CRISPR gene-editing therapies need more diverse DNA to realize their full potential – Vox.com

Medicine has entered a new era in which scientists have the tools to change human genetics directly, creating the potential to treat or even permanently cure diseases by editing a few strands of troublesome DNA. And CRISPR, the gene-editing technology whose creators won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2020, is the face of this new normal.

CRISPRs novel harnessing of bacterial proteins to target disease-carrying genes has reshaped medical research over the past decade. While gene-editing itself has been around for more than 30 years, scientists can use CRISPR to edit genomes faster, cheaper, and more precisely than they could with previous gene-editing methods.

As a result, investigators have gained far more control over where a gene gets inserted and when it gets turned on. That in turn has opened the door to a new class of better gene therapies treatments that modify or replace peoples genes to stop a disease.

Last December, the US Food and Drug Administration approved the first-ever CRISPR-based therapy, designed to treat sickle cell disease. In February, the treatment, called Casgevy, gained approval from the European Commission as well. It joins the dozen or so pre-CRISPR gene therapies that are already available to patients. In early May, the first patients began to receive treatment

But theres a significant impediment to maximizing CRISPRs potential for developing novel therapies: the lack of diversity in genetics research.

For decades, gene therapy has been defined by both its enormous therapeutic potential, and by the limitations imposed by our imprecise knowledge of human genetics. Even as gene-editing methods, including CRISPR, have become more sophisticated over the years, the data in the genetic databases and biobanks that scientists use to find and develop new treatments are still riddled with biases that could exclude communities of color from enjoying the full benefits of innovations like CRISPR. Unless that gap is closed, CRISPRs promise wont be fully fulfilled.

Developing effective gene therapies depends on growing our knowledge of the human genome. Data on genes and their correlation with disease have already changed the way cancer researchers think about how to design drugs, and which patients to match with which drug.

Scientists have long known that certain genetic mutations that disrupt regular cell functions can cause cancer to develop, and they have tailored drugs to neutralize those mutations. Genetic sequencing technology has sped that progress, allowing researchers to analyze the genetics of tumor samples from cancer patients after theyve participated in clinical trials to understand why some individuals respond better than others to a drug.

In a clinical trial of the colorectal cancer drug cetuximab, investigators found retrospectively that tumors with a mutation in the KRAS gene (which helps govern cell growth) did not respond to treatment. As a result, clinicians are now asked to confirm that patients do not have the mutation in the KRAS gene before they prescribe that particular drug. New drugs have been developed to target those mutations in the KRAS gene.

Its a step-by-step process from the discovery of these disease-related genes to the crafting of drugs that neutralize them. With CRISPR now available to them, many researchers believe that they can speed this process up.

The technology is based on and named after a unique feature in the bacterial immune system that the organism uses to defend itself against viruses. CRISPR is found naturally in bacteria: Its short for Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats, and it functions like a mugshot database for bacteria, containing snippets of genetic code from foreign viruses that have tried to invade in the past.

When new infections occur, the bacteria deploys RNA segments that scan for viral DNA that matches the mugshots. Special proteins are then dispatched to chop the virus up and neutralize it.

To develop CRISPR into a biotech platform, this protein-RNA complex was adapted from bacteria and inserted into human and animal cells, where it proved similarly effective at searching for and snipping strands of DNA.

Using CRISPR in humans requires a few adjustments. Scientists have to teach the system to search through human DNA, which means that it will need a different mugshot database than what the bacteria originally needed. Critical to harnessing this natural process is artificial RNA, known as a guide RNA. These guide RNAs are designed to match genes found in humans. In theory, these guide RNAs search for and find a specific DNA sequence associated with a specific disease. The special protein attached to the guide RNA then acts like molecular scissors to cut the problematic gene.

CRISPRs therapeutic potential was evident in the breakthrough sickle cell treatment approved by the FDA late last year. What made sickle cell such an attractive target is not just that it affects around 20 million people or more worldwide, but that it is caused by a mutation in a single gene, which makes it simpler to study than a disease caused by multiple mutations. Sickle cell is one of the most common disorders worldwide that is caused by a mutation in a single gene. It was also the first to be characterized at a genetic level, making it a promising candidate for gene therapy.

