Monday 30 May 2016

NEJM Week of 12th May 2016 (#42)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 12th May 2016 (#42)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment

EDITORIAL

MAGE-D2 and the Regulation of Renal Salt Transporters

I have not included the article (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1507629) with this editorial which discusses the pathophysiology of Bartter’s syndrome with emphasis on Bartter’s syndrome presenting during pregnancy. For those students with an interest in renal physiology and the development of the renal function during embryogenesis or those future obstetricians interested in polyhydramnios, I recommend the article and the editorial.

The reason I chose this article and editorial in this week’s review was that, during my internship at Sydney Hospital, Professor Solomon Posen (my long term mentor who died recently in Sydney on 16/5/2016 http://tributes.smh.com.au/obituaries/smh-au/obituary.aspx?n=solomon-posen-sol&pid=180052181 ) and I looked after a pregnant patient (end of second trimester) who presented with profound generalised weakness from hypokalaemia due to Bartter’s syndrome. This was the first detailed case description of Bartter’s syndrome during pregnancy ( Med J Aust. 1974 Sep 7;2(10):360-5).

Until his recent death, Sol read my weekly reviews and was never restrained in offering valuable suggestions for improvement. He was a dedicated academic, who was actively writing until the end. In addition to multiple publications in the areas of metabolic bone disease, renal osteodystrophy and hyperparathyroidism, his seminal work was the differentiation of bone from liver alkaline phosphatase, the basis for his MD thesis. This formed the foundation for his definite work on “Alkaline Phosphatase,” published in 1979. Over more recent years he published, “The Doctor in Literature: Satisfaction or Resentment.” I will very much miss him, not only for a long friendship, but also for his incisive mind, his generosity, his loyalty and sense of equity and his witty and insightful personality.



In the future, I plan to discuss medical aspects of the most important issue of the day, namely Global Warming and Climate Change. As physicians we can hide in current science which is truly amazing (epidemiology, public health, surgical techniques, ethics, basic science, new advances in management of cancer and chronic disease to name just a few) but in fact many of us are emulating the ostrich.  All of these medical advances pale when compared with how our planet is being devastated by human activity (anthropogenic climate change – ACC).  Climate chaos will have a profound effect on all life on earth and prominent medical journals need to incorporate this fact in their articles and editorials.
I call for all medical schools to include within their curricula a major segment, not only on Medical and Public Health issues, but all aspects of Global Warming and Climate Change.  I would suggest that every medical school should devote an entire week to this area towards the end of their preclinical training.
The medical profession, especially the AMA and Colleges, MUST be much more proactive politically or else the human race will face the inevitable devastating consequences. The NEJM should also actively pursue all means to mitigate the effects on human health of Global Warming and Climate Change because of the Journal’s scientific credibility, its large readership and its social and scientific responsibility.


Perspective

The Zika Challenge

At a recent international meeting about the Zika epidemic, experts exchanged insights, identified knowledge gaps, and agreed on a plan for accelerating product development and evaluation in the hope of controlling the spread of the virus in Brazil and elsewhere.

This Perspective is a summary of a recent WHO meeting convened to discuss the current state of the Zika virus epidemic, particularly in Brazil. This is a concise summary discussing the biology of the ZIKV and its relationship with the other flaviviruses, the role of a shared immune response between flaviviruses, discussions of the current status of ZIKV diagnostic tools, early data sharing and discussion of management, including vector control, prophylaxis and the very early stages of vaccine development.

Should the Olympics be held in Summer in the middle of a ZIKV epidemic when at least 540,000 people from around the globe converge on Brazil?

I believe that the answer is a resounding NO!!  This event will lead to a global pandemic which does not present with the roar of a lion like Ebola virus but with the purr of a kitten. In some ways this is reminiscent of the early spread of HIV infection in the US, when the slow in reporting on the severity of the threat.
Unfortunately, the Olympics will be held due to many complex globally intertwined interests, which ignore the predictable consequences.

