Tuesday, 23 August 2016

NEJM Week of 28th July 2016 (#53)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 28th July 2016 (#53)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)


Occasional Editorial Comment


If you open the bog at the bottom of the review, you will find the format is much easier to read.


Must Read or Save Articles



REVIEW ARTICLE

Treatment of Opioid-Use Disorders


Opioid-use disorders are common, but most physicians are not trained to recognize and treat them. This review outlines a general approach to identifying and treating these disorders.

This is a must save article. I recommend you store this hyperlink for future use.

This Review Article offers an excellent table (Table 1) which reviews the diagnostic criteria for an opioid-use disorder based on DSM-5. The remainder of the article focuses on the specific treatments of these disorders and the subsequent approaches to rehabilitation and maintenance. The treatment schedules are very detailed, but the general information needed can be obtained from reviewing the tables and reading the overview of the problem which is provided in the first five paragraphs of the article.


Articles Recommended for Medical Students



CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 23-2016 — A 46-Year-Old Man with Somnolence after Orthopedic Surgery


A 46-year-old man had worsening somnolence 1 day after replacement surgery with a femoral endoprosthetic implant. Fever, tachycardia, hypertension, and tachypnea developed, and examination revealed somnolence, gaze deviation, rigidity, and hyperreflexia. A diagnosis was made.

This patient developed deterioration in mental function 14 hours after significant orthopaedic surgery.  The discussion focuses on the effects of medication and the cerebral fat embolism syndrome. A diagnostic MRI of the head is illustrated.


Perspective

Incorporating Indications into Medication Ordering — Time to Enter the Age of Reason


Beyond the five “rights” for safe medication ordering and use — the right patient, right drug, right dose, right time, and right route — a sixth element must be correct: the indication. Indications based prescribing can improve medication use in multiple ways.

Medical students in Australia are routinely taught the 6Rs of prescribing, with the 6th R representing the right indication. In hospital charts there is a place to document the prescribing indication thought this appears to be infrequently filled out. There is no place for drug indication on routine prescriptions but it is a requirement for an Authority Script.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Dysphagia Lusoria


A 46-year-old otherwise healthy man presented with a 1-year history of occasional dysphagia to solid foods that was not accompanied by weight loss. A barium-swallow examination revealed posterior oblique indentation of the proximal esophagus.

This is an extremely unusual cause of dysphagia.  However it is another cause for external compression of the oesophagus for those who like lists of rare disorders.

Recommended learning:

Review the causes and management of dysphagia.  Particularly review the case of dysphagia in the MED300 weekly clinical cases.



IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Herpes Zoster Mandibularis


A 70-year-old man presented with a 2-day history of facial edema, rash along the left lower jaw, and plaque that covered two thirds of the left half of his tongue. He had had pain, otalgia, and glossodynia 3 days before the outbreak of the rash.

This is an excellent clinical photograph of a patient with Herpes zoster involving the mandibular branch of the trigeminal nerve. Note the typical facial involvement together with involvement of the anterior 2/3 of the tongue via the lingual nerve. Vesicles may also have been present on the tympanic membrane which is innervated by the auriculo-temporal branch of the mandibular nerve.

Recommended learning:

Review the anatomy of the trigeminal nerve (V), in particular the motor and sensory innervations and the clinical examination of the trigeminal nerve.


EDITORIAL

Von Willebrand Factor — A Rapid Sensor of Paravalvular Regurgitation during TAVR?



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Von Willebrand Factor Multimers during Transcatheter Aortic-Valve Replacement


In patients undergoing transcatheter aortic-valve replacement, defects in high-molecular-weight von Willebrand factor multimers and the closure time with adenosine diphosphate (a measure of hemostasis) were closely correlated with postprocedural aortic regurgitation.


Before reading the Editorial and the study, I strongly recommend watching the accompanying video which describes the normal biological function of von Willebrand factor (vWF), as well as the procedure transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR).  I also suggest you review the YouTube presentation.

The premise for this study is that vWF under normal shear stress circulates as partially unfolded, elongated multimers with exposed binding sites for platelets and collagen. With active binding, the zinc-dependent metalloprotease ADAMTS13 cleaves vWF into appropriate sizes to optimize the clotting process. (In most cases of acquired TTP, an autoantibody is directed against ADAMTS13).

Under situations of increased shear stress and the generation of excessive turbulence, such as valvular heart disease (in this study patients with severe aortic stenosis), hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM), circulatory-assist devices, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenators, high-molecular weight vWF multimers are cleaved resulting in acquired vWF deficiency and the potential for bleeding.

