Wednesday, 28 September 2016

NEJM Week of 25th August 2016 (# 57)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 25th August 2016 (#57)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment


None


Must Read Articles



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

A Randomized Trial of Focused Ultrasound Thalamotomy for Essential Tremor


In this randomized, sham-controlled trial, MRI-guided focused ultrasound thalamotomy reduced hand tremor in patients with essential tremor who had not had a response to medication. Adverse effects of the procedure included sensory deficits and gait disturbances.


EDITORIAL

Treatment of Medically Refractory Essential Tremor


This is a significant study in patients with essential tremor which employs ultrasound thalamotomy to induce a permanent lesion in the contralateral ventro-intermediate nucleus of the thalamus. Patients had moderately severe essential tremor, present for up to 30 years, which was resistant to or non-responsive to propranolol or primidone.  A major advantage of the technique is that no surgery is required (burr holes with or without wire placement) in a patient group that is surgery adverse. Reduction in severity of the tremor (Figure 1) and improvement in social activities and ADLs (not speech) (Figure 2) are seen to varying extents in the majority of patients. Major concerns with the study were the short follow-up period after thalamotomy (up to 12 months) and the probable lack of further improvement at 12 months (similar results with burr holes with induced thalamotomy). Long term follow-up is undoubtedly underway. Further adverse effects related to the procedure (Table 2) were paraesthesiae or numbness in 14% of patients, which were most common in the face or hand (9%). The question is what improvement occurred in the tremor versus how severe the numbness and paraesthesiae were; i.e. were the adverse effects worth the improvement in the tremor?
Another procedure employed is burr hole placement with deep brain stimulation with wires where no permanent major thalamic lesion is induced and where the degree of stimulation can be adjusted.

Ideally the following studies should be done:

1.     Continue long-term follow-up of the current study.
2.     Compare the results of ultrasound thalamotomy with deep brain stimulation.
3.     Re-introduce medical therapy after ultrasound thalamotomy to determine if medical therapy is now effective.
4.     Repeat the procedure on patients where minimal improvement was produced with the initial thalamotomy and where no adverse effects occurred.

Recommended learning:

1.     Review essential tremor, the neurobiology and pathways involved, and its management.
2.     Review the types of tremors observed in clinical practice, their mechanisms, and management.


REVIEW ARTICLE

Treatment of Patients with Cirrhosis


This guide to the practical treatment of patients with cirrhosis summarizes recent developments. It includes advice on medical management, invasive procedures, nutrition, prevention, and strategies to protect the cirrhotic liver from harm.

This is a comprehensive review of cirrhosis which will be the standard reference article for years to come. The article reviews cirrhosis under the following areas:  epidemiology and diagnosis, nutrition; medications employed, invasive procedures; complications and how to avoid them, and the clinical approach to the patient.
 At a minimum, the three figures and tables should be reviewed, even if the article is not read at this stage in its entirety.

Recommended learning: While I suggest you review what you have been taught on cirrhosis in the curriculum, this review is by far the best resource, as it also reviews such areas as hepatocellular cancer, degree of reversibility of liver pathology following insult(s), and the public health aspects of cirrhosis including its causes.



Articles Recommended for Medical Students



Perspective

Uncertainty in the Era of Precision Medicine

Far from ushering in an age of diagnostic and prognostic certainty, precision-medicine tools will demand a greater tolerance of uncertainty and greater facility for calculating and interpreting probabilities than we have been used to as physicians and patients.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

70-Gene Signature as an Aid to Treatment Decisions in Early-Stage Breast Cancer
In a study in women with early breast cancer, those with high-risk clinical features and a low-risk gene-expression profile were assigned to chemotherapy or no chemotherapy. At 5 years, omission of chemotherapy led to a 1.5-percentage-point lower rate of survival without distant metastasis.

EDITORIAL
Increasing Precision in Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer

The above three articles relate to both the concept and the improvement of “precision medicine” which implies both precision based diagnosis and precision in predicting the outcomes (both positive and negative) of therapy. The Perspective provides an overview of “precision medicine” and if only one article were to be read, this is the one I would choose.  To date, the most widely studied patient group in which genomic analysis has been applied is the group of patients with malignant disease.
The study involves a cohort of 6693 patients with early stage breast cancer and utilizes the 70-gene signature test (first described 14 years ago), the validity of which has been demonstrated in earlier studies in defining patients with high and low risk genomic profile with a good and poor prognosis respectively. Prognosis was based on the risk of distant recurrence at 5 and 10 year follow-up. Experienced physicians have developed expertise in the assessment of patients with breast cancer in determining clinical outcomes (stage, grade, immunopathology, premorbid disease).  Such techniques as genomic analysis in improving clinical outcomes and assessing the effects of therapy will be progressively added to the clinical outcomes in the future.
Patients in the study were divided into four groups based on the presence of high or low genomic risk and high or low clinical risk (Table 1). The hypothesis generated was: could patient groups be identified in which adjuvant chemotherapy, with its attendant risks, be avoided but achieving similar outcomes to those treated with chemotherapy? Based on available data, patients with both low clinical and genetic risks did not receive adjuvant chemotherapy and patients with both high clinical and genomic risks all received adjuvant chemotherapy.

The study then focussed on those patients with high clinical and low genomic risk (HCLG), although data was also generated for the low clinical and high genomic (LCHG) risk group. The five year outcomes of this study were:

1.     Disease free survival (Figure 2): chemotherapy improved the HCLG group (p=0.03) and also the LCHG, although “not statistically significant” in the latter group.
2.     Overall survival (Figure 2): there was no difference with or without chemotherapy in either group.
3.     Survival without distant metastases: there was no difference with or without chemotherapy in either group.
4.     The overall survival without distant metastases did not differ significantly between the HCLG and LCHG groups which were both significantly different from either the HCHG and LCLG groups (Figure 3).

