Wednesday 27 April 2016

NEJM Week of 14th April 2016 (#38)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 14th April 2016 (#38)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment

None


Must Read Articles


CLINICAL PRACTICE

Diabetic Sensory and Motor Neuropathy


Painful peripheral neuropathy is common among patients with diabetes mellitus. Management includes lifestyle interventions and pharmacologic therapy to control cardiovascular risk factors and medications to control pain.

This is a superb, easily read clinical review on diabetic neuropathy which should be read by all medical students, particularly MED300 and MED400 students.  The hyperlink should be saved for future reference. It provides the answers to all of the questions you did not know you needed to ask in order to understand this area.

Diabetic neuropathy represents a common clinical problem which is well outlined in the review. Key clinical points are tabulated. Evidence based diagnosis and evaluation, clinical management and pharmacotherapy are also well described. There is a detailed table (Table 2) of drugs, their classes, adverse events, and the number of patients needed to treat (NNT) to produce 50% improvement in a single patient. The review discusses the symptoms and signs associated with large and small nerve fibre damage (Table 1).

A pearl I gleaned from Goodman and Gilman’s Textbook of Pharmacology many years ago was the use of oral 4% pilocarpine eye drops (2 drops in water bid) to counteract the anticholinergic side effects, particularly due to the tricyclic antidepressants which have one of the best NNPs in treating diabetic neuropathy.

Recommended learning: Review the common causes of peripheral neuropathy, focusing on diabetic neuropathies.


Must Save Articles


The above review article on diabetic neuropathy



Articles Recommended for Medical Students


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

“Frog Sign” in Atrioventricular Nodal Reentrant Tachycardia


There is an interesting video of fast regular jugular venous cannon A waves which disappear with abrogation of the tachyarrhythmia by carotid sinus massage. There is an accompanying ECG of the arrhythmia and a good description of the mechanism. The term “frog sign” is not generally used.  Just use the common physiologically descriptive term “cannon A waves.”

Recommended learning: Review the physiology of the jugular venous pulse wave and the conditions that can be diagnosed using this valuable clinical sign.


EDITORIAL

Fusion for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis — Safeguard or Superfluous Surgical Implant?


The two articles (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1513721, http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1508788) in this issue of the Journal are well summarised together with the current literature in the accompanying Editorial.

In essence, the studies indicate that for patients with symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis with or without degenerative spondylolisthesis, the addition of spinal fusion to decompressive surgery (laminectomy and/or foraminotomy) did not improve clinical outcomes significantly.

 In the Swedish study of 247 randomized patients, spinal fusion did not improve clinical outcomes at 2 and 5 years (see inclusion and exclusion criteria in Table 1).  Both groups had a similar frequency of repeat lumbar spine surgery (21% versus 22%).  Spondylolisthesis is defined as greater than 3 mm slippage.

 In the US study involving 66 patients randomized at multiple centres, addition of spinal fusion showed only a minimal improvement in outcomes. There were more repeat operations in the decompression alone group (34% versus 14%, but with a barely significant p value of 0.05).  Spondylolisthesis defined as grade 1 with slippage between 3–14 mm, although patients with >3 mm instability at the listhesis were excluded.
Although there were some differences in the outcome measures, the overall data failed to show an outcome advantage with the addition of spinal fusion surgery over decompression surgery alone. With the addition of fusion surgery, there was more blood loss at surgery and longer hospital stays.

Recommended learning: The indications for referring a patient with low back pain to a surgeon and the expected results of the surgery.


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 11-2016 — A 12-Year-Old Boy with Malaise, Fevers, Abdominal Pain, and Pallor


A 12-year-old boy presented with a 1-month history of fever and abdominal pain. Three months earlier, he had traveled to the Dominican Republic. Laboratory evaluation revealed anemia and an elevated C-reactive protein level. Diagnostic tests were performed.

This is an interesting case of a boy presenting with abdominal pain who was found to have iron deficiency anaemia. The case is discussed from the perspectives of both an ED physician and of a paediatrician.
When you come across a new drug, in this case chemotherapeutic agents, I recommend that you store the drug information in Wikipanion. This data base will allow you to search for the drug and store the information (class, basic biology, MOA, drug interactions, and hyperlinks) in folders designated for specific drug classes.

