{"id":20959,"date":"2012-10-01T10:48:33","date_gmt":"2012-10-01T09:48:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/bmj\/?p=20959"},"modified":"2012-10-01T11:47:28","modified_gmt":"2012-10-01T10:47:28","slug":"richard-lehmans-journal-review-1-october-2012","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/bmj\/2012\/10\/01\/richard-lehmans-journal-review-1-october-2012\/","title":{"rendered":"Richard Lehman&#8217;s journal review\u20141 October 2012"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.bmj.com\/site\/blog\/icons\/richard_lehman.jpg\" alt=\"Richard Lehman\" width=\"160\" height=\"108\" align=\"left\" \/><strong>Arch Intern Med\u00a0 24 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 172<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Of Exercise I sing, and that benignant sweat<br \/>\nWhich from six thousand diabetic brows<br \/>\nExudes. My pen, Hygeia, speed! To save<br \/>\nThat honey-urined tribe from mortal pains<br \/>\nWhich Indolence doth breed, and glut of food:<br \/>\nThat to the treadmill they may go, or healthful jog,<br \/>\nOr bicycle with ever-turning wheel;<br \/>\nThese strivings, Muse, assist me to exhort,<br \/>\nThat to the height of this great Argument<br \/>\nI may assert eternal Exercise:<br \/>\nFor sloth in diabetes hastens death.<\/p>\n<p>I beg your pardon: I was just trying to think of an EPIC way to convey the message of <a href=\"http:\/\/archinte.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=1307570\">this paper<\/a> about the mortality benefit of exercise in a cohort of 5859 diabetic individuals followed up from 1992 onwards in the European Prospective Investigation Into Cancer and Nutrition (aka EPIC). I know there\u2019s confounding and reverse causality to be considered, but the burden of all such studies is always the same: even small amounts of regular exercise buy large amounts of added life.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>1301\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Nothing else in diabetes is as straightforward as the benefit of exercise: blood pressure control in type 2 DM for example, is a subject of such intellectual complexity that I sometimes think only Rod Hayward really understands it. <a href=\"http:\/\/archinte.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=1307572\">The message of this systematic review and meta-analysis <\/a>seems to be fairly clear: if you set a target BP with an upper limit of 130\/80 rather than 140-160\/85-100, you will reduce stroke but have no significant effect on total mortality or myocardial infarction. That may be all that a jobbing clinician needs to remember, but if you drill down just a little deeper, things get a good deal more complex. There is no simple\u2014or even complicated\u2014formula that can just give you a read out of numbers needed to treat for risk reduction in type 2 diabetes with hypertension. You must always consider the totality of cardiovascular risk in the individual patient. If you really want to engage with this, combine this study\u2019s findings with the classic <a href=\"http:\/\/archinte.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=416099\">Timbie, Hayward and Vijan modelling paper from 2010<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>JAMA\u00a0 26 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 308<\/strong><br \/>\n1221\u00a0 <a href=\"http:\/\/jama.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=1362024\">This RCT<\/a> forms a footnote to the systematic review of corticosteroids following tonsillectomy which appeared in the BMJ three weeks ago. It doesn\u2019t really add anything new: there was slightly more bleeding in the steroid group but it did not reach statistical significance.<\/p>\n<p>1227\u00a0\u00a0 Total knee replacement is a safe and highly effective procedure for most patients, but in the UK it is being rationed (again) and in the USA it is sometimes cited as an example of supply-led demand. I rather doubt it: it\u2019s a major operation and most people undergo it with reluctance and foreboding, having tried the various ineffectual alternatives for months or years. The volume curve shown <a href=\"http:\/\/jama.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=1362022\">in this paper<\/a> for this procedure in the Medicare population is very much what you would expect: a steady climb followed by a wobbly plateau. The NHS curve is probably similar, but from this year on it will dip, while the same patients hobble round to the private hospital and hand over their savings to have the same procedure done by the same orthopaedic surgeons who are forbidden to fill their NHS lists.