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Today’s Top News Highlights: Doctors protest racism, controversial studies retracted


 

Here are the stories our MDedge editors across specialties think you need to know about today:

#WhiteCoats4BlackLives stands up to racism

Participants in the growing #WhiteCoats4BlackLives protest against racism say it is a chance to use their status as trusted messengers, show themselves as allies of people of color, and demonstrate that they are familiar with how racism has contributed to health disparities.

The medical student-run group WhiteCoats4BlackLives has helped organize ongoing, large-scale events at hospitals, medical campuses, and city centers nationwide.“It’s important to use our platform for good,” said Danielle Verghese, MD, a first-year internal medicine resident at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, who helped recruit a small group of students, residents, and pharmacy school students to take part in a kneel-in late last month in a city park.

“As a doctor, most people in society regard me with a certain amount of respect and may listen if I say something,” Dr. Verghese said.

Read more.

A conversation on race

In this special episode of the Psychcast podast, host Lorenzo Norris, MD, and fourth-year psychiatry resident Brandon C. Newsome, MD, discuss race relations as physicians in the wake of the death of George Floyd. The pair discuss what their patients are experiencing and what they’re experiencing as black physicians.

“Racism – whether or not you witness it, whether or not you utilize it, whether or not you are the subject of it – affects and hurts us all,” Dr. Norris says. “We all have to start to own that. You can’t just stay siloed, because it is going to affect you.” Listen here.

Two journals retract studies on HCQ


The Lancet has retracted a highly cited study that suggested hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) may cause more harm than benefit in patients with COVID-19. Hours later, the New England Journal of Medicine announced that it had retracted a second article by some of the same authors, also on heart disease and COVID-19.

Three authors of the Lancet article wrote in a letter that the action came after concerns were raised about the integrity of the data, and about how the analysis was conducted by Chicago-based Surgisphere Corp and study coauthor Sapan Desai, MD, Surgisphere’s founder and CEO. The authors asked for an independent third-party review of Surgisphere to evaluate the integrity of the trial elements and to replicate the analyses in the article.

“Our independent peer reviewers informed us that Surgisphere would not transfer the full dataset, client contracts, and the full ISO audit report to their servers for analysis, as such transfer would violate client agreements and confidentiality requirements,” the authors wrote, leading them to request a retraction of the paper.

In a similar note, the authors requested that the New England Journal of Medicine retract the earlier article as well.

Both journals had already published “Expression of Concern” notices about the articles. The expression of concern followed an open letter, endorsed by more than 200 scientists, ethicists, and clinicians and posted on May 28, questioning the data and ethics of the study.

Read more.

FDA approves antibiotic to treat pneumonia

The Food and Drug Administration has approved Recarbrio (imipenem-cilastatin and relebactam) for the treatment of hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia in people aged 18 years and older.

Approval for Recarbrio was based on results of a randomized, controlled clinical trial of 535 hospitalized adults with hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated bacterial pneumonia who received either Recarbrio or piperacillin-tazobactam. After 28 days, 16% of patients who received Recarbrio and 21% of patients who received piperacillin-tazobactam had died.

“As a public health agency, the FDA addresses the threat of antimicrobial-resistant infections by facilitating the development of safe and effective new treatments. These efforts provide more options to fight serious bacterial infections and get new, safe and effective therapies to patients as soon as possible,” said Sumathi Nambiar, MD, MPH, of the agency’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

Read more.

For more on COVID-19, visit our Resource Center. All of our latest news is available on MDedge.com.

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