Recommended learning: For MED400, broad immunopathological classification of lymphomas, including Hodgkin’s lymphoma, as well as the clinical presentations of Hodgkin’s lymphoma.


INTERACTIVE MEDICAL CASE

Eye of the Beholder


This interactive feature presents the case of a 47-year-old man with swelling around his left eye and a sensation of tightness in his throat. Test your diagnostic and therapeutic skills at NEJM.org.

This interactive case involves a patient presenting with periorbital swelling, pharyngeal-upper oesophageal dysphagia, and hoarseness. This facilitates clinical reasoning and the development of a differential diagnosis.


Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS OF BASIC RESEARCH

Obesity — On or Off?


A recent genetic study of body-mass index, adiposity, and gene expression in mice provides evidence of an epigenetic mechanism of susceptibility to obesity.

Obesity is the major disease epidemic in developed countries. Several weeks ago, a basic science article was reviewed which showed that mice exposed to sustained cold developed inducible beige fat cells which readily metabolised fatty acids. These mice experienced not only weight loss but also a reduction in insulin resistance. This property could be transferred to mice exposed to normal temperatures by transferring to them the intestinal microbiome from the cold exposed mice.

Today a further mouse study is reviewed (Dalgaard et al, Cell 2016) in which a mutation in the Trim28 transcription factor leads to obesity associated with a doubling in the number of adipocytes in the mouse. A functional Trim28 gene down-regulates a cluster of genes (IGN1 cluster) which normally function as an “on” switch for obesity in the mouse. Mutations in Trim 28 in mice (or reduced functional levels of Trim28 found in human adipose tissue) lead to up-regulation of IGN1 and weight gain.

These studies refocus on a possible hereditable component of obesity, in particular epigenetic environmental factors such as the ambient temperature.  In this series of experiments (see review for details), no differences in DNA methylation were observed.

A common response among students is, “so what.”  If obesity can be managed by education, self-control, elimination of processed foods, reduced portion size and fat intake, exercise, and if necessary judicious use of bariatric surgery. Why is this study important? There is some validity to that reaction, however, if specific gene clusters involved in overeating and/or fat metabolism can be identified and modified by epigenetic factors e.g. cold exposure, drugs, this will be a massive windfall for pharmaceutical companies and will provide a more scientific physiological-genetic basis for weight loss.
  

Other Articles which should interest medical students


Perspective

The Virtues and Vices of Single-Payer Health Care


Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has made Medicare for All a centerpiece of his platform, reopening an old debate. What are the virtues and vices of single-payer reform? Is it a realistic option for the United States or a political impossibility?

This Perspective provides a historical perspective for evolution of the Health Care System in the US, in particular the political machinations and the role of special interest groups in determining policy. It also discusses the current election cycle and how election promises might realistically play out with health care policy.

Perspective

What Do I Need to Learn Today? — The Evolution of CME


As the U.S. continuing medical education system evolves, it will help if physicians are more self-aware, educators create more powerful learning environments, regulators promote innovation, and health care systems recognize the strategic value of education in driving change.

This review focuses on the role of CME in the US (CPD in Australia) in the accreditation of clinicians for licensure and for regulatory and specialty board requirements. It addresses the issue of regulatory authorities recognising the value of education in driving clinical practice and quality improvement as well as the promotion of life-long learning.
  

Perspective

The Public and the Gene-Editing Revolution


Polls conducted over recent decades give a sense of what the U.S. public thinks about gene therapy and gene editing in adults, children, and human embryos or germline cells, as well as of whether and for what reasons Americans would consider undergoing genetic testing.

This Perspective reviews the results of polls taken of the US public regarding the recent advances in gene-editing and their application. The results of polls on public attitudes about genetic testing are represented in Table 1.  In general, “the public favors gene therapy for clinical use in patients with serious diseases. The majority do not support gene editing in human embryos or germline cells, but the level of opposition varies depending on its goals,” specifically if used for eliminating disease (more in favour) or altering phenotype or personality (strongly opposed).


