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Pulmonology

Physician discussions on respiratory conditions, critical care, interstitial lung disease, and pulmonary procedures.

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How often do you monitor pulmonary function tests in patients with fibrotic lung disease?

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Pulmonology · University of Colorado School of Medicine

For IPF patients and those on IS meds, every 4 months, I obtain Spirometry and DLCO. I obtain six-minute walk tests every 4-6 months.

What is your approach for disease activity monitoring in patients with sarcoidosis?

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Pulmonology · Emory University School of Medicine

Disease activity monitoring is useful in managing therapy and prognostication in sarcoidosis. Since the disease activity can vary across different organ systems, it can be a challenge. Broadly, good bio-markers of overall disease activity are lacking in this disease.ACE level lacks the sensitivity b...

What patient factors prompt you to consider starting dupilumab in patients with COPD?

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Pulmonology · Columbia Doctors Pulmonology

The factors I consider are recurrent exacerbations, symptoms despite triple therapy, and an eosinophil count that is greater than 300. What is unclear is the decision regarding chronic azithromycin and/or roflumilast versus dupilumab. It looks like roflumilast was not allowed in the study, and appar...

Do you grade severity of OSA by AHI or RDI?

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Pulmonology · Emory Healthcare

We recently changed, per AASM guidelines, to reporting both AHI3a and AHI4. Since most sleep-disordered breathing events will qualify with the 3a decision, as it includes arousals, we have stopped reporting an RDI. If there are events that don't meet the 3a hypopnea definition, we might comment on i...

What is your approach to the use of Paxlovid for patients with risk factors for severe Covid-19 infection but who have received SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in light of the EPIC-SR trial findings?

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3 Answers

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Infectious Disease · Ut Physicians Infectious Diseases Texas Medical Center

Although EPIC-SR Trial may not have shown a significant benefit of paxlovid in standard-risk patients regardless of vaccination status, EPIC HR and real-world evidence have shown benefits in high-risk populations. Shared decision-making with the patient is always the best policy.Disclosure: I have r...

Is there an age at which you consider not starting antifibrotic therapy in a patient with IPF?

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Pulmonology · University of North Carolina @ Chapel Hill

I don't have an age cutoff. In my first couple of years of practice, I was hard-pressed to prescribe octogenarian antifibrotics, but I've come to think that approach is discriminatory.There does not appear to be an age at which antifibrotics lose efficacy. The real question seems to be whether older...

Do you consider administration of nintedanib or pirfenidone via enteral tube in patients unable to take PO due to recurrent aspiration?

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Pulmonology · Loma Linda University Health

I have not ordered nintedanib or pirfenidone via enteral tube for any of my patients. However, in the past, I have looked into it due to some research interests and have discussed it with our local MSLs and our clinical pharmacist. Nintedanib is available only in capsule form and is not recommended ...

Are SCDs contraindicated in patients with acute DVTs?

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Hematology · University of Wisconsin

SCDs can help prevent DVT but I'm not aware of any evidence of benefit when treating an established event. There are rare reports of pulmonary embolism following the application of SCDs in patients with asymptomatic DVTs. I don't think this constitutes an absolute contraindication, but in the absenc...

Do you ever employ the use of prolonged periods of pressure support ventilation as means of "weaning" in the management of patients with acute respiratory failure?

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Pulmonology · The Permanente Medical Group-NCAL

The evidence basis here would suggest no one mode is superior for weaning vs just putting patients on SBT. However, as a practical matter, weaning a patient from the ventilator involves letting sedatives metabolize/wear off (propofol can take days to wash out after a week of use), and testing how th...

How small of a nodule would you attempt to biopsy with robotic bronchoscopy?

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Pulmonology · Rogel Cancer Center/University of Michigan

There’s no right answer to this. Size is only one criteria, and may not even be the most important. Location relative to the airways is far more important than size, and you may have trouble biopsying a 2 cm nodule with no airway leading near it, as compared to a 7 mm nodule that is located near or ...