While this study provides significant new information, more long term follow-up data and refinement of the genomic analyses will be required before “precision medicine” correctly earns its title.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Giant Thrombosed Intracranial Aneurysm
A 79-year-old woman presented with gradual neurologic decline involving confusion, memory loss, imbalance, and incontinence. On examination, she was oriented only to self and had mild nonfluent aphasia. CT revealed a large left frontotemporal mass with areas of calcification.

This is a case of a 79 year-old woman who presented with symptoms of low/normal pressure hydrocephalus (confusion, memory loss, imbalance and urinary incontinence) and was found to have an old calcified, giant thrombosed intracranial aneurysm involving the bifurcation of the left middle cerebral artery. Surgery was not performed to remove the aneurysm because of the surgical risk.  However, with less extensive surgery involving placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt and an endoscopic transfrontal septostomy to relieve the hydrocephalus, there was an overall improvement in the patient’s neurological status.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

A Sneeze
A human sneeze can eject droplets of fluid and potentially infectious organisms. The image sequence captures, in increments of 20 msec, the emission of a sneeze cloud produced by a healthy person. Two videos show the same sneeze at normal speed and at a much slower speed.

The video image of a normal sneeze demonstrates the distance that droplets produced by the sneeze can travel and reminds us of the importance of sneezing in spreading potentially infectious micro-organisms.


SPECIAL REPORT

Body Fatness and Cancer — Viewpoint of the IARC Working Group
The International Agency for Research on Cancer convened a workshop on the relationship between body fatness and cancer, from which an IARC handbook on the topic will appear. An executive summary of the evidence is presented.

This article summarises the current data generated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) regarding obesity and cancer risk. The agency reviewed more than 1000 observational studies and compared the cancer-preventive effect with the absence of body fat. Their results are presented in Table 2. They compare the cancer site or type with the strength of evidence in humans that the absence of excess body fatness lowers the risks of most cancers.  However the data indicate that there is as yet no specific evidence that intentional weight loss lowers the risks of developing specific cancers.

IARC have also identified an additional eight tumour types where the absence of fat is associated with a lower risk of specific cancers (gastric cardia, liver, gallbladder, pancreas, ovary, thyroid, multiple myeloma and meningioma) (see Table 2 for full data).

     

Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


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Other Articles which should interest medical students


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 26-2016 — A 28-Year-Old Woman with Back Pain and a Lesion in the Lumbar Spine
A 28-year-old woman presented with intractable back pain with radiation to the leg. Examination of biopsy specimens revealed a giant-cell tumor of bone. Management decisions were made.

The case is that of a 28 year old female presenting with low back pain and found to have a giant-cell tumour of bone (osteoclastoma) destroying L5 and extending into the spinal canal and into the surrounding soft tissues. There is a detailed discussion of the management of this patient and a differential diagnosis of the bony lesion.
Of interest is the use of denosumab, a humanized monoclonal antibody directed against RANKL which is expressed on the surface of osteoblasts as well as the surface of mononuclear stromal cells present within the osteoclastoma. RANKL binds to RANK on the surface of osteoclasts and osteoclast precursor cells leading to osteoclast activation and osteoclast precursor differentiation.

It is believed that the neoplastic cell within the osteoclastoma is the mesenchymal cell expressing RANKL which then leads secondarily to osteoclast formation.

In osteoporosis, denosumab inhibits RANKL activation of RANK on osteoclast precursors and thus inhibits osteoclastic bone remodelling.

Recommended learning: Review the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in osteoporosis and the mechanisms of actions of drugs used in the treatment.
 

New Pharmacological Therapies

The aim of this new section is to introduce new therapies, particularly those that provide either a novel pharmacological group, an established drug that is employed for a new indication or where a new mechanism of action has been established for a drug.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Inotuzumab Ozogamicin versus Standard Therapy for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
Among adults with relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia, treatment with the anti-CD22 drug conjugate inotuzumab ozogamicin produced a higher rate of complete remission, as well as a higher rate of veno-occlusive disease, than did standard chemotherapy.

Inotuzumab ozogamicin is an agent combining a humanized anti-CD22 (a non-shed, cell surface glycoprotein expressed on the surface of ALL B cells in 90% of patients) monoclonal antibody with a cytotoxic antibiotic calicheamicin. The drug binds to the CD22 surface receptor and is then rapidly internalized followed by release of the calicheamicin. Calicheamicin then binds to the minor groove of DNA, inducing double-strand cleavage and subsequent apoptosis. An uncommon side effect is hepatic veno-occlusive disease.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Daratumumab, Bortezomib, and Dexamethasone for Multiple Myeloma
In a study involving patients with refractory multiple myeloma, the anti-CD38 antibody daratumumab in combination with bortezomib and dexamethasone resulted in longer progression-free survival and a higher rate of response than bortezomib and dexamethasone alone.

Daratumumab is a human IgGκ monoclonal antibody that targets CD38, which is highly expressed on the surface of myeloma cells and other hematopoietic cell types. Daratumumab has direct and indirect antitumor activity and diverse mechanisms of action, including:

1.     Induction of apoptosis;
2.     Immune-mediated actions, including complement-dependent cytotoxicity, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, and antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis; and

3.     Immunomodulatory functions that target and deplete CD38-positive regulator immune suppressor cells which lead to T-cell expansion and activation in patients who have a response to this monoclonal antibody.