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Metronidazole-Associated Encephalopathy


A 58-year-old man with cryptogenic cirrhosis was admitted to the ICU with confusion after a fall. He had been taking metronidazole for C. difficile infection. MRI of the brain showed a fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) signal in the dentate nuclei of the cerebellum.

As the cause of the confusion in this patient is unclear and is associated with an abnormality in the dentate nucleus of the cerebellum, the best course of action is to admit you do not know the cause and to consult the literature. This rare side effect of metronidazole can be similarly stored in your brain stem.

Recommended learning: Review the pharmacology of metronidazole, its clinical indications and its common side effects.


SPECIAL REPORT

A Proactive Response to Prescription Opioid Abuse


The FDA has committed to working with other agencies, health care providers, industry, and patients and families to deal proactively with the opioid abuse crisis, while safeguarding appropriate access to vitally important pain medications for the patients who need them.

This is a further publication on the concern US regulatory bodies (FDA, CDC, and the National Academy of Medicine) have on prescribing and overuse of narcotics for chronic pain and the use of these prescribed drugs by other parties. This is a difficult balancing act between patients in pain not being compromised by lack of availability of pain relief versus the inappropriate use of opiates leading to misuse, addiction, and drug overdose.

 Table 1 reviews the issues and the FDA responses. The availability of naloxone in conjunction with opioids has been a major advance. Further, OTC naloxone and IM auto-injectors and intranasal naloxone for opioid overdose should be considered. As mentioned in earlier blogs, this problem is not unique to the US.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Effect of Avoidance on Peanut Allergy after Early Peanut Consumption


A previous trial showed that early consumption of peanuts resulted in fewer cases of allergy than did avoidance. In a follow-up study, all participants avoided peanuts from 5 to 6 years of age; those who had eaten peanuts in early life retained the ability to do so.

An earlier study on the same cohort over 60 months compared the introduction of peanuts to the diet during the first 11 months of life versus avoidance of peanuts in the diet for 60 months after birth. Children who consumed peanuts over 60 months had an 81% reduction in peanut allergy at 5 years of age over those who had not been given peanuts.


The current study involves the same two groups who were followed for a further 12 months in which peanuts were withheld in the earlier peanut consumption group and with maintained avoidance in the other. The results are best appreciated in Figure 3. In essence, those who consumed peanuts for the first 60 months had fewer manifestations of peanut allergies (positive peanut wheal, peanut specific IgE and arah2 specific IgE) at 72 months (4.8% versus 18.6%) and higher levels of peanut-specific IgG4 and higher levels of peanut-specific IgG4:IgE ratios. Overall, there was no increase in the prevalence at 72 months of peanut allergy in the group administered peanuts for the first 60 months and then stopped for the subsequent 12 months.  How long this state will last is unknown, though long term follow-up is undoubtedly planned.

Tuesday 26 April 2016

NEJM Week of April 7th 2016 (#37)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 7th April 2016 (#37)
University of Notre Dame Australia
(Fremantle Campus)


Occasional Editorial Comment

None



Must Read Articles

None


Must Save Article


REVIEW ARTICLE

Antiemetic Prophylaxis for Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting


One of the most important changes in cancer treatment in recent decades has been the development of treatment regimens that greatly reduce the incidence and intensity of nausea and vomiting. The most effective regimens and how they work are reviewed.

This review article on antiemetic drugs provides an excellent update on groups of drugs and their mechanisms of action (Figure 1). It provides the reader with information on the NK1-receptor antagonists and a chronology of the approval and use of antiemetic drugs. Antiemetic treatment recommendations are proposed for nausea and vomiting produced by IV chemotherapy (Table 3) which should be compared with local guidelines.

Recommended learning: Groups of antiemetic drugs and their mechanisms of action. This will be particularly useful on oncology rotations.


Articles Recommended for Medical Students


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Reversible Loss of Vision in Malignant Hypertension


A 35-year-old man presented with reduced vision in both eyes. He had no relevant medical history apart from intermittent headaches. Fundus examination revealed bilateral disk edema, macular edema with lipid exudates, splinter hemorrhages, and cotton-wool spots.

