PRISM Rounds: Pulmonary Critical Care & Sleep Podcast

S01E38 | Portable TB Testing — MiniDock MTB and Diagnostic Equity

18 min · 2 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio S01E38 | Portable TB Testing — MiniDock MTB and Diagnostic Equity

Descripción

In this episode of PRISM Rounds, we review the NEJM study of MiniDock MTB, a portable near-point-of-care molecular test for pulmonary tuberculosis using sputum and tongue swabs. The study found that MiniDock MTB outperformed smear microscopy, approached Xpert Ultra performance with sputum swabs, and met WHO near-point-of-care diagnostic accuracy targets. We discuss why this matters for resource-limited settings, where delayed TB diagnosis, repeat visits, and limited access to molecular testing remain major barriers to care. We also cover the key limitations: lower sensitivity in paucibacillary disease, smear-negative TB, and people living with HIV, plus the need for reflex drug-resistance testing. Educational use only. AI-generated voices may include occasional mispronunciations. Article: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2509761 Tuberculosis, TB, pulmonary tuberculosis, MiniDock MTB, point-of-care testing, near-point-of-care diagnostics, molecular diagnostics, tongue swab, sputum swab, Xpert Ultra, smear microscopy, global health, infectious diseases, pulmonary medicine, critical care, resource-limited settings, diagnostic equity, implementation science, public health, NEJM, medical podcast, journal club, evidence-based medicine, FOAMed, FOMEd, Free Open Access Medical Education, PRISM Rounds, AI-generated medical education, AI medical podcast, clinical research summary Tags

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45 episodios

episode S01E44: Remote Rehab After the ICU — The iRehab Trial artwork

S01E44: Remote Rehab After the ICU — The iRehab Trial

Surviving the ICU is not the same as recovering from critical illness. In this episode of PRISM Rounds, we discuss the JAMA iRehab randomized clinical trial, which tested whether a 6-week remote, multicomponent rehabilitation program could improve recovery for ICU survivors after hospital discharge. The primary 8-week quality-of-life endpoint was neutral, but the study showed important signals in secondary outcomes, including sit-to-stand performance, fatigue, anxiety, intervention acceptability, and 6-month quality of life. We also discuss the accompanying editorial and what this trial teaches us about post-ICU recovery, telerehabilitation, patient heterogeneity, and why ICU survivorship care cannot be one-size-fits-all. Article: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.7401 Editorial: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2026.5761 Educational content only; not medical advice. Tags Critical Care, ICU, ICU Survivorship, Post-Intensive Care Syndrome, PICS, Rehabilitation, Telerehabilitation, Remote Rehab, iRehab Trial, Mechanical Ventilation, JAMA, Pulmonary Critical Care, Physical Recovery, Quality of Life, Fatigue, Anxiety, Evidence-Based Medicine, PRISM Rounds

12 de jun de 202621 min
episode S01E43 | EDTA for CVADs: Can a Line Lock Reduce ICU Catheter Complications? artwork

S01E43 | EDTA for CVADs: Can a Line Lock Reduce ICU Catheter Complications?

In this episode of PRISM Rounds, we discuss the JAMA 2026 randomized clinical trial by Ornowska and colleagues testing whether 4% tetrasodium EDTA, or t-EDTA, used as a locking fluid for inactive central venous access device lumens, can reduce CVAD-associated complications in adult ICU patients. This pragmatic, triple-blind, multicenter, cluster-randomized crossover trial included 1468 ICU patients across 6 Canadian hospitals. The primary composite outcome—CVAD-associated bloodstream infection, catheter occlusion requiring alteplase, or catheter removal due to occlusion—occurred at 13.1 vs 19.9 events per 1000 catheter-days with t-EDTA versus control. The main signal was fewer catheter occlusions requiring alteplase; infection and thrombosis events were uncommon and should not be overinterpreted. Article link: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2026.6025 [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2026.6025?utm_source=chatgpt.com] Tags Critical Care, ICU, Central Line, CVAD, EDTA, t-EDTA, CLABSI, Catheter Occlusion, Alteplase, Venous Thrombosis, Infection Prevention, Vascular Access, JAMA, Randomized Trial, Pulmonary Critical Care, FOAMed, PRISMRounds

4 de jun de 202623 min
episode S01 Bonus Episode01: Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease — A Patient-Friendly Book Review artwork

S01 Bonus Episode01: Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease — A Patient-Friendly Book Review

