Smilow Shares with Primary Care: Benign Hematology and Elevated Blood Counts
January 08, 2025January 7, 2025
Presentations by: Frank Ciminiello, MD, Kelsey Martin, MD, and Anish Sharda, MD, MPH
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- 12607
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Transcript
- 00:00I'll go ahead and get
- 00:01us started. So good evening.
- 00:03This is Smilo shares with
- 00:05primary care,
- 00:07which is a monthly
- 00:09series
- 00:11with primary care here at
- 00:13Northeast Medical Group and Yale
- 00:15New Haven Health System
- 00:16and our oncology
- 00:18Yale Cancer colleagues
- 00:20at SMILO.
- 00:22We like to discuss topics
- 00:24where they may present in
- 00:26primary care. Primary care may
- 00:28have some testing to do,
- 00:30evaluation,
- 00:31have to decide on referral
- 00:33criteria,
- 00:35and get a good sense
- 00:37of what's going to happen.
- 00:40We will
- 00:42today be focusing on hematologic
- 00:45issues,
- 00:46with a special focus on
- 00:48when things are too high,
- 00:50and we'll get started there
- 00:51in just a second.
- 00:53But first, I wanna make
- 00:55sure I introduce,
- 00:57myself and,
- 00:59pass it over to, Anne
- 01:01Chang
- 01:02who is,
- 01:03in the Smilow Cancer Center
- 01:05and will introduce
- 01:07her colleagues as well.
- 01:09So, I'm Karen Brown. I'm
- 01:11the medical director of primary
- 01:12care at Northeast Medical Group
- 01:14at Yale New Haven Health
- 01:15System.
- 01:16And Frank Ciminielo
- 01:18is my colleague,
- 01:20also a primary care physician
- 01:22with a background
- 01:24of a chemistry degree at
- 01:26Georgetown University,
- 01:28working as an HIV case
- 01:30manager
- 01:31back in what we would
- 01:32call the day when there
- 01:33was,
- 01:34uncontrolled
- 01:35HIV.
- 01:36And then, went to medical
- 01:38school at NYU and did
- 01:39his residency at University of
- 01:40Pennsylvania.
- 01:42He did a clinician educator
- 01:44fellowship and was on faculty
- 01:46there for four years before
- 01:47moving to Connecticut and joining,
- 01:50PrimeMed, which is a medical
- 01:52group which is now part
- 01:53of,
- 01:54larger Northeast Medical Group.
- 01:56He's received an MBA from
- 01:57the Yale School of Management
- 01:59and is now both the
- 02:00regional medical director for the
- 02:03Bridgeport region,
- 02:04as well as the president
- 02:06of the Prime Med Physicians
- 02:07PSA.
- 02:09He's on the board of
- 02:09trustees and the CIN board
- 02:11of directors.
- 02:13And, he lives in Easton
- 02:14with his wife who's an
- 02:16OB GYN, so he always
- 02:18has extra perspective to add
- 02:20and, tells me that he's
- 02:22feeling miserable
- 02:23miserably at learning tennis in
- 02:25a world of pickleball players.
- 02:28Anne, I will pass it
- 02:29over to you to introduce,
- 02:30the rest of our speakers.
- 02:33Okay. Thank you. Frank that
- 02:34picture is a little old.
- 02:37I think that's all right.
- 02:38Doesn't do you justice.
- 02:40Thank you, Karen. This is
- 02:42such a
- 02:43pleasure to be here tonight.
- 02:44I'm a medical oncologist and
- 02:46also associate cancer center director
- 02:49for clinical initiatives. And tonight
- 02:51we have two SMILO
- 02:53colleagues of mine.
- 02:55Doctor. Kelsey Martin, who's an
- 02:57assistant professor of medicine in
- 02:59hematology.
- 03:00She received her medical degree
- 03:02from the Royal College of
- 03:03Surgeons in Dublin, Ireland and
- 03:05completed her residency
- 03:06in Internal Medicine at the
- 03:08Jacobi Medical Center, Albert Einstein
- 03:10College of Medicine in New
- 03:11York.
- 03:12She subsequently completed her subspecialty
- 03:15training in hematology
- 03:16and medical oncology at Lenox
- 03:18Hill Hospital in New York
- 03:19City,
- 03:20and has been here at
- 03:21Smilo since that time.
- 03:23It's such a joy to
- 03:24have you.
- 03:25And also,
- 03:27Doctor. Martin's clinical interests include,
- 03:30patient communication,
- 03:31hematology,
- 03:32hematologic
- 03:33disorders
- 03:34in women, cancer prevention, including
- 03:36the role of nutrition, obesity
- 03:38and the environment in cancer.
- 03:40She's actively involved in the
- 03:42Yale community as a member
- 03:43of status of women in
- 03:44medicine and the women faculty
- 03:46forum.
- 03:47And she's an highly engaged
- 03:48member of the American society
- 03:50of hematology
- 03:51as a member of the
- 03:52committee and practice and representative
- 03:54for the AMA
- 03:55House of Delegates.
- 03:57Doctor. Martin's interested in how
- 03:59sex and gender influence health
- 04:01and collaborates with the women's
- 04:03health research at Yale. So
- 04:04thank you, Kelsey.