In the US, the Congress has gone into recess without approving additional funding for ZIKV research. I recommend you read the article from the Washington Post and listen to the excellent video clip on ZIKV. Republicans indicated there “was no urgency” in extending the funding ( https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/wp/2016/05/27/congress-leaves-town-with-no-zika-resolution-lengthy-negotiations-ahead/ ).

Within the next month, most conservative Republican Southern states, which have rejected Obamacare for partisan reasons, will be in the middle of a ZIKV epidemic and will be screaming for the Congress to appropriate more funding.


Must Read Articles


Perspective

Health as a Family Affair

Despite the substantial burden borne by informal caregivers, our society has only recently recognized that our conception of illness as solely an individual experience is too narrow. Acknowledgment of illness’s effects on families suggests a better approach to care.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

One-Year Outcomes in Caregivers of Critically Ill Patients

Investigators evaluated the caregivers of patients who had received mechanical ventilation for at least 7 days in an ICU. Although there was a large burden of depressive symptoms soon after discharge, the burden diminished in magnitude, in most caregivers, during the subsequent year.

While the article focuses on the symptoms of depression over a twelve-month period in caregivers of patients who had been treated in an ICU on a ventilator for at least 7 days, the Perspective article deals with the general area of the burden borne by caretakers of patients with major illness, particularly those with chronic disease (cardiac, pulmonary, rheumatic, malignancy) and those in palliative care. It is interesting that in palliative care the physician’s responsibility extends not only to the patient but also to the caregiver(s), including after death of the patient.

Concern for the caretaker should include such areas as individual health (physical, emotional, social), financial health, loss of work, respite care, and psychiatric support. Medical students need to be reminded that there is more to caregiver illness than Takotsubo’s cardiomyopathy.

Caretaker health is clearly an area in which a major component of the patient’s health care cost is borne by the caregiver and should be considered within the financial equation of total health care costs.



Must Save Articles


REVIEW ARTICLE
Clinical Implications of Genomic Discoveries in Lung Cancer

Many genetic lesions have been identified in lung cancers. The findings shed light on molecular pathogenesis and have led to the definition of abnormalities that can be targeted by therapeutic agents that occasionally elicit dramatic responses.

This is an article that should be saved, although at first glance it may not appear relevant to medical students. For those interested in the genetic basis of lung cancer, this is a must read review. However, for most readers, I would suggest focusing on Figures 2 and 3 and Table 1. This article demonstrates the complexities of genes and cancer.  There is slow but definitive progress and awareness of the more common mutations particularly in adenocarcinoma of the lung, where research in these areas will eventually lead to significant changes in prevention and targeted gene-based therapies.


Articles Recommended for Medical Students


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Serious Asthma Events with Fluticasone plus Salmeterol versus Fluticasone Alone

Among more than 11,000 patients with moderate-to-severe asthma, fluticasone–salmeterol was noninferior to fluticasone alone with respect to severe asthma events.

EDITORIAL

Safety of Fluticasone plus Salmeterol in Asthma — Reassuring Data, but No Final Answer

As indicated in the editorial comments, the article does not answer all of the questions but it does answer many in patients with “serious asthma.” There was no increase in adverse drug-related events in those patients with “serious asthma” treated with the combination of fluticasone and salmeterol (a long-acting beta agonist – LABA) over those treated with fluticasone alone, suggesting the long-term (26-week study) safety use of LABAs in this patient population. Another important aspect of the combined drug usage was that fewer severe asthma exacerbations occurred in this group.
There are several aspects of the study that need discussion:
1.     The population of patients with “serious asthma,” including age and inclusion/exclusion criteria, must be noted.
2.     There is an assumption that the effects (positive and negative) of LABAs (salmeterol versus formoterol) are similar, which may not be true. Unfortunately, a side to side comparison between these drugs would never be funded.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Clinical Significance of Symptoms in Smokers with Preserved Pulmonary Function

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease diagnosis rests on chronic pulmonary symptoms and airflow obstruction. This study showed that people may have chronic COPD symptoms but no airflow obstruction. Such patients have more COPD exacerbations than those without chronic symptoms.