Recommended learning: Review the progressive retinal changes and their pathological basis in patients with hypertension.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Creeping Eruption — Cutaneous Larva Migrans


A 42-year-old man presented with an intensely pruritic eruption on his foot after a vacation in Nigeria. The eruption was migratory, moving a few millimeters to a few centimeters daily. Examination revealed a serpiginous, erythematous raised tract on his right foot.

An excellent clinical photograph of cutaneous larva migrans. The hookworm life cycle involves entry into the skin by filariform larvae, migration to alveolar spaces, ascending into the pharynx, swallowed and maturing into the adult hookworm in the small intestine resulting commonly in iron deficiency anaemia. If the definitive host is a dog or cat as in this example, the larva enters the human epidermis but is unable to travel any further. The serpiginous lesion spontaneously resolves and the larva dies. However, if the definitive host is human, the hookworm can carry out its normal life cycle.

Recommended learning: For those seeking more information, there is an excellent review of Skin Lesions in the Returning Traveller in UpToDate.


CLINICAL PROBLEM-SOLVING

A Deficient Diagnosis


A previously healthy boy, 2 1/2 years old, presented with a 6-week history of progressive inability to bear weight on his right leg. His mother noted no recent trauma. His medical history was notable only for speech delay.

All students should read this article.  If an adequate dietary history in this patient had been performed at the initial encounter, the diagnosis would have been made much earlier, saving the child morbidity and eliminating unnecessary health care costs.

 The case again emphasises the importance of taking a detailed history and performing an appropriate physical examination, especially where the initial diagnosis is not apparent.

The case reviews the causes of a painful lower extremity in a child and iron deficiency anaemia.

This diagnosis is not uncommon in the homeless alcoholic who lives on a nutritionally inadequate diet and is admitted through the ED and not examined carefully. In the ED, always look for perifollicular haemorrhages with occasionally cork-screw hairs on the lower extremities as these lesions disappear within days once the patient receives any vitamin C.

Recommended learning: Review the biochemical role of vitamin C, particularly in collagen synthesis, and the clinical presentations of vitamin C deficiency.


Perspective

When Is It Ethical to Withhold Prevention?


Why is the value of extending human life the determining factor in treatment decisions but the cost of an intervention the determining factor in population-level prevention decisions? The contrast exposes some tangled issues of ethics, cost, and cost-effectiveness.

This article should be read by all students and tutors as it highlights the ethical dilemma raised by the allocation of a fixed number of dollars to either disease prevention, in this case lung cancer, or the expensive extension of a patient’s life by several months. The author indicates that that there is a “systemic bias against prevention and that decisions upon whether to provide or withhold proven preventive actions are not just tough budgetary choices, but are also ethical ones.”  The other factor apart from having to treat the patient asking for expensive life-extending therapies, is that patients, their families and friends, and doctors also vote.



Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research

 None


Other articles which should be of interest to medical students

Perspective

Finding Value in Unexpected Places — Fixing the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule


A substantially improved, carefully managed Medicare Physician Fee Schedule could pave the way to more fundamental value-based payment reform and improve performance among physicians, who are likely to be paid according to fee schedules for the foreseeable future.

This article raises the vexing question of how the health care system values time spent talking to and examining patients with increasingly complex medical problems. Clearly the area of cognitive skills and time taken for clinical reasoning is markedly underfunded and undervalued.  In order for clinicians, especially GPs, to continue to practice high quality, cost effective medicine this area needs not only to be addressed, but appropriately funded.

While doing bedside teaching rounds, the number of patients presenting with iron deficiency anaemia associated with metastatic colon cancer continues to amaze me, particularly patients who have been seeing their GP for years and who have been treated with oral iron, without having had a rectal examination or faecal occult blood testing. I would like to believe that had the clinician spent more time up front with the patient that the cost of managing metastatic colon cancer and patient morbidity and mortality might have been avoided. Medical education cannot continue to be the scapegoat.

I visited the GP last week for my annual influenza vaccination, but instead of just visiting the nurse, I was scheduled an unnecessary doctor visit, not with my usual GP. After being asked by the GP if I had any previous allergies, the nurse then gave me the shot.