In sickle cell disease, a genetic mutation distorts the shape of a persons hemoglobin, which is the protein that helps red blood cells carry and deliver oxygen from the lungs to tissues throughout the body. For people with sickle cell disease, their red blood cells look like sickles instead of the normal discs. As a result, they can get caught in blood vessels, blocking blood flow and causing issues like pain, strokes, infections, and death.

Since the 1990s, clinicians have observed that sickle cell patients with higher levels of fetal hemoglobin tend to live longer. A series of genome-wide association studies from 2008 pointed to the BCL11A gene as a possible target for therapeutics. These association studies establish the relationships between specific genes and diseases, identifying candidates for CRISPR gene editing.

Casgevys new CRISPR-derived treatment targets a gene called BCL11A. Inactivating this gene stops the mutated form of hemoglobin from being made and increases the production of normal non-sickled fetal hemoglobin, which people usually stop making after birth.

Out of the 45 patients who have received Casgevy since the start of the trials, 28 of the 29 eligible patients who have stayed on long enough to have their results analyzed reported that they have been free of severe pain crises. Once the treatment moves out of clinical settings, its exact effects can vary. And if the underlying data set doesnt reflect the diversity of the patient population, the gene therapies derived from them might not work the same for every person.

Sickle cell disease as the first benefactor of CRISPR therapy makes sense because its a relatively simple disorder that has been studied for a long time. The genetic mutation causing it was found in 1956. But ironically, the same population that could benefit most from Casgvey may miss out on the full benefits of future breakthrough treatments.

Scientists developing CRISPR treatments depend on whats known as a reference genome, which is meant to be a composite representation of a normal human genome that can be used to identify genes of interest to target for treating a disease.

However, most of the available reference genomes are representative of white Europeans. Thats a problem because not everybodys DNA is identical: Recent sequencing of African genomes shows that they have 10 percent more DNA than the standard reference genome available to researchers. Researchers have theorized that this is because most modern humans came out of Africa. As populations diverged and reconcentrated, genetic bottlenecks happened, which resulted in a loss of genetic variation compared to the original population.

Most genome-wide association studies are also biased in the same way: They have a lot of data from white people and not a lot from people of color.

So while those studies can help identify genes of importance that could lead to effective treatments for the population whose genes make up the majority of the reference data i.e., white people the same treatments may not work as well for other nonwhite populations.

Broadly, theres been an issue with human genetics research theres been a major under-representation of people of African ancestry, both in the US and elsewhere, said Sarah Tishkoff, professor of genetics and biology at the University of Pennsylvania. Without including these diverse populations, were missing out on that knowledge that could perhaps result in better therapeutics or better diagnostics.

Even in the case of the notorious breast cancer gene BRCA1, where a single gene mutation can have a serious clinical impact and is associated with an increased risk of developing cancer, underlying mutations within the gene tend to differ in people of different ancestries, Tishkoff said.

These differences, whether large or small, can matter. Although the vast majority of human genomes are the same, a small fraction of the letters making up our genes can differ from person to person and from population to population, with potentially significant medical implications. Sometimes during sequencing, genetic variations of unknown significance appear. These variants could be clinically important, but because of the lack of diversity in previous research populations, no one has studied them closely enough to understand their impact.

If all the research is being done in people of predominantly European ancestry, youre only going to find those variants, Tishkoff said.

Those limitations affect scientists up and down the developmental pipeline. For researchers using CRISPR technology in preclinical work, the lack of diversity in the genome databases can make it harder to identify the possible negative effect of such genetic variation on the treatments theyre developing.

Sean Misek, a postdoctoral researcher at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, started developing a project with the goal of investigating the differences in the genetic patterns of tumors from patients of European descent compared to patients of African descent. CRISPR has become a versatile tool. Not only can it be used for treatments, but it can also be used for diagnostics and basic research. He and his colleagues intended to use CRISPR to screen for those differences because it can evaluate the effects of multiple genes at once, as opposed to the traditional method of testing one gene at a time.

We know individuals of different ancestry groups have different overall clinical responses to cancer treatments, Misek said. Individuals of recent African descent, for example, have worse outcomes than individuals of European descent, which is a problem that we were interested in trying to understand more.

