Friday 4 November 2016

NEJM Week of 27th October, 2016 (# 66)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 27th October 2016 (#66)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment



Over the past three editions of the Journal, readers have been fortunate to be exposed to a series of articles written on "Serious Mental Illness" by NEMJ national correspondent. Dr Lisa Rosenbaum.  I have found these articles to exhibit an uncommon sense of humanity in their discussion of doctor/patient relations.  The descriptions of the personal level of interactions with patients from all walks of life by the staff, particularly psychiatrists, at the MGH is an example of patient care that members of the medical profession should seek to emulate.
 
I regard these articles as an essential component of the unwritten curriculum for all medical students and teachers at the University of Notre Dame Australia.



Must Read Articles



MEDICINE AND SOCIETY

Unlearning Our Helplessness — Coexisting Serious Mental and Medical Illness


Patients with coexisting serious mental and medical illnesses often don't recognize that they need treatment, and those who do may be unlikely to complete it. Caring for such patients successfully requires dedication, flexibility, collaboration, persistence, and love.

I will not attempt to summarize the article but rather draw attention to the concept of “learned helplessness” and how it may be recognised and managed in the physician. This is a quote from the final three sentences of the article: It entails recognizing that a disease doesn’t define a person, without pretending that it doesn’t exist or warrant treatment. It requires understanding that autonomy may be achieved not in an instant but over time (in a patient with serious mental illness).  And it means knowing when a refusal of care is a symptom and when it’s a dying wish.  

  

Articles Recommended for Medical Students



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

A Randomized Trial of Long-Term Oxygen for COPD with Moderate Desaturation


In this trial, long-term supplemental oxygen treatment did not result in longer survival over no use of supplemental oxygen among patients with stable COPD and moderate resting desaturation (SpO2, 89 to 93%) or moderate exercise-induced desaturation.


EDITORIAL

Clinical Usefulness of Long-Term Oxygen Therapy in Adults


Long-term oxygen therapy has been previously demonstrated to improve prognosis in patients with COPD and chronic severe hypoxaemia (PaO2 less than or equal to 55 mm Hg and a SaO2 <88%, breathing ambient room air) or moderate hypoxaemia with signs of right heart failure or polycythaemia.

This article addresses the question of long-term oxygen therapy in patients with stable COPD and resting pulse oximeter readings (SaO2) from 89-93% (compared with a group receiving no supplemental oxygen). In order to increase the number of patients in the study, the researchers added a group of patients with stable COPD who exhibited moderate exercise-induced desaturation. The study group that desaturated only with exercise received supplemental oxygen only during exercise and sleep.
 
The results of the study on 738 patients from 42 centres over a period ranging from 1-6 years showed that the group receiving supplemental oxygen did not differ from those who did not receive supplemental oxygen with respect to time to death or time to hospitalization.  Further, oxygen supplementation did not result in improved secondary outcomes (incidence of COPD exacerbations, adherence to oxygen regimen, 6 minute walk distance, severe exercise-induced severe desaturation or quality of life and well-being).


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Child–Parent Familial Hypercholesterolemia Screening in Primary Care


This study assessed child–parent screening for familial hypercholesterolemia in primary care practices. For every 1000 children screened, 8 persons who had positive screening results for familial hypercholesterolemia were identified.


EDITORIAL

What Should Be the Screening Strategy for Familial Hypercholesterolemia?


10, 095 children between the ages of 1 to 2 years were screened when they attended their PCP for routine immunizations. Blood was removed by heel prick and screened for familial hypercholesterolaemia. The children were considered positive if they had either an elevated cholesterol level (above the 99.2th percentile) on two occasions three months apart, or if they had an elevated cholesterol level together with a familial hypercholesterolaemia mutation. If they were positive, their parents were also screened.

 The mutation prevalence was 1 in 273 children (not all had an increased cholesterol level at the time). For every 1000 children screened, 4 children and 4 parents were positive and considered at high cardiovascular risk in the future. 