The article specifically addresses some areas in which reduced time and work involved has been markedly improved with automation, but where the fee system has not been updated (i.e. appropriately reduced) (see Figure). Examples provided include liquid nitrogen freezing of actinic keratosis and time spent interpreting ECGs, echocardiograms, and CT and MRIs of the brain. There are many other examples where health care costs could be contained, but because of powerful specialty lobbying groups, this is unlikely to occur, leaving the cognitive clinician underpaid for their services.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Pioglitazone after Ischemic Stroke or Transient Ischemic Attack


In this trial in nondiabetic patients with insulin resistance and a recent ischemic stroke or transient ischemic attack, pioglitazone was associated with a lower risk of stroke and MI than was placebo but with a higher risk of weight gain, edema, and bone fracture.


EDITORIAL

Insulin Resistance and a Long, Strange Trip


The article and Editorial address the issue of treating insulin resistance with pioglitazone in the prevention of a further stroke or myocardial infarction. Insulin resistance, while universal in type II diabetes mellitus (DM), is found in 50% of patients without DM who have had a previous TIA or ischaemic stroke. A numerical value for insulin resistance is calculated by utilizing the fasting serum glucose and insulin level.
Use of pioglitazone in patients who had insulin resistance and a history of a recent stroke or TIA resulted in a statically significant improvement in the primary outcome (9% versus 11.8%, p = 0.007) but without any change in all-cause mortality. It resulted in fewer cases of type II DM but increases in weight gain, oedema, and serious fractures (cause undetermined).

Whether the data support the use of pioglitazone in patients without clinically apparent vascular disease and increased insulin resistance is not answered by this study. Further, the use of pioglitazone should be carefully considered in view of the side effects.


EDITORIAL

Antenatal Glucocorticoids for Late Preterm Birth?


This article (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1516783) and the Editorial provide evidence of the therapeutic benefit for the established practice of treating women between 34 weeks and 36 weeks and 5 days gestation (late preterm delivery) at high risk for delivery during this preterm period with two injections of betamethasone.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Fresh Fruit Consumption and Major Cardiovascular Disease in China



In a study involving 451,665 adults in China, higher levels of fruit consumption were associated with lower blood pressure and blood glucose levels and, largely independent of these and other dietary and nondietary factors, with significant reductions in cardiovascular risk.

This is part of an extensive public health study (512, 891 adults over 10 geographic areas in China) in collaboration with the University of Oxford which demonstrated that regular fresh fruit consumption (see Table 2) is associated with lower blood pressure and blood glucose levels.  However, this diet was also associated with an increase in BMI and waist circumference (Figure 1).

When the group who had daily fruit consumption were compared with those without any fresh fruit consumption, the hazard ratio for cardiovascular death was 0.6 and with similar hazard ratios for incident major coronary events, ischaemic strokes and haemorrhagic strokes. The paper should be read carefully for more specific details.


CLINICAL DECISIONS

Clinical Effect of Surgical Volume


This interactive feature offers a case vignette accompanied by essays that support either undergoing surgery at a lower-volume, local hospital or undergoing surgery at a higher-volume hospital, even if it's more distant. Share your comments and vote at NEJM.org.

This is an interesting point-counterpoint discussion on specific complex surgery performed in the US at highly specialist centres with higher turnover versus at smaller sites with less turnover but with very experienced surgeons. The surgery discussed is a Whipple’s procedure performed for potentially curative surgery for carcinoma of the head of the pancreas.

From the Australian point of view this discussion is moot, as all Whipple’s procedures are performed in capital cities at centres with the highest turnover and clinical experience. Currently in Perth, Whipple’s procedure can be performed and funded only at SCGH and FSH.


I had always assumed that one would automatically have the procedure at the centre with the highest turnover and most experience, which I still believe, though the article does provide some interesting arguments to support alternate points of view which may be more valid for practice in the US.