EDITORIAL

Smoking, Not COPD, as the Disease

The article and editorial are very enlightening, particularly the latter which should be read by all medical students along with the introduction to the article. The major discussion focuses on the definition of COPD, defined as persistent airflow obstruction in smokers.

A group of present or past smokers with symptoms (cough and sputum, and less commonly SOB, wheeze and reduced energy), in whom there is no spirometric evidence of airway obstruction (thus they do not fulfil the international definition of COPD), were studied. The message is that for smokers with symptoms, irrespective of normal or abnormal spirometric tests, it is the presence of respiratory symptoms that determines the number of future acute exacerbations of pulmonary disease.

Smokers with symptoms are more likely to exhibit a decrease in exercise activity and greater airway thickening without emphysema on HRCT. Further there is a slight reduction overall in FEV1, FVC and IC. All smokers with symptoms are treated similarly with inhaled corticosteroids and bronchodilators, irrespective of the lack of evidence in those patients without evidence of airway obstruction.

Recommended learning:

1.     Review the pathology, definitions and evidenced-based therapy for patients with COPD, emphysema and chronic bronchitis.
2.     Review the types of ILD directly caused by smoking.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Patterns of Growth and Decline in Lung Function in Persistent Childhood Asthma

Data from a controlled trial of asthma treatment that enrolled patients in the first decade of life were combined with follow-up data to provide novel information on the growth and decline in lung function in the first three decades of life in patients with asthma.

This is a very important and interesting article on patients with persistent childhood asthma who had their FEV1 levels measured over a prolonged period of time.  The statistical analyses were complicated. When I saw the possible lung function trajectories (ratios of FEV1/normal control age related FEV1) projected through the age of 30 years (review Fig. 1 carefully), I was impressed with the similarities with bone mineral densities, particularly in females where optimal achieved bone mass could be reduced by early use of corticosteroid or reduced oestrogen levels.

The methods section should be carefully reviewed.  This is a subset analysis of the original CAMP cohort (Childhood Asthma Management Program) in which four possible lung function trajectories (approximately 25% of the patients are in each group) are arbitrarily chosen and the study participants ultimately allocated into each group.

The data suggest that “childhood impairment of lung function and male sex were the most significant predictors of abnormal longitudinal patterns of lung-function growth and decline. Children with persistent asthma and reduced growth of lung function are at increased risk for fixed airflow obstruction and possibly COPD in early adulthood.” It will be very important to follow this cohort over time to determine if the two groups who never obtain optimal lung growth develop early onset COPD and whether they have persistent symptoms.  


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 14-2016 — A 37-Year-Old Woman with Adult-Onset Psychosis
Examination of a 37-year-old woman with adult-onset psychosis revealed weight loss, a thyroid nodule, anemia, and micronutrient deficiencies. Diagnostic tests were performed.

This is an interesting CPC of a 37-year-old female presenting with difficult to manage psychosis who was subsequently found to have coeliac disease. The treating doctors fulfilled Koch’s postulates, demonstrating the very uncommon associated between these two entities in this patient.

What amazes me is the continual references to the “astute endocrinologist” who suggested an association between iron deficiency anaemia and coeliac disease in a patient with a strong family history of autoimmune disease. It should be noted throughout the CPC that there was no mention of obtaining a faecal blood test or taking a menstrual history in the patient by the “astute endocrinologist”, although the latter was mentioned in passing at the end of the discussion. There was no discussion of the low serum vitamin B12 (predominantly absorbed in the terminal ileum) level which was assumed to be due to malabsorption from coeliac disease. The patient could well have also had autoimmune pernicious anaemia accounting for the low vitamin B12 level with antibodies demonstrated against intrinsic factor and parietal cells.