What they encountered instead was a roadblock.

When Miseks team tried to design CRISPR guides, they found that their guides matched the genomes in the cells of people with European and East Asian ancestry, whose samples made up most of the reference genome, but not on cells from people of South Asian or African ancestry, who are far less represented in databases. In combination with other data biases in cancer research, the guide RNA mismatch has made it more difficult to investigate the tumor biology of non-European patients.

Genetic variations across ancestry groups not only affect whether CRISPR technology works at all, but they can also lead to unforeseen side effects when the tool makes cuts in places outside of the intended genetic target. Such side effects of off-target gene edits could theoretically include cancer.

A big part of developing CRISPR therapy is trying to figure out if there are off-targets. Where? And if they exist, do they matter? said Daniel Bauer, an attending physician at Dana-Farber/Boston Childrens Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.

To better predict potential off-target edits, Bauer collaborated with Luca Pinello, associate professor at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, who had helped develop a tool called CRISPRme that makes projections based on personal and population-level variations in genetics. To test it, they examined the guide RNA being used for sickle cell disease treatment, and found an off-target edit almost exclusively present in cells donated by a patient of African ancestry.

It is currently unclear if this off-target edit detected by the CRISPRme tool has any negative consequences. When the FDA approved the sickle-cell therapy in December 2023, regulators required a post-marketing study to look into off-target effects. Any off-target edits affecting a persons blood should be easily detected in the blood cells, and drawing blood is easier to do than collecting cells from an internal organ, for example.

The genetic variant where the off-target effect occurred can be found in approximately every 1 in 10 people with African ancestry. The fact that we actually were able to find a donor who carried this variant was kind of luck, Bauer said. If the cells we were using were only of European ancestry, it wouldve been even harder to find.

Most of these [off-target] effects probably wont cause any problems, he said. But I think we also have these great technologies, so thats part of our responsibility to look as carefully as we can.

These issues recur again and again as investigators hunt for novel treatments. Katalin Susztak, professor of medicine and genetics at the University of Pennsylvania, thinks one promising candidate for a future CRISPR therapy is a standout gene for kidney disease: APOL1.

Researchers identified the gene when they looked into kidney disease risk in African Americans. While genome-wide association studies turned up thousands of distinct genes increasing risk for people of European ancestry, in African Americans, this single gene was responsible for 3 to 5 times higher risk of kidney disease in patients, said Susztak.

The APOL1 variant is common among African Americans because it protects people from developing African sleeping sickness, which is spread by the Tsetse fly present across much of the continent. This is similar to the story of the sickle cell mutation, which can protect people from malaria.

The variant is maybe only 5,000 years old, so this variant has not arisen in Europe, Asia, or anywhere else. Just in West Africa, Susztak said. But because of the slave trades, West Africans were brought to the United States, so millions of people in the United States have this variant.

The variant also predisposes people to develop cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, and COVID-related disease, which maybe explains why there was an increased incidence of deaths in African Americans during COVID than in Europeans, Susztak said. APOL1 is potentially a very interesting target [for CRISPR] because the disease association is strong.

A CRISPR treatment for kidney disease is currently being investigated, but using the tool comes with complications. Cutting the APOL1 gene would set off an immune response, Susztak noted, so they will have to somehow prevent undesirable side effects, or find a related, but editable gene, like they did with sickle cell.

An alternative RNA-based strategy utilizing CRISPR is also in the works. DNA needs to be transcribed into a messenger RNA sequence first before it can be turned into proteins. Instead of permanently altering the genome, RNA editing alters the sequence of RNAs, which can then change what proteins are produced. The effects are less permanent, however, lasting for a few months instead of forever which can be advantageous for treating temporary medical conditions.

And it may turn out that gene therapy is simply not the right approach to the problem. Sometimes, a more conventional approach still works best. Susztak said that a small molecule drug developed by Vertex which works similarly to most drugs except special classes like gene therapies or biologics to inhibit the function of the APOL1 protein has enjoyed positive results in early clinical trials.

Even with these limitations, more CRISPR treatments are coming down the pike.

