Inpatient Update
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2592753/fan_mail/new] With Special Guest Dr. Adam Jaffe In this episode of Inpatient Update, Dr. Mason Turner is joined by hospitalist Dr. Adam Jaffe to tackle two high-impact clinical questions: * Is there a clear winner among DOACs? * Who actually benefits from steroids in community-acquired pneumonia? Two common decisions. New data. Practice-changing implications. Articles & PubMed Links Apixaban vs Rivaroxaban for VTE (Head-to-Head RCT) New England Journal of Medicine (2026) Randomized trial (n=2,760) comparing: * Apixaban vs * Rivaroxaban Population: * Acute VTE * Excluded: active cancer, extreme obesity, other anticoagulation indications Key Findings * ↓ Clinically significant bleeding with apixaban * ~54% relative risk reduction * NNT ≈ 27 * ↓ Major bleeding (0.4% vs 2.4%) * No difference in: * Recurrent VTE * Mortality Interpretation * Same efficacy * Less bleeding with apixaban Takeaway → For new starts: Apixaban is the preferred DOAC pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41812192/ Corticosteroids in Community-Acquired Pneumonia (IPD Meta-analysis) Lancet Large meta-analysis (n=3,224 across 8 RCTs) Compared: * Steroids vs * Placebo Primary Outcome: 30-day mortality * Absolute risk reduction: 2.2% * NNT = 46 🔑 The Key Insight: CRP Matters When stratified by inflammation: CRP >200 * Mortality: 13% → 6% * Absolute risk reduction ≈ 7% * NNT ≈ 14 CRP <200 * No mortality benefit Other Findings * ↑ Hyperglycemia (expected) * ↑ Readmissions (7% vs 3.7%) * No clear signal that severity scores (PSI) identify benefit Interpretation * Steroids are not for everyone * Benefit appears driven by high inflammatory states Takeaway → Consider steroids in CAP only if CRP is markedly elevated (~>200) → Routine use in all pneumonia is not supported pubmed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39892408/ Practice-Changing Takeaways * DOACs: * Apixaban > rivaroxaban for bleeding * Same clot prevention → choose apixaban for new starts * Pneumonia: * Steroids may reduce mortality — but only in the right patient * CRP can help identify who benefits Clinical Pearls * The difference between DOACs is no longer “vibes” — we now have head-to-head data * Most steroid benefit in pneumonia appears inflammatory-driven, not severity-driven * CRP — often ignored — may actually guide meaningful decisions here Bottom Line If you change nothing else this week: * Start apixaban for new VTE patients * In pneumonia, check a CRP — and consider steroids if >200 Fewer bleeds. Smarter steroids. Better outcomes.
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