Background Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease induced by autoimmune-like dysregulation of the immune system. Treatment options have drastically evolved in recent years, and treatment advances that target specific cytokines and other molecules involved in dysregulation have had a profound effect in controlling the disease. Objective We reviewed the literature to assess the risk of developing melanoma with conventional therapies and newer agents used to treat psoriasis. Methods A comprehensive literature search using Medline (via Ovid) and Embase was conducted. Results The majority of studies reviewed reported insignificant results. Potential risk for melanoma was identified for only 3 out of 15 anti-psoriatic treatments analyzed: adalimumab (relative risk 1.8, 95% CI 1.06-3.00), etanercept (relative risk 2.35, 95% CI 1.46-3.77) and infliximab (Empirical Bayes Geometric Mean 7.90, 95% CI 7.13-8.60). The confidence intervals provided are from prior studies. There are not enough collective data on newer agents to make any conclusions on risk. Conclusions We were unable to identify any substantial risk for developing melanoma due to the use of anti-psoriatic treatments. Until additional long-term registry data become available, it would be prudent to continue screening patients with psoriasis at baseline and periodically for melanoma when these agents are used.
Background: Patients are increasingly turning to the Internet for health guidance, requiring awareness from clinicians of constantly changing resources and quality of available information. A previous study demonstrated a minority of YouTube videos were useful for teaching methotrexate (MTX) self-injection; however, YouTube content constantly evolves, and previous results may not represent current videos. This study provides an update on previous work from 2014 evaluating the quality of YouTube videos demonstrating self-administered subcutaneous MTX injections. Our aim was to evaluate how YouTube videos on MTX injection have changed and evaluate the current video quality.Methods: "Methotrexate injection" was searched on YouTube. The first 75 videos were analyzed independently by 2 reviewers. Videos were classified as useful, misleading/irrelevant, or a personal patient view and rated for reliability, comprehensiveness, and quality.Results: Of the 75 videos reviewed, 12 were classified as useful (16%), 43 misleading/irrelevant (57.3%), and 20 personal patient views (26.7%). Although this represents a substantial increase from previous results in the proportion of videos deemed misleading/irrelevant (57.3% vs. 27.5%) ( p = 0.0011), their reliability and global quality scores were higher. Conclusions:Concordant with the previous study, only a small proportion of the total videos were deemed useful videos for MTX injection specifically. However, reliability and global quality scores for all videos increased from the previous study, suggesting more videos provide reliable information with regard to MTX overall, even if it does not speak to self-injection directly. Logistics of the YouTube algorithm may still impede access to the "best" videos for patient teaching; therefore, clinicians should be prepared to recommend strategies for patients to find high-quality videos.
OBJECTIVES Strategies to increase confidence in rheumatology knowledge are valuable for medical trainees and residents. A web-based teaching innovation was implemented in an attempt to increase rheumatology exposure for internal medicine residents. METHODS An Image of the Month webpage was established, where a practicing rheumatologist would post a new image that could be answered online by internal medicine residents. Cumulative data was analyzed to determine the extent and change in rheumatology exposure. RESULTS The Image of the Month webpage posted images for a total of 76 months between July 2010 to May 2017, with a total of 1326 submitted responses. The proportion of residents who only participated in Image of the Month and only did a rheumatology rotation averaged 36.1% and 16.5%, respectively. The proportion of residents who only participated in Image of the Month was higher than the proportion who only did a rheumatology rotation for all of the 7 time periods assessed. A total of 491 residents participated in Image of the Month, with an average of 54.9% of residents participating each year. Overall, on average, 52 residents had 1 or more submissions, 3.6 entries were submitted per resident, and 17.4 entries were submitted per month. Junior residents (PGY1) participated more often than senior residents (PGY3). CONCLUSIONS The Image of the Month webpage successfully improves internal medicine resident exposure to rheumatology with minimal resources and manpower required. Further study is necessary to determine the impact this exposure may have on the abilities and confidence levels of internal medicine residents.
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