Healthcare Unfiltered

Chadi Nabhan
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Jan 19, 2021 • 57min

Episode 14: Vaccine Distribution and Mandate Ethics With Alison Bateman-House

Chadi welcomes back Alison Bateman-House, (@ABatemanHouse), MPH, PhD, medical ethicist at New York University’s School of Medicine, to break down COVID-19 vaccine distribution and mandates. Why has vaccine distribution not been an efficient and effective process? Are the right people being prioritized in the vaccine pecking order? Should vaccine doses be immediately available to anybody and everybody to make strides toward herd immunity? Should a “first dose only” vaccine approach be adopted to mitigate the supply shortage? Is a government mandate of the vaccine at any level legal and ethical? How about at schools or hospital systems? The duo dives into trying to make sense of the burning COVID-19 vaccine questions of today.
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Jan 12, 2021 • 1h 2min

Episode 13: Cardiology, Comedy, and COVID-19 with Rohin Francis

Rohin Francis (@MedCrisis), cardiologist in the UK, brings his expertise and unique sense of humor to the show to share how he’s combined comedy with medical education through his Twitter and YouTube presence, how he sifts through the vast expanse of COVID-19 research for data that is useful and legitimate, the apparent inability to have an open scientific debate on Twitter without being chastised or judged for your viewpoints, and so much more. Check out Dr. Francis’ videos at https://www.medlifecrisis.co.uk/.
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Jan 5, 2021 • 1h 6min

Episode 12: Drug Approvals and Real-World Use: The Case of Selinexor in Multiple Myeloma

Aaron Goodman (@AaronGoodman33), MD, hematologist/oncologist, University of California San Diego, and Jatin Shah (@JatinShahMD), MD, executive vice president and chief medical officer, Karyopharm Therapeutics, join the show for a deep consideration of oncology drug approvals in the context of RCTs, RWE, surrogate endpoints, and outcomes. The larger discussion is framed around Karyopharm’s STORM study of selinexor in refractory multiple myeloma and whether the FDA had enough convincing data to approve the drug. Contention ensues around the findings of Karyopharm's BOSTON study and whether they should be used to justify selinexor as a second-line treatment.
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Dec 29, 2020 • 1h 27min

Episode 11: Recapping 2020: A Year of COVID-19, Tradeoffs, and Censorship

In an enthralling yet informative roundtable discussion, Chadi hosts Saurabh Jha (@RogueRad), MD, radiologist and frequent guest of the show; Vinay Prasad (@VPrasadMDMPH), MD, MPH, hematologist/oncologist and former guest of the show; and Sally "Loyal Listener"(@barttels2), patient advocate, to breakdown 2020 like only they can. These titans of the MedTwitter world dissect and opine on lessons to be learned from COVID-19 (warts and all), the diminishing space for public discourse and healthy debate, the not-so-subtle censorship of provocative materials in academic journals due to social media backlash, cancel culture and the power of the Twitter mob, and so much more.
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Dec 22, 2020 • 47min

Episode 10: Advances in Multiple Myeloma From the ASH Annual Meeting

Rafael Fonseca (@Rfonsi1), MD, interim director of Mayo Clinic Cancer Center, shares with Chadi his picks for the most clinically applicable multiple myeloma studies coming out of the ASH virtual meeting, including notes on transplantation, frontline therapy, the “belle of the ball” bispecific antibodies, CAR-T therapies, and MRD monitoring.
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Dec 15, 2020 • 42min

Episode 9: Words Matter: The Patient Perspective of Language Used on Social Media

Laura Lee (@lauraelee), JD, a lawyer by training and journalist in North Carolina, brings her unique perspective to the show to discuss how language used on social media to describe the outcomes of clinical trials and the tolerance of therapies in a patient population can be damaging to patients on an individual level. She expresses some of her larger concerns in the way medical information is displayed and discussed online, including the tone that is used, how quality of life measures fall short in providing value for individual patients, and the lack of compassionate language used in studies that are poorly conducted.
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Dec 1, 2020 • 57min

Episode 8: Real-World Evidence and Value-Based Care in the Academic World

Yousuf Zafar (@yzafar), MD, GI oncologist and associate professor of medicine, Duke University, highlights perspectives that are missing from the “general rubric” of value-based care in oncology, how real-world evidence (RWE) can help augment takeaways from clinical trial data, issues of capturing the patient voice in real-world data and electronic health records, and how the FDA is utilizing RWE for expanding drug indications. Dr. Zafar shares where he sees the intersection between RWE and value-based care existing from a payer perspective as well why he believes the COVID-19 pandemic provides “fertile ground” for the prevalence of RWE.
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Nov 24, 2020 • 59min

Episode 7: Direct-To-Consumer Advertising in Healthcare: Legality and Ethics

Alison Bateman-House (@ABatemanHouse), MPH, PhD, medical ethicist at New York University’s School of Medicine, explains the distinction between direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising of doctors and drugs to that of consumer goods, as well as regulatory and ethical concerns of DTC advertising on the part of hospitals and drugs. Chadi and Dr. Bateman-House grapple with questions of whether healthcare is simply a consumer good or if it is something more and whether DTC advertising should be banned in healthcare altogether.
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Nov 17, 2020 • 1h 5min

Episode 6: Advocacy in a Time of Uncertainty: Jill Feldman’s Ongoing Battle With Lung Cancer

Jill Feldman (@jillfeldman4), lung cancer survivor and advocate, shares her familial history of lung cancer that drove her to advocacy work long before her own diagnosis of EGFR-positive disease, as well as her treatment courses with erlotinib and subsequent SBRT for many years before osimertinib. Jill then describes her “journey” in advocacy, beginning with self-advocacy and the LUNGevity Foundation, independent research advocacy and representing lung cancer patients, and co-founding the EGFR Resisters (@EGFRResisters) – a group of EGFR-positive patients who are resistant to targeted treatment. Her message for clinicians and scientists is to start thinking of patients as partners in research.
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Nov 10, 2020 • 54min

Episode 5: Measurable Residual Disease: Hype or Hope?

Ameet Kini (@AmeetRKini), MD, PhD, hematopathologist, and Patrick Hagan, MD, hematologist/oncologist, both at Loyola University Medical Center, deliberate on the clinical importance of MRD and how clinicians should utilize it, optimal techniques for detecting MRD in various diseases, the gap between academia and the community when it comes to MRD knowledge, the potential of MRD as a surrogate marker, and how to reconcile discordant MRD results from different vendors.

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