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Today’s top news highlights: Cancer makes COVID-19 more dangerous, treatment for heavy menstrual bleeding, and more


 

Here are the stories our MDedge editors across specialties think you need to know about today:

Active cancer ups death risk for patients with COVID-19

New data show that patients with COVID-19 and progressing cancer had a significantly higher risk of 30-day mortality, compared with COVID-19–positive cancer patients who were in remission or had no evidence of cancer. Interestingly, one of the independent risk factor for death in patients with COVID-19 and cancer was treatment with hydroxychloroquine plus azithromycin. This finding, however, was of “uncertain validity due to a high risk of residual confounding; for example, patients receiving this combination were more likely to have severe disease or more likely to be hospitalized,” said Jeremy L. Warner, MD, of Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville. Read more.

Two new studies indicate that social distancing successfully flattened the curve on COVID-19 hospitalizations. One study, published in JAMA, showed significantly lower numbers of observed cases versus worst-case projections in four states: Colorado, Minnesota, Ohio, and Virginia. In Minnesota, 17 days after the order, there were 361 cumulative hospitalizations, compared with a projection of 988 had no such action been taken. In a separate study measuring COVID-19 patients occupying ICU beds in Ontario and deaths among those cases, hospitals “would have rapidly exceeded ICU capacity and observed substantially higher mortality” without any physical distancing intervention. Read more.

FDA approves treatment for heavy menstrual bleeding

The Food and Drug Administration has approved a medication for the management of heavy menstrual bleeding associated with uterine fibroids in premenopausal women. The medication, marketed as Oriahnn, is an estrogen and progestin combination product that consists of elagolix, estradiol, and norethindrone acetate capsules packaged together for oral use. The most common side effects of the drug included hot flushes, headache, fatigue, and irregular vaginal bleeding. The drug’s label includes a boxed warning about a risk of strokes and blood clots, especially in women at increased risk for these events. Read more.


Lessons from a drive-through COVID testing center

Chris Notte, MD, and Neil Skolnik, MD, were part of a team of clinicians charged with launching a drive-through COVID-19 testing center. Their task was to get the operation up and running in 2 days. It took them 3 days. While the launch was a success, the experience taught them some lessons about the limits of medical technology and the importance of personal protective equipment. “Prior to the coronavirus pandemic, I had never considered surgical masks, face shields, and nasal swabs to be critical components of medical technology. My opinion quickly changed after opening our drive-through COVID-19 site,” they wrote. Read more.

For more on COVID-19, visit our Resource Center. All of our latest news is available on MDedge.com.

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