The Editorial provides an overview of the study and an in-depth analysis of screening methodology including advantages and disadvantages. Universal screening, selective universal screening and cascade screening are explained in the context of this disorder. Whether o screen or not to screen all comes down to a cost/risk-benefit analysis which is what we do in the everyday practice of clinical medicine. 


REVIEW ARTICLE

Hepatic Encephalopathy


The brain dysfunction associated with liver failure can have diverse manifestations. The main pathogenesis is metabolic derangement of cell function and brain edema. Prompt recognition and treatment may reverse, at least partially, some of the abnormalities.

This is an excellent clinical review on hepatic encephalopathy. Figures and Tables provide a summary of the article. The section on current treatment is particularly worth reading.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Emphysematous Pyelonephritis


A 51-year-old man presented with fever and general malaise of 2 weeks' duration. He had poorly controlled diabetes mellitus at the time of presentation. Imaging studies revealed gas collection in the parenchyma and perinephric space of the left kidney.

This case of emphysematous pyelonephritis due to E. coli, in a patient with diabetes mellitus and a neurogenic bladder, was treated with IV antibiotics and did not require nephrectomy. This is second in the series of emphysematous infections involving the urinary tract either due to E. coli or K. pneumoniae.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Clonus Associated with Tropical Spastic Paraparesis


A 53-year-old woman with tropical spastic paraparesis reported several months of worsening weakness of the legs and feet. On examination, she had severe spasticity and weakness of both legs and feet, bilateral Babinski sign, and bilateral patellar clonus, shown in a video.

The video should be reviewed to see bilateral patellar clonus. This patient suffered from tropical spastic paraparesis (human T-lymphotropic virus–associated myelopathy) which results in progressive spastic paraplegia.


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 33-2016 — A 30-Year-Old Woman with Severe Lower Abdominal Pain and Chills


A 30-year-old woman presented to this hospital with abdominal pain, nausea, and chills. Evaluation showed tachycardia, bilateral lower-quadrant abdominal tenderness, leukocytosis, and an elevated CA-125 level. Imaging studies showed adnexal cysts. A diagnosis was made.

This 30-year-old patient had fever, lower quadrant abdominal pain and was found to have bilateral pelvic masses on CT. Excellent differential diagnoses were presented together with a discussion of the causes of an elevated CEA level.



Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research



CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS OF BASIC RESEARCH

The Hypoxia Response Pathways — Hats Off!


This year's Lasker Award for basic medical science recognizes the work of investigators who uncovered a pathway that has a central role in effecting the myriad cellular responses to hypoxia.

In MED100 pathology, the role of HIF (hypoxia-inducible factor) in the pathogenesis of the acute inflammatory process was discussed. This article summarises the research on HIF which was the basis for the 2017 Lasker award.

The following is the final paragraph of the article:
All three of these 2016 Lasker awardees have been involved in efforts to exploit such oxygen-sensing pathways for therapeutic gain. For example, Semenza did early groundwork showing the salutary effects of HIF in preclinical ischemia models, Kaelin and Ratcliffe established that the PHDs (prolyl hydroxylase domain enzymes) could be inhibited with drug-like molecules, and all three have probed the role of HIF in cancer. First-generation PHD inhibitors, which stabilize HIF, are being developed for renal failure, tissue ischemia, and tissue regeneration. Conversely, HIF inhibitors are being developed for cancer (especially clear-cell renal carcinoma) and specific diseases such as pulmonary arterial hypertension (see Fig. 1 for the biology of HIF under normal and low oxygen conditions and in the von Hippel-Lindau syndrome).



Other Articles which should interest medical students


Perspective

Days Spent at Home — A Patient-Centered Goal and Outcome


If “high-value, patient-centered care” is to be more than rhetoric, health care organizations need to measure outcomes that matter to patients, such as days spent at home in the last 6 months of life. There is substantial variation in this patient-centered outcome.