Another consideration for management not discussed, when the patient was readmitted for psychosis and a flare in her coeliac disease, would have been a course of corticosteroids. This would have controlled the disease process, reversed her psychosis and her denial of the disease, thus allowing her to recommence her gluten-free diet. This would have been a pragmatic approach to health care cost containment.

The strong points of the CPC are a very good discussion of psychosis in a 37-year-old patient and an excellent discussion of the histo- and immunopathology of coeliac disease.

Recommended learning:

1.     For MED400 students, review the different presentations of psychosis, their peak ages of presentation and their management.
2.     Review the pathology, diagnosis, presentations, and management of coeliac disease.


Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS OF BASIC RESEARCH

Blood and Bone

Hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation has come a long way in 60 years, but substantive clinical challenges remain. Hoxb5, a marker for long-term HSCs, has been used to better understand their niche.

This is a fascinating article describing the work of Chen et al in Nature 2016 in which long-lived haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in bone marrow could be identified in mice using a specific cell marker (Hoxb5). They used this technique to demonstrate that the majority of HSCs reside in close proximity to marrow endothelial cells. It raises the consideration that when autologous HSCs are transplanted, maybe they should also be infused with autologous bone marrow endothelial progenitor cells.

Recommended learning: Review the area of stem cell biology, in particular the role of HSCs, their future differentiation and the factors necessary for differentiation.


Other Articles which should interest medical students


Perspective

Drug Regulation and Pricing — Can Regulators Influence Affordability?

Regulation may contribute to high drug costs, but there are several ways in which regulators at the European Medicines Agency believe they can contribute to keeping drug spending sustainable, beginning with approving genetics and biosimilars more rapidly.

This article is for those students interested in public health policy and the role regulators should play (four examples are provided) in maintaining a rational and practical price for new pharmaceuticals. This is a balancing act between the pharmaceutical companies who claim they need more profit in order to recoup R&D costs while on the other hand to increase shareholder profit. Take the recent example of sofosbuvir, an RNA polymerase inhibitor, used to treat hepatitis C where R&D costs were recouped within the first three months of its use in the US market!

What Australians need to be aware of is that the majority of the R&D costs of new drugs are borne by US patients and US citizens who pay exorbitant prices for health insurance.  The most frequent reason that Americans declare bankruptcy is their inability to pay for their health care costs.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Diaphragmatic Hernia Causing Lung Collapse

A 54-year-old man with a history of cerebral palsy and mental impairment presented with acute respiratory distress. He was afebrile and had a nonproductive cough. Examination revealed an absence of air sounds in the right hemithorax, with audible bowel sounds.

As an intern in Sydney in 1969 it was common practice, for even interns, to place suprapubic peritoneal catheters for acute peritoneal dialysis, unlike today where acute haemodialysis is performed through central venous access. Following the introduction of several litres of dialysis fluid through the peritoneal catheter, the patient developed acute respiratory distress, tachypnoea, cyanosis, tachycardia and hypotension and was found to have stony dull percussion note on the right and tracheal deviation to the left. CXR confirmed a massive right pleural effusion with mediastinal shift to the left. I was almost as distressed as the patient. Before the patient coded, the head of the bed was elevated and the pleural and peritoneal fluid was quickly withdrawn.  The patient then improved dramatically. Addition of Trypan blue to the remaining peritoneal fluid and its demonstration in the remaining pleural fluid confirmed the presence of a previously asymptomatic diaphragmatic hernia.


MAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Hair-on-End Sign

A 35-year-old man with a history of sickle cell disease presented with a sickle cell crisis and headaches. CT of the head revealed a thickened calvarium with perpendicular proliferation of the trabeculae, a finding termed the hair-on-end sign.

This is an interesting CT demonstrating excessive medullary haematopoiesis in the diploic space of the calvarium most commonly seen in thalassemia major.