PRACTICAL POINTERS
FOR
PRIMARY CARE
ABSTRACTED MONTHLY FROM THE JOURNALS
OCTOBER 2005
OBJECTIVE EVIDENCE OF THE PLACEBO EFFECT
BARIATRIC SURGERY—THE ONLY EFFECTIVE APPLICATION TO
CORRECT MORBID OBESITY
NINETEEN POINTS REGARDING BENEFITS OF EXERCISE FOR
HYPERTENSION
NORMAL FASTING GLUCOSE DOES NOT ALWAYS PREDICT ABSENCE
OF DIABETES
DIETARY FOLATE MAY PROTECT AGAINST ALCOHOL-INDUCED
BREAST CANCER
THE ACELLULAR PERTUSSIS VACCINE—EFFECTIVE AND SAFE FOR
USE IN ADOLESCENTS AND ADULTS
CAUTION IN USING ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS FOR ELDERLY
PATIENTS WITH DEMENTIA
REFINING SCREENING FOR DEPRESSION—ADDING A “HELP”
QUESTION
JAMA, NEJM, BMJ, LANCET PUBLISHED
BY PRACTICAL POINTERS, INC.
ARCHIVES INTERNAL MEDICINE EDITED BY RICHARD T.
JAMES JR. MD
ANNALS
INTERNAL MEDICINE
www.practicalpointers.org
This
document is divided into two parts
1)
The HIGHLIGHTS AND EDITORIAL COMMENTS
HIGHLIGHTS condenses the contents of studies, and allows a quick
review of pertinent
points
of each article.
----------
EDITORIAL COMMENTS are the editor’s assessments of the clinical
practicality of articles
based on his long-term review of the current literature and
his 20-year publication of Practical
Pointers.
2) The main ABSTRACTS section is
designed as a reference. It presents structured summaries of the
contents of
articles in much more detail.
I hope you will find Practical Pointers interesting and helpful. The complete content of
all issues for the past 5 years can be accessed at www.practicalpointers.org
Richard T.
James Jr, M.D.
Editor/Publisher.
HIGHLIGHTS AND EDITORIAL
COMMENTS OCTOBER 2005
10-1 PAIN STUDIES
ILLUMINATE THE PLACEBO EFFECT
Recent
studies based on MRI and PET scans of the brain provide the first direct
evidence that the placebo effect is mediated by activation of the receptors in
the endogenous opioid system. This demonstrates a mechanism through which
patient’s expectation of pain relief
can alter their experience of pain and their emotional state.
This
article cites a study in which a salt water solution was injected into the jaws
of healthy male volunteers to maintain a steady state of pain. Brain imaging
studies compared responses of
1) subjects received a placebo that was described as a medicine
which might relieve pain, vs 2)
subjects who did not receive the placebo. The
images differed.
In group 1) areas of the brain containing opioid receptors were activated. In
group 2) they were not activated.
The
mental events induced by placebo can activate mechanisms that are similar to
those activated by drugs. There is a similarity between psychosocial and
pharmacodynamic effects.
The Only Effective
Application To Correct It Morbid Obesity
10-2 WEIGHING IN
ON BARIATRIC SURGERY: Procedure Use, Readmission Rates, And
Mortality
An estimated 5% of the adult population in
the
In recent
years, as the prevalence of obesity has increased, use of bariatric surgery has
increased dramatically.
Combinations of diet therapy, behavior
modifications, prescribed exercise programs, and pharmacotherapy in various
combinations are widely used. They generally accomplish some degree of weight
loss, but unfortunately the loss is generally transient, particularly in
persons with severe obesity. In contrast, over a 10-year period, bariatric
surgery patients have demonstrated sustained weight loss which is sufficient to
favorably affect obesity-related complications.
Despite the exponential increase in
bariatric surgery, and despite surgery being the only
effective application to correct morbid obesity, relatively few persons
actually receive it.
The advent of laparoscopic surgical
techniques and development of high-volume surgical centers has been associated
with improved patient safety. Now,
surgical capacity has increased and is no longer a limiting factor in some
environments. Surgical techniques have improved and favorable outcomes occur in
the majority. “Experience and technique count.”
“On a practical level, patients who
present to their primary care physician with a breast mass or
symptomatic gallstones are routinely referred for surgical consultation.
In contrast, patients who present with severe obesity are routinely entered
into medical treatment programs even if such programs have failed on multiple
previous occasions.”
“Morbid obesity is a significant health
concern. Bariatric surgery offers a potentially effective and enduring
treatment for weight reduction.” It helps resolve co-morbidities of obesity,
and provides a survival benefit. It has had increasing success.
----------
The
editorialist is an enthusiast.
When, if ever,
should primary care clinicians consider advising bariatric surgery?
1)
The patient is morbidly obese and is subject to medical complications and early
death.
2)
The patient should be relatively young and have little co-morbidity.
3)
Repeated attempts to lose have failed miserably.
4)
The clinician knows the consultant surgeons well, and understands that they
have
performed many procedures with long-term success, and little
morbidity and mortality.
5)
The patient wants desperately to lose weight, and is fully informed about outcomes, bad
as well as
good.
Would it be
advisable to wait until the patient opens the subject? There may be good reason
to do so. As with screening procedures, if the clinician opens the discussion
he or she assumes greater responsibility for any adverse outcome. And yet, we
do not wait for patients to open the possibility of surgery if they have
gallbladder disease or a breast mass.
I suspect advice for bariatric surgery
will be given with less reservation in the future.
10-3
REFINING THE EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION FOR HYPERTENSION
Guidelines
for management of hypertension are likely to include advice to: “engage in regular aerobic activity such as
brisk walking (at least 30 minutes a day) most days of the week”.
This
article states that there is enough published work on exercise and hypertension
to refine aspects of this advice.
The
authors present 19 points regarding benefits of exercise.
----------
I am sure the effects of exercise on BP
differ a great deal between individuals.
I was not aware of many of these points.
Primary care patients may find them
helpful. That moderate exercise 3 times a week is as beneficial as more
frequent, prolonged, and strenuous exercise may be welcome news to many. The
flexibility and benefits of accumulating exercise in 10-minute sessions may
increase compliance. The helpfulness of exercise independent of weight loss
might encourage some.
Physical exercise instructors may post
these points to foster continuing compliance with exercise programs they offer
their clients.