<\/p>\n<p>Interventional cardiologists with itchy fingers will all be citing the FAME study (see<em> NEJM<\/em> two weeks ago) as a reason to put wires in coronary arteries to measure fractional flow reserve (FFR) in stable coronary artery disease. I promised at the time that I wouldn\u2019t comment further on something so far removed from my own field of practice. Here, however, is a technique for measuring FFR without an invasive procedure, unless you count a hefty dose of ionizing radiation as invasive. It is our old friend coronary computed tomographic (CT) angiography with some extra computing thrown in. <a href=\"http:\/\/jama.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=1352969\">In this multinational study<\/a>, 252 patients with stable CAD underwent both CT scanning and invasive FFR measurement with adenosine stimulation. So this is a nice example of a diagnostic study with a simple gold standard: you can plug the figures into your 2&#215;2 table and come up with specificity (73%), sensitivity (90%) and all the rest. Or you can construct a receiver operator curve (AUC, 0.81). Either way, CT derived FFR doesn\u2019t quite cut the mustard. Further refinement might give us more accuracy, but for now, I struggle to think of a clinical use for this imaging modality. People with stable CAD should keep taking their tablets and try to avoid cardiologists with itchy fingers or shiny new CT machines.<\/p>\n<p>1246\u00a0\u00a0 <a href=\"http:\/\/jama.jamanetwork.com\/article.aspx?articleid=1362030\">How to use an article reporting a multiple treatment comparison meta-analysis<\/a> is a very good paper written by all the right people, and it describes all the pitfalls from a good practical clinical perspective. But at the end of the day, all you can derive from such comparisons is weak evidence prone to a range of biases. What we need are lots of good head to head comparisons of common interventions in large typical populations. Ben Goldacre cries out for these in his great new book, <em>Bad Pharma<\/em>, and describes how they could be done easily and cheaply using randomized prescribing in UK general practice. Come on, university departments of primary care: drop what you\u2019re doing and let\u2019s have a programme of coordinated comparative effectiveness research which can deliver the information that clinicians really need for shared decision making with patients.<\/p>\n<p><strong>NEJM\u00a0 27 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 367<\/strong><br \/>\n1187\u00a0\u00a0 Enzalutamide is a drug you will need to get used to. Before long, every patient with treatment-resistant prostate cancer will be taking it. Nearly half a year of added survival without nasty adverse effects is just the thing we have been looking for: at least it\u2019s the thing I have been looking for on behalf of a friend with castration-resistant prostate cancer, until he died in May. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nejm.org\/doi\/full\/10.1056\/NEJMoa1207506\">The AFFIRM trial<\/a> is just your typical pharma run study, ended early because of clear benefit: fewer than ten patients from each of 156 sites in 15 countries, authors with lists of conflicting interests as long as your arm, etc, etc\u2014but this doesn\u2019t alter the validity of the editorial title: Enzalutamide\u2014A Major Advance in the Treatment of Metastatic Prostate Cancer. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nejm.org\/doi\/full\/10.1056\/NEJMe1209041\">That editorial<\/a> is also the best place to go for an understanding of why that should be.<\/p>\n<p>1196\u00a0\u00a0 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nejm.org\/doi\/full\/10.1056\/NEJMoa1208606\">With tiotropium in asthma poorly controlled with standard combination therapy<\/a> we\u2019re back into the murky world of borderline benefit and special pleading. Boehringer Ingelheim and Pfizer ran two good lengthy trials of their new soft-mist delivery Respimat system for tiotropium versus placebo in adults with \u201cpoorly controlled\u201d asthma already taking long-acting inhaled bronchodilators and inhaled corticosteroids. Mean time to first \u201csevere\u201d exacerbation was 226 days in the control groups and 286 days in the active group. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nejm.org\/doi\/full\/10.1056\/NEJMe1209381\">A less than rapturous editorial<\/a> looks at the detail.