Wednesday 20 April 2016

NEJM Week of 31st March 2016 (#36)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 31st March 2016 (#36)
University of Notre Dame Australia
(Fremantle Campus)


Occasional Editorial Comment

None


Must Read Articles

Perspective

The Science of Choosing Wisely — Overcoming the Therapeutic Illusion


The success of efforts to reduce inappropriate use of medical tests and interventions may be limited by our tendency to overestimate the effect of our actions. Efforts to promote more rational medical decision making will need to address this illusion of control.

The premise for this Perspective is to identify a mechanism for reducing the inappropriate use of medical tests and treatments which could be achieved by changing the way we think and be applied in a cost-efficient manner.
The author chose to address this process through focusing on the concept of “therapeutic illusion” which has been defined as “unjustified enthusiasm for treatment on the part of both patients and doctors.” This definition has been derived from the concept of “illusion of control,” which is our tendency to infer causality where none exists.
As practicing physicians, it is essential that we are aware of these processes and actively work to define the situations in which they occur.

I quote extracts from the article as I am unable to improve on the author’s definitions and examples:

Random chance can encourage physicians to embrace mistaken beliefs about causality. Knee pain tends to wax and wane, and the example provided is of arthroscopic joint lavage in osteoarthritis as an example where orthopaedists believe this to be effective in relieving symptoms, but where evidence has shown this to be untrue.

 The “therapeutic illusion” is reinforced by a tendency to look selectively for evidence of impact — one manifestation of the “confirmation bias” that leads us to seek only evidence that supports what we already believe to be true. Physicians may be particularly susceptible to that bias when caring for a patient with a complex illness.

The illusion of control is deeply ingrained in human psychology in the form of a “heuristic,” or rule of thumb, that we rely on to interpret events and make decisions. Many heuristics are subconscious and therefore difficult to avoid or eradicate, but we can ameliorate their effects by using countervailing, conscious heuristics.

 We tend to ignore the pretest probability of an illness when making a diagnosis, which can cause us to overdiagnose rare conditions and underdiagnose common ones; medical students are therefore taught the rule “When you hear hoof beats, look for horses, not zebras.”

Two conscious heuristics can help counteract the therapeutic illusion:
 “Before you conclude that a treatment was effective, look for other explanations.” 
 “If you see evidence of success, look for evidence of failure.” In other words, test assumptions of effectiveness by looking for negative outcomes.

There are many more pearls in this article which should be read and then reread by all.


Must Save Article


REVIEW ARTICLE

Opioid Abuse in Chronic Pain — Misconceptions and Mitigation Strategies


The epidemic of opioid abuse is related in part to incomplete understanding of pain-relief management, opioid tolerance, and opioid addiction. Among the prevention strategies are more widespread sharing of data about opioid neuropharmacology and opioid-use patterns.

This article reviews the use and abuse of opioids in non-cancer chronic pain in the US. The statistic quoted is that 40% of older US adults suffer from chronic pain and in the US opioids are the most frequently prescribed class of medications, though I am sure similar statistics apply to the Australian population.
The biology of opioid receptors and their distribution is outlined with an excellent Figure 1. The authors further discuss the differences between tolerance and physical dependence and addiction (see Table 1), ways to deter opioid abuse, factors associated with the risk of opioid overdose and addiction and mechanisms that can be used to counteract opioid diversion and misuse.

Recommended learning: Opioid pharmacology, in particular mechanisms of action, opioid overdose and addiction, and ways to deter abuse.


Articles Recommended for Medical Students

IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Paget’s Disease of Bone


A 57-year-old man with a history of pain in the right knee presented with warmth and swelling in the right thigh. Examination revealed an asymmetric increase in right thigh volume. Radiography showed bony enlargement and cortical thickening.

Most patients with Paget’s disease of bone have isolated disease and are asymptomatic. They usually present with pain and, less commonly, deformity. This presentation with pain and increased warmth and size of the right thigh would be unusual in the Australian population today. The other unusual feature with the extent of active bone disease in this patient is a minimally elevated bone alkaline phosphatase in serum.
Recommended learning: Pathology, clinical presentation and management of Paget’s disease of bone.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Carotid–Cavernous Sinus Fistula


A healthy 18-year-old man was in a motor vehicle accident and received a head injury that resulted in intracranial bleeding at multiple sites, fractures of facial bones, and immediate traumatic mydriasis and ptosis in the left eye.

