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IM Journal Club
IM Journal Club
15 episodes
7 months ago

Journal-Clubbing Our Way Through Internal Medicine


Do you also find it hard to follow the medical literature?

Newsletters with tables of contents are hard to get through after having written all your notes and maybe having done a chart dissection.


Welcome to IM Journal Club!

Our mission: to guide you through some of the most interesting internal medicine studies published in the last few weeks and months that you WOULD have liked to or SHOULD have heard about


Target groups: physicians and other clinicians in general internal or family medicine – hospital medicine and primary care – or in an internal medicine subspecialty; biostatisticians, epidemiologists, or data scientists; journal club enthusiasts!


Hidden agenda: to shed some lights on the studies’ methods AND on the context (what was known before, how do the new results change things – so what does this all mean?). We will give you episodes with primers on particularly difficult methods.


We will come out with a new episode every one to two weeks - we'll upload early on Fridays - so you can listen on your commute or on the weekend.


Please subscribe in your favorite podcast app or to our YouTube channel .


Please let us know what we can do better, or what new study we could cover: You can leave a review in your podcasting app, a comment on YouTube, or drop us a line at hello@imjournalclub.com


We are also on social; our email newsletter will be on Twitter: https://twitter.com/IMJournalClub


---

Show Credits

Host: Ben Geisler

Video editor: Fernando Tábora

Methods consultant: Professor Ulrich Mansmann

Advisory group (current): Bijay Acharya, Chang-Berm Kang, Jeffrey L. Greenwald, Jonathan W. Heflin, Kathy May Tran, Marcel Müller, Rahul Ganatra, and Warren Chuang

Supported by LMU Munich’s Institute for Epidemiology, Biometry, and Medical Information Processing



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Medicine
Health & Fitness,
Science,
Life Sciences
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All content for IM Journal Club is the property of IM Journal Club and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Journal-Clubbing Our Way Through Internal Medicine


Do you also find it hard to follow the medical literature?

Newsletters with tables of contents are hard to get through after having written all your notes and maybe having done a chart dissection.


Welcome to IM Journal Club!

Our mission: to guide you through some of the most interesting internal medicine studies published in the last few weeks and months that you WOULD have liked to or SHOULD have heard about


Target groups: physicians and other clinicians in general internal or family medicine – hospital medicine and primary care – or in an internal medicine subspecialty; biostatisticians, epidemiologists, or data scientists; journal club enthusiasts!


Hidden agenda: to shed some lights on the studies’ methods AND on the context (what was known before, how do the new results change things – so what does this all mean?). We will give you episodes with primers on particularly difficult methods.


We will come out with a new episode every one to two weeks - we'll upload early on Fridays - so you can listen on your commute or on the weekend.


Please subscribe in your favorite podcast app or to our YouTube channel .


Please let us know what we can do better, or what new study we could cover: You can leave a review in your podcasting app, a comment on YouTube, or drop us a line at hello@imjournalclub.com


We are also on social; our email newsletter will be on Twitter: https://twitter.com/IMJournalClub


---

Show Credits

Host: Ben Geisler

Video editor: Fernando Tábora

Methods consultant: Professor Ulrich Mansmann

Advisory group (current): Bijay Acharya, Chang-Berm Kang, Jeffrey L. Greenwald, Jonathan W. Heflin, Kathy May Tran, Marcel Müller, Rahul Ganatra, and Warren Chuang

Supported by LMU Munich’s Institute for Epidemiology, Biometry, and Medical Information Processing



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Show more...
Medicine
Health & Fitness,
Science,
Life Sciences
https://assets.pippa.io/shows/633c326d6903e90012bb6d80/1666867925533-620872ea6a2a90e48cae51a9457e229c.jpeg
Vitamin D to Prevent Fractures w/ Dr. Wynn Fan
IM Journal Club
36 minutes 36 seconds
3 years ago
Vitamin D to Prevent Fractures w/ Dr. Wynn Fan

Is Vitamin D supplementation useless to prevent fractures in the general population?


While there is currently insufficient evidence to prove that Vitamin D supplementation might prevent cancer or cardiovascular events, several meta-analyses have shown a benefit of Vitamin D plus calcium to prevent hip fractures. This was also seen in a per-protocol analysis of a Women’s Health Initiative study.