- 04:06And then I'd like to
- 04:07also introduce Doctor. Anish Sharda
- 04:10who's an assistant
- 04:11professor of medicine in hematology.
- 04:13And he cares for patients
- 04:14as part of the SMILO
- 04:16Classic Hematology Program,
- 04:18previously known as benign hematology.
- 04:20Now we call it classic.
- 04:22His clinical and research interests
- 04:23are in bleeding, clotting and
- 04:25plateless platelet disorders. His research,
- 04:31in vascular biology is, is
- 04:33funded by the NIH.
- 04:34He received his medical degree
- 04:36from the BP Koala
- 04:38Institute of Health Scientists in,
- 04:40Dharan, Nepal and completed his
- 04:42residency at the University of
- 04:44Minnesota Medical Center,
- 04:46followed by clinical and research
- 04:47fellowship and the Hemang fellowship
- 04:50at BI Deaconess Medical Center
- 04:52and Harvard Medical School in
- 04:53Boston. So
- 04:54welcome to both of you.
- 04:58And
- 04:59I'm gonna turn it over
- 05:00to doctor oops, sorry.
- 05:02Oh, I was just gonna
- 05:03say, we're gonna turn it
- 05:04over to doctor Chimenola to
- 05:06get us started with the
- 05:07cases.
- 05:08If you have questions as
- 05:09we go, please feel free
- 05:10to enter them in the
- 05:12q and a section and
- 05:13we will, break at the
- 05:15appropriate point to answer them.
- 05:17It's it's part of what
- 05:18makes this series great is
- 05:19the ability to really answer
- 05:21questions real time throughout.
- 05:24And I see some of
- 05:25our regulars,
- 05:26and you guys are always
- 05:28very engaged. So thank you
- 05:29again. I know it's a
- 05:30busy time. Happy New Year,
- 05:32and we'll we'll get started.
- 05:33Thank you for attending.
- 05:36Yeah. Well, yeah. Yeah. Thank
- 05:37you for attending.
- 05:38Thank you for
- 05:40having me. So,
- 05:41these are two cases from
- 05:44my panel.
- 05:45The data is
- 05:47a hundred percent like just
- 05:49transferred over and you'll and
- 05:50then you'll
- 05:53you'll see where maybe I
- 05:54could have done a little
- 05:55more before referral,
- 05:57as well. So these are
- 05:58just, real cases I thought
- 06:00would make the most sense
- 06:01to to you all, the
- 06:02audience, and and, hopefully,
- 06:05you agree. So,
- 06:07we're gonna talk about two
- 06:08cases where the blood counts
- 06:09are high. Right? We think
- 06:10about referring for a lot
- 06:12of lows, a lot of
- 06:13penis, but there's a lot
- 06:14of elevated
- 06:16and abnormal blood counts, when
- 06:18you start, looking. And there's
- 06:20a substantial amount of prework,
- 06:22that can be done prior
- 06:23to referral,
- 06:24which may actually eliminate the
- 06:26need for a referral,
- 06:28in some cases, but also
- 06:29sort of identify people who
- 06:30need more urgent referrals,
- 06:32as well. And so we'll
- 06:33go through, these cases. If
- 06:35I get the next slide,
- 06:36please. So the first case
- 06:38was, is a gentleman
- 06:40who, about eight years ago,
- 06:42we saw,
- 06:44for fatigue
- 06:46and
- 06:47not a significant medical problem.
- 06:50History, just really high blood
- 06:51pressure was his only active
- 06:52problem. He was at the
- 06:54time on lisinopril and hydrochlorothiazide,
- 06:57married, no real, significant social
- 06:59history,
- 07:00works as a social worker
- 07:02and,
- 07:03licensed clinical social worker.
- 07:06BMI was was
- 07:07technically over, overweight, but but
- 07:09but pretty good.
- 07:11And you can see his
- 07:12family history, which did sort
- 07:13of,
- 07:14include some
- 07:16some potential hematolite,
- 07:18heme or hemonc,
- 07:20diseases. So he came in
- 07:22for fatigue.
- 07:23We ran simple perfect. We
- 07:24ran some blood work and
- 07:25found that, initially his hemoglobin
- 07:27was,
- 07:28elevated,
- 07:30slightly. The rest of his
- 07:31CBC was, generally unremarkable.
- 07:35We actually stopped his hydrochlorothiazide,
- 07:38and, rechecked, but the CBC
- 07:41was relatively unchanged. The hemoglobin
- 07:43had stayed in the seventeen
- 07:45to seventeen point five range.
- 07:47So
- 07:48mildly elevated. And other than
- 07:50the fatigue, really no other
- 07:52symptoms.
- 07:53We, we started the workup,
- 07:54which showed the normal iron
- 07:56studies,
- 07:58that you saw before.
- 07:59And, and then sort of
- 08:01kind of what and we
- 08:02were at and those were
- 08:03unrevealing.
- 08:04And then sort of the
- 08:05plan was sort of, you
- 08:06know, what, what next? And
- 08:08so,
- 08:09before we go back to,
- 08:10to him, just sort of
- 08:11a little bit of a,
- 08:13a reintroduction
- 08:15to people on the care
- 08:16signature pathways.