This is an extremely rare condition which is usually described in association with pulsatile exophthalmos, a bruit and pulsatile tinnitus.



CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Case 10-2016 — A 22-Year-Old Man with Sickle Cell Disease, Headache, and Difficulty Speaking


A 22-year-old man with sickle cell disease presented with headache and difficulty speaking after smoking marijuana. He had anomia, apraxia, and alexia and was unable to perform arithmetic. Diagnostic tests were performed, and management decisions were made.

This CPC describes an acute stroke in a 22-year old male with a sickle cell disease (SSD) and with obvious sickling on the peripheral blood smear.
The discussion involves the causes of acute stroke in a 22-year old male, the associations between cannabis use and stroke, and in particular the vasculopathy associated with SSD and stroke management in SSD. With international travel, Australian physicians should be aware of the complications of SSD as these patients do present to EDs in the Perth area. In this article, there is an excellent CT without contrast demonstrating fresh clot in the middle cerebral artery and acute dissection of the internal carotid on MRI.

Recommended learning: Review the neuroanatomy and function of the cerebral hemispheres, in particular the classical clinical findings in lesions involving the dominant and non-dominant hemispheres. Review Gerstmann syndrome.


EDITORIAL
Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy and Atherosclerosis — Time Is of the Essence


The article (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1505241) and the accompanying Editorial in this week’s Journal are again focused on postmenopausal HRT (hormone replacement therapy). The Editorial summarizes the article and provides an overview of the cardiovascular benefit of HRT.
This is a single centre study of 643 postmenopausal women who were randomly assigned to treatment with estradiol (with or without progesterone) or placebo. All patients in the study were free of symptoms of coronary artery disease and were divided into two groups, comprising those that were < 6 years postmenopause and those that were 10 or more years postmenopause.  The aim of this study was to determine if HRT, initiated in either of these arbitrary time periods, had any effect on coronary artery disease.

Coronary artery disease was assessed by:
1.     the progression of potentially preventable coronary artery plaque formation using a surrogate marker, the carotid intimal-medial thickness (CIMT) (data in Table 2), and
2.     coronary artery calcification score (CAC) and /or cardiac CT angiography (CCTA), which assessed the extent of irreversible coronary atherosclerosis (Table 3)

Overall, the data indicate that in the early postmenopausal group, HRT slowed the progression of active plaque (CIMT) but had no effect on established coronary atherosclerosis (CAC, CCTA). In the late postmenopausal group, HRT had no effect on slowing plaque formation or on established coronary atherosclerosis.
As indicated in the Editorial, the results suggest that the time of initiation of HRT relative to the onset of menopause may be important but there is clearly much more work to be done in this area before this can be recommended as the standard of care.
  

Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research

CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS OF BASIC RESEARCH

Genetic Targeting of the Albumin Locus to Treat Hemophilia


Goals of gene therapy include the integration of the therapeutic gene into the host genome at expression levels sufficient to ameliorate symptoms. Strategies involving the transcriptional machinery of albumin in the liver have proved effective in a mouse model of hemophilia.
          
This article reviews the frequency of hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency) and B (factor IX deficiency, Christmas disease) worldwide, the treatment and costs, and the lack of availability of this treatment for most patients worldwide.

In 2004, the authors transfected the hepatocytes of 10 patients with severe factor IX deficiency (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1407309) with the factor IX genome (F9) incorporated into a recombinant adenovirus 9 vector. In these patients, there was a modest increase in factor IX production by the host livers. At higher doses of F9 vector, levels of factor IX were sufficient to reduce bleeding and the frequency of factor IX replacement. However the results of this type of transfection were short-lived as there is no permanent incorporation of the transfected F9 into the host liver cell genome (AVV exhibits a tropism for hepatocytes).
Two recent quoted publications focus on mechanisms to incorporate F9 permanently into the host hepatocyte genome without producing untoward side effects. In vitro and in vivo studies in murine models have achieved acceptable, though low factor IX protein production. This was achieved using, in one example, the AVV DNA construct containing promoterless human F9 downstream from active targeted murine albumin DNA. Murine cells produced both mouse albumin and human factor IX. However, the murine hepatocytes exhibited a low long-term vector incorporation rate of 0.5%.