The following is a quote from this article:
Health policy often stumbles when there is uncertainty about what we are trying to maximize in health care. It is clear that one goal is to minimize costs, but there should be counterbalancing measures to be maximized. Mortality is not a sufficient measure to define excellence in care; in fact, no single performance metric will suffice. Outcome measures that reflect what truly matters to patients can define performance in ways that increase the engagement of patients, clinicians, and provider organizations in the redesign of care.

In US studies, patients in their last six months of life (180 days) spent between 120 -146 days at home depending on the region of the country (Fig. 1). In a large UK study, the Camden Commissioning Group (CCG), unusual data was produced (Fig. 2). The more patients accessed home hospice and home-health care, the fewer the days the patients spent at home.  This result was attributable to the findings that: when providers did more of one thing, they did not do less of another. There is a difference between doing more and doing better. The Camden CCG experience indicates, however, that when health care providers and community groups collaborate with the goal of increasing days spent at home, progress can be made.

Results of surveys indicate that:
1.     86% of patients want to be at home in their final days under ideal circumstances, but some prefer to be in a medical care facility for many reasons e.g. not having a supportive family, not wanting to be a burden, and preferring hospitals, for such reasons as perceived better pain relief and care.
2.     Patients do want to be placed on a respirator to gain an extra week of life.
3.     Patients are not opposed to drugs that relieve symptoms but ultimately may shorten their lives.


SPECIAL ARTICLE

Public-Access Defibrillation and Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in Japan


In Japan, the use of public-access defibrillation for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest increased substantially from 2005 to 2013. The rate of 1-month survival with favorable neurologic outcome was significantly higher with than without public-access defibrillation.

Between 2005 and 2013, there were 43,762 documented bystander witnessed cardiac arrests in Japan. 4499 (10.3%) were treated with public-access defibrillators.  Usage of defibrillators increased from 1.1% in 2005 to 16.5% in 2013 due to increasing public access. The primary outcome assessed was survival at one month with favourable neurological outcomes. This was 38.5% for patients treated with public-access defibrillators compared with 18.2% for those not treated with early defibrillation (adjusted odds ratio of 1.80). The number of neurologically functional survivors increased from 6 in 2005 to 201 in 2015 (P< 0.001).



New Pharmacological Therapies


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Levosimendan for the Prevention of Acute Organ Dysfunction in Sepsis


In a randomized trial, over 500 patients with sepsis received levosimendan or placebo in addition to usual care. Levosimendan did not result in a lower likelihood of organ dysfunction or lower mortality.

Levosimendan, a calcium-sensitizing drug with inotropic and vasodilatory properties, was added to usual standard of care for adults with sepsis. The aim was to determine if addition of the drug reduced the frequency of severe organ dysfunction and mortality rate. The results indicated that levosimendan did not reduce the risk of severe organ dysfunction or the mortality rate but did lead to a higher risk of supraventricular tachycardia and a lower likelihood of successful weaning from the respirator. A brief summary of the physiological effects of sepsis is contained within the Introduction.



Other articles which may be of interest to certain students


None.


Wednesday 2 November 2016

NEJM Week of 20th October (# 65)

                                                                                                                                   Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 20th October 2016 (#65)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment



None



Must Read Articles

MEDICINE AND SOCIETY
Closing the Mortality Gap — Mental Illness and Medical Care


People with mental illness die, on average, 13 to 30 years earlier than similar people without mental illness, mostly from medical conditions such as cancer and cardiovascular disease. One contributing factor may be that physicians allow such patients to refuse care.

This article, second in a series on Serious Mental Illness, involves the management of patients who have significant medical or surgical disease along with severe mental illness. This is a Must Read article.

I found several statements (with slight amendments) worth considering:
1.     Doctors assume that because the patient has mental illness, he/she has no quality of life. You can’t just let him/she refuse the treatment.
2.     But though coercion is rarely justifiable, the rationalization that “there’s only so much you can do” risks misrepresenting laziness as respect.
3.     It’s infinitely easier to document that the “patient refused” care than to ensure that the care is provided.
4.     We focus on “fixing the broken system,” but do we stop seeking solutions from within ourselves?
5.     Far harder is overcoming any collective belief that what mentally ill people truly need is not something we can offer.