In this PRISM Rounds bonus episode, we step away from our usual journal-club format for a patient-facing book review of Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease by Caldwell B. Esselstyn Jr., M.D. This book was published in 2007, and cardiovascular prevention guidelines have evolved since then. But its central message remains practical and motivating: patients are not powerless, and daily food choices can be an important part of reducing cardiovascular risk. This episode is designed especially for physicians and clinicians who want a simple, shareable way to start a food-focused heart-health conversation with patients. We focus on practical steps individuals can take: improving breakfast, building plant-forward meals, stocking healthier foods at home, and making small sustainable changes. Educational only. Not medical advice. Patients should discuss major diet or medication changes with their healthcare team. Tags Cardiovascular prevention, Heart disease, Plant-based diet, Lifestyle medicine, Patient education, Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease, Caldwell Esselstyn, Nutrition, Primary prevention, Secondary prevention, Cholesterol, Coronary artery disease, Food as medicine, PRISM Rounds, Bonus episode

3 de jun de 20261 h 11 min
episode S01E42: Auto-Adjusted NIV in OHS - The Pickwick Titration Trial artwork

S01E42: Auto-Adjusted NIV in OHS - The Pickwick Titration Trial

In this episode of PRISM Rounds, we discuss the AJRCCM 2026 Pickwick Titration Trial, which asked whether automatically adjusted noninvasive ventilation can match manually adjusted NIV titrated in the sleep lab for ambulatory patients with obesity hypoventilation syndrome. The trial found that auto-adjusted NIV produced similar 12-month improvement in daytime PaCO₂ compared with manually adjusted NIV, while reducing cost and potentially decreasing sleep-lab burden. The accompanying editorial highlights the real-world nuance: CPAP remains first-line for many stable OHS patients with severe OSA, but auto-adjusted NIV may be especially useful when NIV is indicated and access to in-lab titration is limited. Article: https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamag018 [https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamag018] Editorial: https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamag112 [https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamag112] This episode is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. TagsCritical Care, Pulmonary Medicine, Sleep Medicine, Obesity Hypoventilation Syndrome, OHS, Noninvasive Ventilation, NIV, Auto NIV, Auto EPAP, AVAPS, CPAP, PaCO2, Hypercapnia, Sleep Lab, Polysomnography, AJRCCM, Pickwick Titration Trial, PRISM Rounds, Medical Education, Free Open Access Medical Education, FOAMed, AI Generated Medical Education, Research Summary, Journal Club, ICU, Respiratory Therapy, Pulmonary Critical Care

29 de may de 202624 min
episode S01E41: EIT-Guided PEEP in ARDS — Precision Ventilation or Too Much Titration? artwork

S01E41: EIT-Guided PEEP in ARDS — Precision Ventilation or Too Much Titration?

In this episode of PRISM Rounds, we discuss the 2026 AJRCCM EITVent randomized clinical trial and its accompanying editorial. The study asked whether electrical impedance tomography, or EIT, could help clinicians individualize PEEP in adults with moderate to severe ARDS compared with the traditional lower PEEP/FIO2 table. The overall trial was neutral: EIT-guided PEEP did not reduce 28-day mortality, ventilator-free days, length of stay, or major safety outcomes. But an important subgroup signal emerged in patients with higher lung recruitability, raising a practical bedside question: should EIT be used selectively to guide precision ventilation rather than as routine daily exhaustive PEEP titration? We discuss the trial design, the “collapse-overdistension crossing point,” the editorial’s caution about repeated recruitment maneuvers and decremental PEEP trials, and how this should influence bedside ventilator thinking in ARDS. Educational only. Not medical advice. AI-generated voices are used and may occasionally mispronounce terms. Trial DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamaf125 [https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamaf125] Editorial DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamag012 [https://doi.org/10.1093/ajrccm/aamag012] #PRISMRounds #CriticalCare #PulmonaryCriticalCare #ICU #ARDS #MechanicalVentilation #PEEP #EIT #ElectricalImpedanceTomography #VentilatorManagement #LungProtectiveVentilation #PrecisionVentilation #Recruitability #DrivingPressure #MechanicalPower #PronePositioning #RespiratoryFailure #AJRCCM #EITVent #ClinicalTrials #JournalClub #EvidenceBasedMedicine #FOAMed #MedEd #ICUEducation #AIgeneratedPodcast #FreeOpenAccessMedEd Tags

22 de may de 202622 min