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Tag: New York Presbyterian Hospital

  • We Have No Drugs to Treat the Deadliest Eating Disorder

    We Have No Drugs to Treat the Deadliest Eating Disorder

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    In the 1970s, they tried lithium. Then it was zinc and THC. Anti-anxiety drugs had their turn. So did Prozac and SSRIs and atypical antidepressants. Nothing worked. Patients with anorexia were still unable to bring themselves to eat, still stuck in rigid thought patterns, still chillingly underweight.

    A few years ago, a group led by Evelyn Attia, the director of the Center for Eating Disorders at New York Presbyterian Hospital and the New York State Psychiatric Institute, tried giving patients an antipsychotic drug called olanzapine, normally used to treat schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and known to cause weight gain as a side effect. Those patients in her study who were on olanzapine increased their BMI a bit more than others who were taking a placebo, but the two groups showed no difference in their cognitive and psychological symptoms. This was the only medication trial for treating anorexia that has shown any positive effect at all, Attia told me, and even then, the effects were “very modest.”

    Despite nearly half a century of attempts, no pill or shot has been identified to effectively treat anorexia nervosa. Anorexia is well known to be the deadliest eating disorder; the only psychiatric diagnosis with a higher death rate is opioid-use disorder. A 2020 review found people who have been hospitalized for the disease are more than five times likelier to die than their peers without it. The National Institutes of Health has devoted more than $100 million over the past decade to studying anorexia, yet researchers have not found a single compound that reliably helps people with the disorder.

    Other eating disorders aren’t nearly so resistant to treatment. The FDA has approved fluoxetine (a.k.a. Prozac) to treat bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorder (BED); doctors prescribe additional SSRIs off-label to treat both conditions, with a fair rate of success. An ADHD drug, Vyvanse, was approved for BED within two years of the disorder’s official recognition. But when it comes to anorexia, “we’ve tried, I don’t know, eight or 10 fundamentally different kinds of approaches without much in the way of success,” says Scott Crow, an adjunct psychology professor at the University of Minnesota and the vice president of psychiatry for Accanto Health.

    The discrepancy is puzzling to anorexia specialists and researchers. “We don’t fully understand why medications work so differently in this group, and boy, do they ever work differently,” Attia told me. Still, experts have some ideas. Over the past few decades, they have been learning about the changes in brain activity that accompany anorexia. For example, Walter Kaye, the founder and executive director of the Eating Disorders Program at UC San Diego, told me that the neurotransmitters serotonin and dopamine, both of which are involved in the brain’s reward system, seem to act differently in anorexia patients.

    Perhaps some underlying differences in brain chemistry and function play a role in anorexia patients’ extreme aversion to eating. Or perhaps, the experts I spoke with suggested, these brain changes are at least in part a result of patients’ malnourishment. People with anorexia suffer from many effects of malnutrition: Their bones are more brittle; their brain is smaller; their heart beats slower; their breath comes shorter; their wounds fail to heal. Maybe their neurons respond differently to psychoactive drugs too.

    Psychiatrists have found that many patients with anorexia don’t improve with treatment even when medicines are prescribed for conditions other than their eating disorder. If an anorexia patient also has anxiety, for example, taking an anti-anxiety drug would likely fail to relieve either set of symptoms, Attia told me. “Time and again, investigators have found very little or no difference between active medication and placebo in randomized controlled trials,” she said. The fact that fluoxetine seems to help anorexia patients avoid relapse—but only when it’s given after they’ve regained a healthy weight—also supports the notion that malnourished brains don’t respond so well to psychoactive medication. (In that case, the effect might be especially acute for people with anorexia nervosa, because they tend to have lower BMIs than people with other eating disorders.)