The
Proportional Reduction In The Event Rate Per Mmol/L
Reduction In LDL-C Was Largely Independent Of The Pre-Treatment Level
Observational
studies indicate a continuous relationship between coronary heart disease (CHD)
risk and low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) concentrations. There is no definite threshold below which
lowering LDL-c is not associated with lower risk.
This
systematic meta-analysis was designed to remove uncertainty about
over-estimating and under-estimating of effects of statin drugs on CHD, and
other vascular or non-vascular outcomes.
Outcomes
were reported as the effects per 39 mg/dl (1.0 mmol) reduction in LDL-c. Mean
follow-up = 5 years.
Five-year
absolute benefits per 39 mg/dL reduction in LDL-c:
A.
Participants without previous CHD:
Outcomes
avoided per 1000 participants:
Major
coronary events 8
Coronary
revascularizations 12
Stroke 5
Major
vascular events 25
B.
Participants with previous CHD:
Outcomes
avoided per 1000 participants:
Major
coronary events 30
Coronary
revascularizations 27
Stroke 8
Major
vascular events 48
Effects
were evident during the first year. Benefits were greater in subsequent years.
Absolute benefits increased with continuing treatment.
There was no evidence that lowering LDL-c by 39
mg/dL over 5 years increased the risk of non-vascular cause of death or any
type of cancer. (Statins remain among the
safest of the major dugs used today. RTJ)
The
proportional reduction in the event rate per mmol/L reduction in LDL-c was
largely independent of the
pre-treatment level:
Lowering LDL-c from 156 to 117 reduces the
risk of vascular events by about 23%
Lowering LDL-c from 117 to 78 also reduces
(residual) risk by about 23%.
Treatment
goals should aim chiefly to achieve substantial reductions in LDL-c (rather
than to
achieve particular
target levels) since the risk reductions are proportional to the absolute LDL-c
reduction.
----------
LDL-c is only one of many risk factors for
CVD. Even if LDL-c were controlled to the maximum, some risk would persist. The
goal of therapy is to reduce all risk factors concomitantly I believe that benefits from lowering all
factors to a modest degree (even if not reduced to “normal”) would reduce risk
more than lowering LDL-c maximally without concern for other risk factors.
Should The
“
10-5 NORMAL
FASTING PLASMA GLUCOSE LEVELS AND TYPE 2 DIABETES IN YOUNG MEN
The
normal fasting plasma glucose (FPG)
is now defined as less than 100 mg/dL. An “impaired FPG” is now considered to
range between 100 and 125.
Persons
with impaired FPG are at increased risk for type two diabetes
(DM2).
Do
FPG levels below 100 (especially those in the 90s) independently predict DM2 in
young adults? Better and earlier
identification of young adults at risk of DM2 may lead to interventions aimed
at delaying onset of DM2.
This
study followed over 13 000 men age 26 to 45 (mean = 33) for 14 years. All had
baseline FPG under 100. None had DM2.
Primary
endpoint = incidence of DM2 defined as FPG of 126 or more. Mean follow-up = 6
years.
Compared
with FPG less than 82,
risk of DM2 progressively increased as FPG rose from 82 to 99.
Hazard
ratios for DM2 according to quintiles of normal fasting glucose:
Quintile
1 2 3 4 5
Fasting
plasma glucose 50-81 82-86 87-90 91-94 95-99
Number
of incident DM2 20 24 37 50 77
Risk
of DM2 increased when other risk factors were associated with FPG:
Hazard ratios for DM2 when TG and
FPG were combined:
FPG
<
87 88-90 91-99
TG
< 150 1.00 1.76 2.65
TG > 150 2.42 5.26 8.23
Hazard ratios for DM2 when BMI and FPG were
combined:
FPG
<
87 78-90 91-99
BMI
24 and less 1.00 0.75 1.79
BMI
25-29.9 1.99 2.75 4.77
BMI
30 and more 3.42 7.78 8.29
In
apparently healthy young adults, risk of developing DM2 rose across quintiles
of FPG levels usually
considered to be
within normal range. A FPG in the high “normal” range may predict DM2.
Risk
increases when other factors are associated with a high “normal” FPG: higher BMI and triglyceride levels,; age; family history; sedentary lifestyle; abdominal
girth.
----------
When clinicians inform a patient that her
blood test is “normal”, this in no way indicates that risk of associated
disease is absent—only that risk may be lower than in patients with an ”
abnormal” test.
Patients should realize that risk
increases when risk factors are combined even if they are all “normal”,
especially if they are “high normal”.
There is a continuum, not an absolute cutpoint. “Normal” is not
necessarily normal anymore. It is relative. A given level of a risk factor may be
normal for one patient and abnormal for another. It is the combination of risk
factors, not the level of one, which determines risk.
This advances the concept that lowering
all risk factors (BP, lipids, BMI, abdominal girth, FPG) is beneficial even if
they are not reduced to “normal”.
The term “favorable” might replace
“normal”.
The term “requires intervention” should be
used more frequently.
10-6
DOES DIETARY FOLATE INTAKE MODIFY EFFECT OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION ON
BREAST CANCER RISK: Prospective Cohort
Study
High alcohol consumption is a known risk
factor for breast cancer (BC).
Although the association is modest, its adverse effect on BC is one of the most
consistent findings among dietary risk factors.
Some
studies report an inverse association between folate intake and risk of BC.
This study asked: Is the association
between alcohol consumption and risk of BC modified by intake of dietary
folate?
This
prospective cohort study recruited and followed over 17 000 women age 40-69 at
baseline (mean = 55)
At baseline, obtained information about alcohol consumption.
Calculated folate intake from a dietary
questionnaire.
Hazard
ratios for BC considering both alcohol and folate intake: For women who consumed 40 g alcohol per day
and 400 ug of folate daily the rate of
BC was half that of women who consumed 40 g alcohol per day and 200ug folate. (A suggestive protective effect.)
Women
who had a high alcohol intake and a low folate intake had increased risk of BC.
Women who had a high alcohol intake and a
high folate intake were not at increase risk.
----------
Value of a therapeutic intervention has
been defined as the ratio between benefit/harm-cost.
Benefit depends on the absolute risk
reduction (Number needed to treat to benefit one patient). It also
depends on
the type of benefit achieved. Preventing a BC may be considered a greater
benefit than
preventing
a less ominous outcome.