REVIEW ARTICLE

Graves’ Disease



Graves' disease is an autoimmune disorder in which the thyroid is activated by antibodies to the thyrotropin receptor. The hyperthyroidism that develops is one of many somatic and psychiatric manifestations of the disease that can affect the quality and length of life.

This is an excellent review article particularly on the pathogenesis (Figure 2) and management (Figure 3, Table 2) of Graves’ disease.



Articles Recommended for Medical Students

CLINICAL PRACTICE
Chronic Cough


http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMcp1414215


The evaluation of chronic cough should address the possibilities of asthma, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and postnasal drip and may require more specialized investigations. For patients with refractory chronic cough, other treatment approaches may be necessary.

 

This is an important Clinical Practice article on the approach patients with a chronic cough (persisting for greater than three weeks).  After the common causes have been excluded (lingering viral respiratory tract infection, asthma, GORD, postnasal drip), there still remains a population of patients who will need management of their symptoms. This article provides an approach to this group of patients. The Figures are informative and should be reviewed.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Prevalence of Pulmonary Embolism among Patients Hospitalized for Syncope


Among 560 patients hospitalized for syncope, 97 (17.3%) received a diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. In 61 patients, the most proximal location of the embolus was a main pulmonary artery or a lobar artery or the perfusion defect was larger than 25% of the total area of both lungs.

2584 patients presented to the EDs in Italy with syncope. 1867 were sent home as the cause was apparent (vasovagal syncope, volume depletion, drug-induced hypotension, situational syncope, although eight declined hospitalization). 717 patients were admitted but 157 were excluded for various reasons, leaving the 560 patients for the study.

560 patients were admitted with their first episode of syncope, irrespective of the cause. The question posed by the study was what percentage of the patients were found to have a pulmonary embolus as the cause of the syncope. Of the 560 cohort, 330 (60%) were excluded from further analysis because of low-probability for pulmonary embolism (low probability based on Wells score for PE together with a negative D-dimer). Of the remaining 230 patients (high probability), 42% were found to have a PE. Of the entire 560 patients who were admitted for syncope, the overall risk for PE was 17.3%.


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 32-2016 — A 20-Year-Old Man with Gynecomastia


A 20-year-old man reported a 3-year history of gynecomastia and a 4-year history of polyuria and polydipsia that had recently resolved. Evaluation revealed bilateral gynecomastia, minimal facial hair, small testes, and an elevated serum sodium level. Diagnostic tests were performed.

The patient presented with gynaecomastia and an elevated prolactin level.
He was subsequently diagnosed with hypopituitarism associated with diabetes insipidus (adipsic type i.e. without thirst). An intracranial germ-cell tumour resulted in damage to cells in the hypothalamus producing ADH together with the osmoreceptor cells leading to loss of thirst.

The discussion of pituitary and hypothalamic physiology and the method of determining the site of the lesions by the neuro-ophthalmologist is worth reading.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Romosozumab Treatment in Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis



Romosozumab binds sclerostin, increases bone formation, and decreases bone resorption. Postmenopausal women with osteoporosis were assigned to romosozumab or placebo for 1 year, followed by 1 year of denosumab. Romosozumab was associated with lower vertebral and clinical fracture risk.


EDITORIAL

Building Better Bones with Biologics — A New Approach to Osteoporosis?



An earlier article comparing romosozumab with alendronate and teriparatide for the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis (DEXA results only) was published in the Journal in 2014 (review Figure 2) (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1305224 ).