    Why exactly this would be true remains a mystery. Attia noted that proteins and certain fats have been shown to be crucial for brain function; get too little of either, and the brain might not metabolize drugs in expected ways. Both she and Kaye suggested a possible role for tryptophan, an amino acid that humans get only from food. Tryptophan is converted into serotonin (among other things) when we release insulin after a meal, Kaye said, but in anorexia patients, whose insulin levels tend to be low, that process could end up off-kilter. “We suspect that that might be the reason why [SSRIs] don’t work very well,” he said, though he emphasized that the theory is very speculative.

    In the absence of meaningful pharmacologic intervention, doctors who treat anorexia rely on methods such as nutrition counseling and psychotherapy. But even non-pharmaceutical interventions, such as cognitive behavioral therapy, are more effective at treating bulimia and binge-eating disorder than anorexia. Studies from around the world have shown that as many as half of people with anorexia relapse.

    Colleen Clarkin Schreyer, a clinical psychologist at Johns Hopkins University, sees both patients with anorexia nervosa and those with bulimia nervosa, and told me that the former can be more difficult to treat—“but not just because of the fact that we don’t have any medication to help us along. I often find that patients with anorexia nervosa are more ambivalent about making behavior change.” Bulimia patients, she said, tend to feel shame about their condition, because binge eating is stigmatized and, well, no one likes vomit. But anorexia patients might be praised for skipping meals or rapidly losing weight, despite the fact that their behaviors can be just as dangerous over the long term as binging and vomiting.

    Researchers are still trying to find substances that can help anorexia patients. Crow told me that case studies testing a synthetic version of leptin, a naturally occurring human hormone, have produced interesting data. Meanwhile, some early research into using psychedelics, including ketamine, psilocybin, and ayahuasca, suggests that they may relieve some symptoms in some cases. But until randomized, controlled trials are conducted, we won’t know whether or how well any psychedelic really works. Kaye is currently recruiting participants for such a study of psilocybin, which is planned to have multiple sites in the U.S. and Europe.

    Pharmaceutical companies just don’t seem that enthusiastic about testing treatments for anorexia, Crow said. “I think that drug makers have taken to heart the message that the mortality is high” among anorexia patients, he told me, and thus avoid the risk of having deaths occur during their clinical trials. And drug development isn’t the only area where the study of anorexia has fallen short. Research on eating disorders tends to be underfunded on the whole, Crow said. That stems, in part, from “a widely prevailing belief that this is something that people could or should just stop … I wish that were how it works, frankly. But it’s not.”

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    Rachel Gutman-Wei

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  • Hospital Covered Up Doctor’s Sexual Assault Of Teen Patient: Lawsuit

    Hospital Covered Up Doctor’s Sexual Assault Of Teen Patient: Lawsuit

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    A former patient is suing a New York City hospital, accusing the institution of covering up a sexual assault allegedly perpetrated by a doctor in 2021.

    The female patient, who is unnamed in the lawsuit filed Monday night, is suing NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital along with several staff members. She is accusing the hospital of covering up a sexual assault by Dr. Zhi Alan Cheng, who she said drugged her with an unknown substance and filmed her assault in the exam room.

    Cheng was arrested and charged with felony rape last year and is currently awaiting trial, according to inmate records.

    Attorneys for Cheng told HuffPost that they would “respond in court” to the allegations and that as of Tuesday afternoon they had not received or reviewed the lawsuit filing.

    At the time of the alleged incident, the patient was 19, did not speak English and had recently moved to the United States from South America.

    Cheng had first come into contact with the patient at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in Queens. He examined her alone on June 20, 2021, two days after she was admitted to the emergency room with severe abdominal pain caused by gallstones.

    The lawsuit, which was obtained by HuffPost, states that Cheng performed an unnecessary and invasive rectal examination on the patient during their first encounter.

    Later the same day, Cheng allegedly used an employee ID to unlock the door to the stairwell near the patient’s room and entered alone, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit alleges that nurses were not appropriately monitoring the patient and visiting her room regularly.

    Cheng then injected an unknown drug into the patient’s IV bag, which was connected to her arm, the lawsuit says. The drug made her feel immense pain and quickly lose consciousness, and he began to sexually assault her on video without her knowing, the suit states.

