PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Mental health challenges faced by children with cystic fibrosis are the focus of a major, multisite study led by UB

UB team has been instrumental in identifying and addressing how a person’s mental health affects disease progression and outcomes in cystic fibrosis

Mental health challenges faced by children with cystic fibrosis are the focus of a major, multisite study led by UB
2024-09-18
(Press-News.org) BUFFALO, N.Y. — A University at Buffalo psychiatrist who has played a critical role in getting mental health screening and treatment integrated into routine care for adults and adolescents with cystic fibrosis (CF) has been awarded $3 million from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation to focus on the mental health of children with the disease.

 

Led by UB and launched this summer, the new study is an outgrowth of The International Depression Epidemiological Study (TIDES), which began in 2014 and was the largest study of mental health in adolescents and adults with CF. As a result of TIDES, annual screening for depression and anxiety is now part of routine CF care for nearly 90% of adults and adolescents with CF in the U.S.

“That’s the goal of this new study, which we are calling TIDES 2.0,” says Beth A. Smith, MD, principal investigator, interim chair of psychiatry in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB, medical director of the Children’s Psychiatry Clinic in Oishei Children’s Hospital and founding chair of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation’s Mental Health Advisory Committee. “It will allow us to take what we have done nationally and internationally for adolescents and adults with CF and do it for children from 18 months up to 11 years old.”

The study will evaluate the national prevalence of mental health concerns in children with CF under 12 years of age. It will identify the best ways to screen for mental health issues in these children, and it will characterize those issues most often seen in children being treated with the new therapies that have essentially revolutionized CF. It will identify potential risk factors and likely lead to the adoption of new international guidelines on mental health screening for children with CF, just as the original TIDES did.

Often diagnosed in infants, cystic fibrosis is a rare, chronic disease without a cure. A progressive, genetic disease, it affects the whole body, including the ability to breathe and digest food. Managing the disease is complex, and people with CF can spend several hours a day doing treatments to clear airways of mucus and treat other complications; some individuals eventually require a lung transplant.

Dramatic improvements

Fortunately, the prognosis for people with CF has improved dramatically in the past 20 years. That’s due to improvements in multidisciplinary, specialized care, as well as the development of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) modulator therapies, which precisely correct the malfunctioning protein that is made by the CFTR gene. UB and Oishei researchers have been at the forefront of this research; in 2009 they enrolled the first U.S. patient in a multisite clinical trial of these drugs.

Whereas in the 1950s — when children born with CF rarely lived long enough to attend elementary school — today, many people with CF grow up, marry, have families and live into retirement.

The impact these pharmaceutical advances have had cannot be overstated, but the story of the disease has grown more complicated.

Previous studies at UB and elsewhere have shown that depression in people with CF is linked with worse health outcomes, including decreased lung function, lower body mass index, increased exacerbations and hospitalizations, and increased mortality.

In a small study Smith and her colleagues published in 2010, they found that children with CF as young as 7 years old start to have depressive symptoms. “Kids become sad and irritable, they start to have a lot of negative thoughts about their lives, they notice that they’re different from other kids,” Smith says.

Googling one’s disease for example, only intensifies those feelings. “Even though life expectancy has improved so much, there are a lot of comorbidities now that people are living longer,” says Smith. “They have much higher rates of colorectal cancer, they get CF-related diabetes because their pancreas gets bogged down, and boys find out they might be sterile. There’s just a lot that gets unfolded over time for these young kids.”

Parents, of course, are also deeply affected and their concerns can, in turn, affect the child. So, Smith says, it is critical to identify and address mental health issues early on.

Changing the trajectory

“Looking back on when I first began working with patients with CF in the early 2000s, I think if mental health screening had been more prominent and we had been addressing it in a different way, maybe we would have been able to change some of the patients’ trajectories,” she says.

In a previous study, Smith and colleagues found that people with CF with chronic depressive symptoms who had not received treatment were more likely to die than those who had had their depression addressed. “It’s not that the other patients didn’t have depression,” she says. “They did, but it was addressed.”

Changing those trajectories is part of Smith’s mission with the new grant focused on children. “Can we change these trajectories if we treat the depression and treat it well and help with developing coping skills and disease self-management? Can we change the outcome so a positive depressive screening in someone with CF isn’t associated with a doubling of the risk of mortality?”

Part of the care team

One key to doing that requires that the entire CF care team be committed to including mental health screening as part of standard patient care. Danielle M. Goetz, MD, director of the Cystic Fibrosis Center of Western New York at Oishei Children’s Hospital, clinical associate professor of pediatrics and the leading CF pulmonologist as well as a co-PI on the new grant, plays a critical role.