The hypothesis generated for this study involves TAVR for treating severe aortic stenosis. If the valve is placed successfully, only minimal to mild paravalvular aortic regurgitation (AR) should result.  Moderate to severe paravalvular AR is described in 12% of patients with the first generation of the valve and in 4% with the second generation.

With severe aortic stenosis (Figure 2 in study), the high MW vWF multimers represent approximately 61% of vWF present in pooled normal human plasma and with subsequent correction of the AR, the percentage increases to 100% within five minutes. A similar parallel improvement in clotting test (CT-ADP (closure-time with ADP) is seen with correction of the paravalvular AR.

The mortality rate at one year in those undergoing TAVR is twice as high in those patients with residual moderate to serve resultant paravalvular AR (Figure 4).                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          
Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


None


Other Articles which should interest medical students



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Liraglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Type 2 Diabetes


Patients with type 2 diabetes and high cardiovascular risk were assigned to receive either the glucagon-like peptide 1 analogue liraglutide or placebo. The rate of first occurrence of cardiovascular death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke was lower with liraglutide.
                 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Empagliflozin and Progression of Kidney Disease in Type 2 Diabetes


Among patients with type 2 diabetes at high cardiovascular risk, the rates of progression of kidney disease and clinically relevant renal events were lower among patients receiving empagliflozin, a sodium–glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitor, than among those receiving placebo.


EDITORIAL

Cardiac and Renovascular Complications in Type 2 Diabetes — Is There Hope?


These two articles describe placebo-controlled, double blind trials involving patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus who were at high risk for cardiovascular events. In general, the first study used liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide 1 agonist, to determine the effects of the drug on limiting macrovascular complications of diabetes.  The second article focussed on the prevention of microvascular complications of diabetes in the kidney using empagliflozin, a sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor. Both drugs improved diabetic control over placebo.

 In the first study, liraglutide was added to standard diabetic therapy (4688 patients received liraglutide and 4672 placebo) and patients were followed for a median time of 176 weeks after randomization. Moreover in this group, there was a significant reduction in death from cardiovascular causes (p=0.007) and death due to any cause (p=0.02) (Figure 1). There were no differences in nonfatal myocardial infarction and strokes or hospitalization for heart failure. When the primary composite outcome was subsequently reanalysed as an expanded composite outcome (Table 1), where coronary revascularisation and hospitalization for either unstable angina or heart failure were added to death from cardiovascular causes, or nonfatal MI or stroke, the p value fell from 0.01 to 0.005.
In the other study using empagliflozin, a total of 7018 patients were randomized to receive empagliflozin (4685 patients) or placebo (2333 patients) and further broken down into those with baseline creatinine clearances less than (25.5%) or greater (74.5%) than 60 ml/minute, with a minimum of 30 ml/minute. Two doses of empagliflozin studied. Overall, empagliflozin was superior to placebo in slowing the progression of kidney disease (Figure 1) and in significantly improving seven renal outcome measures (Figure 2). Empagliflozin resulted in a fall in eGFR with both doses over the first four weeks of the 192 week study and then rose, such that by 80 weeks, eGFR was higher than placebo over the remainder of the study.

Both of these studies were reviewed in the accompanying Editorial.  All patients studied had extensive cardiovascular disease, although in the liraglutide study eligible patients less than 60 years of age had to have a coexisting cardiovascular condition and if 60 or older, one cardiovascular risk factor would suffice (? effect of age).  Both studies were large, expensive, and multicentre and employed patient populations which were similar, though not identical. As summarized in the Editorial, it appears that both therapies add to the management of type 2 diabetic patients with a high risk for cardiovascular events with more studies and drugs to come. The problem I have with all of these studies is how to reconcile the differences in study design, the varying inclusion and exclusion criteria and the number of similar drugs coming on the market. I wonder where SGLT1 inhibitors, that reduce glucose absorption from the intestine, will fit into the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Recommend learning:

Review the mechanisms of action and the underlying physiology of the groups of non-insulin therapies used to treat diabetes mellitus:

1.     Sulfonlyureas
3.     Thiazolidinediones
4.     DPP-4 inhibitors
5.     Glucagon-like peptide-1 analogues
6.     Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2 inhibitors) (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMcibr1506573)
7.     Acarbose

By the end of MED200, you should have a working knowledge of the medication groups used to treat diabetes mellitus, not just metformin and the sulfonylureas.