As of early last year, more than 200 people have been treated with experimental CRISPR therapies for cancers, blood disorders, infections, and more. In the developmental pipeline is a CRISPR-based therapeutic from Intellia Therapeutics that treats transthyretin amyloidosis, a rare condition affecting the function of the heart tissues and nerves. The drug has performed well in early trials and is now recruiting participants for a Phase III study. Another CRISPR drug from Intellia for hereditary angioedema, a condition that causes severe swelling throughout the body, is slated to enter Phase III later this year.

As the CRISPR boom continues, some research groups are slowly improving the diversity of their genetic sources.

The All of Us program from the National Institutes of Health, which aims to find the biological, environmental, and lifestyle factors that contribute to health, has analyzed 245,000 genomes to date, over 40 percent of which came from participants who were not of European ancestry. They found new genetic markers for diabetes that have never been identified before.

Then theres the Human Pangenome project, which aims to create a reference genome that captures more global diversity. The first draft of its proposal was released last May. Another project called the PAGE study, funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute and the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, is working to include more ancestrally diverse populations in genome-wide association studies.

But at the current pace, experts predict that it will take years to reach parity in our genetic databases. And the scientific community must also build trust with the communities its trying to help. The US has a murky history with medical ethics, especially around race. Take the Tuskegee experiment that charted the progression of syphilis in Black American men while hiding the true purpose of the study from the participants and withholding their ability to seek treatment when it became available, or the controversy over Henrietta Lacks cervical cells, which were taken and used in research without her consent. Those are just two prominent historical abuses that have eroded trust between minority communities and the countrys medical system, Tishkoff said. That history has made it more difficult to collect samples from marginalized communities and add them to these critical data sets.

Where the research is being done, where the clinical trials are being held, as well as whos doing the research, can all have an impact on which patients participate. The Human Genetics & Genomics Workforce Survey Report published by the American Society of Human Genetics in 2022 found that 67 percent of the genomic workforce identified as white. Add in the financial burden of developing new treatments when using a reference genome, or a pre-made biobank from past efforts to collect and organize a large volume of biological samples, saves time and costs. In the race to bring CRISPR treatments to market, those shortcuts offered valuable efficiency to drug makers.

What this means is that the first-generation of CRISPR therapeutics might therefore be blunter instruments than they might otherwise be. However, if improvements can be made to make sure the source genomes reflect a wider range of people, Pinello believes that later generations of CRISPR will be more personalized and therefore more effective for more people.

Finding the genes and making drugs that work is, of course, momentous but ultimately, thats only half the battle. The other worry physicians like Susztak have is whether patients will be able to afford and access these innovative treatments.

There is still an overwhelming racial disparity in clinical trial enrollment. Studies have found that people of color are more likely to suffer from chronic illness and underuse medications like insulin compared to their white counterparts. Gene therapies easily rack up price tags in the millions, and insurance companies, including the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, are still trying to figure out how to pay for them.

Because its the pharmaceutical industry, if they dont turn around profit, if they cannot test the drug, or if people are unwilling to take it, then this inequity is going to be worsened, said Susztak. We are essentially going to be creating something that makes things worse even though we are trying to help.

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CRISPR gene-editing therapies need more diverse DNA to realize their full potential - Vox.com

An epigenome editing toolkit to dissect the mechanisms of gene regulation – EurekAlert

image:

Creative depiction of the epigenetic editing toolkit: each building represents the epigenetic state of a single gene (dark windows are silenced genes, lit up windows are active genes). The crane illustrates the epigenetic editing system which enables de novo deposition of chromatin marks on any genomic location.

Credit: Marzia Munaf

Understanding how genes are regulated at the molecular level is a central challenge in modern biology. This complex mechanism is mainly driven by the interaction between proteins called transcription factors, DNA regulatory regions, and epigenetic modifications chemical alterations that change chromatin structure. The set of epigenetic modifications of a cells genome is referred to as the epigenome.

In a study just published in Nature Genetics, scientists from the Hackett Group at EMBL Rome have developed a modular epigenome editing platform a system to program epigenetic modifications at any location in the genome. The system allows scientists to study the impact of each chromatin modification on transcription, the mechanism by which genes are copied into mRNA to drive protein synthesis.

