And, are calcium and vitamin D pills worthwhile?
 

Health Rounds

Health Rounds

By Nancy Lapid, Health Science Editor

Hello Health Rounds readers! Today we feature a study that found benefits of widespread early childhood screening for type 1 diabetes prior to onset of symptoms and regardless of family history. We also report on a large analysis that found little clinical anti-fracture benefit from vitamin D or calcium supplements, and a study that suggests insurers may be cutting off sleep apnea patients from their CPAP machines prematurely.

Among our breaking news stories: Acting head of US NIH infectious disease institute has left; pharma sector doubles down on AI amid hopes of slashing costs, timelines; US HHS launches AI initiative to detect fraud and waste in health programs as Secretary Kennedy fires heads of key preventive health panel and US Senator Durbin urges RFK Jr to resist easing vape rules.

Ebola updates: Outbreak cases are 'tip of the iceberg', global experts say; case confirmed in Congo area far from outbreak's epicenter; vaccines and treatments in development as responders decry lack of medicine, masks, motorbikes; and US working with small biotech firm on experimental Ebola treatment while the UK commits $26.87 million to contain Ebola outbreak.

 

Industry Updates

  • US FDA to hold meeting to review Moderna's flu vaccine.
  • Novo, Lilly weight-loss pills draw patients from compounded drugs.
  • Lilly says patients on new obesity drug lose 28% of body weight.
  • Pfizer's pneumococcal shot shows strong immune response.
  • Mankind Pharma may raise condom prices on war-linked oil surge.
  • Medtronic to buy SPR Therapeutics for $650 million.
  • Bristol Myers to use Anthropic's Claude AI to speed drug discovery.
  • BioMarin drug shows growth gains in children in late-stage trial.
  • Johnson & Johnson says nipocalimab approved in China.
  • Bayer says FDA grants priority review designation for finerenone.
  • Advanced Medical Solutions attracts fresh suitor in H.B. Fuller.
  • Convatec warns of higher cost from Iran War.
  • Parabilis Medicines files for US IPO.
 
 

With care access under assault in US, families of transgender youth weigh moves

REUTERS/Benoit Tessier. (Shown here, people in Washington DC hold signs outside the U.S. Supreme Court as it hears arguments over a Tennessee ban on gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors, December 4, 2024.)

Confronted with Trump Administration threats to gender-affirming care for young transgender people, American families are weighing moves out of their states to gain access to needed healthcare, according to doctors, patients, policy experts and advocacy groups. 

 

Study Rounds

Screen all children for type 1 diabetes, study suggests

 

Type 1 diabetes can be detected in children with a blood test by the family pediatrician long before symptoms develop or an emergency occurs, researchers reported, suggesting more widespread early screening may be in order.

Most children who developed full-blown type 1 diabetes in this study had no family history of the disease, which means screening should not be limited to those with a family history, the researchers said in a report in JAMA.

“The ability to detect type 1 diabetes early through screening and monitoring is a significant breakthrough with vast potential to reach a broad population and change the course of the disease for those who will develop it," Esther Latres of Breakthrough T1D, which helped fund the research, said in a statement.

Families often don't recognize the early-warning symptoms of diabetes such as excessive thirst, weight loss, or fatigue,  leading to development of diabetic ketoacidosis, a severe medical emergency, the researchers noted.

In the study in Germany, more than 220,000 children were tested for early stages of type 1 diabetes during routine pediatric care. A small blood sample is analyzed for the presence of at least two different types of islet autoantibodies, which are immune cells that mistakenly attack the pancreas.

Children with islet autoantibodies but normal blood glucose levels are considered to be in stage 1. Families receive information, education, and access to specialized diabetes centers where regular follow-up examinations then take place.

In stage 2, the first signs of impaired glucose metabolism appear. In stage 3, insulin is required.

At the first screening, 590 children, or roughly 0.3%, were found to have early-stage type 1 diabetes. Eventually, 212 of them progressed to stage 3.

After five years, the probability of progressing from an early stage to clinical type 1 diabetes was 36.2%, researchers reported.

Once an early stage was diagnosed, there was no difference in disease progression in children with and without a family history, they noted.

“The long-standing argument that early-stage disease cannot be readily identified - and therefore cannot efficiently or effectively be studied or targeted - no longer holds,” Dr. Jamie Felton and Dr. Emily Sims of the Indiana University School of Medicine, who were not involved in the study, wrote in an editorial. 

“The findings suggest that the time to seriously consider general population screening has arrived,” they concluded.

 

Value of calcium and vitamin D supplements questioned

Daily use of calcium and vitamin D supplements offers older people little meaningful protection against falls and fractures, according to a large analysis of recently published studies.

Previous studies have come to similar conclusions, yet clinicians and guidelines continue to recommend that patients use them for prevention, the researchers said.

For the new analysis published in The BMJ, they reviewed data from 69 randomized trials that compared calcium or vitamin D supplements – or both – with placebo for reducing fractures and falls.

Study participants got little to no “clinically meaningful” benefit from use of calcium supplements, vitamin D supplements or combined supplementation regardless of age, sex, history of falls, or dietary habits, the researchers said.

The 153,902 study participants were mostly healthy seniors living independently who were not at high risk for falls or fractures. The conclusions might not apply to individuals with certain medical conditions, including those receiving drug treatment for osteoporosis, the researchers acknowledged.

They say general recommendations for calcium and vitamin D supplementation should be reevaluated “in light of current evidence.”

An editorial published with the study calls for increased funding of interventions that have been shown to offer meaningful prevention of falls and fall-related injuries, such as balance and resistance exercise and hazard assessments.

Experts not involved in the analysis said the researchers’ definition of a meaningful benefit as being at least a 50% reduction in risk might have been excessive.

Given that in the UK alone, there are more than 70,000 hip fractures annually costing approximately £2 billion ($2.7 billion), “some might consider a much smaller reduction a meaningful benefit,” Dr. Donal McNally of the University of Nottingham said in a statement.