Harm depends on the absolute number of
adverse effects. (NNT to treat to harm one patient.) It also depends
on the
severity of the harm produced.
Cost is a basic consideration for primary
care. It is seldom mentioned in scientific reports. Availability and
accessibility
are also cost considerations.
Folic acid has been reported to benefit
(reduce risk of) neural tube defects, osteoporotic fractures, congestive heart
failure, dementia and Alzheimer’s disese. And now, BC in
heavy alcohol consumers.
Consider the benefit/harm-cost ratio of a
daily supplement of folic acid:
Benefit (except for reduction of
risk of spina bifida) is not
firmly established. Evidence of benefit is
strongly
suggestive.
Cost is nil. Harm is nil if B12
deficiency is not present. Availability
and accessibility are high.
Because the absolute level of the
denominator of the ratio (harm-cost) is so low, the benefit/harm-cost ratio may
be very high.
I believe many primary care clinicians
will prescribe daily folate (in a multivitamin capsule) for many patients on
the basis of the high putative benefit and low harm-cost.
10-7 EFFICACY OF AN ACELLULAR PERTUSSIS VACCINE
AMONG ADOLESCENTS AND ADULTS
During
the past 50 years, routine immunization of children has dramatically decreased
the burden of childhood pertussis.
Immunization
of children has not decreased the
incidence of disease in older persons, nor has it eliminated the transmission
of infections to unimmunized children.
Infections
among adolescents and adults result from waning immunity. Neither immunization
nor natural infection induces long-term immunity. Most adult cases are not
suspected.
This
trial, sponsored by the National Institute of Health, aimed to ascertain the
protective efficacy of acellular pertussis vaccine among adolescents and adults
Double-blind
multicenter trial randomized over 2700 healthy subjects mean age 35 to 1) a
single dose of acellular pertussis vaccine used alone, or 2) a control vaccine
(hepatitis A).
A
total of 2672 illnesses with cough lasting over 5 days were evaluated.
Ten
cases met the criteria for pertussis:
Nine in controls.
One
in vaccine group
The
incidence of pertussis in the control group = 9 cases per 2444 persons over 2
years. (390 cases
per 100 000
person-years. ~ 4 per 1000 between ages 15 to 65.)
Overall
efficacy of the vaccine = 92%
Vaccine
safety: Serious adverse events occurred
in 140 of 1391 subjects—equally in both groups. None
were deemed to
be vaccine-related.
Pertussis
in adults is not uncommon. Extrapolating the rate of pertussis reported in this
study
would result in
an estimated 1 million cases each year in the
or mild
infections.
Pertussis
is one of the least well controlled illnesses that are preventable by vaccine.
Immunization of
adolescents between
ages 10 and 19 may be the most beneficial initial strategy in view of ease of administration and costs.
----------
The purified acellular vaccine is
associated with fewer local and systemic reactions than the whole-cell vaccine.
Should Be
Used Only When A Demented Patient Has An Identifiable Risk Of Harm To
Themselves Or To Others.
10-8 ANTIPSYCHOTIC
DRUGS IN DEMENTIA
Antipsychotic
drugs are used to treat psychiatric and behavioral symptoms that affect the
majority of persons with dementia. In nursing homes, where many residents have
dementia, up to 25% of individuals receive such therapy.
In
the 1990s, the introduction of atypical, or second-generation, antipsychotic
drugs was met with enthusiasm because the rate of adverse effects (parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia) was reported to be
lower. However, in 2003 a study reported higher rates of cardiovascular adverse
events and mortality in patients with dementia-
associated agitation
and psychosis who were treated with the newer antipsychotic risperidone (Risperdal ) compared with placebo.
“Antipsychotic
drugs should not be used when non-drug treatments are available and the risk of
harm or significant distress is low.”
“Patients
with hallucinations and delusions that are neither distressing nor placing
themselves or others at risk or harm should not be treated with antipsychotic
drugs.”
----------
At present, we cannot say that there is a
“safe” antipsychotic drug. And we cannot say that one drug is safer than
another.
Primary care clinicians who follow nursing
home patients should ask themselves__”Am I prescribing this antipsychotic to
benefit the patient, or to benefit the staff and the family?”
10-9
EFFECT OF THE ADDITION OF A ”HELP” QUESTION TO TWO SCREENING QUESTIONS
ON SPECIFICITY FOR DIAGNOSIS OF DEPRESSION IN GENERAL PRACTICE
Two
questions have been used as a screening test for depression:
1)
During the past month have you often been bothered by feeling down, depressed,
or hopeless?
2)
During the past month have you been bothered by little interest or pleasure in
doing things?
The
sensitivity of the screen is high. If
the patient is indeed depressed, one or two questions will be answered “yes”.
(True positive rate = > 90%.)
The
specificity however, is relatively low (~ 60% to 85%). Many persons who are not
actually depressed will answer
“yes”. (False positive rate ~ 15% to
40%)
This
study adds a 3rd question.
“Is
there something for which you would like help? ”
Adding
the help question improved specificity (increased true negative responses from
78% to 89%, and reduced false positive responses from 22% to 11%. This
increased the likelihood that a positive screen does indeed denote depression.
----------
I believe screening for depression in some
groups of primary care patients should be applied universally. (Almost any
serious condition with a prevalence of 5% requires screening.)
The authors of the study suggest the
questions be put in writing for the patient to answer.
Will adding the “help”
question aid the diagnosis? The
study says so. It is simple and takes little additional time and bother.
What to do if the questions are answered
positively? Certainly, not reach
immediately for the prescription pad. Further conversation will allow patients
to ventilate (which in itself may be helpful), and may lead to a better
understanding of their problem and more willingness to seek help..
10-10
SENSITIVITY, SPECIFIFITY, POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO, NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD
RATIO OF SCREENING TESTS FOR DEPRESSION:
Review by the Editor
Statistical analysis in now an essential component of studies
presented by peer-reviewed journals.
Primary care clinicians do not need
to be expert statisticians, but they should know and be able to calculate
several basic functions. Clinicians should be familiar with the meaning of
sensitivity, specificity, positive likelihood ratio, and negative likelihood
ratio, and be able to calculate them from the data presented. This will enhance
enjoyment of journal-reading and make it more meaningful.
