Monday, July 27, 2015

Did eliminating annual pap tests worsen chlamydia screening rates?

- Jennifer Middleton, MD, MPH

Despite the USPSTF's recommendation to screen all sexually active women aged 15-24 for chlamydia annually (along with women over age 24 at increased risk), many women do not receive this testing. Even worse, a recent study in the Annals of Family Medicine found that the rate of annual chlamydia screening in young women in one health care system decreased after 2009, the year the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology (ACOG) updated their cervical cancer screening recommendations and increased both the initial age of screening and the recommended screening interval for cervical cancer (which is consistent with the United States Preventive Services Task Force [USPSTF]'s current recommendations). Given that asymptomatic chlamydia infections can cause serious, potentially permanent complications in women, this study should prompt each of us to examine how and when we are screening for chlamydia in our offices.

The study researchers obtained data from 5 outpatient family medicine offices in a university-based health care system. They looked at the number of visits made by women aged 15-21 for any reason and calculated the percentage of women who had received chlamydia screening during two 13-month intervals, the first spanning 2008-2009 and the second 2011-2012. The total number of office visits for each cohort was similar. The odds ratio for having chlamydia screening done in the 2008-2009 group compared to the 2011-2012 group was 13.97 (95% confidence interval 9.17-21.29); in these offices, at least, chlamydia screening happened significantly more often when annual gyn exams were still the norm.

As discussed in the current issue of Family Practice Management, the Choosing Wisely campaign's goal is to eliminate medical overuse - unnecessary, potentially harmful care. Annual cervical cancer screening certainly falls into this category, as do annual screening pelvic examinations. Many of us family physicians currently practicing, however, learned to associate sexually transmitted disease (STD) screening with these no-longer annual visits; a decrease in chlamydia screening may be an unintended consequence of scaling back on cervical cancer screening.

The importance of this screening regarding our female patients' reproductive health cannot be overstated; the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that 60% of female infertility could be eliminated with appropriate chlamydia screening. Family physicians may find it helpful to measure the rate of chlamydia screening in their own practices, and, if suboptimal, consider implementing an office quality improvement initiative to increase screening. Using a urine sample to screen, which is as accurate as a cervical sample, may be one way to reduce barriers for both patients and clinicians. The National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) has a publication addressing chlamydia screening which includes several additional strategies to try.

There's an AFP By Topic on STDs if you'd like to read more, and the collection contains this 2012 article on chlamydia infection screening, diagnosis, and management.

How is your office screening women for chlamydia?

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

How to make sure your patients understand health information

- Kenny Lin, MD, MPH

In the July 15th issue of AFP, associate medical editor Barry Weiss, MD shares an anecdote about a hospitalized patient's confusion about a conversation between himself and a consultant who said that it was okay to move her from the intensive care unit to the floor. The perplexed patient interpreted "floor" literally to mean that the hospital was so overcrowded that she would not be able to sleep in a bed! Although this mildly comical story might elicit chuckles at health professional gatherings, it also highlights the serious potential for limited health literacy to lead to misunderstandings between doctors and patients.

Health literacy encompasses essential skills that patients need to access health services, understand and apply health information, and make good decisions: reading, writing, numeracy, and communication. A large body of evidence demonstrates strong associations between low health literacy and poorer health outcomes; compared to patients with high health literacy, patients with low literacy have more hospitalizations, more emergency department visits, and are less likely to receive appropriate preventive and chronic care services. According to a clinical review by Dr. Lauren Hersh and colleagues, "More than one-third of U.S. adults, an estimated 80 million persons, have limited health literacy, making it more difficult for them to read, understand, and apply health information. ... Although U.S. adults on average read at an eighth-grade level, more than 75% of patient education materials are written at a high school or college reading level." Limited health literacy is more common in patients age 65 years and older and in minority populations.

How can family physicians make sure their patients understand health information? Rather than routinely screening for low health literacy, which has not been shown to improve outcomes, Dr. Hersh and colleagues recommend taking "universal health literacy precautions," a group of strategies for enhancing verbal and written communication, and visual aids (including online videos). For example, clinicians can use "teach back" to ask patients to restate the medical concept or plan in their own words to confirm understanding. Online tools are available to quickly assess the reading level of written patient materials. Patients also benefit from being encouraged to participate actively in formulating their care plans and being connected to community literacy resources, if needed.

For more information on how to bridge the health literacy gap with your patients, see this recent Family Practice Management article and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's Health Literacy Universal Precautions Toolkit.

Monday, July 6, 2015

Which antidepressants have the highest suicide risk?

- Jennifer Middleton, MD, MPH

All antidepressant medications carry a black box warning regarding an increased risk of suicidal behaviors, especially in teens and young adults. That black box warning assigns equal culpability to all antidepressants, but a POEM in the July 1 issue of AFP describes a study that found a higher risk of suicide with mirtazapine and venlafaxine compared with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs). 

The study researchers used a primary care patient database from the United Kingdom and identified patients between the ages of 20-65 with a depression diagnosis. They excluded patients who had other co-morbid psychiatric disease and/or who received a mood stabilizer or antipsychotic medication, ending up with a final cohort of about 240,000 patients. The researchers tracked rates of completed suicides and suicide attempts among these patients and compared these rates among patients taking various antidepressants. 

Citalopram was the most commonly prescribed antidepressant, followed by fluoxetine, with venlafaxine and mirtazapine prescriptions in fifth and seventh place, respectively. The adjusted hazard ratios for venlafaxine and mirtazapine for suicidal behavior (successful or not) were 1.70 (1.44 to 2.02) and 1.85 (1.61 to 2.13), respectively, compared with citalopram. All of the SSRIs and TCAs had non-significant hazard ratios compared with citalopram. The highest rates of completed suicide and suicide attempt, regardless of antidepressant, were in the first 28 days of a new prescription and the first 28 days after stopping an antidepressant medication. The researchers did not find a statistically significant difference in suicide risk by age. 

It is possible that, in the study cohort, patients taking venlafaxine and mirtazapine had more serious and/or refractory depression compared to patients taking an SSRI or TCA. These patients' physicians may have prescribed venlafaxine or mirtazapine after an SSRI or TCA treatment failure, for example. The researchers attempted to account for patients' depression severity in their analysis, but the documentation of depression severity in the database was inconsistent. They concluded that "the severity of depression is likely to still have a confounding influence on our results." Regardless of the reason, the difference in suicide risk for patients taking venlafaxine or mirtazapine is significant. These medications may still serve a need in certain clinical situations, but they require careful monitoring and should not be first-line medications.

This study compliments the already sizable evidence base regarding SSRIs' efficacy and tolerabilitySSRIs remain the first choice for treating most patients with depression. Regardless of antidepressant choice, we need to carefully monitor patients during the first 28 days of any new antidepressant medication as well as during the first 28 days after stopping one. Family Practice Management provides an Immediate Action Protocol for physicians to use once patients screen positive for suicidal thoughts. This protocol provides guidance regarding follow-up questioning and can help physicians determine if a need exists for immediate psychiatric evaluation. Using a protocol like this one can help physicians avoid any language that might, unintentionally, inhibit suicide disclosure by patients. You can read more about depression treatment at the AFP By Topic on Depression and Bipolar Disorder.

Will this POEM change how you prescribe antidepressants and/or monitor patients for suicidal risk?