In this issue of the Journal, patients with postmenopausal osteoporosis were treated with romosozumab (a monoclonal antibody against sclerostin which is produced by osteocytes and inhibits new bone matrix formation by osteoblasts) for 12 months followed by denosumab (a monoclonal antibody which inhibits the action of RANKL leading to decreased bone resorption) for a second 12 months.
The improvement in bone density and reduction in fracture rate in the lumbar spine were very impressive, but similar changes were not statistically significant in non-vertebral sites (Figure 3). Moreover in the 65 patients treated with romosozumab, one developed osteonecrosis of the jaw and one developed an atypical femoral fracture at 12 months, and one patient developed osteonecrosis of the jaw at 24 months following both romosozumab and denosumab.  These events have been previously associated with bisphosphonate use.
The Editorial provides an historical perspective to bisphosphonate use and a critical analysis of the study and should be read.


First Branchial Cleft Cyst



A 3-year-old boy presented to the ED with pain in the right ear and swelling in the postauricular area. When gentle pressure was applied to the postauricular area (shown in a video), keratin debris and purulence were expressed into the osteocartilaginous junction of the ear canal.

This is an interesting case on an inflammatory post-auricular swelling in a three year old boy, particularly the video.



Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


None


Other Articles which should interest medical students


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Guillain–Barré Syndrome Associated with Zika Virus Infection in Colombia



The Guillain–Barré syndrome has been associated with Zika virus infection. In this report from Colombia, further evidence of the association is provided, as well as further characterization of the associated neurologic syndrome.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
EDITORIAL

Zika Getting on Your Nerves? The Association with the Guillain–Barré Syndrome




CORRESPONDENCE

Zika Virus and the Guillain–Barré Syndrome — Case Series from Seven Countries



During the past year and a half, Zika virus has been spreading rapidly throughout Latin America. In this letter, evidence for the Guillain–Barré syndrome being temporally associated with Zika virus transmission is presented.

Comparing the article, the Editorial and the Correspondence, the most information can be derived from the Correspondence which describes the chronological association between ZIKV infection and GBS in seven countries. The Editorial discusses the requirements for establishing epidemiological causality between the virus and GBS and the difficulties establishing this relationship.



New Pharmacological Therapies


None

      
Other articles which may be of interest to certain students



None

Tuesday 1 November 2016

NEJM Week of 13th October, 2016 (#64)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 13th October 2016 (#64)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment


In this week’s Journal there is a series of articles which will lead to further discussion on the treatment of malignancies which are detected in an early phase because of advances in technology. They also explore the inability to predict, at this stage of our medical ignorance, which of these tumours will possibly kill the patient before they die from other comorbidities.

This has been a problem with asymptomatic patients with prostate cancer diagnosed by an elevated PSA and a subsequent confirmatory biopsy. An attempt to answer the question of treatment options has been addressed in a serious of articles in the current issue of the Journal.

Also this issue of the Journal has an article describing the overdiagnosis of breast cancer and how this form of cancer might be managed in the future.

Screening for lung cancer using low-dose CT to monitor those who “continue to smoke” is also mentioned, but I digress.

In a previous issue of the blog (#56) a similar issue was raised for thyroid cancer (http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1604412 ).



Must Read Articles


Perspective

Hard Time or Hospital Treatment? Mental Illness and the Criminal Justice System


When a mentally ill person comes into contact with the criminal justice system, the decision about whether that person belongs in jail or in the hospital is rarely a clinical one. But it may shape the course of the person's life for many years to come.

This Perspective describes the totally different outcomes when a psychotic individual arrested by police is taken to either a jail or to a hospital (in Providence RI). This study give us all pause to reflect on how this applies to Australia, particularly within the Aboriginal community.


MEDICINE AND SOCIETY

Liberty versus Need — Our Struggle to Care for People with Serious Mental Illness


Of 9.8 million U.S. adults with serious mental illness, an estimated 40% receive no treatment in any given year, often with dire consequences. But the structural impediments to care can’t be addressed without reconciling the conflicting ideals underlying them.

This is a must read, compassionate, and evidence-based article which addresses serious mental illness in the US, though equally transferable to Australia. The article outlines the ethical issues involved in treating patients who deny they have a treatable mental illness and reject treatment. This situation is particularly difficult when their future deterioration if untreated is predictable. There is also a section on medical illness and the adverse effects of anti-psychotic drugs in patients with serious mental illness.

