Pulmonology
Physician discussions on respiratory conditions, critical care, interstitial lung disease, and pulmonary procedures.
Recent Discussions
What are best practices for engaging with multidisciplinary colleagues to ensure patients with earlier stage NSCLC are being appropriately considered for novel adjuvant therapies?
All post-operative lung resection patients are discussed at our multidisciplinary tumor board. As a collective group and especially with input from medical oncology colleagues almost all patients will be considered for adjuvant therapy if they are candidates.
Would you offer adjuvant chemotherapy, osimertinib, or both to a patient with Stage IB EGFR mutated lung adenocarcinoma found in the lung explant pathology after bilateral lung transplant?
This is such a rare and individualized case that there will likely be no correct answer. My understanding of the facts is that stage IB lung adenocarcinoma was found on the removed explanted lung after a lung transplant. The question posed is what is the role of adjuvant systemic therapy? Ignoring t...
Would you advise a patient with quiescent vasculitis who flared with the first Covid mRNA vaccine to obtain an additional dose?
There is still much we don't know about mRNA vaccines, including the true risk of vasculitis relapse and the risk of relapses occurring with vaccine re-challenge. Relapses of vasculitis after COVID vaccination have only been reported in case report form to date. Therefore it's not possible to tell w...
What is your approach to treatment for a patient with progressive ILD (UIP pattern) with high titer RF but no articular symptoms?
Hello and thank you for this question. It is very important. But I need more facts to safely answer this question. My very first thought is that assessment (i.e., a thorough history and physical exam) is highly operator-dependent. In most cases, the historical and exam findings of systemic autoimmun...
Is there a role for antifibrotic therapy in post COVID-19 pulmonary fibrosis?
As you may know from working with these patients in the acute and post-infection (PASC - post-acute sequelae of COVID-19) settings, there is a spectrum of lung injuries that can ensue after infection with SARS-CoV-2. This spectrum is composed of mild GGOs to organizing pneumonia to fibrosis (or, fre...
Do you de-escalate airway clearance therapies in patients with CF who experience an improvement in mucus production and clearance after CFTR modulator therapy is started?
De-escalation of airway clearance therapy, and even mucolytic therapy, is a frequently encountered question since the introduction of highly effective modulator therapy. Since the majority of patients no longer have cough or sputum production, the necessity of such therapy is often questioned and it...
Do you routinely continue airway clearance therapies in the setting of mild to moderate hemoptysis in a patient with CF?
I typically hold it temporarily until hemoptysis resolves or decreases.
Is there a role for the use of inhaled corticosteroids in patients with pulmonary sarcoidosis who have stage II or III disease with abnormal lung function but only mild respiratory symptoms?
There are several older studies that have tried to answer this question.Du Bois et al., PMID 10445610: 44 stage II or III patients randomized to placebo or fluticasone 2mg/day, showed no statistically significant difference in symptom scores, PEFR, or FEV1 over 6 months (although trend towards impro...
How do you treat patients with sarcoid who have persistent symptoms after an initial 6 week course of corticosteroids?
The answer to this question depends on what organ(s) you are treating and how severe the manifestation(s) is/are because you must balance the risk of the treatment itself, and the risk of flare with an aggressive steroid taper. 6 weeks of steroids is not appropriate for cardiac sarcoidosis that over...
Do you consider EBUS TBNA in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with mediastinal lymphadenopathy with concern for lymphoma?
Yes, very commonly. The traditional thought is that histological architecture is needed to diagnose lymphoma. However, with flow-cytometry, we can diagnose all types of NHL. We always try to get a lot of aspirations (more than 7-10 passes) from the lymph nodes or mediastinal masses to prepare a good...