“The pulmonologists are so important,” says Smith. “They run the clinics; they’re the boots on the ground. As a mental health clinician, I can say that mental health screening is important, but it won’t happen unless the pulmonologists understand that this is important to total CF care. At our clinic, Dr. Goetz has been foundational to making sure this study works.”

TIDES 2.0 will enroll patients at the Cystic Fibrosis Center of Western New York at Oishei Hospital in Buffalo and at 15 other sites nationwide including Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

People interested in enrolling in the study should contact Smith at balucas@buffalo.edu or research coordinator Julianne Hergenroder at jhergenroder@upa.chob.

 

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Mental health challenges faced by children with cystic fibrosis are the focus of a major, multisite study led by UB

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UC3M and Universia obtain an ENIA Chair in artificial intelligence in data economy

UC3M and Universia obtain an ENIA Chair in artificial intelligence in data economy
2024-09-18
The Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M) is one of 22 institutions that have been selected by the Ministry for Digital Transformation and the Civil Service to create an ENIA Chair to further the development of artificial intelligence (AI)-based applications. The AImpulsa UC3M-Universia Chair, as it is called, will be the only one of its kind in Spain in the area of Data Economy and will collaborate with Universia-Banco Santander, through Santander Universities. The ENIA Chairs' objectives, which depend on the Secretary of State for Digitalisation and Artificial Intelligence of the Ministry for Digital Transformation and ...

Why petting your cat leads to static electricity

Why petting your cat leads to static electricity
2024-09-18
Anyone who has ever pet a cat or shuffled their feet across the carpet knows that rubbing objects together generates static electricity. But an explanation for this phenomenon has eluded researchers for more than two millennia. Now, Northwestern University scientists have finally uncovered the mechanics at play.  When an object slides, the front and back parts of that object experience different forces, researchers found. This difference in forces causes different electrical charges to build up on the front and back parts of the object. And the difference in electrical charges creates a current, leading to a light zap. The study was published yesterday (Sept. 17) in the journal ...

UC San Diego Health maintains top quality care status by Vizient

2024-09-18
UC San Diego Health has been honored as a top performer for Vizient’s 2024 Bernard A. Birnbaum, MD, Quality Leadership Performance Award, marking the sixth consecutive year the health system has achieved this prominent distinction. This award places UC San Diego Health among the top academic medical centers in the nation, highlighting its exceptional commitment to delivering high-quality, patient-centered care. This sustained excellence recognizes the region’s only academic medical center’s mission of advancing health care standards and outcomes at the highest level. “Being named a Vizient top performer for the sixth year in a row underscores ...

If you build it, will they come? Wildlife corridors need smarter design

2024-09-18
As human population and development continue to expand, it’s more important than ever to set aside corridors of undeveloped land where wildlife can travel safely, helping to ensure their long-term survival. However, a recent study by the University of Maryland reveals that current methods of designing and evaluating wildlife corridors may not be adequate to ensure wildlife protection, and suggests that Best Management Practices should include analyzing corridors with a smarter and more thorough framework. University researchers tested different ...

Sea surface temperature record in the southwestern Pacific: Coral colony from Fiji reveals warmest temperatures in over 600 years

Sea surface temperature record in the southwestern Pacific: Coral colony from Fiji reveals warmest temperatures in over 600 years
2024-09-18
The sea surface temperature in the Fijian archipelago in the southwestern Pacific is now at its maximum for more than 600 years. This is the result of an international research team's evaluation of a new coral record providing further evidence for unprecedented warming in the western Pacific Ocean. According to this, the year 2022 was the warmest year in the region since 1370. The scientists used the giant coral Diploastrea heliopora colony in Fiji to obtain the data for the new reconstruction. These unique and long-lived massive corals record long-term climatic and ...

Homemade ‘play-putty’ can read the body’s electric signals, find UMass researchers

Homemade ‘play-putty’ can read the body’s electric signals, find UMass researchers
2024-09-18
AMHERST, Mass. – A new study by University of Massachusetts Amherst researchers demonstrates the effectiveness of homemade play putty at reading brain, heart, muscle and eye activity. Published in Device, the research outlines the conductive properties of this material, so-named “squishy circuits.”  “[Squishy circuits] are literally child’s play putty, that is also conductive” describes Dmitry Kireev, assistant professor of biomedical engineering and senior author on the paper.   The conductive squishy ...