The Vitamin D and Ometa-3 Trial or VITAL was a randomized placebo-controlled trial of cholecalciferol (that’s Vitamin D3) and omega-3 fatty acids. Since they tested two interventions, this was studied in two-by-two factorial design. Vitamin D was given as 2000 units daily and the daily omega-3 pills contained 1g of fatty acids. This was an ancillary study of a trial that is hypothesized to test whether these interventions, alone or together, can prevent cancer and cardiovascular disease. The study population is men over 50 and women over 55. There were no other in- or exclusion criteria except that patients could not already have cancer or cardiovascular disease, and also they couldn’t have hypercalcemia.

The study population had a mean age of 67, 51% were female. They recruited entirely in the U.S. and they had 71% Caucasians and 20% African Americans. Notably, it was allowed that patients were already taking Vitamin D supplements, and 43% already did so. 5% were taking osteoporosis medications and 10% had a previous frigitilty fracture. The baseline mean vitamin D level was over 30 ng/ml.

Over the course of the median 5.3 years of follow-up, Vitamin D did not prevent fractures in the total fracture group. The same was true for non-vertebral and hip fractures subgroups.

 

Our guest, WuQiang Fan, M.D., Ph.D., is an endocrinologist and hospitalist at Mass General Hospital and an Instructior in Medicine at Harvard Medical School. He often functions in the role of the Fracture Liaison Services, seeing patients with a new fracture in consultation, where he might be asked to assess what preventative therapies patients might quality for.

 

References:

-MS LeBoff et al.. N Engl J Med . 2022 Jul 28;387(4):299-309. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35939577/

-USPSTF: Final Recommendation Statement. Vitamin D, Calcium, or Combined Supplementation for the Primary Prevention of Fractures in Community-Dwelling Adults https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf/recommendation/vitamin-d-calcium-or-combined-supplementation-for-the-primary-prevention-of-fractures-in-adults-preventive-medication

-USPSTF: Final Recommendation Statement. Vitamin D Deficiency in Adults: Screening. https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf/recommendation/vitamin-d-deficiency-screening (retrieved Nov 11, 2022)

-MF Holick, […], Endocrine Society. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2011 Jul;96(7):1911-30. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21646368/

-NEJM Journal Watch Clincal Conversations. Podcast 297, July 29, 2022. https://pca.st/fhr0cdyo

-Three previous meta-analyses in osteoporotic women that included Vitamin D and calcium:

1) MJ Bolland et al.: Calcium intake and risk of fracture: systematic review . BMJ . 2015 Sep 29;351:h4580. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26420387/

2) DIPART Group. BMJ. 2010;340:b5463. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20068257/

3) A Avenell, JC Mak, and D O'Connell. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24729336/

RD Jackson et al. N Engl J Med. 2006 Feb 16;354(7):669-83. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16481635/

 

YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@IMJournalClub



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

IM Journal Club

Journal-Clubbing Our Way Through Internal Medicine


Do you also find it hard to follow the medical literature?

Newsletters with tables of contents are hard to get through after having written all your notes and maybe having done a chart dissection.


Welcome to IM Journal Club!

Our mission: to guide you through some of the most interesting internal medicine studies published in the last few weeks and months that you WOULD have liked to or SHOULD have heard about


Target groups: physicians and other clinicians in general internal or family medicine – hospital medicine and primary care – or in an internal medicine subspecialty; biostatisticians, epidemiologists, or data scientists; journal club enthusiasts!


Hidden agenda: to shed some lights on the studies’ methods AND on the context (what was known before, how do the new results change things – so what does this all mean?). We will give you episodes with primers on particularly difficult methods.


We will come out with a new episode every one to two weeks - we'll upload early on Fridays - so you can listen on your commute or on the weekend.


Please subscribe in your favorite podcast app or to our YouTube channel .


Please let us know what we can do better, or what new study we could cover: You can leave a review in your podcasting app, a comment on YouTube, or drop us a line at hello@imjournalclub.com


We are also on social; our email newsletter will be on Twitter: https://twitter.com/IMJournalClub


---

Show Credits

Host: Ben Geisler

Video editor: Fernando Tábora

Methods consultant: Professor Ulrich Mansmann

Advisory group (current): Bijay Acharya, Chang-Berm Kang, Jeffrey L. Greenwald, Jonathan W. Heflin, Kathy May Tran, Marcel Müller, Rahul Ganatra, and Warren Chuang

Supported by LMU Munich’s Institute for Epidemiology, Biometry, and Medical Information Processing



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.