Primary Care
Physician perspectives on preventive care, chronic disease management, and evidence-based primary care practice.
Recent Discussions
What is your approach to screening a cancer survivor for iron overload, and what is your treatment of choice?
We check the ferritin level after completion of chemotherapy. If ferritin is >1,000 ng/ml, we recheck the level as it can be falsely elevated with inflammation/infection. If ferritin is >1,000, we obtain a liver MRI with iron quantification. If liver iron concentration (LIC) is > 5 mg/g dry weight, ...
What is your approach to screening a cancer survivor for iron overload, and what is your treatment of choice?
We check the ferritin level after completion of chemotherapy. If ferritin is >1,000 ng/ml, we recheck the level as it can be falsely elevated with inflammation/infection. If ferritin is >1,000, we obtain a liver MRI with iron quantification. If liver iron concentration (LIC) is > 5 mg/g dry weight, ...
How would you approach the counseling and management of a 76-year-old man presenting to clinic having purchased a direct to consumer pTau181 Elecsys test (rule out) that is positive for amyloid, with MoCA 29/30?
I so wish this wouldn’t happen, but in reality, it’s happening! I tell people who are cognitively intact to ignore the results of the PTau test if possible. It is not a “crystal ball” that will predict their future. Is it a risk factor for developing AD in the future? Perhaps. But it’s one that is n...
In a hospitalized older adult with significant pain and delirium, in which delirium may be due either to underlying pain or use of pain medications such as narcotics, how do you approach clinical management of delirium?
This is such a common and challenging scenario! Older adults experiencing delirium often cannot identify/vocalize the need for PRN medications. If there is high clinical suspicion for sub-optimally controlled pain being a contributor to the delirium, a strategy could be scheduling low-dose pain medi...
How do you decide when to give antibiotics for an older adult receiving comfort-focused care who develops signs of a symptomatic infection?
In an older adult receiving comfort-focused care, the decision to use antibiotics should be guided by goals of care and likelihood of symptom relief, rather than by the presence of infection alone. The main question is whether antibiotics are likely to meaningfully improve distressing symptoms such ...
What is your approach to bisphosphonate use in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease and osteoporosis?
I have used serum markers of bone turnover in decision-making for patients with chronic renal disease, both to initiate treatment and to monitor response. This seems to have a basis in the literature (Smout et al., PMID 35703216).This approach has also helped to minimize doses of oral bisphosphonate...
What is your approach to counseling severely frail older adults regarding their planning for invasive life-sustaining therapy?
My approach is pragmatic, evidence-based, and bi-directional. Patients/family make the decision, but I ensure they are fully informed about the pros and cons and provide them time to think through.
At what point would you consider stopping antidepressant treatment of late life depression after remission?
My first step here would be to answer some clarifying questions: What is the patient's current prognosis? (If the patient has a limited life expectancy- weeks to small order months- then I would certainly consider deprescribing with more ease.) Are there any foreseeable anticipated triggers for depr...
How do you approach requests from facilities requesting a urinalysis (either on demand or PRN) for "behavioral changes"?
First, I would do a happy dance (discreetly, of course) because rather than asking me to prescribe a psychoactive medication, the facility thought about the possibility that a behavior change has an underlying medical cause. And before getting too distracted by the request for a UA, I would get more...
What is your view on the potential role of immune-targeted therapies in Parkinson’s disease?
In my opinion, the role of immune-targeted therapies in Parkinson’s disease remains uncertain at this time. While both activated microglial cells and various cytokines associated with immune activation have been detected in Parkinson’s patients, it remains unclear whether these are pathologically si...