Some
articles present the opportunity to review these aspects of statistics as
applied to general clinical practice. I enjoy calculating them.
Although
I have calculated them many times from various studies, I still struggle to get
them right, and then wonder if I did indeed get them right. A periodic
refresher is required.
The
preceding study allowed me to make these calculations from the data presented.
ABSTRACTS OCTOBER 2005
10-1 PAIN STUDIES ILLUMINATE THE
PLACEBO EFFECT
Recent
studies based on MRI and PET scans of the brain provide the first direct
evidence that the placebo effect is mediated by activation of the receptors in
the endogenous opioid system. This demonstrates a mechanism through which
patient’s expectation of pain relief
can alter their experience of pain and their emotional state.
For
decades, there has been evidence that the endogenous opioid system plays a key
role in the mechanism of the placebo effect.
The effect can be blocked by the opioid-inhibitor, naloxone.
This
article cites a study in which a salt water solution was injected into the jaws
of healthy male volunteers to maintain a steady state of pain. Brain imaging
studies compared responses of
1) subjects received a placebo that was described as a medicine
which might relieve pain, vs 2)
subjects who did not receive the placebo. The
images differed.
In group 1) areas of the brain containing opioid receptors were activated. In
group 2) they were not activated.
A
picture on page 1750 illustrates the difference in images of brain activity
when a subject received a pain stimulus alone vs a pain stimulus + a placebo.
The difference is striking. “The study showed changes in opioid release occur
directly in the brain in regions of the brain most closely associated with
subjective feelings, reward, and pain experience.”
“This
emerging understanding of the placebo effect suggests that a patient’s
assessment of a situation could have important clinical implications.” The
mental events induced by placebo can activate mechanisms that are similar to
those activated by drugs. There is a similarity between psychosocial and
pharmacodynamic effects. Individuals who have a strong placebo response may
have an adaptive advantage over those who do not.
There
are implications of the physician-patient relationship—how physicians can
influence patients’ expectations.
To
determine whether patients’ expectations or beliefs about their treatment are
affecting the outcomes of clinical trials, some researchers are designing
studies that compare a drug’s effects when: 1) Patients know they are receiving
the drug vs 2) When the drug is given covertly. A review of overt-covert
clinical trials of medications for pain, anxiety, and Parkinson disease
reported that treatments were less
effective when the patients did not
know they were receiving the drug.
JAMA
The Only
Effective Application To Correct Morbid Obesity
10-2 WEIGHING
IN ON BARIATRIC SURGERY: Procedure Use, Readmission Rates, And Mortality
An
estimated 5% of the adult population in the
In recent
years, use of bariatric surgery has increased dramatically as the prevalence of
obesity has increased..
Combinations of diet therapy, behavior
modifications, prescribed exercise programs, and pharmacotherapy in various
combinations are widely used. They generally accomplish some degree of weight
loss, but unfortunately the loss is generally transient, particularly in
persons with severe obesity. In contrast, over a 10-year period, bariatric
surgery patients have demonstrated sustained weight loss which is sufficient to
favorably affect obesity-related complications.
The advent of laparoscopic surgical
techniques and development of high-volume surgical centers has been associated
with improved patient safety.
Despite the exponential increase in bariatric
surgery, relatively few morbidly obese persons actually
receive it.
“On a practical level, patients who
present to their primary care physician with breast mass or symptomatic
gallstones are routinely referred for surgical consultation. In contrast,
patients who present with severe obesity are routinely entered into medical
treatment programs even if such programs have failed on multiple previous
occasions.”
What explains the disparity between the
recognition of the health consequences of severe obesity and . . .
“the only effective application to correct it”? Primary care clinicians heretofore may have
been reluctant to advise surgery because only a few surgeons were routinely
performing bariatric surgery, and the awareness that bariatric surgery has the
potential for adverse effects including mortality, rehospitalization, and
disability. In addition, the same communication system that informs patients of
the successes of surgery also provides anecdotal reports of adverse outcomes.
There is a perception that weight loss achieved by bariatric surgery may be
transient especially for certain procedures.
Now, surgical capacity has increased and
is no longer a limiting factor in some environments. Surgical techniques have
improved and favorable outcomes occur in the majority. “Experience and
technique count.”
Health care funding still constitutes a
barrier to access, especially for those who are uninsured.
“Morbid obesity is a significant health
concern. Bariatric surgery offers a potentially effective and enduring
treatment for weight reduction.” It helps resolve co-morbidities of obesity,
and provides a survival benefit. It has had increasing success.
JAMA
10-3 REFINING
THE EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION FOR HYPERTENSION
Guidelines
for management of hypertension are likely to include advice to: “engage in regular aerobic activity such as
brisk walking (at least 30 minutes a day) most days of the week”.
This
article states that there is enough published work on exercise and hypertension
to refine aspects of this advice:
1)
One session of exercise can lower BP acutely for up to 24 hours. This requires
only
moderate-pace walking (at 40% of maximal capacity).
to pre-exercise levels in 1 to 2 weeks.
3)
Exercise in hypertensive patients results in a larger
reduction in BP than in normotensive patients.
4) Regular
exercise lowers BP in 75% of persons with hypertension by an average
11/8 mg Hg.
5) Exercise
can reduce 10-year cardiovascular risk by at least 25% in the average patient
with hypertension because of the effect on BP and other risk
factors.
6)
Exercising 3 times a week is as effective in lowering BP as exercising 5 times
a week.
7)
There seems to be little difference in effect on BP reduction between
exercising at a rate
of 373 kcal vs 1866 kcal a week (3 minutes of moderate
walking a week vs 60
minutes brisk walking a week).
8)
Cardiovascular fitness and lipid profiles can be improved in persons with
hypertension
by accumulating the required exercise in brief episodes of
10-minute sessions several times throughout the day.
9) The
flexibility of accumulating exercise in 10-minute sessions throughout the day,
and
knowing that benefits start after the first day of exercise
might improve exercise prescription uptake and motivation.
10)
Aerobic exercise appears to be more effective than resistance exercise in
lowering BP.
11)
Any type of aerobic activity seems to work, including walking, jogging, or
cycling.
Cycling
seems to be the most effective.
12)
BP reduction with exercise is independent of weight loss. (Weight loss
typically needs
twice the energy expenditure to achieve.)