- 08:18And you can see that
- 08:19in the last
- 08:20few months, they've really,
- 08:23increased
- 08:24especially in some of the
- 08:26basic hematologic
- 08:27diseases. And you can you
- 08:28can see some some here.
- 08:32As most of you know,
- 08:33the the care signature pathways
- 08:36are pathways that are designed
- 08:37by,
- 08:38of a group of our
- 08:40local,
- 08:41clinicians and experts,
- 08:43to provide sort of best
- 08:44practices for a certain condition,
- 08:46a certain, problem. We probably
- 08:48all know it started or
- 08:50or, really gained some some
- 08:52fame with the COVID.
- 08:55But now is,
- 08:58the number,
- 09:00and then the depth of
- 09:01some of the information you
- 09:02get from there is, is
- 09:04incredible. And, and it's a
- 09:05live,
- 09:07a live document, so to
- 09:08speak, where it it's continuing
- 09:10to change.
- 09:12And so
- 09:14just, so these are some
- 09:15of the new ones,
- 09:17or some of them, including
- 09:18some that are really relatively
- 09:21brand new. Another reason we
- 09:22pick some of these cases
- 09:23was to highlight some of
- 09:24the new care signature pathways.
- 09:27If I can get to
- 09:28the next slide, please. So,
- 09:30as you can see here,
- 09:32there's a pretty substantial care
- 09:34signature pathway,
- 09:35for an elevated,
- 09:37hemoglobin.
- 09:38Should have mentioned
- 09:40in in the history part
- 09:41that his pulse ox had
- 09:43been consistently
- 09:45normal.
- 09:46We saw, I'm on the
- 09:48right side actually now some
- 09:49of the basic stuff. You
- 09:50know, he wasn't on testosterone,
- 09:53as well. But if you
- 09:55start looking and you can
- 09:56see some of the things
- 09:57that we had done now
- 09:58this was twenty in my
- 09:59defense, it was twenty fifteen,
- 10:01so there wasn't a cancerous
- 10:02pathway, but there was an
- 10:03up to date. So we
- 10:04did some of the workup.
- 10:05As you can see, there's
- 10:06probably a little bit more
- 10:07that we should have done.
- 10:08He certainly didn't need an
- 10:09urgent referral,
- 10:12but the care synergy pathway
- 10:14really does sort of,
- 10:16I find to be incredibly
- 10:17helpful,
- 10:18for some, for a lot
- 10:19of the hematologic
- 10:21diseases
- 10:22in particular.
- 10:25I'm I'm gonna, we'll go
- 10:27to the next
- 10:28slide,
- 10:30and, I'm gonna pass this,
- 10:33forward,
- 10:35but, I'm gonna stick around
- 10:36if there's any questions from,
- 10:39for me.
- 10:42Great.
- 10:43Thank you, Frank. So,
- 10:45I'm gonna go through,
- 10:47initially, some definitions
- 10:49of erythrocytosis,
- 10:50just because I actually think
- 10:51that's where the referral starts.
- 10:53Sometimes different labs might have
- 10:55different normal ranges,
- 10:57which could flag something as
- 10:59potentially being high when maybe
- 11:00we don't consider it as
- 11:02such.
- 11:03But,
- 11:04there are sex differences,
- 11:06in how we define arthrocytosis
- 11:08and for sixteen point five
- 11:10grams per deciliter for males
- 11:11and sixteen grams per deciliter
- 11:13for females with the corresponding
- 11:14hematocrit, in parentheses following that.
- 11:17The main our main goal,
- 11:19for these cases is trying
- 11:20to distinguish primary arthrocytosis,
- 11:23which is really an autonomous
- 11:25production. And and for the
- 11:27sake of this discussion, that
- 11:28that really means, polycythemia
- 11:30vera, which is a a
- 11:31malignant disorder.
- 11:33Everything else which is more
- 11:34common would fall into secondary
- 11:36erythrocytosis.
- 11:37And these are,
- 11:38situations in which it's it's
- 11:40not autonomous or rather an
- 11:41external factor, which is leading
- 11:43to the booster red cell
- 11:44red blood cell production. And
- 11:46mainly, this is driven by,
- 11:48erythropoietin
- 11:49or EPO, and this can
- 11:50happen for a variety of
- 11:51reasons.
- 11:53Both of these can be
- 11:55classified in another way, either
- 11:57congenital or acquired. But in
- 11:58our adult,
- 12:01primary care practices, we're mostly
- 12:03gonna be discussing acquired
- 12:05causes.
- 12:07I'll just briefly mention,
- 12:09the idea of relative erythrocytosis,
- 12:11which I think is what,
- 12:14doctor Chimneyel was, like, discussing
- 12:16in his case,
- 12:18where they
- 12:19discontinued the,
- 12:21hydrochlorothiazide.
- 12:26The,
- 12:28you know, most of the
- 12:29time, when we're thinking about
- 12:30a relative of retrocytosis, right,
- 12:32where the there's
- 12:34a change in the plasma
- 12:35volume creating this,
- 12:37increase,
- 12:38or apparent increase,
- 12:40in the hemoglobin or hematocrit.
