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.