13)
Low to moderate intensities of exercise are as effective, if not more
effective, in
lowering BP than vigorous exercise. Vigorous exercise can
increase platelet activity and adhesion. This can increase risk of sudden death
after exercise, especially in previously sedentary persons.
14)
Platelet activity is inhibited by moderate exercise. Platelet adhesion is
reduced by
regular exercise.
15)
Although BP often rises acutely during exercise, this response is attenuated by
regular
exercise.
16)
Exercise is associated with reductions in cardiac output, stroke volume, and
left ventricular
end-diastolic pressure.
17)
Regular exercise improves myocardial contractility, coronary perfusion, arterial
compliance, and endothelial function.
18)
Regular moderate exercise can also reverse left ventricular hypertrophy.
19)
The recommended exercise prescription for lowering BP in patients with
hypertension
can be tailored, and can involve any intermittent or continuous aerobic activity of at least 30
minutes a day three or more times a week.
Lancet
The
authors provide 14 references. They are certainly enthusiastic.
The
Proportional Reduction In The Event Rate Per Mmol/L
Reduction In LDL-C Was Largely Independent Of The Pre-Treatment Level
10-4 EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF
CHOLESTEROL-LOWERING TREATMENT: Prospective
Meta-Analysis From 90 056 Participants In 14
Randomised Trials Of Statins
Observational
studies indicate a continuous relationship between coronary heart disease (CHD)
risk and low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) concentrations. There is no definite threshold below which
lowering LDL-c is not associated with lower risk.
This
systematic meta-analysis was designed to remove uncertainty about
over-estimating and under-estimating of effects of statin drugs on CHD, and
other vascular or non-vascular outcomes.
Conclusion: Statin therapy safely reduced 5-year
incidence of major coronary events, and stroke, irrespective of the initial
lipid profile.
STUDY
1. This prospective meta-analysis
obtained data from over 90 000 individuals in 14 randomized trials of statin
therapy.
2. Main prespecified outcomes
were: 1) all cause mortality, 2) CHD
mortality. 3) non-CHD mortality. Secondary
outcomes included effects on stroke, cancer, and vascular procedures.
3. Outcomes were reported as the
effects per 39 mg/dl (1.0 mmol) reduction in LDL-c.
4. Mean follow-up = 5 years.
RESULTS
1. During follow-up there were over
8100 deaths; 14
000 major vascular events; 5000 cancers.
2. Mean LDL-c differences at 1 year
was 42.5 mg/dL. At 5 years was 31 mg/dL. (The difference
reflected non-compliance.)
3. Effects on mortality of a 39
mg/dL LDL-c reduction:
Treatment (%) Control (%) Absolute
difference (%) NNT
(n
= 45 000) (n = 45 000)
CHD death 3.4 4.4 1.0 100
Stroke death 0.6 0.6 --
Any
vascular death 4.7 5.7 1/0 100
Any death 8.5 9.7 1.2 83
4. Effect on vascular events per 39
mg/dL reduction LDL-c:
Non-fatal
MI 4.4 6.2 1.8 55
Major
coronary event 7.4 9.8 2.4 42
Coronary
revascularization 5.8 7.6 1.8 55
Ischemic
stroke 2.8 3.4 0.6 166
Any
major vascular event 14.1 17.8 3.7 29
Hemorrhagic
stroke 0.2 0.2
5. Five-year
absolute benefits per 39 mg/dL reduction in LDL-c:
A.
Participants without previous CHD:
Outcomes
avoided per 1000 participants:
Major
coronary events 8
Coronary
revascularizations 12
Stroke 5
Major
vascular events 25
B.
Participants with previous CHD:
Outcomes
avoided per 1000 participants:
Major
coronary events 30
Coronary
revascularizations 27
Stroke 8
Major
vascular events 48
6. Effects were evident during the
first year. Benefits were greater in subsequent years. Absolute
benefits increased with continuing treatment.
7. Safety:
A. There
was no evidence that lowering LDL-c
by 39 mg/dL over 5 years increased the risk of non-vascular
cause of death or
any type of cancer.
B.
The incidence of rhabdomyolyis was very low (0.1%). However, no trial used high doses of statins.
C.
Incidence of raised liver enzymes was not obtained.
D. Adverse
effects with treatment beyond 5 years must be studied.
DISCUSSION
1. There was an approximately
linear relationship between the absolute reductions in LDL-c and the
proportional
reductions in coronary and other major vascular events.
Larger LDL-c reductions produced larger
reductions in vascular disease risk.
2. If all participants had been
compliant, and had taken the statin regularly, benefits would have been greater
by
about 2%. Full
compliance with statins can reduce LDL-c by substantially more than 39 mg/dL.
3. A reduction of LDL-c of 60 mg/dL
with sustained statin therapy
might be expected to reduce incidence of
major vascular events by about one third.
4. The absolute reduction in LDL-c
with a particular dose of statin tended to be smaller among
those presenting with a lower LDL-c than among those with a higher
LDL-c.
5. But, the proportional reduction
in the event rate per mmol/L
reduction in LDL-c was largely
independent of the
pre-treatment level:
Lowering LDL-c from 156 to 117 reduces the
risk of vascular events by about 23%
Lowering LDL-c from 117 to 78 also reduces
(residual) risk by about 23%.
A reduction of 78 mg/dL might be expected
to reduce risk by as much as 40%
6. Treatment goals should aim
chiefly to achieve substantial reductions in LDL-c (rather than to
achieve particular target levels) since the risk reductions
are proportional to the absolute LDL-c reduction.
CONCLUSION
Statin
therapy safely reduced the
5-year incidence of major cardiovascular events by about one
fifth for each 39 mg/dL reduction in LDL-c.
Long-term therapy should be considered in all patients at high risk of
any type of major vascular event.
Lancet
Should The
“
10-5 NORMAL
FASTING PLASMA GLUCOSE LEVELS AND TYPE 2 DIABETES IN YOUNG MEN
The normal fasting plasma glucose (FPG) is now defined as less than 100
mg/dL. An “impaired FPG” is now considered to range between 100 and 125.
Persons
with impaired FPG are at increased risk for type two diabetes
(DM2).
This
study asked: Do FPG levels below 100
(especially those in the 90s) independently predict DM2 in young adults? Better and earlier identification of young
adults at risk of DM2 may lead to interventions aimed at delaying onset of DM2.