- 12:42We might often be talking
- 12:43about something transient such as
- 12:45diuretics,
- 12:47or
- 12:47GI losses through, you know,
- 12:49either vomiting or diarrhea, but
- 12:50I just did wanna make
- 12:51a brief mention that there
- 12:52is a,
- 12:54condition,
- 12:55called case box polycythemia, which
- 12:57can really be thought of
- 12:57as almost a chronic form
- 12:59of of relative polycythemia.
- 13:01We we might tend to
- 13:01see that in,
- 13:03males with hypertension
- 13:04who are obese. So sometimes,
- 13:07I personally find it's almost
- 13:09like a diagnosis exclusion, but
- 13:11something that we do keep
- 13:11in in mind. Go to
- 13:13the next slide.
- 13:16So, you know, one brief
- 13:17slide here on polycythemia
- 13:18vera because I think that's
- 13:19often,
- 13:21as a malignant condition, something,
- 13:22of course, we don't wanna
- 13:24miss.
- 13:25And this is a,
- 13:27cancer, a myeloproliferative
- 13:29neoplasm that's really characterized by
- 13:30an increase in erythrocyte mass.
- 13:32Patients often have thrombotic,
- 13:34but sometimes bleeding complications and
- 13:36can have vasomotor
- 13:38symptoms.
- 13:40For simplicity's sake for this
- 13:42discussion,
- 13:43essentially, all patients with polycythemia
- 13:46there will have a JAK
- 13:47two mutation. So
- 13:49most of those are this
- 13:50JAK two v six one
- 13:51seven f mutation, and then
- 13:53a smaller percentage
- 13:54are kinda what we call
- 13:55other other JAK mutations.
- 13:57And so if somebody is
- 13:59has a JAK mutation
- 14:01negative,
- 14:02it's extremely unlikely that they
- 14:04would have polycythemia
- 14:05vera.
- 14:09So this is a,
- 14:10one proposed
- 14:12approach, but,
- 14:15you know, starting at the
- 14:16top left, again, that has
- 14:17just our definitions. This is,
- 14:19taken from a,
- 14:21European journal, so you can
- 14:22notice the change in decimal
- 14:23places. But,
- 14:25you know, following the definitions
- 14:26we outlined earlier for erythrocytosis,
- 14:28again, first excluding that relative,
- 14:31erythrocytosis,
- 14:32which is really things like
- 14:33dehydration,
- 14:35you know, then we get
- 14:36to this next main fork
- 14:37in the road. And of
- 14:38the next kind of very
- 14:40useful test that can be
- 14:41done is the erythropoietin level.
- 14:44And whether that turns out
- 14:46to be high, low, or
- 14:47normal, that helps,
- 14:49bring us into the next,
- 14:52most likely,
- 14:54leading us down the diagnostic
- 14:55pathway. And so if the
- 14:56erythropoietin level is high, we're
- 14:58really looking at these secondary
- 15:00acquired causes. So not polycythemia
- 15:03vera, not the can not
- 15:04a cancerous condition, but something
- 15:05else driving EPO levels to
- 15:07be high.
- 15:08And often the main the
- 15:09main,
- 15:10reasons here are hypoxia and
- 15:12medical conditions that cause such
- 15:14and medications.
- 15:15We're rarely gonna see congenital,
- 15:18associated causes in practice.
- 15:20If the,
- 15:22erythropoietin level is low or
- 15:23very low, then that's where
- 15:25we often will next check
- 15:26the JAK two,
- 15:28mutation testing. Again, if it's
- 15:29positive, that confirms that someone
- 15:31has polycythemia
- 15:32vera.
- 15:33If it's negative, we we,
- 15:36we'll we'll look for those
- 15:38other JAK mutations.
- 15:40And,
- 15:41again, if these are all
- 15:42negative,
- 15:43it makes it very unlikely
- 15:45the patient has polycythemia vera.
- 15:47Okay. Next slide.
- 15:49Okay. So, again, our in
- 15:50terms of our diagnostic approach,
- 15:52the first most important, lab
- 15:54to check would be an
- 15:54erythropoietin
- 15:55level.
- 15:57And, again, if it's low,
- 15:58that really points us in
- 15:59the direction of placentia vera.
- 16:01And if it's normal or
- 16:02elevated, then we're going down
- 16:03the more common
- 16:05likelihood of secondary etiologies.
- 16:09So this is just a
- 16:10list of diseases that as
- 16:12primary care,
- 16:14providers,
- 16:15you might commonly see in
- 16:17your practice,
- 16:19that can
- 16:20that can, again, have a
- 16:22erythrocytosis
- 16:23and with either a normal
- 16:24or increased erythropoietin
- 16:25level.
- 16:28So cardiopulmonary
- 16:29disease and obstructive sleep apnea,
- 16:31I think, are are quite
- 16:32common in our patient population,
- 16:35given that we don't live
- 16:36in a high altitude.
- 16:38Cigarette smoking,
- 16:40often, I think,
- 16:42we might see either separate
- 16:44but often together with cardiopulmonary
- 16:46diseases.
