Tuesday, 21 March 2017

NEJM Week of 16th February 2017 (# 82)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of 16th February 2017 (#82)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment


None


Must Read Articles



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Bariatric Surgery versus Intensive Medical Therapy for Diabetes — 5-Year Outcomes


Five-year data showed that among patients with type 2 diabetes and a BMI of 27 to 43, bariatric surgery plus intensive medical therapy was more effective than intensive medical therapy alone in decreasing or resolving hyperglycemia, even among those with a BMI of less than 35.

This is an important study that compares the results of intensive medical therapy (IMT) alone versus IMT plus bariatric surgery.  In the study, an equal number of patients had a sleeve gastrectomy or gastric bypass/Roux-en-Y. In Australia, most surgeries are now sleeve gastrectomies, or the correction of complications from earlier gastric banding.

Overall the results at five years demonstrate that IMT + surgery is clearly superior to IMT in all parameters (see Table 1, Figure 1). It should be noted that the study was conducted at three pre-eminent institutions (Harvard, the Cleveland Clinic, and Baylor) where “optimal’ IMT is the type of medical therapy one could only strive to attain in most sites in the US or Australia where diabetes is managed. In other words, optimal IMT is very difficult to achieve in other sites, probably making the results seen with bariatric surgery more significant.  In the 87 patients who had bariatric surgery it was remarkable that only one patient during the study had significant complications requiring revision surgery.  Adverse events are documented in Table 2. The long-term data on renal and ophthalmological complications is awaited.



Articles Recommended for Medical Students



Perspective

Addressing the Fentanyl Threat to Public Health


Governments can address widespread fentanyl-related deaths by pursuing a harm-reduction approach involving increased transparency for users and public health and public safety organizations, harm-reduction policing, expanded naloxone use, and targeted treatment.

This Perspective outlines the public health and medical complications following the introduction of fentanyl as an additive to heroine or non-prescribed morphine. Fentanyl, a potent synthetic opioid, is relatively easy and cheap to produce.  Fentanyl has been involved in 41% of deaths from morphine overdose in the US from 2012 through 2014.  In these situations, naloxone needs to be administered earlier and at escalated doses in patients where both fentanyl and morphine are combined, rather than with morphine alone. This will become an increasing problem in Australia as fentanyl is added to street morphine or heroine.



SPECIAL ARTICLE

Opioid-Prescribing Patterns of Emergency Physicians and Risk of Long-Term Use


In this analysis involving Medicare patients seen in emergency departments, rates of opioid prescribing varied widely among emergency physicians. Patients seen by physicians who prescribed opioids more frequently were more likely to use opioids on a long-term basis.

This is a study which attempts to quantify the risks of long-term use of opioids (180 days or more) in patients presenting to the ED in pain and who receive opioids for relief of the pain.  Patients, who have not received opioids within previous six months and who received treatment within the same hospital from high-intensity opioid prescribers were more likely to be taking opioids at six months than if they had initially visited a low-intensity opioid prescriber. This is a complex, well controlled and difficult study to undertake and must be read carefully.  Rates of opioid prescribing appear to vary by a factor of three within the same hospital. The population studied is an older Medicare population in the US, thus rates of long-term opioid use following a single ED visit for pain may differ from a younger population who do not have the comorbid diseases seen in the older population (Table 1).  



IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Gas in the Left Atrium and Ventricle


A 60-year-old man with clinically significant coexisting cardiac conditions presented with chest pain. Shortly after his initial admission, he suddenly collapsed. Scans showed air in his left ventricle.

The moral of the story is to pick a cardiologist who does the most procedures with the lowest frequency of adverse events.



Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research


None


Other Articles which should interest medical students



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Survival and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes among Periviable Infants


This study assessed survival and neurodevelopmental outcomes among infants born at 22 to 24 weeks of gestation, as measured at 18 to 22 months of corrected age, and showed that the rate of survival without neurodevelopmental impairment increased between 2000 and 2011.

EDITORIAL

Neonatal Intensive Care — The Only Constant Is Change

This is a study that addresses mortality and neurodevelopmental outcomes at 18 – 22 months (corrected age) in infants born between 22 - 24 weeks of gestation in three time periods (2000-2003, period 1; 2004 – 2007, period 2; and 2008 – 2011, period 3). It was conducted at 11 centres in the US and was NIH funded.

In infants born at 22 weeks in whom no active treatment was provided (76 -79% over the three periods), there was no change in the death rates (95-98%) or in the number of surviving infants with or without neurocognitive defects (NCDs) over the three periods (Table 2).

In infants born at 23 weeks, in whom active treatment was provided in 70 – 73%, the death rate did not change significantly (76% in period 3 and 80% in periods 1 and 2), although the number of infants surviving without NCDs increased from 7% in period 1 to 13% in period 3 (p = 0.005).

