Title: Preventive Medicine
1Preventive Medicine
2Maimonides, A.D. 11351204
- "Live sensiblyamong a thousand people, only one
dies a natural death, the rest succumb to
irrational modes of living.
3Reality
- "Why do I have to get a Pap smear again this
year, Doctor?" - "My neighbor gets a chest x-ray every year. Why
aren't you ordering one for me?" - "I saw an ad for a total body MRI in the
newspaper. Do you think I should get one?"
4Types of Clinical Prevention
- Immunization
- Screening
- Behavioral counseling (lifestyle changes)
- Chemoprevention
5Levels of Prevention
- Primary prevention
- Immunizations, Folic acid, Healthy Lifestyles
- Secondary prevention
- PAP, Mammo, FOBT
- Tertiary prevention
- Beta-blockers after MI, ACE inhibitors in DM
6Criteria for a Good Screening Test
- High sensitivity and specificity
- High positive predictive value
- Simplicity and low cost
- Safety
- Acceptable to patients and clinicians
- Labeling
- Frequency of condition
- Effectiveness of intervention
7Possible adverse effects from screening
- Risk of false-positive result
- Risk of pseudodisease (overdiagnosis)
8Prioritizing Preventive Services
- Start with the condition
- not the test
- not the intervention
- with the largest burden of suffering
- Demonstrated effectiveness
- Test
- Intervention
9Priority Conditions
Cervical Cancer Depression Injuries (Motor vehicle collisions, Domestic
violence) Lifestyle (Obesity, Physical Inactivity) Sexually-transmitted infections (GC/Chlam/HIV) Substance abuse (Tobacco, Alcohol) 10Priority Conditions 50yo
- Cardiovascular (MI, CVA, AAA)
- Cancer (Lung, CRC, BrCA, Prostate, Cervical)
- Depression
- Immunization (Flu 50, Pneumo 65)
- Injuries (Falls, Bone Fcx, MVA, Domestic
violence) - 65yo Falls and Bone Fractures
- Lifestyle (Obesity, Physical Inactivity)
- Substance abuse (Tobacco, Alcohol)
- Vision Hearing (65yo)
11Cardiovascular Disease
- Global CVD Risk
- High ( 20 10-yr risk)
- Moderate (10-19 10-yr risk)
- BP, dyslipidemia, low-dose ASA
- Low (
12Framingham CAD Risk Calculator
- http//www.intmed.mcw.edu/clincalc/heartrisk.html
13Blood Pressure Screening
14Cholesterol Screening
15Screening for Diabetes
16Aspirin Case
- ST is a 55-year-old man who you see regularly for
hypertension and depression. He is overweight and
sedentary, and his elder sister recently had a
heart attack. He asks you whether he should take
a daily aspirin, "just in case."
17Aspirin Case, cont.
- Which one of the following statements best
reflects the new U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force (USPSTF) recommendations regarding aspirin
for the primary prevention of cardiovascular
events? - A daily aspirin is recommended only for men over
age 40. - Aspirin is recommended for both men and women
ages 50 to 75. - Physicians should discuss benefits and harms of
aspirin chemoprevention with adults who are at
increased risk of heart disease. - Aspirin is recommended for all men and women with
at least one cardiovascular risk factor.
18Cancer
- Lung
- Colorectal
- Breast
- Prostate
- Cervical
19Lung Cancer
- U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)
concluded in 2004 that "the evidence is
insufficient to recommend for or against
screening asymptomatic persons for lung cancer
with either low dose computed tomography, plain
chest radiographs, sputum cytology, or a
combination of these tests"
20Stay Tuned 2008.
- National Lung Screening Trial The National Lung
Screening Trial (NLST) is a lung cancer screening
study launched in late 2002. The trial seeks to
randomly assign 50,000 current or former smokers
at 30 sites throughout the United States to
either lung cancer screening with CT or screening
with chest radiographs, and is powered to detect
a 20 percent reduction in lung cancer mortality
due to differences in screening methods.
Enrollment of new patients has closed and
participants have just completed their third
screening exam. The final analysis of survival
and mortality is planned for 2008. Information
for physicians and patients regarding this trial
is available online at www.cancer.gov/nlst.