- 16:47And then I just wanted
- 16:48to bring attention to carbon
- 16:50monoxide poisoning as, of course,
- 16:51something we wouldn't wanna miss,
- 16:52and that can be identified
- 16:53on lab work. And then
- 16:55also a list of,
- 16:56medications here,
- 17:00Pointing out that SGLT
- 17:02SGLT
- 17:03two,
- 17:04inhibitors,
- 17:05the drugs that end in
- 17:06neflozins,
- 17:07we're seeing an increased number
- 17:09of these prescribed as,
- 17:12in our patient population, and
- 17:13we do see erythrocytosis from
- 17:15these. So just keep that
- 17:16in mind, kind of doing
- 17:17a quick medication check when
- 17:18you
- 17:19notice a higher hemoglobin in
- 17:21your with your patients.
- 17:23In addition to things like
- 17:24testosterone,
- 17:25I'd say that's
- 17:27also
- 17:28often prevalent in our patient
- 17:29population.
- 17:31I personally don't see that
- 17:33many patients,
- 17:35using,
- 17:37you know, EPO doping, but,
- 17:38of course, it it, I
- 17:39think, intuitively makes sense to
- 17:41think about that.
- 17:44If we talked about the
- 17:45relative,
- 17:46erythrocytosis,
- 17:47and then if we see
- 17:48a high EPO,
- 17:49level,
- 17:51tumors, both malignant and benign,
- 17:53including, like, uterine fibroids, which
- 17:55is something I've seen in
- 17:56practice, can actually sudd secrete
- 17:58EPO.
- 18:01And then also renal conditions,
- 18:03so renal artery stenosis, renal
- 18:05cysts, and,
- 18:07and patients who have also
- 18:08had a, kidney transplant as
- 18:10well.
- 18:13So in terms of other
- 18:14labs to to check, in
- 18:15addition to those,
- 18:17iron studies, a lot of
- 18:18our patients with polycythemia
- 18:20vera will have kinda low
- 18:21iron at baseline,
- 18:24which was checked in your
- 18:25case.
- 18:26And, also, a blood smear,
- 18:28is useful,
- 18:30really to look for some
- 18:31of those kind of more
- 18:32ominous markers,
- 18:34sort of,
- 18:35blasts, which could be seen.
- 18:37It could highlight a potential
- 18:38malignant condition
- 18:40or
- 18:41what we call leukoerythroblastosis,
- 18:43just sort of these younger
- 18:45precursor cells, so nucleated red
- 18:46blood cells, for example.
- 18:49Again, just, this was, I
- 18:50guess, kinda outlined on the
- 18:51prior slide, but just in
- 18:52a different format.
- 18:55I think some of these
- 18:56are relatively common conditions in
- 18:58the primary care population.
- 19:01Just as you,
- 19:03after you've checked in erythropoietin
- 19:05and you see that it's
- 19:06either normal or high, and
- 19:08kinda try to go through
- 19:09this list of different possibility.
- 19:15And, again, we just wanted
- 19:17to highlight,
- 19:18particularly this last bullet point
- 19:19here as we're seeing more
- 19:20of these prescribed in practice.
- 19:25When we're taking a history,
- 19:28you know, I think,
- 19:29it largely is going to,
- 19:32the medication list, obviously, we
- 19:34might have in front of
- 19:34us. We're we're gonna take
- 19:35a smoking history, of course.
- 19:37You know, do you have
- 19:38a carbon monoxide monitor in
- 19:39your home? And symptoms of,
- 19:41I think, sleep apnea are
- 19:42are quite,
- 19:43useful.
- 19:46And on our physical exam,
- 19:48you know, hypertension,
- 19:50plethora,
- 19:51signs of,
- 19:52scratching, itching from pruritus patients
- 19:54might experience.
- 19:56Certainly, if someone has splenomegaly,
- 19:58I think we're really gonna
- 19:59wanna
- 19:59wanna make sure we're ruling
- 20:01out any malignant etiology.
- 20:03So these are helpful things
- 20:04to look for.
- 20:08So who should be referred
- 20:09to hematology? So I I
- 20:10would say my my my
- 20:12recommendations would be anybody who
- 20:13has a low erythropoietin level,
- 20:17someone who has really long
- 20:19standing erythrocytosis
- 20:21or a clear family history
- 20:22patient's younger because while they're
- 20:24quite rare, there are,
- 20:26we do have a handful
- 20:27of patients with hereditary forms
- 20:29of erythrocytosis,
- 20:32certainly somebody who has a
- 20:33JAK2 mutation.
- 20:35And then I think that
- 20:36there are patients who,
- 20:39we might feel have symptoms
- 20:41related to erythrocytosis,
- 20:42which can be challenging to
- 20:44to
- 20:45manage.
- 20:46So
- 20:46headaches, for example, I'd say
- 20:48would be a very common
- 20:49symptom,
- 20:51kind of mental fogginess,
- 20:55would probably be a second
- 20:56thing I would think about.
- 20:58And so, certainly,
- 20:59if there's concerns that symptoms
- 21:01patients have are related to
- 21:02erythrocytosis, I think we should
- 21:03see those patients, in my
- 21:04opinion.