This study
was based on determinations of FPG and data from physical examinations of men
in the Israel Defense Forces age 26 to 45.
Conclusion: FPG levels within the high “normal” range
were an independent risk factor for DM2 especially when combined with higher
levels of other risk factors.
STUDY
1. Followed over 13 000 men age 26
to 45 (mean = 33) for 14 years. Women were not included.
2. All had baseline FPG under 100. None had DM2.
3. Primary endpoint = incidence of
DM2 defined as FPG of 126 or more.
4. Two subjects developed type 1
diabetes. They were excluded from the study.
5. Mean follow-up = 6 years.
RESULTS
1. A total of 208 incident cases of
DM2 occurred during over 74 000 person-years. All had FPG of
126 or more on two occasions.
2. Compared with FPG less than 82, risk of DM2
progressively increased as FPG rose from
82 to 99.
Hazard
ratios for DM2 according to quintiles of normal fasting glucose:
Quintile
1 2 3 4 5
Fasting
plasma glucose 50-81 82-86 87-90 91-94 95-99
Number
of incident DM2 20 24 37 50 77
3. Risk of DM2 increased when other
risk factors were associated with FPG:
Hazard ratios for DM2 when TG and
FPG were combined:
FPG
<
87 88-90 91-99
TG
< 150 1.00 1.76 2.65
TG > 150 2.42 5.26 8.23
Hazard
ratios for DM2 when BMI and FPG were combined:
FPG
<
87 78-90 91-99
BMI
24 and less 1.00 0.75 1.79
BMI
25-29.9 1.99 2.75 4.77
BMI
30 and more 3.42 7.78 8.29
DISCUSSION
1. In apparently healthy young
adults, risk of developing DM2 rose across quintiles of FPG levels usually
considered to be within normal range. A FPG in the high
“normal” range may predict DM2.
2. Risk increases when other
factors are associated with a high “normal” FPG: higher BMI and triglyceride
levels; age; family
history; sedentary lifestyle.
3. FPG levels are largely
determined by hepatic glucose production. A relative overproduction of hepatic
glucose
which is exaggerated by obesity may exist early in the
natural history of diabetes.
CONCLUSION
Higher
FPG levels within the “normal” range may constitute a risk factor for DM2 in
young men. Risk is enhanced by concomitant overweight, higher triglyceride
levels, and other risk factors.
NEJM
An
editorial by Ronald A Arky,
On the
surface, patients asking “Are my laboratory results normal?” seems a benign,
straightforward question which should lend itself to a simple answer. Over the
past several decades, the complexity of this question has been compounded by
the increased number of epidemiological studies that point out how differences
in sex, ethnic backgrounds, age, and a multiplicity of other factors may
determine what is “normal”. There has been a redefinition of what is normal and
what should be the desired level of interventions.
10-6 DOES
DIETARY FOLATE INTAKE MODIFY EFFECT OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION ON BREAST CANCER
RISK: Prospective Cohort Study
High alcohol consumption is a known risk
factor for breast cancer (BC).
Although the association is modest, its adverse effect on BC is one of the most
consistent findings among dietary risk factors.
Some
studies report an inverse association between folate intake and risk of BC.
This study asked: Is the association
between alcohol consumption and risk of BC modified by intake of dietary
folate?
Conclusion: An adequate intake of folate might protect
against BC.
STUDY
1. This prospective cohort study
recruited and followed over 17 000 women age 40-69 at baseline (mean = 55)
2. Followed for 9 to 13 years (mean
= 10 years).
3. At baseline, obtained
information about alcohol consumption. Calculated folate intake from a dietary
questionnaire.
4. Divided alcohol consumption into
5 categories:
Abstainers
Ex-drinkers
1-19
g/day
20-39
g/day
40 and 0ver g/day.
5. Main outcome measure = BCs
diagnosed during follow up.
RESULTS
1. Diagnosed 537 incident BCs
during follow-up.
2. Hazard ratios for BC considering
alcohol intake alone:
Hazard
rate of BC increased by 1.03% for each 10g/day increase in alcohol consumption
The
highest hazard ratio occurred in women who consumed 40g/day or more.
(This agrees with the many studies which
have reported that high alcohol intake increase risk of BC.)
4. Hazard ratios for BC considering
both alcohol and folate intake:
For
women who consumed 40 g alcohol per day and 400 ug of folate daily the rate of BC was half that of
women who consumed 40 g
alcohol per day and 200ug folate. (A suggestive protective
effect.)
DISCUSSION
1. The authors cite a meta-analysis
of 53 epidemiological studies comparing women who abstained from alcohol
with those reporting an average intake of 45 g/d. The
relative hazard of BC in the alcohol group was 1.46. The present study agrees with the increased
alcohol-BC risk.
2. The study found a significant
association between risk of incident BC and alcohol consumption and folate
intake. Women who had a high alcohol intake and a low folate
intake had increased risk of BC. Women who had
a high alcohol intake and a high folate intake were not at increase risk.
3. The mechanism is not clear. The impact of alcohol consumption on hormonal
status is likely to be a major
contributor.
CONCLUSION
This
study supports the hypothesis that alcohol consumption may increase the risk of
BC through an interaction with folate. Some of the adverse effects of alcohol
may be reduced by sufficient dietary folate intake.
BMJ October 8, 2005; 331:
807-10 Original investigation, first
author Laura Baglietto, Cancer Epidemiology Centre, Victoria, Australia.
10-7
EFFICACY OF AN ACELLULAR PERTUSSIS VACCINE AMONG ADOLESCENTS AND ADULTS
Bordetella pertussis causes whooping cough in
non-immune persons. The illness is characterized by prolonged cough. The severity of the
illness varies with age, immune status (prior immunization or infection), and
probably the extent of the exposure and the virulence of the organism. Infections can be asymptomatic, mild, or
classic in presentation.
During
the past 50 years, routine immunization of children has dramatically decreased
the burden of childhood pertussis.
Immunization
of children has not decreased the
incidence of disease in older persons, nor has it eliminated the transmission
of infections to unimmunized children.
Infections
among adolescents and adults result from waning immunity. Neither immunization
nor natural infection induces long-term immunity. Most adult cases are not
suspected. The possibility of adult infection is usually considered only when
it occurs in association with classic whooping cough in children. Many factors contribute
to the failure to detect pertussis: lack
of clinical awareness, lack of availability and insensitivity of culture
and polymerase-chain-reaction assay (PCR), difficulty in obtaining
appropriate specimens, and absence of clear serologic diagnostic criteria.