21Intuitive Protocol CT PET
- Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005 Jun
15171(12)1378-83. Epub 2005 Mar 24. - annual spiral CT if high-risk
- noncalcified nodules 5 mm or greater repeat CT
- FDG-PET for 7 mm growing nodules
- FDG-PET for nodules 10 mm or larger
- Results
- All NSCLC Dx in stage I
- FDG-PET correctly diagnosed 19 of 25
indeterminate nodules. - FDG-PET (Sensitivity 69 / Specificity 91 / PPV
90 / NPV 71) - When a negative FDG-PET was followed three months
later with a repeat CT, the negative predictive
value was 100 percent. - Lancet 2003 Aug 23362(9384)593-7.
- Combined use of low-dose spiral CT and selective
PET effectively detects early lung cancer.
Lesions up to 5 mm can be checked again at 12
months without major risks of progression.
22Colorectal Cancer ask at age 30
- Have you ever had colorectal cancer or an
adenomatous polyp? - Have you had inflammatory bowel disease
(ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease)? - Has a family member had colorectal cancer or an
adenomatous polyp? If so, how many, was it a
first-degree relative (parent, sibling, or
child), and at what age was the cancer or polyp
first diagnosed?
23Colorectal Cancer Average risk 50yrs
- FOBT (annual)
- sigmoidoscopy (every 5 yrs)
- FOBT sigmoidoscopy (annual / q5yrs)
- double contrast barium enema (q5yrs)
- colonoscopy (q5-10yrs)
- ? virtual colonoscopy
- NOT DRE or hemoccult during DRE
24Colorectal Cancer High risk
- A personal history of CRC or adenomatous polyp
- A genetic syndrome predisposing to CRC (ie,
HNPCC, FAP) - One or more first degree relative with CRC or
adenomatous polyp - Two or more second degree relatives with CRC
- IBD causing pancolitis or longstanding (8 to 10
years) active disease
25Breast Cancer Case
- GK is a 46-year-old woman who presents to your
office for a well-woman examination. She informs
you that her 51-year-old friend was diagnosed
with breast cancer one month ago and that she is
worried about getting breast cancer. On further
inquiry, you learn that she delivered her only
child when she was 32 years of age and has no
family history for breast cancer. She does not
perform breast self-examinations and has never
had a mammogram. GK asks for your advice on
breast cancer screening.
26Breast Cancer Question 1
- According to recommendations from the U.S.
Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), which
one of the following options is best for this
patient? - Discuss the harms and benefits of screening, and
offer screening because she is older than age 40. - Do not offer screening because she is younger
than age 50. - Offer screening to obtain a baseline examination,
and begin routine screening at age 50. - Discuss the harms and benefits of screening, and
offer screening because she is older than age 40
continue screening every one to two years until
age 70. - Screening is not indicated because she is at low
risk for developing breast cancer.
27Breast Cancer Question 2
- According to recommendations from the USPSTF,
which one of the following strategies is best to
screen for breast cancer? - Monthly breast self-examinations combined with an
annual clinical breast examination. - Monthly breast self-examinations and mammography
every one to two years. - Clinical breast examination every one to two
years. - Mammography with or without clinical breast
examination every one to two years. - Routine breast self-examinations and mammography
with or without clinical breast examinations
every one to two years.
28Breast Cancer Question 3
- Which of the following statements regarding the
benefits and harms of screening for breast cancer
is/are correct? - The majority (80 to 90 percent) of patients with
abnormal screening mammograms are diagnosed with
breast cancer. - In general, the benefits of screening for breast
cancer increase as a woman becomes older. - In general, the harms of screening for breast
cancer increase as a woman becomes older. - The balance of benefits and harms and the
decision about when to initiate screening vary
from patient to patient.
29Breast Cancer Summary
- Mammography q1-2yrs age 40
- significantly reduces mortality
- more benefit with increased age
- best age 50-69
- age 70 unless life expectancy lower from
co-morbidities - insufficient evidence to recommend for or against
the teaching or performing of routine breast
self-examination
30Prostate Cancer
- Many more men are diagnosed with prostate cancer
than die of it however - 15 lifetime risk of diagnosis / 3 lifetime risk
of mortality - 2nd leading cause of cancer-related death among
U.S. men (30,200 men in year 2002) - The risk of developing prostate cancer increases
beginning at age 40 - African-American men (start age 40-45)
- 60 higher incidence / twofold higher mortality
rate c/w whites - Non-white Hispanics 35 lower mortality rate
than white - Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders 40 lower
rate - 50yo annually (?), stopping at age 65 (?)