However, in infants born at 24 weeks in whom active treatment was provided (94 – 96%), the death rate fell from 51% to 44% (p <0.001) and the number of infants surviving without NCDs rose from 28 to 32% (p = 0.007) without any significant change in the percentage of infants born with NCDs over the three time periods. Thus, the improvement in mortality was not associated with an increased percentage of infants born with NCDs.
The study is analysed in the accompanying Editorial. Advances have occurred with improvements in perinatal and neonatal care. The limitations of the study are discussed, as are comparative studies in other countries together with the philosophy of care provided at these gestational ages.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Baricitinib versus Placebo or Adalimumab in Rheumatoid Arthritis


In a phase 3 randomized trial of 1307 patients with rheumatoid arthritis receiving background methotrexate, the oral JAK1 and JAK2 inhibitor baricitinib showed superior efficacy to placebo and to the anti–tumor necrosis factor α monoclonal antibody adalimumab.

 Since the introduction of the biological agent etanercept (Enbrel) by Wyeth, rheumatologists have learned how to use methotrexate successfully in rheumatoid arthritis.  Prior to this study, rheumatologists were afraid to use the current therapeutic doses of methotrexate, unlike our oncology colleagues, because of fears of producing bone marrow failure or cirrhosis.  The Wyeth funded study compared Enbrel directly with methotrexate, using an initial mean methotrexate dose of 17.5 mg/week.  Rheumatologists were stunned by the effectiveness of methotrexate, as well as the absence of any significant adverse effects. Wyeth was also stunned by the 12-month data which showed that methotrexate in these doses was as effective at treating RA as their new agent Enbrel. However, there is a happy ending for Wyeth, in that the 2-year data showed that Enbrel fared statistically better than methotrexate alone in treating active RA. This has been the most important study of therapeutics in RA (funded would you believe by a pharmaceutical company), in that it taught rheumatologists how to use methotrexate and introduced the first biological agent in the treatment of RA. We have come a long way since then in treating RA.

The current study introduces the new oral agent baricitinib, an inhibitor of the intracellular Janus kinases, JAK1 and JAK2.  Patients in this 52-week study (1307 patients, phase 3, double-blinded, placebo- and active-controlled trial of moderate to severe active RA who had failed to respond to methotrexate) were maintained on methotrexate (placebo) while other groups were treated with methotrexate together with either adalimumab (a monoclonal antibody against TNFa, standard therapy) or the study drug, baricitinib.

All data points studied, including radiological progression, over the 52-week study (see Figure 1) showed that baricitinib + methotrexate statistically outperformed adalimumab + methotrexate.  The withdrawal rate was slightly greater with baricitinib than adalimumab and adalimumab produced a greater increase in haemoglobin level than baricitinib (Table 2).


Recommended learning: Review the basic groups of drugs used to treat rheumatoid arthritis.                                                                             


CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 5-2017 — A 19-Year-Old Man with Hematuria and a Retroperitoneal Mass


A 19-year-old man presented with a 2-day history of hematuria, without pain, after hiking. Imaging revealed a well-circumscribed 4.6-cm retroperitoneal mass. A procedure was performed.

This CPC involves the differential diagnosis of a South American patient presenting with painless haematuria.  He was found to have a mass which was anterior and medial to the right psoas muscle, anterior to the right common femoral artery and which produced mild medial deviation of the ureter. In the discussion, the cause of the haematuria was attributed to either vigorous exercise or the close proximity of the mass to the ureter (I do not really understand the pathology unless there was invasion of the thick muscular wall of the ureter). Why did the patient not also have a cystoscopy or tuberculin skin test/interferon g release assay and culture/PCR of urine for TB?



New and Novel Therapies



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Osimertinib or Platinum–Pemetrexed in EGFR T790M–Positive Lung Cancer

In a randomized trial involving patients with non–small-cell lung cancer with mutant EGFR (T790M) in whom a tyrosine kinase inhibitor had failed, osimertinib was associated with significantly longer progression-free survival than platinum therapy plus pemetrexed.

Patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer and sensitizing mutations of the epidermal growth factor receptor generally respond well to first -line EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors.  After 9 – 13 months, the majority recur with 60% developing a new EGFR resistance mutation inhibiting optimal binding of the first-line EGFR inhibitor. Osimertinib binds to both the sensitising and resistance EGFR mutations, again inhibiting down-stream signalling.

When osimertinib was compared with platinum + pemetrexed (folic acid antimetabolite inhibiting both purine and pyrimidine synthesis) in patients with advanced disease with both mutations, the former therapy improved disease-free survival over the latter group (10.1 months vs 4.4 months) as well as in the objective response rate (71% vs 31%).  In 144 patients with CNS metastases, progression-free survival was also increased with osimertinib (8.5 months vs 4.2 months). Grade 3 or higher adverse effects were lower in the osimertinib group than in the platinum + pemetrexed group (23% vs 47%).




Articles Some Medical Students Found Interesting



IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Eosinophilic Otitis Media


A 50-year-old man presented with a 6-month history of pain, otorrhea, and progressive hearing loss in both ears. Polypoid masses were found in both external ear canals.


This is an interesting case of otitis media.