COVID Vax Guide

Team: COVID Vax Guide, aka the “Buckeye-Vax-Attack”

Base Article: Arnold J, Winthrop K, Emery P. COVID-19 vaccination and antirheumatic therapy. Rheumatology (Oxford). 2021;60(8):3496-3502. doi:10.1093/rheumatology/keab223

Authors: The Ohio State Rheumatology Fellowship Program

  1. Cristina Hurley, MD, second year rheumatology fellow, Ohio State University 
  2. Megha Kotha, MBBS, first year rheumatology fellow, Ohio State University 
  3. Jasmine Thai, MD, second year rheumatology fellow, Ohio State University 

Team Overview

You know what they say, you miss all the shots you don’t take. Vaccines are no Hail Mary buzzer beater from half court.  They’re the layup you practice all day long in the office and patient messaging.  As Arnold et al describe, this is a “pragmatic strategy” to make your life easier.  Corticosteroids, methotrexate, JAKi, rituximab – this team will tell you when to take “the shot” so that it matters in the game. 

This article outlines the humoral responses of patients on common immunosuppressants to influenza, pneumonia, and even shingles vaccinations.  Apply this to COVID19 vaccines and use it for the assist.  Think COVID19 vaccination is a moving target? You’re not wrong. Our visual aid allows you space to update in real time so you can stay in the game.   

Some may think that a primer on detailed plays for ILD, rheumatoid arthritis, PMR, or dermatomyositis might be more important, but we argue that our team has an answer for almost everyone. While weight loss may help you get faster across the court, we’re not sure that’ll end up helping with the score. We’ve got the shot. 

Next Report: VITAL

Back to the full list of scouting reports.

 

ADIRA

Team: ADIRA, aka the “Tendon Ticklers”

Base Article: Vadell AKE, Bärebring L, Hulander E, Gjertsson I, Lindqvist HM, Winkvist A. Anti-inflammatory Diet In Rheumatoid Arthritis (ADIRA)-a randomized, controlled crossover trial indicating effects on disease activity. Am J Clin Nutr. 2020;111(6):1203-1213. doi:10.1093/ajcn/nqaa019

Authors: The Allegheny Health Network Rheumatology Fellowship Program

  1. Saloni Goyal, DO, first year rheumatology fellow, Allegheny Health Network
  2. Conor O’Donnell, MD, first year rheumatology fellow, Allegheny Health Network
  3. Zaina Shahid, MD, second year rheumatology fellow, Allegheny Health Network
  4. Sara Shahid, MD, second year rheumatology fellow, Allegheny Health Network
  5. Michael Lucke MD, Rheumatologist, Allegheny Health Network

Team Overview

Imagine a team huddle between you and your poorly controlled rheumatoid arthritis patient. You just completed a long discussion to optimize their medications when they throw you a curve ball, “doc what about my diet?”  A setback? I think not! You have your one shining moment when you think back to the ADIRA trial. ADIRA hit a homerun in demonstrating the importance of an anti-inflammatory diet. In this trial, a mediterranean diet with probiotics squared off against a predominantly carnivorous diet and proved to be a heavy hitter in reducing DAS 28 scores. Randomized crossover study design, high compliance to assigned diet due to home deliveries of meals, and stable weights throughout the study minimized confounding throughout the clinical trial.  This remarkable trial has changed clinical practice by putting the ball in the patient’s court, empowering them to seize victory in the clash against rheumatoid arthritis.

Though this study looked at a homogenous Swedish population and the clinical importance of a mildly reduced DAS may not be of great significance to scientific minds, this is of paramount importance to the patient. The patient is finally taken off the bench and steps onto the court to have their Christian Laettner moment to hit a buzzer beater.  Finally, you have created a patient doctor relationship where you can see them hit repeated game winners. When they happily come back to see you, both you and the patient will bask in the glory of victory.

Want to learn more?

See the Q&A on theMednet.org about the following question: How do you counsel patients who ask if there are any dietary modifications they can make to help control their autoimmune disease?

Next report: COVID Vax Guide

Back to the full list of scouting reports.

 

Precision OA

Team: Precision OA, aka the “Bayesian Ballers”

Base Article:  Jiang X, Nelson AE, Cleveland RJ, et al. Precision Medicine Approach to Develop and Internally Validate Optimal Exercise and Weight-Loss Treatments for Overweight and Obese Adults With Knee Osteoarthritis: Data From a Single-Center Randomized Trial. Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2021;73(5):693-701. doi:10.1002/acr.24179

Authors: The University of North Carolina Fellowship Program

  1. Natalie Allcott, DO, first year Rheumatology fellow, UNC
  2. Pranathi Narayanareddy, MD, first year Rheumatology fellow, UNC
  3. Sahar Sawani, MD, first year Rheumatology fellow, UNC

Team Overview

In the storied arena of knee osteoarthritis (OA), precision medicine is a standout rookie, bending norms and ushering in a new era of treatment. Every athlete has their individualized training regimens. Similarly, precision medicine tailors interventions for overweight and obese adults with knee OA, recognizing that a one-size-fits-all approach will no longer score in this dynamic arena.

Researchers used data from the Intensive Diet and Exercise for Arthritis trial, where 343 participants were randomized to diet alone, exercises alone, and diet + exercise cohorts. Outcomes including SF-36 physical component score, weight loss, WOMAC pain/function/stiffness scores, compressive force, and IL-6 were evaluated. Researchers used machine learning models considering factors like genetic makeup, lifestyle, and the severity of knee OA to develop personalized treatment recommendations.

Like a synchronized point guard and small forward, the combined diet and exercise regimen emerged as the powerhouse duo for most participants across outcomes of weight loss since baseline, WOMAC pain, function, and stiffness scores, as well as PCS.  In individuals where the primary goal is to reduce systemic inflammation, diet alone was found to be the choice treatment.

Precision medicine – teamed up with the unstoppable data-crunching skills of machine learning – lays the groundwork for evolving strategies to tackle knee OA in overweight and obese individuals. The individual treatment decisions from precision medicine’s approach are reproducible, data driven, and extendable to other clinical settings. As the shot clock runs down, it’s undeniable – precision medicine can transform the landscape of knee OA treatment by offering individualized care.

Want to learn more?

See the Q&A on theMednet.org about the following question: How do you counsel patients on the benefits of diet and exercise in OA in a way that motivates them to comply?

Next Report: ADIRA

Back to the full list of scouting reports.

 

Bracket Submissions Open 2/28/2024

RheumMadness 2024 is coming soon!  The theme for this year’s tournament is “Practically Perfect,” and the teams are based on 16 recent articles that are vying to be named the most practically useful article in the tournament. How do you play? It’s simple. Starting February 28, 2024, you can read scouting reports about each team (complete with visual aids!) written by fellowship programs and other rheumatology groups from around the world. Then you submit a bracket where you try to predict which team is going to win!  It is free to play.

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Make RheumMadness a part of your didactics series!

Many fellowship programs have started including RheumMadness in their core curriculum as a fun way to review recent articles in rheumatology.  Some programs even host RheumMadness parties!  This tournament is all about sharing the joy of rheumatology.  Tell us what your group did on X (formerly Twitter) using #RheumMadness.

RheumMadness + theMednet.org

The RheumMadness team is excited to announce continued collaboration with theMednet.org for our 2024 tournament.  theMednet is a physician only site providing a space for physicians to tackle difficult clinical questions and see how colleagues are practicing. theMednet will be featuring select Q&A relevant to articles in our 2024 tournament and will provide a space for further discussion and polling around clinical application. Register here for a free account with full access to the site and RheumMadness content!