Roadside AssistanceKovich, Heather
doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1907848pmid: 31774953
Roadside Assistance“If you’re in an accident, you don’t want a doctor on the scene,” said the wilderness first aid instructor. “You want a nurse or an EMT. Doctors are useless outside a hospital.” At the scene of an accident 20 years later, a doctor discovers the instructor was right.
This Week in the Journaldoi: 10.1056/NEJMtwj191128pmid: N/A
Issue HighlightsIssue Highlights, November 28, 2019MRI Screening for Women with Dense BreastsComparison of Drugs for Status EpilepticusRuling Out Pulmonary EmbolismEssential ThrombocythemiaGenome Sequencing in Cancer
Essential ThrombocythemiaTefferi, Ayalew; Pardanani, Animesh
doi: 10.1056/NEJMcp1816082pmid: 31774958
Key Clinical PointsEssential ThrombocythemiaEssential thrombocythemia is associated with an increased risk of thrombosis and bleeding.Most patients with essential thrombocythemia harbor a mutation in one of three genes: JAK2 V617F (in 60%), CALR (in 20%), or MPL in (3%).Confirmation of the diagnosis requires a bone marrow biopsy.The risk of thrombosis is estimated on the basis of a history of thrombosis, the presence of a JAK2 V617F mutation, an age older than 60 years, and cardiovascular risk factors. Patients are classified into four risk categories: very low, low, intermediate, and high.Low-dose aspirin is a cornerstone of the therapy used to reduce the risk of thrombosis, except in patients with very-low-risk disease.Cytoreductive therapy is indicated in patients with high-risk disease but is of uncertain benefit in those with intermediate-risk disease. Hydroxyurea or interferon alfa-2a are considered first-line options when therapy is indicated, with the former used more frequently.