Hospital Medicine
Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.
Recent Discussions
How do you approach treatment for arthritis associated with multicentric reticulohistiocytosis?
There are no systematic treatment studies of multicentric reticulohistiocytosis due to its rarity. There are, however, numerous case reports of TNF inhibitors used with success, frequently requiring higher doses than used for rheumatoid arthritis. As this condition is based on proliferation of osteo...
How would you approach chronic isolated severe non-cyclic neutropenia with negative bone marrow and rheumatologic work-up?
My preference would be to use G-CSF at the lowest effective dose, i.e., the dose that maintains the ANC >1000. The risk of inducing leukemia is low in individuals with idiopathic, chronic neutropenia, but it is positively correlated with the G-CSF dose. There are also other side effects like bone pa...
What immunosuppressive agents aside from steroids would you use to treat bronchiolitis obliterans in a patient with long-standing seropositive RA?
There is little doubt that bronchiolitis obliterans can be a devastating lung disease. Corticosteroids remain the primary anchor therapy, however, virtually all patients will require an additional agent. Rituximab has become the primary choice and there is evidence, though mostly anecdotal, that it ...
How do you approach screening for inflammatory bowel disease prior to starting IL-17 inhibitors?
IL-17i are now widely used to treat skin psoriasis (PsO), psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and axial spondyloarthritis (SpA). Genetic and epidemiologic studies suggest the coincidence of these diseases and Crohn’s diseases (CD) as they may present concomitantly in the same patient or affect a family membe...
Is there a role for antibody testing to confirm vaccine response for patients on rituximab after COVID-19 vaccination?
It's a great question, but I do not feel that routinely performing COVID antibody testing would help in the management of these patients: We don't know how well most commercial antibody testing correlates with neutralizing antibody/immune-status (esp. if qualitative testing is performed), and I have...
How do you approach evaluation of pulmonary vein thrombosis?
Pulmonary vein thrombosis is a rare condition that is usually associated with injury to the vessel, for example after surgery or lung transplantation, or as a complication of lung cancer. I am not aware of any data on the relative efficacy of different anticoagulants in PVT but from a biologic persp...
Do you routinely obtain bone marrow biopsy in newly diagnosed autoimmune hemolytic anemia when working up potential underlying etiologies?
Thank you for the question. For patients with cold agglutin disease, I perform a bone marrow biopsy and flow cytometry at diagnosis/before initiating therapy on all patients. I base the decision whether to do a bone marrow biopsy after initial diagnosis of warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia based on w...
Does calcinosis appear differently in patients with dermatomyositis compared to systemic sclerosis?
Classically, calcinosis in dermatomyositis and scleroderma are different with dermatomyositis having more typical sheet-like calcinosis in the muscles whereas in scleroderma it is more typical on the fingers, extensor surfaces of the forearm, olecranon, knee, and shins. However, many sclerodermas al...
How does evidence of cerebral amyloid angiopathy/microbleeds affect choices for secondary stroke prevention in patients with a history of ischemic stroke and atrial fibrillation?
This is a discussion I have with the patient, mentioning that the positive predictive value of cortically based cerebral microhemorrhages is not absolute, especially when there is a small number of them and there are no other signs of small vessel disease (such as FLAIR changes or enlarged peri-vasc...
What is your approach to immunotherapy-related pancreatitis?
Depending on the severity of the ICI-associated pancreatitis, I will start patients on prednisone 0.5 mg/kg/day - 1 mg/kg/day. Once lipase levels decrease and approach normal levels, I will start tapering at generally around 10 mg weekly with a total taper time that is typically close to 6 weeks. If...