Vaccines
have not been recommended for persons over age 6. Consequently, pertussis
continues to circulate among older persons. This creates a source of contagion
for younger children.
Vaccines
combining diphtheria and tetanus toxoids with acellular pertussis are safe and
effective in children and have been routinely used worldwide. Two adult
acellular vaccines have recently been licensed in the
This
trial, sponsored by the National Institute of Health, aimed to ascertain the
protective efficacy of acellular pertussis vaccine among adolescents and
adults.
Conclusion: The vaccine was protective.
STUDY
1. Double-blind multicenter trial
randomized over 2700 healthy subjects mean age 35 to
1)
a single dose of acellular pertussis vaccine used
alone, or 2) a control vaccine (hepatitis A).
2. The pertussis vaccine contained
3 different acellular antigens. The total vaccine content was about
1/3 that of the acellular pertussis vaccine usually given to
children. Dose = 0.5 mL.
3. Monitored subjects over 2.5
years for illness with cough lasting over 5 days.
4. Evaluated each illness by
culture and PCR of nasopharyngeal aspirates, and serum samples for
changes in antibodies to 9 different B pertussis antigens.
5. Defined cases of pertussis:
A.
Cough over 5 days.
B.
Positive culture for B pertussis; or
positive PCR; or stringent serological evidence of infection
(increase in titer of antibody to pertussis toxin by a factor
of two or more).
RESULTS
1. A total of 2672 illnesses with
cough lasting over 5 days were evaluated.
2. Ten cases met the criteria for
pertussis:
A.
Nine in controls.
B.
One in vaccine group (Serological evidence only.)
3. The incidence of pertussis in
the control group = 9 cases per 2444 persons
over 2 years; 390 cases per 100 000
person-years; ~ 4 per
1000 between ages 15 to 65.
3. Overall efficacy of the vaccine
= 92%
4. Vaccine safety: Serious adverse events occurred in 140 of
1391 subjects—equally
in both groups. None
were deemed to be vaccine-related.
DISCUSSION
1. Illness with cough lasting over
5 days is common and is associated with substantial morbidity and costs.
2. Immunization prevented
pertussis, but did not decrease the overall burden of prolonged illness. This
was
because pertussis constituted only a small proportion of the
illnesses.
3. However, pertussis in adults is
not uncommon. Extrapolating the rate of pertussis reported in this study
would result in an estimated 1 million cases each year in
the
or mild infections.
4. Immunity to pertussis wanes with
time. The control of the disease will probably require immunization of
all adolescents and adults as well as children.
5. Pertussis is one of the least
well controlled illnesses that are preventable by vaccine. Immunization of
adolescents between ages 10 and 19 may be the most
beneficial initial strategy in view of ease of administration
and costs.
CONCLUSION
The
acellular pertussis vaccine was protective among adolescents and adults.
Routine use might reduce the overall burden of the disease and transmission to
children.
NEJM October 13, 2005; 353:
155-63 original investigation, first
author Joel I Ward, David Gelfin School of Medicine, UCLA, Torrance,
California.
An
editorial in this issue of NEJM (pp 1615-17 by Scott A Halperin, comments and
expands on the study:
In the
The
clinical severity in adults increases with age.
Two
formulations of acellular pertussis vaccine are now licensed in the
Should Be
Used Only When A Demented Patient Has An Identifiable Risk Of Harm To
Themselves Or To Others.
10-8 ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS IN
DEMENTIA
Chlorpromazine
(Thorazine), the first antipsychotic
drug, was introduced into clinical practice over 50 years ago. It
revolutionized psychiatry and neurology.
The efficacy of this drug and others in the phenothazine class
demonstrated that a disease considered a “mental illness” could respond to a
biologically mediated therapy.
Antipsychotic
drugs are used to treat psychiatric and behavioral symptoms that affect the
majority of persons with dementia. In nursing homes, where many residents have
dementia, up to 25% of individuals receive such therapy.
In
the 1990s, the introduction of atypical, or second-generation, antipsychotic
drugs was met with enthusiasm because the rate of adverse effects (parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia) was reported to be
lower. However, in 2003 a study reported higher rates of cardiovascular adverse
events and mortality in patients with dementia-associated agitation and psychosis
who were treated with a second-generation antipsychotic drug risperidone (Risperdal )
compared with placebo. “These
findings should have a direct effect on clinical practice.” They do not
contraindicate use in patients with dementia who have psychotic symptoms and
agitation. Instead, they change the
risk-benefit analysis such that antipsychotic drugs should be used only when
the demented patients have an identifiable risk of harm to themselves or to
others. Or when the distress caused by the symptoms is significant, when
alternate therapies have failed, and symptom relief would be beneficial.
“Antipsychotic
drugs should not be used when non-drug treatments are available and the risk of
harm or significant distress is low.”
“Patients
with hallucinations and delusions that are neither distressing nor placing
themselves or others at risk or harm should not be treated with antipsychotic
drugs.”
Once
these drugs have been prescribed, careful assessment and documentation of the
need for continuation should be reassessed.
JAMA
The
risk of newer antipsychotic agents may be just as great as the older
“conventional” agents.
NEJM
10-9 EFFECT OF
THE ADDITION OF A ”HELP” QUESTION TO TWO SCREENING QUESTIONS ON SPECIFICITY FOR
DIAGNOSIS OF DEPRESSION IN GENERAL PRACTICE
Depression
is common in primary care practice. The diagnosis is often missed.
Quality-of-life and productivity are lowered to an extent comparable to that of
major physical illnesses.
Depressed patients often present
with a variety of physical symptoms (somatization), leading to excess use of
medical services. The suicide rate of depressed persons is at least 8 times higher
than in the general population.
Two
questions have been used as a screening test for depression:
1)
During the past month have you often been bothered by feeling down, depressed,
or hopeless?
2)
During the past month have you been bothered by little interest or pleasure in
doing things?