Magnifying deep space through the “carousel lens”

Magnifying deep space through the “carousel lens”
2024-09-18
In a rare and extraordinary discovery, researchers have identified a unique configuration of galaxies that form the most exquisitely aligned gravitational lens found to date. The Carousel Lens is a massive cluster-scale gravitational lens system that will enable researchers to delve deeper into the mysteries of the cosmos, including dark matter and dark energy. “This is an amazingly lucky ‘galactic line-up’ – a chance alignment of multiple galaxies across a line-of-sight spanning most of the observable universe,” said David Schlegel, a co-author of the study and a senior scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Physics Division. "Finding one such alignment is ...

Another new wasp species discovered by researchers Rice campus

Another new wasp species discovered by researchers Rice campus
2024-09-18
A newly identified wasp species, Chrysonotomyia susbelli, has been discovered in Houston, Texas, marking the 18th new species identified by Rice University’s Scott Egan and his research team since 2014. The discovery, the fourth wasp species found on the university grounds in seven years, reveals the hidden world of parasitoid wasps and the intricate ecosystems that thrive outside our doors. The Chrysonotomyia susbelli is a parasitoid wasp, about 1 millimeter long, that emerges from galls, or tumorlike growths created by the gall wasp Neuroterus bussae found on southern live oak leaves. The galls serve as microhabitats within which larvae feed, develop and pupate. ...

Greenhouse gains: cucumbers get a genetic upgrade through innovative pollen tech

Greenhouse gains: cucumbers get a genetic upgrade through innovative pollen tech
2024-09-18
Researchers have achieved a groundbreaking advancement in plant biotechnology by using a magnetofected pollen gene delivery system to genetically transform cucumbers. This cutting-edge method uses DNA-coated magnetic nanoparticles to introduce foreign genes into pollen, producing genetically modified seeds without the need for traditional tissue culture or regeneration steps. This technique significantly streamlines and accelerates crop genetic modification, opening up new avenues to boost agricultural productivity and resilience. Genetic modification in horticultural crops, particularly within the Cucurbitaceae family, is often hindered by complex tissue culture requirements and ...

Like humans, artificial minds can learn by thinking

2024-09-18
Some of the greatest discoveries don’t come merely from observations but from thinking. Einstein developed theories about relativity through thought experiments, and Galileo derived insights about gravity through mental simulations. A review published September 18 in the journal Trends in Cognitive Sciences shows that this process of thinking is not exclusive to humans. Artificial intelligence, too, is capable of self-correction and arriving at new conclusions through “learning by thinking.” “There are some recent demonstrations of what looks like learning by thinking in AI, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The African Engineering and Technology Network signs eighth university partner

Researchers awarded $1.14M to use artificial intelligence to determine best rectal cancer treatment strategy

A new ventilator-on-a-chip model to study lung damage

Enrollment of undocumented students at California universities dropped from 2016 to 2023

Gaining insights into the chemical basis of aversive learning

Revolutionary visible-light-antenna ligand enhances samarium-catalyzed reactions

Stopping plants from passing viruses to their progeny

​​​​​​​NIH awards $2.8M to Rice, Baylor College of Medicine for research on acute respiratory distress syndrome

The University of Limpopo chooses Figshare to support its research excellence strategy

A new forecasting model based on gene activity predicts when Japan’s cherry buds awake from dormancy

New organic thermoelectric device that can harvest energy at room temperature

Activity in brain system that controls eye movements highlights importance of spatial thinking

New research reenvisions Earth’s mantle as a relatively uniform reservoir

Global warming leads to drier and hotter Amazon: reducing uncertainty in future rainforest carbon loss

Low-carbon ammonia offers green alternative for agriculture and hydrogen transport

New mechanism uncovered for the reduction of emu wings

Zeroing in on the genes that snakes use to produce venom

Maynooth University study reveals impact of homework on student achievement in maths and science

Reducing floodplain development doesn’t need to be complex

Lights, camera, action! Coronavirus spike proteins can be selectively detected in 5 minutes

Your Zoom background could influence how tired you feel after a video call

With the use of visual cues, hospital rooms get nearly 70% cleaner

Serial-autoencoder for personalized recommendation

How do look for microbes in nature that are beneficial to plant?

Exotic species invasions enhance biodiversity response to climate change

Arctic warming may fuel ice formation in clouds

Rugged Falklands landscape was once a lush rainforest

Dizziness in older adults is linked to higher risk of future falls

Triptans more effective than newer, more expensive migraine drugs

Iron given through the vein corrects iron deficiency anaemia in pregnant women faster and better than iron taken by mouth

[Press-News.org] Mental health challenges faced by children with cystic fibrosis are the focus of a major, multisite study led by UB
UB team has been instrumental in identifying and addressing how a person’s mental health affects disease progression and outcomes in cystic fibrosis