    The lawsuit accuses the doctor of injecting a drug into the patient’s IV drip.

    Bloomberg Creative via Getty Images

    Dr. Sang Hoon Kim, one of the doctors who is also named in the lawsuit, allegedly signed off to witness the exam in his report with “boilerplate language” that he copied from a template.

    The lawsuit says that Kim had made false statements in his procedure notes, including that the patient was receiving “twilight anesthesia.” The notes also failed to mention she was rectally penetrated during the procedure.

    After Cheng left, the patient notified a hospital employee that a doctor had given her a painful injection that knocked her out. At this point, she did not know she had been sexually assaulted, the lawsuit says.

    According to attorneys, the hospital put together a lineup of male doctors, and the patient identified Cheng as the one who had given her the injection. But the hospital allegedly did not do anything else about the patient’s report.

    “The hospital made no notes about the lineup in medical records, did not notify police and failed to suspend or terminate Dr. Cheng,” attorneys representing the patient said in a news release. “Further, the hospital did not collect any forensic evidence, including robe or bedsheets, did not test the plaintiff’s blood to determine what she was injected with, or offer her sufficient and timely support services.”

    The day after the identification lineup, Cheng continued to treat the patient while she was sedated during surgery.

    Christopher Daviess, another doctor named in the lawsuit, was allegedly informed on June 23, 2021, by a staff member that the patient had been sexually assaulted by Cheng.

    The lawsuit alleges that Daviess delayed the patient’s release from the hospital in order to draw her blood to test for HIV, without her consent or knowledge, and failed to tell her they believed she had been assaulted.

    Upon her discharge, Daviess gave the patient a packet of hundreds of pages of discharge papers in English that included a “sexual assault bill of rights.” The few papers that were in Spanish were confusing to her because she did not know she had been sexually assaulted yet, the suit states.

    The patient would not find out about the assault until more than a year later, in April 2023, when authorities called her and her mother in to tell them that they found footage of Cheng sexually assaulting the young woman while she was unconscious, according to the document.

    Cheng was arrested on Dec 27, 2022, after a woman with whom he was in an intimate relationship told police that she discovered a video of Cheng sedating and sexually assaulting her on multiple occasions while she spent the night in his apartment.

    Police said they found multiple videos of Cheng sexually abusing other victims, including the patient.

    NewYork-Presbyterian told HuffPost in a statement that it was “appalled and deeply saddened” by what the patient endured. The hospital said that once the district attorney made it aware of the case, Cheng had been “immediately placed off duty, banned from hospital property, and terminated.”

    “As caregivers, we are responsible for the safety and wellbeing of our patients. It is a sacred trust,” the hospital’s statement says. “The crimes committed by this individual are heinous, despicable, and a fundamental betrayal of our mission and our patients’ trust.”

    The statement adds that NewYork-Presbyterian has numerous stringent patient safety policies and protocols in place.

    “Our exhaustive review of this matter included an analysis of compliance with those policies, as well as the immediate implementation of additional training for all employees,” the hospital said. “At the same time, we have been examining the full breadth of our protections to identify any opportunities for further strengthening, in line with our unwavering commitment to the highest standard of patient safety and care.”

    But Adam Slater, one of the attorneys representing the patient, said in a statement that this not the first time he’s sued NewYork-Presbyterian on behalf of people who were sexually assaulted by the hospital staff.

    In 2021, Columbia University and NewYork-Presbyterian came to a $71.5 million settlement with 79 women who were former patients of former gynecologist Robert Hadden, who was convicted this year of sexually assaulting his patients.

    “At the time of my firm’s previous settlement with NewYork-Presbyterian, a spokesperson for the medical system vowed to never let what Robert Hadden did happen to another patient again,” Slater said in the news release. “Less than two years later, my firm is filing another lawsuit against the same hospital system for employing yet another predatory doctor.”

    Slater added that the failure to protect patients wasn’t isolated but systemic, and he encouraged survivors to reach out for legal representation.

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