The
sensitivity of this screen is high. If
the patients in the group studied are indeed depressed, one or two questions
will be answered “yes” by over 90%. . (Sensitivity of the test = > 90%)
The
specificity however, is relatively low (~ 60% to 85%). Many persons who are not
actually depressed will answer
“yes”. (False positive rate ~ 15% to
40%)
This
study adds a 3rd question:
“Is
there something for which you would like help? ”
Conclusion: Adding the help question improved specificity
(increased the true negative responses from 78% to 89%, and reduced false
positive responses from 22% to 11%).
This increased the likelihood that a positive screen does indeed denote
depression.
STUDY
1. Cross sectional study involved
19 general practitioners in 6 clinics.
2. Screened over 1000 patients for
depression. None were receiving psychoactive drugs.
3. Determined the sensitivity,
specificity and likelihood ratios of various combinations of the questions.
All
questions were answered in writing, not verbally.
4. Considered these responses to
indicate depression:
A.
If the patient answered “yes” to either or both of the two screening questions.
.
B.
If patients responded “yes” to either or both screening question plus “yes” to
the help question.
5. The general practioners could
ask further questions. They then gave their opinion whether the
patient was depressed
6. Subjects completed the mood
module of the composite international diagnostic interview. This
was considered the reference standard for depression.
RESULTS
1.
Sensitivity Specificity Positive likelihood ratio Negative
likelihood ratio
(Ratio of
positive tests) (Ratio of negative
tests)
Two
screening questions alone 96% 78% 4.4 0.05
Screening
questions plus
a “help” question 96% 89% 9 0.05
(See the following for a more detailed
explanation RTJ)
2. When general practitioners
considered answers to the screening questions plus the help and then added
their own questions about depression,
their accuracy of diagnosing depression was increased.
DISCUSSION
1. The addition of a help question
to two screening questions improved specificity of the test for detecting
depression from 78% to 89%. (Increased the % of true
negative responses, and reduced the % of false positive responses.)
2. Importantly, the accuracy of the
general practioners’ diagnosis of depression after seeing the patients’
responses to the classical screening questions plus the help
question increased from the 35% often reported to 79%.
3. The two screening tests are
shorter than other questionnaires for depression, and have similar likelihood
ratios.
This
enables clinicians to immediately pursue the issue of depression with the help
question.
4.
In practice, any patient who answers yes to one or both screening
questions, and yes to the help
question, should be questioned further about depression.
CONCLUSION
After
asking two classical questions about depression, adding a question inquiring if
help is wanted improves the specificity of the tests (increased the rate of
true negative responses, and reduced the rate of false positives
.
It improved the accuracy of general
practitioner’s diagnosis of depression.
BMJ
10-10
SENSITIVITY, SPECIFIFITY, POSITIVE LIKELIHOOD RATIO, NEGATIVE LIKELIHOOD
RATIO OF TESTS FOR DEPRESSION: Review
by the Editor
Statistical analysis in now an essential component of studies
presented by peer-reviewed journals.
Primary care clinicians do not need
to be expert statisticians, but they should know and be able to calculate
several basic functions. Clinicians should be familiar with the meaning of
sensitivity, specificity, positive likelihood ratio, and negative likelihood
ratio, and be able to calculate them from the data presented. This will enhance
their enjoyment of journal-reading,
Some
articles present the opportunity to review these aspects of statistics as
applied to general clinical practice. I enjoy calculating them.
Although
I have calculated them many times from various studies, I still struggle to get
them right, and then wonder if I did indeed get them right. A periodic
refresher is required.
The
preceding study allowed me to make these calculations from the data presented.
TO BEGIN:
The
calculations are best made from the classical 2 X 2 table. The table must be set up correctly, Otherwise, results will be confusing.
On
the top row place disease present and disease not present as determined by a
“gold standard” which defines the disease.
In
the left column place whether the test is positive, or negative
Disease present Disease
not present
Test
positive (a) (b)
Test
negative (c) (d)
Total (e) (f)
I
applied the data from page 885 of the preceding study to make the calculations:
Depression
present Depression not present
Test
positive
Two
screening questions (a) true positive test (b) false positive test
One
or two answered “yes” n = 45 n = 196
96%
22%
Test
negative
Two
screening questions (c) false negative test (d) true negative test
Both
answered “no” n = 2 n = 697
4% 78%
Total
(e) = 45 + 2 = 47 (f) = 196 + 697 = 893
1. SENSITIVITY is calculated from
the “disease present” column:
A.
In the preceding study the “disease’: was depression. :
Depression present Depression not present
Test
positive
Two
screening questions (a) true positive test ----
One
or two answered yes n = 45
96%
= SENSITIVITY
Test
negative
Two
screening questions (c) false negative test ----
Both
answered “no” n = 2
4%
Total
(e) = 47
Sensitivity
= (a)/(e) = 45/47 = 96%
2. SPECFICITY is calculated from
the “disease not present column”:
Depression present Depression
not present
Test
positive
Two
screening questions ---- (b) false positive test)
One
or two answered yes n
= 196
22%
Test
negative
Two
screening questions ---- (d) true negative test
Both
answered “no” n
= 697
78% = SPECIFICITY
Total
(f)
= 893
Specificity
= (d)/(f) – 697/893 = 78%
3. LIKELIHOOD RATIOS
1.
Positive likelihood ratio:
This
is better defined as the ratio between true positive and false positive tests.
It
is calculated from the top row
Depression
present Depression not
present
Test
positive
Two
screening questions (a) true
positive (b) false positive
test)
One
or two answered “yes” 96% 22%
Test
negative
Two
screening questions ---- ----
Both
answered “no”
The
ratio of positive tests = (a)/(b) = 96/22 = 4.4
This
means that whatever the pre-test probability of depression is, a ratio of positive tests of 4 will modestly enhance the
post-test probability that depression is present. (Any value above 1.0 will do
so.)
2.
Negative likelihood ratio:
This
is better defined as the ratio between false negative and true negative tests
It
is calculated from the bottom row
Depression
present Depression not
present
Test
positive ---- ----
Test
negative
Two
screening questions (c) false
negative test (d) true negative
Both
answered “no” n = 2 n = 697
4% 78%
The
ratio of negative tests = (c)/(d) = 4/78 = 0.05.
This
means that whatever the pre-test probability of depression is, a ratio of
negative tests of 0.05 will greatly enhance the post-test probability that
depression is absent. (Any value below 1.0 will do so.)
For further information about
likelihood ratios go to: www.cebm.net/likelihood_ratios.asp