I particularly enjoyed reading the final section entitled, “Good and Compassionate Care,” which argues that there should be a middle ground between coercion and persuasion.
 I quote: a University of Southern California law professor who was in high school when she had her first episode of schizophrenia-induced psychosis, offers nuanced analyses of coercion, judgment impairment, and ethical, legal, and medical considerations. Although she is generally protective of autonomy, she advocates a one-time autonomy violation for forced treatment “the first time a person comes to the attention of treaters in a psychotic state.” She also supports a controversial approach called Ulysses grants, whereby people sign agreements when they’re relatively well to receive psychiatric treatment when they have a psychotic episode, overriding any future refusal of care. The latter is really an advanced directive for future psychiatric care.

The article is provocative yet balanced and offers an excellent vehicle to discuss these ethical issues.


Perspective

Hearing without Listening


Computers put patient data at our fingertips, but medical teams hypnotized by their screens may not have the true intellectual interchange that lets them wrap their minds around patients' problems. Yet there are ways to turn computers from our masters into our servants.

My wife correctly points out that I hear without listening.  Thus I cannot but wonder how much of this process applies to the swarms of medical care professionals with or without their WOWs (workshops on wheels) flying from patient to patient on hospital ward rounds.



Articles Recommended for Medical Students



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

10-Year Outcomes after Monitoring, Surgery, or Radiotherapy for Localized Prostate Cancer


In the ProtecT trial, over 1600 men with PSA-detected localized prostate cancer were assigned to active monitoring, prostatectomy, or radiotherapy. Although more patients assigned to active monitoring had disease progression, overall survival was similar in the three groups.



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Patient-Reported Outcomes after Monitoring, Surgery, or Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer


The choice of treatment for PSA-detected, localized prostate cancer is influenced by effects of the interventions on quality of life. In the ProtecT trial, patterns of side-effect severity, improvement, and decline in urinary, sexual, and bowel function differed among the treatments.


EDITORIAL

Treatment or Monitoring for Early Prostate Cancer


These two articles and the Editorial provide the most current information on managing prostate cancer patients found to have an elevated PSA on screening with biopsy proven cancer (Gleason score of 6-7 in 98% of patients).  1643 patients from the UK were randomized equally into groups for active monitoring, radical prostatectomy (robotic prostatectomy was not performed), or radiotherapy with or without 3-6 months of androgen-suppressive therapy.

 A summary of the results and reasonable recommendations (similar to current Australian recommendations) are presented in the Editorial:
1.     For today, we can conclude on the basis of level 1 evidence that PSA monitoring, as compared with treatment of early prostate cancer, leads to increased metastasis.
2.     If a man wishes to avoid metastatic prostate cancer and the side effects of its treatment, monitoring should be considered only if he has life-shortening coexisting disease such that his life expectancy is less than the 10-year median follow-up of the current study.
3.     Given no significant difference in death due to prostate cancer with surgery versus radiation and short-course androgen-deprivation therapy, men with low-risk or intermediate-risk prostate cancer should feel free to select a treatment approach using the data on health-related quality of life and without fear of possibly selecting a less effective cancer therapy.

After considering the data from the study and the adverse effects of each procedure, my personal selection at this stage would be radiotherapy. However as robotic radical prostatectomy was not employed in this study, I predict in the future that, with fewer long-term adverse results by experienced operators, robotic prostatectomy may well become a clear first choice.



IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Congenital Rubella


An 8-month-old child was brought to the clinic by his parents, who reported that he had had white opacities and “shaky” eyes since 4 months of age. On examination, the child had wandering eye movements with bilateral central, dense, white, nuclear congenital cataracts.

