Thursday 21 January 2016

NEJM Week of 31st December 2015 (#23)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of the 31st December 2015 (#23)
University of Notre Dame Australia
(Fremantle Campus)

Occasional Editorial Comments

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MUST READ SECTION
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Articles Recommended for Medical Students

EDITORIAL

Simple, Effective, but Out of Reach? Public Health Implications of HCV Drugs


The data is now in: hepatitis C is a curable viral infection but the cost is prohibitive for most individuals, both in the US and Australia. The cost has major public health implications.
There are three articles in this issue of the Journal (and an earlier article in the Journal in 2014 using sofosbuvir and ribavirin) indicating that a twelve week course of sofosbuvir (a NS5B inhibitor) and velpatasvir (a NL5A inhibitor) combined in a single tablet daily dose is effective at eliminating the virus (all genotypes 1-6, including the resistance genotype 3) in up to 98% of patients and that the addition of ribavirin to this regimen only increased adverse effects without adding any therapeutic benefits. The main adverse effects of this combination were headaches, fatigue, nausea and insomnia.
The cost in the US for a twelve week course is between US $83,000 and $153, 000!!! Double that for a 24 week course or if the course needs to be repeated. This studies only describe cure (absence of viral RNA) at 12 weeks and we await the long term results, though word on the street is that the cure may well be sustained in most patients after one course.
Recommended learning:
Hepatitis C, epidemiology, virology, pathology and sequelae, modes of transmission and treatment.
Review the hepatitis C non-structural proteins NS5B and NS5A and their roles in viral replication: these are the targets of the two drugs sofosbuvir and velpatasvir respectively which you will all be using in the future to treat hepatitis C.

Perspective
Value-Based Cancer Care

Perspective

Measuring the Value of Prescription Drugs


It is only appropriate that these two Perspectives follow the articles on the cost of curing hepatitis C.
The first relates to the cost of newer drugs to treat cancer and the second to evaluating the value of prescription drugs generally but focusing on costs, namely how are the benefits and the cost of the drug reconciled?
With respect to newer cancer drugs, virtually none offer a cure, with some only improving the disease-free survival but not overall survival. In the US, usual costs for new drugs can range from $10,000 to $30,000 per month, with some newer check-point inhibitor combinations costing up to $100,000 per month. Granted this is usually not long term therapy like biologics used in rheumatoid arthritis, but the cost is still impossible for most of us to seriously appreciate, until we or one of our patients require the treatment.
Several major organizations in the US (documented in the Perspectives) have attempted to define various arbitrary criteria by which each therapy can be evaluated and a scaled therapeutic value determined.
Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York has developed a web site (www.DrugAbacus.org) whereby the physician and the patient can determine an appropriate cost for the drug based on the analysis of various parameters which can provide + or – financial determinants.

The Institute of Medicine has defined six value criteria:
The first three are generally measured in clinical trials:
1.     Safety (toxicity)
2.     Effectiveness (clinical benefit)
3.     Efficiency (cost)
while the second three are infrequently reported:
4.     Timeliness
5.     Equity, and
6.     Patient-centeredness

The second Perspective expands on the first but considers cancer and non-cancer drugs, including the drugs for hepatitis C cure.
Suffice it to say, an attempt at the National level in the US is being made to develop semi-quantitative, partly evidence based assessment parameters to reconcile spirally cost increases with “total benefit.”


Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research

Check out the neuroscience in the Narcolepsy review


Other areas which should be of interest to medical students

Perspective

Report from Paris


This is an interesting, easy read from personal perspectives on how French physicians dealt with the terrorist shootings in Paris in November 2015 and the public health implications.

REVIEW ARTICLE

Narcolepsy

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMra1500587

 

This an excellent review on a subject that I believed, before I read the article, was rare and probably had very little to add to my knowledge.

Suffice it to say I became fascinated by an area about which I knew virtually nothing.

 

The review provides an excellent neuroscientific update on sleep, particularly the role of orexin A and B in sleep, REM, narcolepsy and cataplexy. Of note, narcolepsy has the highest association between HLA and disease at 98% (HLA-DQB1 06:02) (This is very closely followed by birdshot chorioretinopathy associated with HLA-A29 in 80 - 97.5% and our ophthalmology colleagues may have difficulty relinquishing this record). There follows a discussion about the gene implications, infection and the immune response leading to an autoimmune loss of lateral hypothalamic cells which produce orexin. There is a discussion of drug therapy used to treat narcolepsy and will provide MED400 students a chance to review a range of psychoactive medications again.

 

EDITORIAL

Choosing Benefits while Balancing Risks (of Home Birthing)

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe1511068


This is an Editorial describing the pros and cons of home birthing which accompanies i) a study from Portland, Oregon indicating that the perinatal mortality from in-hospital births was 1.8 versus 3.9 in out-of-hospital births per 1000 deliveries and ii) a point-counterpoint clinical scenario based discussion in which the patient described may do well with a home delivery.

The following points can be made:
i)              Perinatal mortality, while low in both groups, is clearly increased in home births and highest in nulliparous patients (in the UK where 8% of women elect to deliver at home, where home delivery is more streamlined than in Australia and the US, 50% of women ended up delivering in hospital)
ii)              A major argument for home deliveries revolves around the higher CS rate in in-hospital deliveries. In the US, and also Australia, the rate of C sections in in-hospital deliveries is higher with the US in-hospital CS delivery rate around 25%  compared with 5% of planned home deliveries.
iii)            Epidural anaesthesia is not available in home deliveries while it is in most hospitals, urban and rural in Australia. It’s like the old days when you had major dental work done without local anaesthesia: who wants this?
iv)            There is a higher frequency of PTSD in women who deliver at home due to the traumatic experience in some patients (source Lincoln Brett)
v)              Hospitals are becoming more “consumer friendly”, even water deliveries, and increased instruction and initiation of breast feeding. Surely the CS rate can be lowered, though clearly the patient can indicate to the obstetrician that they do not want a CS unless really necessary.Editorial comment: It would be interesting to determine if there is any correlation between women who elect for home delivery and those who elect not to immunize their children!
vi)            There is no doubt that women who elect to have a home delivery are taking a risk with the child’s future and they have to decide if they will live with the permanent consequences if the delivery goes bad, even though the risk is small.


Ethical question: If a pregnant women is strongly advised to have a hospital delivery due to concerns about risks to the baby but elects to have a home delivery and the child suffers from permanent long term damage, should Society (or insurance) be responsible for the long-term cost?