positive veterans in the veterans aging cohort study

Jason J. Sico, Suman Kundu, Kaku So-Armah, Samir K. Gupta, Chung Chou H. Chang, Adeel A. Butt, Cynthia L. Gibert, Vincent C. Marconi, Stephen Crystal, Hilary A. Tindle, Matthew S. Freiberg, Jesse C. Stewart 06/25/2021

BACKGROUND: HIV infection and depression are each associated with increased ischemic stroke risk. Whether depression is a risk factor for stroke within the HIV population is unknown. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analyzed data on 106 333 (33 528 HIV-positive; 72 805 HIV-negative) people who were free of baseline cardiovascular disease from an observational cohort of HIV-positive people and matched uninfected veterans in care from April 1, 2003 through December 31, 2014. International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes from medical records were used to determine baseline depression and incident stroke…


Profiles of young women’s alcohol and cannabis use linked to risk for sexually transmitted infection highlight the importance of multi-level targeted interventions: Findings from the Pittsburgh girls study

Tammy Chung, PhD, Alison E. Hipwell, PhD, Stephanie D. Stepp, PhD, Elizabeth Miller, MD & Carolyn E. Sartor, PhD 06/18/2021

Background: Social ecological models designed to understand disparities in sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevalence highlight understudied structural and community risk factors. Guided by a social ecological model, this study identified profiles based on substance use-related STI risk, and examined associations of the profiles with selected indicators of structural-, community-, and individual-level STI risk factors. Methods: Repeated measures latent class analysis was applied to Pittsburgh Girls Study data (n = 2,138; 58% Black, 42% White) at ages 18–20. Profile indicators included: women’s and partner’s alcohol and cannabis use, women’s sexual risk behavior, and self-reported STI. Profile predictors included racial background, structural-, community-, and individual-level risk factors. Results: Two of the five identified profiles had low STI likelihood: “Low Use” of alcohol and cannabis (25.5%; overrepresented by Black women), and “Alcohol Only” (19.1%; overrepresented by White women)…


Profiles of young women’s alcohol and cannabis use linked to risk for sexually transmitted infection highlight the importance of multi-level targeted interventions: Findings from the Pittsburgh girls study

Tammy Chung, Alison E. Hipwell, Stephanie D. Stepp, Elizabeth Miller, Carolyn E. Sartor 06/18/2021

Background: Social ecological models designed to understand disparities in sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevalence highlight understudied structural and community risk factors. Guided by a social ecological model, this study identified profiles based on substance use-related STI risk, and examined associations of the profiles with selected indicators of structural-, community-, and individual-level STI risk factors. Methods: Repeated measures latent class analysis was applied to Pittsburgh Girls Study data (n = 2,138; 58% Black, 42% White) at ages 18–20. Profile indicators included: women’s and partner’s alcohol and cannabis use, women’s sexual risk behavior, and self-reported STI. Profile predictors included racial background, structural-, community-, and individual-level risk factors…


HIV Testing and Counseling at U.S. Substance Use Treatment Facilities: A Missed Opportunity for Early Identification

Nicholas S. Riano, Hannah M. Borowsky, Emily A. Arnold, Mark Olfson, James T. Walkup, Eric Vittinghoff, Francine Cournos, Lindsey Dawson, Alexander R. Bazazi, Stephen Crystal, Christina Mangurian 06/15/2021

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine the availability and national distribution of HIV testing and counseling at substance use treatment facilities in the United States. METHODS: Analyses of data from the 2018 National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services assessed HIV testing and counseling availability in U.S. substance use treatment facilities (excluding those in U.S. territories). Facilities were subcategorized by availability of mental health services and medication for opioid use disorders and compared by using logistic models. Descriptive statistics were calculated to characterize the availability of HIV testing and counseling by state, state HIV incidence, and facility characteristics…


Do coronavirus vaccine challenge trials have a distinctive generalisability problem?

Nir Eyal, Tobias Gerhard 06/07/2021

Abstract: Notwithstanding the success of conventional field trials for vaccines against COVID-19, human challenge trials (HCTs) that could obtain more information about these and about other vaccines and further strategies against it are about to start in the UK. One critique of COVID-19 HCTs is their distinct paucity of information on crucial population groups. For safety reasons, these HCTs will exclude candidate participants of advanced age or with comorbidities that worsen COVID-19, yet a vaccine should (perhaps especially) protect such populations. We turn this cliché on its head. The truth is that either an HCT or a field trial has intrinsic generalisability limitations, that an HCT can expedite protection of high-risk participants even without challenging them with the virus, and that an important route to obtaining results generalisable to high-risk groups under either strategy is facilitated by HCTs…


Medications for Multiple Sclerosis and Risk of Malignancy: What Next?

Daniel B. Horton, Anthony T. Reder 06/02/2021

Many autoimmune diseases confer a higher risk of cancer on patients compared to the general population. A controversial factor tying autoimmune diseases to malignancy is harm from immunosuppressive treatment. Nonetheless, multiple sclerosis is different from other autoimmune diseases, and findings from other disease populations may not apply…


A Pilot randomized clinical trial of adapted tango to improve cognition and psychosocial function in African American women with family history of Alzheimer’s disease (ACT trial)

Whitney Wharton, Leanne Jeong, Liang Ni, Allison A. Bay, Ryan J. Shin, Lauren E. McCullough, Hayley Silverstein, Ariel R. Hart, Dominika Swieboda, William Hu, Madeleine E. Hackney 06/01/2021

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a devastating, progressive neurodegenerative disease resulting in memory loss and a severe reduction in the ability to perform activities of daily living. Ethnicity-related genetic factors promoting the development of dementias among African Americans (AA) and increased risk among women for developing AD indicates that AA women with a parental history of AD are at great risk for developing AD…


Timing of home health care initiation and 30-day rehospitalizations among medicare beneficiaries with diabetes by race and ethnicity

Jamie M. Smith, Haiqun Lin, Charlotte Thomas-Hawkins, Jennifer Tsui, Olga F. Jarrín 05/25/2021

Abstract: Older adults with diabetes are at elevated risk of complications following hospitalization. Home health care services mitigate the risk of adverse events and facilitate a safe transition home. In the United States, when home health care services are prescribed, federal guidelines require they begin within two days of hospital discharge. This study examined the association between timing of home health care initiation and 30-day rehospitalization outcomes in a cohort of 786,734 Medicare beneficiaries following a diabetes-related index hospitalization admission during 2015…


Stress-Related Growth Among Transgender Women: Measurement, Correlates, and Insights for Clinical Interventions

Nadav Antebi-Gruszka, Demetria Cain, Brett M. Millar, Jeffrey T. Parsons, & H. Jonathon Rendina 05/14/2021

ABSTRACT: Although transgender women (TGW), and especially TGW of color, are disproportionately exposed to discrimination and violence, many of them experience stress-related growth. However, little is known about the experience of stress-related growth and its correlates among TGW. Using data from a racially-diverse sample of 210 TGW, the short version of the Stress-Related Growth Scale was modified to assess growth as a result of coming to terms with one’s transgender identity among TGW. The psychometric properties of the modified scale were examined, along with its associations with various cognitive, emotional, and social factors. A confirmatory factor analysis revealed a unidimensional factor, along with excellent reliability. A stepwise regression revealed that positive reappraisal, internal locus of control, social support, and emotional expression were associated with greater stress-related growth. Findings suggest that cognitive, emotional, and social resources are related to stress-related growth in TGW. Interventions to foster stress-related growth among TGW are discussed…


1 5 6 7 8 9 30