Bilateral cataract surgery in this 8 months old child led to significant functional improvement.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Reversible Acute Mesenteric Ischemia


A 60-year-old man presented with abdominal pain and hypotension. He had recently had thrombosis of the superior mesenteric artery; CT showed jejunal dilatation and thinning of the bowel wall. Videos show mucosal gangrene, hemorrhage, and healing.

This is an example of successful conservative medical management of a patient with mucosal necrosis and GI bleeding from acute mesenteric ischaemia in a situation where no further surgical or radiological intervention was possible.


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 31-2016 — A 53-Year-Old Man with Diplopia, Polydipsia, and Polyuria


A 53-year-old man was seen in outpatient clinics of this hospital because of a 1-year history of diplopia, polydipsia, and polyuria. Imaging studies showed mucosal thickening of the sphenoid sinus and enlargement of the pituitary gland. A diagnostic procedure was performed.

IgG4-related disease is an uncommon cause of hypophysitis.

 An excellent discussion of the causes of sellar and suprasellar masses is presented.



ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Breast-Cancer Tumor Size, Overdiagnosis, and Mammography Screening Effectiveness


This study showed that after implementation of mammography screening, the increase in the incidence of small lesions exceeded the decline in the incidence of large lesions, which implied that many of the small tumors were unlikely to become large lesions had they not been detected.


EDITORIAL

Solving the Problem of Overdiagnosis


 As indicated above in the Occasional Editorial Comment, the question will be what to do with small (? overdiagnosed) breast cancers
.
 I cannot imagine a situation currently in which a woman with a small breast cancer (definite histological diagnosis) would elect for watchful waiting rather than, at a minimum, lumpectomy with clear margins considering the low morbidity and adverse effects associated with the procedure (significantly less than radical prostatectomy or thyroidectomy).

The Editorial should be read as it discusses screening and the factors involved in overdiagnosis.

Recommended learning: Review screening as a public health method for prevention of malignant and non-malignant (e.g. lipids and bone density) conditions based on current Australian guidelines.



Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS OF BASIC RESEARCH

Modulating Immunity to Treat Autoimmune Disease


A recent study involving a mouse model showed that a genetically tweaked T cell can specifically target the effector B cell that causes pemphigus vulgaris.

Rather than remove all CD20+ B cells with an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody (Rituximab), which is effective in patients with pemphigus vulgaris associated with autoantibodies directed against desmoglein 3 (Dsg3), the author describes the work of Ellebrecht et al (Science 2016) which describes the use of an engineered T cell in mice capable of selectively removing only the pathogenic autoreactive B cells.  This T cell expresses a chimeric autoantibody receptor whose extracellular domain has been swapped with desmoglein 3. This Dsg3 bearing T cell recognises Dsg3-specific B cells through binding to the B-cell receptor destroying the cell with perforins and cytotoxins.



Other Articles which should interest medical students



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

A Randomized, Controlled Trial of ZMapp for Ebola Virus Infection


Ebola virus causes a devastating clinical illness that is associated with high mortality. In this trial conducted primarily in West Africa during an outbreak, ZMapp (a cocktail of three monoclonal antibodies against Ebola) showed some clinical activity.

Seventy one patients with Ebola infection were randomly assigned into two treatment groups.  One received the current standard of care alone. The other received current standard of care together with a triple monoclonal antibody cocktail against Ebola virus (ZMapp). The mortality rate at 28 days for the group receiving ZMapp was 22%, while for the other was 37%. Although it was apparent that the group receiving ZMapp had a lower mortality rate, the result did not meet the prespecified statistical threshold for efficacy.



New Pharmacological Therapies


None


Other articles which may be of interest to certain students



REVIEW ARTICLE

Cardiovascular Toxic Effects of Targeted Cancer Therapies


Agents targeting signaling pathways in cancer cells are less specific than advertised. A number of these agents induce cardiovascular toxic effects ranging from decreased ejection fraction to atrial arrhythmias.

This review article describes the basis for the new medical subspecialty of cardio-oncology (see Figures 1, 2. Table 1 indicates that virtually all current cancer therapy has the potential for cardiotoxicity).