<\/p>\n<p>1237\u00a0\u00a0 I dipped into this week\u2019s <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nejm.org\/doi\/full\/10.1056\/NEJMra1204512\">Current Concepts review article<\/a> out of mild curiosity, and was surprised by what I learnt. \u201cCases of acute hepatitis E account for a large proportion of cases of acute liver disease in developing countries, with smaller (although unknown) proportions in Europe and the United States.\u201d Gosh. It\u2019s a zoonosis and you can get it from undercooked pork products, wild game and shellfish. PCR tests of most shop-sold p\u00e2t\u00e9 sold in Europe show traces of hep E viral DNA. It comes from the liver: may it go to the liver. Blimey, no more gastronomy for me then. It can also be a pig to diagnose, with no standardization of human serological tests.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Lancet\u00a0 29 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 380<\/strong><br \/>\nThis week\u2019s <em>Lancet<\/em> is largely taken up with global surveys of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thelancet.com\/journals\/lancet\/article\/PIIS0140-6736%2812%2961427-5\/abstract\">maternal<\/a>, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thelancet.com\/journals\/lancet\/article\/PIIS0140-6736%2812%2961415-9\/abstract\">newborn<\/a>, and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thelancet.com\/journals\/lancet\/article\/PIIS0140-6736%2812%2961376-2\/abstract\">child health<\/a>. The global under-5 mortality rate has dropped by 41% and this fall is accelerating, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. But <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thelancet.com\/journals\/lancet\/article\/PIIS0140-6736%2812%2961612-2\/fulltext\">Richard Horton is displeased<\/a>; \u201ca shocking pattern of failure\u201d must be seen and treated with large doses of personal indignation, The <em>Lancet<\/em>\u2019s unfailing remedy for every global ill. What he means is that in some countries (actually just two), under-5 mortality has risen. Not surprisingly, the countries that fare worst are those that the West either ignores completely or fights its proxy wars in. Worthy cause for indignation indeed, but that shouldn\u2019t preclude massive celebration\u2014plus a massive campaign for global contraception if we want progress to continue.<\/p>\n<p><strong>BMJ\u00a0 29 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 345<\/strong><br \/>\nIn the USA, they call it \u201cclinical Gestalt,\u201d but I\u2019m pleased to see that in the UK we can still call it gut feeling. This week I\u2019m facing 12 hours of acute clinical triage, a lot of it involving children with infections, and just now the feeling in my guts is so-so. Every now and again you get one that worries you: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bmj.com\/content\/345\/bmj.e6144\">this paper <\/a>states that about one in 200 children seen in primary care has a serious condition that is easily missed, but in out-of-hours care it\u2019s much more than that. One in 50 perhaps\u2014someone needs to do the study. This one was conducted in Flanders, but the paper also has two Oxford authors who have done a great deal of good work in this area. Rightly, the factor that caused the most concern in doctors was parental anxiety.<\/p>\n<p>Obesity in children is a growing problem on a global scale, although in the UK it is actually falling. Is that due to some wonderful fix discovered by the last government and rolled out by a skilled cadre of public health physicians and community paediatricians? Well no, because no such wonderful fix exists. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bmj.com\/content\/345\/bmj.e5888\">This systematic review<\/a> of the better trials shows that interventions to promote physical activity in children have a negligible effect on physical activity in children, which is overwhelmingly what they do of their own accord. Now if kids were let loose on all the policy documents, local plans, and academic papers ever printed on this subject, and told to tear them up into the tiniest pieces they can, there would be an enormous surge in paediatric exercise levels and enough pulp to save an entire forest.<\/p>\n<p>Some kids, on the other hand, don\u2019t put on enough weight. In babies and toddlers we used to call this failure to thrive, but it seems that the term \u201cweight faltering\u201d is taking over. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bmj.com\/content\/345\/bmj.e5931\">Here\u2019s a rather dry run through the evidence<\/a>, which suggests that we should be more relaxed about it and above all that we shouldn\u2019t immediately suspect parental neglect.<\/p>\n<p>My Oxford colleague Matthew Thompson appears as second author in three papers in this week\u2019s <em>BMJ<\/em>; something perhaps for the Guinness Book of Records. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bmj.com\/content\/345\/bmj.e6212\">This one is an Uncertainties Page<\/a> piece (four pages long) on the factors which influence prognosis in children with acute cough and respiratory infection in primary care. It\u2019s a good topic, because RTIs are the commonest reason for GPs to see pre-school children and also the commonest reason for prescribing them antibiotics. The reviewers don\u2019t find much useful science to guide decision-making in this area, but at least that\u2019s a good starting point for designing some.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Plant of the Week:<em> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.co.uk\/search?q=Lavatera+%E2%80%9CBarnsley%E2%80%9D&amp;hl=en&amp;prmd=imvns&amp;tbm=isch&amp;tbo=u&amp;source=univ&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=oWZpUJCXE6St0QWG2ICoBQ&amp;ved=0CC0QsAQ&amp;biw=1152&amp;bih=708\">Lavatera<\/a><\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.co.uk\/search?q=Lavatera+%E2%80%9CBarnsley%E2%80%9D&amp;hl=en&amp;prmd=imvns&amp;tbm=isch&amp;tbo=u&amp;source=univ&amp;sa=X&amp;ei=oWZpUJCXE6St0QWG2ICoBQ&amp;ved=0CC0QsAQ&amp;biw=1152&amp;bih=708\"> \u201cBarnsley\u201d<\/a><\/strong><br \/>\nIn the 1980s, everybody had this shrub in their gardens, covered in pale pink flowers with a dark boss from July to October. It even achieved a reluctant article in the Royal Horticultural Society\u2019s monthly guide to what proper people grow, The Garden. That seems to have spelt its doom: ever since, it has grown less common, and I begin to miss it.<\/p>\n<p>But I don\u2019t think I would be willing to give scarce garden space to this big straggly shrub again unless someone produced a new range of hybrids. So why don\u2019t they? Lavatera is just a kind of mallow, closely related to the hollyhock. The hollyhocks in England this year have been terrific, and they come in the most ravishingly subtle colours, single or double. But you never know if the plants are going to last for one year or three: seldom more than that. Lavateras last for ten, and it should not be beyond the wit of a molecular hybridist to get some hollyhock genes into these woody mallows and produce shrubs with abundant flowers ranging from greenish white to nearly black with all the softest colours between\u2014pale brownish pink, apricot, blackcurrant purple\u2014to decorate our gardens for months on end. You could cut branches to bring them into the house\u2014and if you do that with a hollyhock, you are likely to discover that the flowers last well and give out a delicious faint pervasive fragrance.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Arch Intern Med\u00a0 24 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 172 Of Exercise I sing, and that benignant sweat Which from six thousand diabetic brows Exudes. My pen, Hygeia, speed! To save That [&#8230;]<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"btn btn-secondary understrap-read-more-link\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/bmj\/2012\/10\/01\/richard-lehmans-journal-review-1-october-2012\/\">More&#8230;<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":38363,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[111],"tags":[317],"class_list":["post-20959","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-richard-lehmans-weekly-review-of-medical-journals","tag-research"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Richard Lehman&#039;s journal review\u20141 October 2012 - The BMJ<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/blogs.bmj.com\/bmj\/2012\/10\/01\/richard-lehmans-journal-review-1-october-2012\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Richard Lehman&#039;s journal review\u20141 October 2012 - The BMJ\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Arch Intern Med\u00a0 24 Sep 2012\u00a0 Vol 172 Of Exercise I sing, and that benignant sweat Which from six thousand diabetic brows Exudes. 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My pen, Hygeia, speed! 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