- Do NOT order PSA without counseling
31PSA
- Elevated by Bx, retention, prostatitis
- NOT by DRE
- 4.0 ng/mL (sensitivity 70-80 / specificity
60-70 / PPV 30 / - 10.0 ng/mL (PPV 42 to 64), but
- nearly 75 percent of cancers detected within the
"gray zone" of PSA values between 4.0 to 10.0
ng/mL are organ confined and potentially curable
32PSA plus
- PSA velocity (change in PSA over time)
- PSA density (PSA per unit volume of prostate)
- free-to-total PSA (reduced with prostate CA)
- complexed PSA (marginal increase in specificity)
- age- and race-specific reference ranges
33Digital Rectal Examination
- Sensitivity 59
- Specificity 94
- Positive predictive value of an abnormal DRE for
prostate cancer varies from 5 to 30 percent
34Cervical Cancer
- sexually active women with an intact cervix,
starting three years from age of onset of sexual
activity or at age 21 (whichever is earlier) - Negative x3? Screen every 3 years.
- No cervix? No PAP, IF
- No GYN cancer
- No CIN III
- No DES exposure
- 70 years, repeat neg.PAP, and are not at
increased risk (more than one sexual partner in
past five years, immunosuppression) no more PAP - Mortality from cervical cancer is greatest among
women who have not had prior adequate screening
35Depression
- 5-15 prevalence in primary care
- 50 not diagnosed
- Screening
- "Over the past two weeks, have you felt down,
depressed, or hopeless?" - "Over the past two weeks, have you felt little
interest or pleasure in doing things?"
36Influenza Vaccination
- high risk for influenza-related complications and
severe disease - children aged 6--59 months,
- pregnant women,
- persons aged 50 years,
- persons of any age with certain chronic medical
conditions - persons who live with or care for persons at high
risk, including - household contacts who have frequent contact with
persons at high risk and who can transmit
influenza to those persons at high risk - health-care workers
- FluMist can be used on all non-pregnant,
non-high-risk 5-49yo - efficacy 60-90 instead of 30-70 from shot
37Pneumococcal Vaccination
- Benefits limited minimal to no harm
- Given only once, except
- Revaccinate after age 65 (5-year interval) if 1st
dose before age 65 - Repeat dose _at_5yrs asplenia, chronic renal
disease, or immunocompromised - Research question does increased antibody titres
equal in vivo improved clinical outcomes?
38Falls / Fractures
- "Get Up and Go" test
- Functional Reach
- Home assessment
- Bone-mineral density
39DXA (Bone Mineral Density)
- 65 (high-risk age 60)
- Risk-factors Caucasian, Asian, family history,
advanced age, female, postmenopausal, small
stature ( - Age-independent high-risk criteria (symptoms /
history) loss of height, postmenopausal,
premature menopause, estrogen deficiency,
cigarette smoker, fragility fracture, X-ray
evidence of low BMD (osteopenia), vitamin D
deficiency, hyperthyroidism, malabsorption,
gastrectomy, organ transplantation, long term
glucocorticoid therapy, anticonvulsant therapy,
gonadotropin releasing hormone agonist therapy,
and long term heparin use - Repeat adult non-traumatic fracture (or,
fracture out-of-proportion to mechanism of injury)
40Injuries
- Motor Vehicle Collisions
- Domestic Abuse
41Sexually-transmitted Infections
- Chlamydia
- Common, often asymptomatic, highly treatable
- Serious complications including pelvic
inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy,
infertility, and chronic pelvic pain. - Urine-based nucleic acid amplification tests make
screening simple and accurate. - Sexually active women ages 15 to 25 years
- Older women who have new or multiple sexual
partners, or inconsistent use of barrier methods - NO Doxy during pregnancy!
- Gonorrhea
- can be asymptomatic
- sexually active women ages 15 to 29 years who
live in high risk areas - HIV
42Vision and hearing problems
- Questioning inadequate
- Snellen chart (refractive errors, cataracts)
- Glaucoma
- Macular degeneration
- "whispered voice test
- small hand-held combination audiometer and
otoscope - 10-item self-administered questionnaire (the
Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly,
Screening HHIE-S)
43Healthy Diet
44Exercise
45Tobacco
46Alcohol