Chromatin modifications are thought to contribute to the regulation of key biological processes such as development, response to environmental signals, and disease.

To understand the effects of specific chromatin marks on gene regulation, previous studies have mapped their distribution in the genomes of healthy and diseased cell types. By combining this data with gene expression analysis and the known effects of perturbing specific genes, scientists have ascribed functions to such chromatin marks.

However, the causal relationship between chromatin marks and gene regulation has proved difficult to determine. The challenge lies in dissecting the individual contributions of the many complex factors involved in such regulation chromatin marks, transcription factors, and regulatory DNA sequences.

Scientists from the Hackett Group developed a modular epigenome editing system to precisely program nine biologically important chromatin marks at any desired region in the genome. The system is based on CRISPR a widely used genome editing technology that allows researchers to make alterations in specific DNA locations with high precision and accuracy.

Such precise perturbations enabled them to carefully dissect cause-and-consequence relationships between chromatin marks and their biological effects. The scientists also designed and employed a reporter system, which allowed them to measure changes in gene expression at single-cell level and to understand how changes in the DNA sequence influence the impact of each chromatin mark. Their results reveal the causal roles of a range of important chromatin marks in gene regulation.

For example, the researchers found a new role for H3K4me3, a chromatin mark that was previously believed to be a result of transcription. They observed that H3K4me3 can actually increase transcription by itself if artificially added to specific DNA locations. This was an extremely exciting and unexpected result that went against all our expectations, said Cristina Policarpi, postdoc in the Hackett Group and leading scientist of the study. Our data point towards a complex regulatory network, in which multiple governing factors interact to modulate the levels of gene expression in a given cell. These factors include the pre-existing structure of the chromatin, the underlying DNA sequence, and the location in the genome.

Hackett and colleagues are currently exploring avenues to leverage this technology through a promising start-up venture. The next step will be to confirm and expand these conclusions by targeting genes across different cell types and at scale. How chromatin marks influence transcription across the diversity of genes and downstream mechanisms, also remains to be clarified.

Our modular epigenetic editing toolkit constitutes a new experimental approach to dissect the reciprocal relationships between the genome and epigenome, said Jamie Hackett, Group Leader at EMBL Rome. The system could be used in the future to more precisely understand the importance of epigenomic changes in influencing gene activity during development and in human disease. On the other hand, the technology also unlocks the ability to program desired gene expression levels in a highly tunable manner. This is an exciting avenue for precision health applications and may prove useful in disease settings.

ystematic Epigenome Editing Captures the Context-dependent Instructive Function of Chromatin Modifications

9-May-2024

Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.

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An epigenome editing toolkit to dissect the mechanisms of gene regulation - EurekAlert

Penn State Health teams rally to reopen Berks Cardiology facility in record time following burst water line – Penn State Health News

Penn State Health Spring Ridge Outpatient Center

When the Berks Cardiology team at Penn State Health Spring Ridge Outpatient Center went to work April 30, they were shocked to discover water pouring down from the ceilings and flooding three stories worth of hallways and exam rooms. The damage caused by a water heater that had burst overnight was so extensive and severe that staff first thought the facility in Wyomissing would be closed for several days or longer. But through quick response and actions by many Penn State Health teams, those fears proved unnecessary.

May 10, 2024Penn State Health The RITE Stuff

Within an hour, the Facilities team was on-site, turning off the water and electricity to the building and quickly evacuating staff. By early afternoon, a contracted restoration company had placed temporary walls on two floors where exam room and offices were most affected.

Meanwhile, Information Services, Emergency Management, Infection Control, Facilities, Security and Operations were in constant communication throughout the day, holding several huddles. Minimizing disruptions for patients was paramount. Penn State Health Medical Group staff contacted more than 300 patients who had appointments scheduled at Berks Cardiology on April 30 and May 1 to offer appointments with their same providers. The appointments were scheduled for May 1 at four other Medical Group locations in Berks County.

Berks Cardiology reopened partially to staff and patients on May 1. And the very next day just two days after the water heater burst the practice was fully back online.

Several Berks Cardiology employees temporarily lost their work spaces to the water damage, but Penn State Health Administration, Spring Ridge Family Practice and St. Joseph Medical Center have welcomed them to work at those sites as long as necessary.