- 21:07I have one brief thing
- 21:09on how we manage polycythemia
- 21:10vera only because it often
- 21:13in the past, how we
- 21:14manage polycythemia vera sort of
- 21:16trickled into how one
- 21:19Sometimes we might think we
- 21:20should manage other causes of
- 21:22arthrocytosis.
- 21:23But very briefly, these patients
- 21:24get,
- 21:25have phlebotomy to reduce their
- 21:27hematocrit often to a level
- 21:28of less than forty five.
- 21:30Most of these patients are
- 21:31on aspirin, and sometimes they,
- 21:33receive,
- 21:34like,
- 21:36phytoreductive pills like hydroxyurea
- 21:40or others.
- 21:42So, but for secondary erythrocytosis,
- 21:46we we really should not
- 21:47be doing phlebotomy. It's really
- 21:49the, like, take home point
- 21:50of this.
- 21:51And the treatment is really
- 21:53directed at the underlying cause
- 21:55if we think it's even
- 21:56necessary,
- 21:59You know, especially when it
- 22:00comes to hypoxic pulmonary disease,
- 22:03right, we might see this
- 22:04in more advanced forms of
- 22:05COPD or OSA, and
- 22:07prognostic significance is not exactly
- 22:09clear. There's sort of mixed
- 22:11data in this space.
- 22:13And there's really no clear
- 22:14evidence that phlebotomy is necessary,
- 22:17or even effective at reducing
- 22:19thrombotic risk and could actually
- 22:20increase thrombotic risk.
- 22:24And, certainly,
- 22:25to try to assess someone's
- 22:27thrombotic risk, you know, we
- 22:28need to think about other
- 22:29other risk other risk factors
- 22:31patients might have.
- 22:33We do know that when
- 22:34patients with OSA are on
- 22:36CPAP, it can reduce their
- 22:37withrocytosis.
- 22:39But, otherwise, in terms
- 22:41of directed management to lower,
- 22:43the erythrocyt count, its data
- 22:45is less clear.
- 22:48One brief slide on testosterone
- 22:49because I we see a
- 22:50lot of these patients as
- 22:51referrals.
- 22:53We know testosterone can cause
- 22:55arthrocytosis,
- 22:57for a few reasons, but
- 22:58probably initially due to a
- 22:59rise in arthropoietin levels.
- 23:04Often, patients have been referred
- 23:06to sort of decide if
- 23:08they should if they would
- 23:09benefit from phlebotomy, and,
- 23:12there's not really a clear
- 23:14data to say we should
- 23:15do that, and it may
- 23:16actually make things worse.
- 23:21So going back to the
- 23:22our case,
- 23:24I think that,
- 23:26you know, we the JAK
- 23:27two mutation was negative from
- 23:29what I recall, so we're
- 23:30now kinda going down this
- 23:31path of what we call
- 23:32secondary causes.
- 23:35For this patient, I would
- 23:36say it's really crucial to
- 23:37rule out medication related causes.
- 23:39Certainly check for carbon dioxide
- 23:41poisoning. And I think checking
- 23:42the erythropoietin
- 23:43level,
- 23:44will help kinda guide us
- 23:45on next steps.
- 23:49Commonly, we might have a
- 23:50patient who has signs or
- 23:52symptoms suggestive of sleep apnea
- 23:53and a referral to pulmonary
- 23:54or sleep medicine sometimes can
- 23:56be useful.
- 23:58And I do not think
- 23:59there's any role for therapeutic
- 24:00phlebotomy in this type of
- 24:02case.
- 24:06Great. Thanks. Before we do
- 24:07case two, since this was
- 24:08eight years ago, I can
- 24:09give you, like, the the
- 24:10final. So he did have
- 24:12a an epogen level before
- 24:14seeing hematology. It was negative.
- 24:17And then,
- 24:19he saw, Doctor. Persico,
- 24:21who did do the,
- 24:23the carboxyhemoglobin
- 24:25study that was normal.
- 24:27And he did the CalR
- 24:28exon analysis
- 24:30as well, which was negative.
- 24:32The workup eventually found that
- 24:34he had some, you know,
- 24:35mild to moderate sleep apnea,
- 24:37and he's been on,
- 24:39CPAP,
- 24:40since. And his,
- 24:42hemoglobin has been generally,
- 24:44staying in, like, the sixteen
- 24:45range. So, upper normal and
- 24:47remained off because he didn't,
- 24:49you know, we switched his
- 24:50blood pressure around blood pressure
- 24:52medicines around off the hydrochlorothiazide.
- 24:54So,
- 24:54and he may still have
- 24:55a little bit of fatigue,
- 24:56but, who who does?
- 24:59So, thank you. The the
- 25:00second case is,
- 25:02this one, is actually sort
- 25:04of in the workup,
- 25:06now. It's a,
- 25:08seventy four year old woman.
- 25:09So recently
- 25:11just for a routine follow-up.
- 25:13She has, some chronic medical
- 25:15problems including obesity,
- 25:17AFib, hypertension, hyperlipidemia,
- 25:20remote history of adrenal insufficiency.
- 25:23You can see her medications.
- 25:24Most of them are old.