This exciting area of gene transfer represents the future for the replacement of deficient proteins, particularly where the deficient protein can be secreted by hepatocytes, in association with a commonly produced protein such as albumin (represents > 25% of all proteins produced by the liver). Challenges that remain are experiments in non-human primates with production of adequate levels of the deficient secreted protein, without producing transaminitis or other potential complications such as insertional oncogenesis or alteration in endogenous gene expression, particularly oncogenes or an immunogenic protein such as albumin.  


Other articles which should be of interest to medical students

Perspective

Immersion Day — Transforming Governance and Policy by Putting on Scrubs


The disconnect between real-world health care and the information delivered in boardrooms or policy discussions is a barrier to responsive governance and policymaking. So Mission Health immerses board members, journalists, legislators, and regulators in its daily work

This is an interesting Perspective that demonstrates the effectiveness of immersing inexperienced bureaucrats involved in formulating health care policy in the day to day operations within the hospital. This was not a hospital tour, but a true immersion experience which took both time and commitment of the bureaucrats. After this immersion experience at Mission Health in Asheville, NC, subsequent appropriate requests for hospital funding were reviewed as being favourable. Such a simple, obvious step can transform governance and policy!  Every bureaucrat involved enjoyed the experience which opened their eyes to the reality of medical practice in the trenches.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Randomized Trial of Longer-Term Therapy for Symptoms Attributed to Lyme Disease


In this randomized, controlled trial from Europe involving patients with persistent symptoms attributed to Lyme disease, there was no benefit associated with 12 additional weeks of treatment with either doxycycline or clarithromycin–hydroxychloroquine.


EDITORIAL

Time for a Different Approach to Lyme Disease and Long-Term Symptoms


These are somewhat predictable European results for the management of patients with long-term symptoms attributable to presumed chronic Lyme disease using either doxycycline or clarithromycin-hydroxychloroquine. The cause of this abundance of symptoms is unclear but frequently manifests as fibromyalgia or prolonged fatigue.
As the author of the Editorial indicates, it is important to consider alternative diagnoses, such as sleep apnoea in patients without the classical phenotype, and to keep an open mind, although management of these patients can be extremely challenging, time consuming, and long-term.


SPECIAL REPORT

The Neglected Dimension of Global Security — A Framework for Countering Infectious-Disease Crises


The Ebola epidemic demonstrated how ill-prepared the global community is for major infectious disease crises. Now an international expert group has outlined a framework for preparedness, detection, and response to future infectious-disease threats.

This Special Report highlights the area of global security particularly as it relates to the recent infectious disease epidemics of Ebola and Zika virus infections. Figure 1 demonstrates the chronology and sites of origins of recent infectious disease outbreaks worldwide.

The recommendations of the Commission on a Global Health Risk Framework for the Future are illustrated and frankly obvious. The bottom line with any proactive international preparedness is that in order to identify a potential outbreak/epidemic/pandemic early and manage it requires both international sharing and cooperation and adequate independent funding in advance – proactive, not reactive.

It sickens me when I see the major roadblock is the lack of predictable and sustainable funding for public world health. Surely all affluent Western societies should contribute a sum which a fixed proportion of their GDP. The sums indicated are paltry ($1.9 - $3.4 billion) when in 2011 the US annual military budget was $600 – 700 billion with up to $ 22 billion documented wasted dollars. If the US claims to be the world policeman, surely it can afford this sum for policing world health. You can prepare as much as you like, but if the money is not there, then all of the Commissions and their erudite recommendations represent only posturing and is for naught. 

Recently President Obama requested that the Congress appropriate $1.6 – 1.9 billion for Zika virus research and public health (not a new funding request but a transfer from the requested Ebola virus funding which is now no longer newsworthy, but still omnipresent. By the way, in spite of pressure by the administration, the Congress has yet to appropriate any of these funds).

As they say, it will “take an act of Congress” but when? Probably when the Zika virus infects a billionaire or their family. Mosquitoes are equal opportunity vectors.