Keeping Berks Cardiology running for our patients throughout this recovery was truly a team effort and a wonderful demonstration of our Penn State Health values, said Ruth Gundermann, interim administrative and operational lead, Penn State Health Medical Group. So many teams jumped into action to ensure that the impact of the flooding to our patients was minimal. Everyone involved deserves our heartfelt gratitude.

If you're having trouble accessing this content, or would like it in another format, please email the Penn State College of Medicine web department.

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Penn State Health teams rally to reopen Berks Cardiology facility in record time following burst water line - Penn State Health News

The push for an independent cardiology board continues – Cardiovascular Business

"We submitted an application to the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS), the governing body that certifies physicians across the country. In January of 2024, the House of Cardiology came together, saying, it's time to make a new board separate from the American Board of Internal Medicine. The new board of cardiovascular medicine cardiologists would be governed by cardiologists to assess that we are all competent clinicians taking care of patients," Kuvin explained.

Key organizations driving this initiative include the ACC, American Heart Association (AHA), Heart Rhythm Society (HRS), Heart Failure Society of America (HFSA), and the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI). While there has been talk about braking off from the ABIM to create a cardiology board for years, serious discussions have been ongoing since 2019. Those discussions culminated with the official ABMS submission earlier this year.

One of the biggest reasons these groups want to create an independent cardiology board is the constant complaints from cardiologists about how the ABIM manages certification and recertification. Kuvin and the societies supporting the movement for an independent board said the requirements of the ABIM do not match the needs of cardiologists, are too complex and can lead to some cardiologists being left uncertified.

Central to the proposal is the concept of tailoring certification and continuing education to the needs of cardiologists throughout their careers. Kuvin outlined a vision for a streamlined, competency-based approach that prioritizes practical application over traditional examination formats.

"This isn't just about passing tests," he remarked. "It's about ensuring that cardiologists possess the knowledge and skills essential for delivering high-quality patient care."

Kuvin said the misalignment between cardiology and ABIM policy has led to several fights over the years. A good example of this took place in August 2023, when SCAI issued a new statement urging the ABIM to rethink its maintenance of certification (MOC) policies. SCAI said some of its members have seen their privileges threatened and even revoked despite passing the necessary exams and reporting procedural volumes as required. According to the SCAI statement, ABIM has linked certification status with yearly MOC participation in a way that could potentially have a negative impact on patient care.

The two organizations have previously worked together to ensure cardiologists have more options when working to meet MOC requirements, but SCAI said ABIM changed course by requiring interventional cardiologists to complete their assessment through a very complex process, achieve 100 self-assessment points every five years and perform a predetermined number of procedures every five years, all to keep ABIM certification for the full 10-year window. Failing to meet these requirements can lead to a loss of certification.

This situation unacceptably exacerbates the interventional cardiology workforce shortage and threatens to directly impact the care of patients suffering life threatening cardiovascular emergencies, according to an SCAI statement at the time. It is the position of SCAI that the ABIM must immediately abandon its complex practice and stop mixing nonparticipation in MOC with not certified status.

SCAI said its members must be protected from ABIMs pattern of making changes to the certification process. Simple and credible rules are advisable, while a labyrinth of regulations is both unfair and unjustified, the group concluded.

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The ACC has also had disagreements with internal medicine experts making certifications decisions for cardiologists instead of experts in cardiology.

"We felt the best way for cardiologists to be certified they are competent would be by measures that other cardiologists would ascribe to them. Essentially, we wanted to make certification qualifications relevant to the cardiology practice," explained former ACC President Hadley Wilson, MD, executive vice chair of Atrium Health Sanger Heart & Vascular Institute, in an interview with Cardiovascular Business last fall. "We believed that was no longer possible through just being grouped with internal medicine, and we felt like cardiovascular medicine is its own distinct specialty. In fact, about 50% of cardiology division programs in the country are either completely separate from internal medicine divisions or at least separate financially. And that number of independent cardiology departments that are separate, distinct entities just continues to grow."

The fact that several large cardiology groups are rallying support demonstrates the widespread endorsement for the board initiative.