- 25:25The Gemteza,
- 25:27is, you know, maybe more
- 25:28new.
- 25:30She,
- 25:31was a former smoker, a
- 25:33fair amount, as you can
- 25:34see, ten to fifteen,
- 25:36pack year.
- 25:37And her family history also
- 25:38interestingly enough has
- 25:40a possible,
- 25:41hematologic,
- 25:43positive finding with the,
- 25:45what she says is her,
- 25:47her,
- 25:51father had, you know, elevated
- 25:53blood counts,
- 25:54but didn't necessarily do
- 25:57she didn't know the diagnosis
- 25:59per se. So,
- 26:00so this is her.
- 26:03We did some, some blood
- 26:05work and, you can see
- 26:06her white count upper normal,
- 26:08hemoglobin
- 26:09normal,
- 26:10and platelets were elevated,
- 26:12repeated
- 26:13and were,
- 26:15pretty similar in the four
- 26:17fifty to five twenty five
- 26:19range.
- 26:20No evidence of kidney disease,
- 26:23liver disease,
- 26:24did do an
- 26:26ultrasound,
- 26:27as part of the workup
- 26:28as well, which showed evidence
- 26:29of fatty liver, not surprising
- 26:30given her her medical history,
- 26:33and, no evidence of any,
- 26:35splenomegaly
- 26:36or,
- 26:37or any,
- 26:39any abnormalities in the spleen.
- 26:43So,
- 26:44this one's on ongoing.
- 26:46So she,
- 26:48were next to order the,
- 26:50blood smear, but thought, unlike
- 26:52the other case, we can
- 26:52do sort of a a
- 26:54a fresh case.
- 26:55And you can see again,
- 26:58a a care signature pathway,
- 27:00showing no,
- 27:01real
- 27:02alarm symptoms,
- 27:04which is good, but a
- 27:05peripheral,
- 27:06blood smear that sort of,
- 27:08you know, ordered not done.
- 27:09So you can see on
- 27:09the bottom, you know, some
- 27:11more worrisome,
- 27:13findings,
- 27:14that we haven't gotten to.
- 27:15Hopefully, won't get to, but
- 27:17haven't ruled out yet.
- 27:21So I'll pass,
- 27:22this,
- 27:23onto our expert and
- 27:26and, obviously, I'm around for
- 27:28questions.
- 27:32Thank you.
- 27:34So I think unlike
- 27:36erythrocytosis or polycythemia,
- 27:39the workup of thrombocytosis
- 27:41is and I misspelled it
- 27:43here,
- 27:46the expert. But,
- 27:49it's it's
- 27:51I think clinically in both
- 27:53the laboratory evaluation and,
- 27:55you know, different causes, it's
- 27:57just a lot more
- 27:58simple or simpler,
- 28:00and
- 28:01perhaps reflects
- 28:02the physiology
- 28:05because you know the platelet
- 28:06production and its regulation is
- 28:07so much
- 28:08simpler
- 28:10than red cells, you know
- 28:11there's no kidney involved, there's
- 28:13no liver involved, and you
- 28:14know there isn't
- 28:15a you know feedback mechanism
- 28:17that's
- 28:18related to kind of oxygen
- 28:21levels or hypoxia or hyperoxia.
- 28:23And,
- 28:24so thrombocytosis
- 28:25is, especially
- 28:29isolated thrombocytosis,
- 28:30and and this is what
- 28:31our our our
- 28:33patient here has is,
- 28:35is mostly
- 28:37incidental.
- 28:38And,
- 28:41with that, what I mean
- 28:42is, you know, most of
- 28:43the time,
- 28:44patients are not very symptomatic,
- 28:46and these are picked up,
- 28:48either, you know, routine labs.
- 28:50They they could be peri
- 28:51up. They could be just
- 28:52their handles, physicals,
- 28:54or otherwise.
- 28:56And and
- 28:57and to sum it up,
- 28:59most of the times when
- 29:00we're
- 29:02when when we're dealing with,
- 29:03with thrombocytosis
- 29:05or
- 29:06especially a persistent, you know,
- 29:08thrombocytosis
- 29:08or elevated platelet counts, we
- 29:10we wanna
- 29:12perhaps,
- 29:13you know, figure out whether
- 29:14it's reactive or or, essential.
- 29:18Next slide, please.
- 29:22So when I'm,
- 29:24seeing
- 29:26a referral,
- 29:28of course, you know, I
- 29:29go through history and,
- 29:31and and and that and
- 29:33just trying to see whether
- 29:34there are any symptoms, which,
- 29:36most of these patients typically
- 29:37don't.
- 29:38I I I feel
- 29:40patients with polycythemia
- 29:41or, other myeloprolifer neoplasms typically,
- 29:45tend tend to have,
- 29:46some more symptoms especially on,
- 29:48you know, when we get
- 29:49down to more direct questions.
- 29:52But
- 29:53but but you know thrombocytosis
- 29:55can also produce some vasomotor
- 29:57symptoms and I've certainly had
- 29:59people with with migraines or
- 30:02with other
- 30:03vasomotor symptoms that get better
- 30:04with with treatment especially with
- 30:06essential
- 30:07thrombocytosis.
