Wednesday 12 April 2017

NEJM Week of 9th March 2017 (# 85)

Professor Brian Andrews NEJM Recommendations for Medical Students and Tutors
Week of March 9, 2017 (#85)
University of Notre Dame Australia (Fremantle Campus)



Occasional Editorial Comment



This will be the last episode of my NEJM blog. I thank you for your readership and hope that I have stimulated some medical students to regularly review a medical journal of their choice, at least weekly, and to learn to critically review the articles.



Must Read Articles


SOUNDING BOARD

Realizing the Potential of Cancer Prevention — The Role of Implementation Science


Accumulating evidence shows that there are simple methods of reducing the incidence of cancer and cancer-related mortality in people at average and high risk. Further study is needed to better understand how these lifesaving, cost-effective measures can be put to greater use.

This is a short, must read article from the US that discusses the scientific basis for cancer prevention and how the scientific, evidence-based knowledge already acquired can be optimized and standardized to prevent cancer. This is not to say that new research must not be acquired in cancer biology, therapy and prevention, but that the current knowledge should also be used optimally.

The first paragraph provides an excellent overview and should be read by all. Table1 reviews the risk modifiers in cancer prevention and a CDC analysis of the data from each US state. It is interesting, although predictable, that California has the highest per-capita consumption of fruit and vegetables of any state, but of more significance is that Massachusetts, the only US state with universal health care, has the highest percentage of its population screened for colon, breast and cervical cancer. This is a statistic that will fall on the deaf ears of the Trump administration.


REVIEW ARTICLE

Psoriatic Arthritis


Psoriatic arthritis occurs in up to 30% of people with psoriasis and can have serious debilitating effects on the peripheral joints, spine, tendon insertions, and fingers. Management has improved, but complete disease control is not yet achievable.

While most students will not read this review article in its entirety, the Figures and Tables should at a minimum be reviewed. The sections on Coexisting Conditions, Causes and Pathophysiological Features and Therapy make for interesting reading.  This should be read by MEDI6400 students prior to their musculoskeletal rotation.

Recommended learning:  HLA-B27 associated spondyloarthropathies.




Articles Recommended for Medical Students



Perspective

Anesthesia and Developing Brains — Implications of the FDA Warning


The FDA has issued a warning regarding use of general anesthetic and sedation drugs in children under 3 years of age and in pregnant women in their third trimester — a warning that will change practice and raise questions that currently have no clear answer.

The genesis of this concern is predicated upon in vitro and animal studies on species ranging from roundworms to nonhuman primates where all of the anaesthetic agents tested resulted in acute neuroanatomical consequences and associated long-lasting functional effects.

 Without human data, on December 14, 2016, the FDA issued a “Drug Safety Communication” (www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/ucm532356.htm) warning that general anesthesia and sedation drugs used in children less than 3 years of age or in pregnant women in their third trimester who were undergoing anesthesia for more than 3 hours or repeated use of anesthetics “may affect the development of children’s brains.” This warning will result in a labelling change for 11 common general anesthetics and sedative agents that bind to GABA or NMDA receptors, including all anesthetic gases such as sevoflurane, and the intravenous agents propofol, ketamine, barbiturates, and benzodiazepines.

While the duration of most anaesthetics is less than three hours, this warning will still send a chill through most parents whose child needs an anaesthetic but hopefully will not lead to postponing necessary surgery. Studies are currently underway to address this possible concern in humans and hopefully the results will be obtained soon.


Perspective

At Risk for Serious Mental Illness — Screening Children of Patients with Mood Disorders or Schizophrenia


The lack of attention paid to the millions of children born to a parent with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or recurrent major depression is out of phase with the massive need in primary care and the available scientific evidence.

This Perspective highlights the need for the general practitioner, in particular, to consider the potential risks to the child or adolescent of developing a mental illness if one of their parents is affected by schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or recurrent major depression.  The recent population prevalence was estimated at 4% in a large European cohort.  The risk to the child or adolescent of a parent with mental illness developing a mental illness is estimated at 15 -20 times more than where none of the parents have mental illness.

The article discusses four major system based problems and provides possible solutions. I consider this is a very important article to read.


ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Long-Term Outcomes of Imatinib Treatment for Chronic Myeloid Leukemia


After nearly 11 years of follow-up, long-term administration of imatinib was shown to be associated with prolonged control of chronic myeloid leukemia and no cumulative or late toxic effects have emerged.


EDITORIAL

Imatinib Changed Everything


Early published work in 1990 demonstrated that the insertion of the bcr/abl gene of the Philadelphia chromosome into murine haematopoietic stem cells resulted in chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) in the mice.
 Subsequent to the development of a selective inhibitor of the abl tyrosine kinase, Brian Drucker, one of the authors of the present study, in 1996 used this drug to inhibit the growth of bcr/abl positive cultured haematopoietic cells.  In 2001, he extended this work and published the positive results of the safety and efficacy of this drug (imatinib) in the treatment of human CML.

In the current study, he and colleagues present the 10 year follow-up data on the use of imatinib in the treatment of CML. While there are many nuances in the study and subgroup analyses, overall this drug has proved to be extremely effective in treating CML.  Its use produced few significant adverse effects and patients frequently died of unrelated comorbidities.

Prior to the introduction of imatinib into clinical medicine, medical schools had no difficulty in finding CML patients with large spleens for OSCI examinations. Sustained splenic enlargement in CML is now a rare occurrence.

Imatinib basically changed the face of therapeutics in the field of oncology with the development and use of a “designer drug” for the first time. The Editorial provides a very informative historical review of this area as well as a glimpse into the future.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Grouped Pustules on an Erythematous Base


A 27-year-old woman presented with painful lesions on her left arm. A diagnosis was made with the use of a Tzanck smear.
This is a classic skin picture of HSV infection and a positive Tzanck test, useful in diagnosing HSV or VZV infection if immunofluorescence and PCR are not available.


IMAGES IN CLINICAL MEDICINE

Glucagonoma-Associated Rash


A 65-year-old man with type 2 diabetes presented with weight loss and other symptoms that occurred after a rash had developed on his arms, genitals, buttocks, and legs. Imaging showed a pancreatic lesion.



Important Articles Related to Mechanisms of Disease and Translational Research



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Other Articles which should interest medical students



ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Chimpanzee Adenovirus Vector Ebola Vaccine


This update of a preliminary report from November 2014 presents safety, immunogenicity, and long-term durability data from a trial of an Ebola vaccine in humans that is based on a chimpanzee adenovirus type 3 construct with the Ebola Zaire and Sudan glycoprotein inserts.



EDITORIAL

One Step Closer to an Ebola Virus Vaccine


This article and accompanying editorial describe a replication-defective recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus type 3–vectored ebolavirus vaccine (cAd3-EBO) which is used to induce immunity against the Ebola virus. The vaccine immunogen encodes the glycoprotein from Zaire and Sudan species.  This phase 1, dose-escalation, open-label trial of the vaccine was administered to 20 healthy adults, 10 receiving a lower (2x1010 particle-unit dose) and 10 a higher dose (2x1011 particle-unit dose).  T cell responses were assessed over an eight week period with optimal CD4 and CD8 responses obtained from the higher dose.  Durability of the antibody response was best preserved at 48 weeks with the higher dose. Efficacy and phase 2 studies are currently underway.



CASE RECORDS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL

Case 7-2017 — A 73-Year-Old Man with Confusion and Recurrent Epistaxis


A 73-year-old man with a history of heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, and a hepatic venovenous malformation presented with confusion. CT of the abdomen revealed pneumatosis of the ascending colon to the level of the hepatic flexure. Diagnostic tests were performed.

This is a classic clinical diagnosis of a case of hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT, Osler-Weber-Rendu disease) which was confirmed by genetic analysis. The most interesting aspect of this case was the clinical presentation with hepatic encephalopathy produced by a large portal-systemic shunt within an hepatic AV malformation. I was also unaware of an ENT procedure (Young’s procedure) used to obliterate the nostrils to avoid serious blood loss from recurrent epistaxis.

The genes associated with HHT are involved with the TGFb – BMP signalling pathway.  The specific gene mutation associated with this patient involved the ACVRL1 (ALK1, HHT2) gene associated with later age onset, recurrent nose bleeds, AV malformations in the liver, and spine and pulmonary hypertension without shunting.



New and Novel Therapies



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Articles Some Medical Students Found Interesting



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