"Cardiology has evolved into its own specialty. We need a board that reflects the unique training pathways, competency statements, and technological advancements inherent to cardiovascular medicine," Kuvin emphasized.

The ABMS has opened its public comment period and will collect comments until July 24. The comment submission form can be found here.

More information about the proposed board is available here.

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The push for an independent cardiology board continues - Cardiovascular Business

American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA) Issue New Hypertrophic … – Diagnostic and Interventional Cardiology

May 9, 2024 The American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA) today released a new clinical guideline for effectively managing individuals diagnosed with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The guideline, according to a written statement shared here, reiterates the importance of collaborative decision-making with patients who have HCM and provides updated recommendations for the most effective treatment pathways for adult and pediatric patients.

Incorporating the most recent data, this new guideline equips clinicians with the latest recommendations for the treatment of HCM, said Steve R. Ommen, MD, FACC, medical director of the Mayo Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Clinic and chair of the guideline writing committee. Ommen added, Were seeing more evidence that patients with HCM can return to their normal daily lives with proper care and management.

Updated recommendations in the guideline reflect recent evidence about HCM treatment and management including new forms of pharmacologic management; participation in vigorous recreational activities and competitive sports; and risk stratification for sudden cardiac death (SCD) with an emphasis on pediatric patients.

The guideline includes recommendations for adding cardiac myosin inhibitors, a new class of medication for patients with symptomatic obstructive HCM who do not get adequate symptom relief from first-line drug therapy. Symptomatic obstructive HCM is a type of HCM where the heart muscle is restricted. Cardiac myosin inhibitors are the first FDA-approved class of medication to specifically target the thickening of the heart muscle instead of treating the symptoms, however, they are monitored under the FDAs Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies (REMS) program, which may create additional steps and time for both the clinician and the patient. Clinicians require special training to prescribe the medication, and patients require regular screenings.

These new drugs offer an alternative for patients who have failed first-line therapy and either want to delay or possibly avoid more aggressive options, Ommen said. With this guideline, were providing clinicians with point-of-care guidance about effectively using this first-in-class, evidence-based treatment option and improving their patients' quality of life.

HCM is an inherited cardiac condition most often caused by a gene mutation that makes the heart muscle too thick (hypertrophy), which impairs its ability to adequately pump blood throughout the body. HCM affects approximately 1 in every 500 individuals; however, a significant portion of cases remain undiagnosed because many people do not exhibit symptoms. Occasionally, the first time HCM is diagnosed is after a sudden death. People who do have symptoms may experience episodes of fainting, chest pain, shortness of breath or irregular heartbeats.

In addition to medication treatment, growing evidence is showing that the benefits of exercise outweigh the potential risks for patients with HCM. Low to moderate intensity recreational exercise should be part of how HCM patients manage their overall health. For some HCM patients, competitive sports may be considered in consultation with HCM clinical specialists.

Recommendations for physical activity continue to evolve with research, Ommen said. As part of a healthy lifestyle, patients with HCM are now encouraged to engage in low-to-moderate intensity physical activities. Were seeing how vigorous physical activities can be reasonable for some individuals. With shared decision-making between the clinician and the patient, some patients may even be able to return to competitive sports.

Poorly managed HCM may lead to many complications including SCD. The new guideline includes recommendations for assessing and managing the risk of SCD by establishing clear risk markers. Guidance for integrating risk markers with tools to estimate an individual patients SCD risk score is recommended to aid in the patient/clinician shared decision-making regarding implantable cardioverter defibrillator placement, incorporating a patients personal level of risk tolerance and specific treatment goals including quality of life.

Several recommendations in the new guideline extend to pediatric patients. A specific pediatric risk stratification for SCD is emphasized, with risk calculators specific to children and adolescents and stressing the importance of HCM centers with expertise in pediatrics. The new guideline extends exercise stress testing recommendations to include children diagnosed with HCM to help determine functional capacity and provide prognostic feedback.

The 2024 AHA/ACC/AMSSM/HRS/PACES/SCMR Guideline for the Management of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy is published simultaneously today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, JACC, and American Heart Association's journal, Circulation.

In addition to the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association, the guideline was written in collaboration with and endorsed by the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine, the Heart Rhythm Society, the Pediatric & Congenital Electrophysiology Society, and the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance.

More information: http://www.acc.org, http://www.heart.org

Related content:

Part 1: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: One on One with a Cardiovascular Research Leader

Part 2: Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Focus

Part 3: Award-winning Researcher Shares Update on Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Work and Value of Mentoring

ONE ON ONE WITH CHRISTINE SEIDMAN, MD, FACC, ON HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY

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American College of Cardiology (ACC) and American Heart Association (AHA) Issue New Hypertrophic ... - Diagnostic and Interventional Cardiology

Cardiologist charged with 9 more sex crimes as police search his home and private practice – Cardiovascular Business

A cardiologist in Carolina Beach, North Carolina, is now facing additional charges for allegedly raping a 10-year-old child.

Damian Brezinski, 61, was originally arrested on May 3. At the time, he was charged with indecent liberties with a child and first-degree statutory sexual offense.

According to new reporting from WECT, a local television station based out of Wilmington, North Carolina, Brezinski has now been charged with nine additional counts, including the rape of a child by an adult offender and the solicitation of a child by computer.

Brezinskis judge raised his bond from $1.5 million to $5 million after the new charges were announced. The judge also said Brezinski could face life in prison without parole if convicted.

WECT obtained copies of multiple search warrants related to the case, revealing new details. Those warrants allowed investigators to search Brezinskis home, cars and even his private practice, Island Cardiology, for evidence.

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Cardiologist charged with 9 more sex crimes as police search his home and private practice - Cardiovascular Business

Cardiologists want better data on how legal marijuana will impact heart health in the US – Cardiovascular Business

Rezkalla and Kloner did note that marijuana use has been linked to certain health benefits. However, they added, it has also been associated with a variety of cardiovascular complications, including myocardial infarction, stroke and congestive heart failure. With recreational marijuana use now legal in approximately half of the country, should cardiologists expect the number of patients presenting with these adverse events to increase dramatically?

Many studies have indicated an increase in cardiovascular events, and some indicated an increase in mortality, in people who use marijuana, Rezkalla and Kloner wrote. An important question is, did legalization of marijuana in any states cause an increase in cardiovascular events and/or mortality?

Overall, the duo concluded, there is an urgent need for the National Institutes of Health and other federal agencies to step forward and fund studies that can provide some definitive answers. Learning more about the cardiovascular impact of marijuana legislation will benefit the general public and it may even help influence future policies and industry guidelines.

Click here to read the full manuscript in Cardiology Research.

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Cardiologists want better data on how legal marijuana will impact heart health in the US - Cardiovascular Business

CB cardiologist facing sex crimes with 10-year-old appears in court – Port City Daily

CAROLINA BEACH A local doctor charged with first-degree sex offense and indecent liberties with a child appeared virtually in court Monday.

READ MORE: Local cardiologist, nonprofit founder arrested for sex crimes with a minor

Damian Alexander Brezinkski, 61, was arrested Friday, May 3, at his practice, Island Cardiology on Pleasure Island, for an incident that allegedly happened April 17. He is being held at the New Hanover County Detention Center under a $1.5 million bond.

Brezinksi was arrested on two felonies of sex offenses with a juvenile that, according to arrest warrants, is 10 years old.

First degree statutory sex offense, by state statute, is when a perpetrator at least 12 years old and four years older than the victim engages in a sex offense with someone under the age of 13. It carries a144 months to life imprisonment sentence, if found guilty.

Indecent liberties with a child refers to incidents when a person over 16 years of age and at least five years older than the victim takes immoral liberties with someone under 16 for the purpose of arousal and meeting sexual desire. Its a Class F felony, which means anyone found guilty may face a maximum sentence of 59 months imprisonment and potential fines.

Documents show Brezinski must go under electronic house arrest and surrender his passport if he makes bond. It was determined by Judge Noecker on his arrest date.

It also mandates Brezinski have no contact with any minor children, nor with the victim or victims family.

He was required to turn in a DNA sample under state statue 15A266.3A.

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CB cardiologist facing sex crimes with 10-year-old appears in court - Port City Daily