- 30:10But in history, other than
- 30:11that, I'm I'm just trying
- 30:12to, figure out,
- 30:15you know, whether the the
- 30:16person is asplenic,
- 30:18and and and happens less
- 30:19so, but but certainly, you
- 30:21know, we we see people
- 30:23from, you know,
- 30:24from,
- 30:26time to time getting,
- 30:29either traumatic or, you know,
- 30:30other,
- 30:31re for for other reasons,
- 30:33getting splenectomy or and and
- 30:34our ACE clinic on that,
- 30:36and that will always,
- 30:38you know, cause kind of
- 30:40mild to moderate thrombocytosis.
- 30:42And then the trend is,
- 30:44really important because, you know,
- 30:47if if it's
- 30:49really,
- 30:52you know, you look back
- 30:52and,
- 30:54someone
- 30:55lives lives around hundred, hundred
- 30:56and fifty or, you know,
- 30:57two hundred and,
- 30:59and, you know, and slowly,
- 31:00the numbers have been creeping
- 31:02up, and they've just recently
- 31:03have come up to maybe
- 31:04four fifty or five hundred
- 31:06range. You know, it kind
- 31:07of gives a sort of
- 31:08sense that maybe this is
- 31:10an essential thrombocytosis
- 31:11and usually takes years to
- 31:13kind of, double,
- 31:16or, you know, the doubling
- 31:17time is typically very, very
- 31:18slow. The trend is important.
- 31:21And then if I see
- 31:21some there's someone who perhaps
- 31:23goes up to six hundred,
- 31:24seven hundred and then goes
- 31:25back to normal and then,
- 31:26you know, goes back again,
- 31:28I,
- 31:29I,
- 31:30typically, like, you know,
- 31:32after finishing the workup,
- 31:34you know,
- 31:35realize that, you know, these
- 31:36are mostly kind of reactive,
- 31:39thrombocytosis.
- 31:41And
- 31:42and then, you know, with
- 31:43recent history of, you know,
- 31:45surgery, sometimes, like, you know,
- 31:47patients can have very extensive
- 31:48surgery, especially orthopedic surgery is
- 31:50very well described,
- 31:53hip surgery for example hip
- 31:54fracture surgery you know patients
- 31:55can have
- 31:56first thrombocytopenia and then you
- 31:58know reactive thrombocytosis that can
- 32:00last for months,
- 32:02and and the same is
- 32:03with chronic infections it could
- 32:04be also myelitis or you
- 32:05know other chronic infections
- 32:07Even acute infection, viral infection,
- 32:09you would see only, you
- 32:10know, ITP or, you know,
- 32:12thrombocytopenia
- 32:13kind of syndrome, but a
- 32:14thrombocytosis
- 32:15that could last for weeks,
- 32:16weeks to months and and
- 32:17then other, chronic inflammatory states,
- 32:20especially rheumatologic diseases. But but
- 32:22even
- 32:24milder,
- 32:26general sort of
- 32:27or, you know, in in
- 32:29inflammatory
- 32:29kind of conditions, even diabetes
- 32:31or,
- 32:32or a poorly controlled diabetes
- 32:34or or others.
- 32:36And then, some medications as
- 32:37well. I mean, I've certainly
- 32:39seen,
- 32:40patients getting steroids.
- 32:43The last one I saw
- 32:44was, you know,
- 32:45a person getting,
- 32:47you know, I think
- 32:48epidurals and and every time,
- 32:50you know, it go up
- 32:51and then come down. And
- 32:52then six months later, you
- 32:53know, it'll go up and
- 32:54come down. So, definitely, you
- 32:55know, steroids can do that.
- 32:57Stimulants also I've seen,
- 32:59especially with methylphenidate.
- 33:02It's not being reported, but,
- 33:03you know, I think I've
- 33:05seen a bunch of patients
- 33:06who really go on it.
- 33:07The patients go high,
- 33:09and then, you know, and
- 33:10then they're off of it
- 33:11and and it comes down.
- 33:12So,
- 33:13and then,
- 33:15and then there are other,
- 33:16you know, chemotherapeutic agents. And
- 33:17gemcitabine is a big one
- 33:18where, you know, you could
- 33:19have really extreme thrombocytosis,
- 33:21but those those would be
- 33:23rare.
- 33:25And then, then coming to
- 33:26the laboratory workup and so,
- 33:27you know,
- 33:29you know, they've had at
- 33:31least a few CBC, but,
- 33:32you know, that's what, we
- 33:34end up getting in smear.
- 33:35And smear becomes very important
- 33:37because,
- 33:40many times,
- 33:41you know, thrombocytosis
- 33:43also causes,
- 33:45how do I put this,
- 33:47some degree of pseudothrombocytopenia.
- 33:51And what I mean by
- 33:52that is, like, you know,
- 33:53you'd see a platelet count
- 33:54of five hundred or six
- 33:55hundred reported platelet count of
- 33:56five, six hundred, and then
- 33:57you look under the smear
- 33:58and there are many, many,
- 33:58many clumps. And so especially
- 34:00with the central thrombocytosis. And
- 34:02so
- 34:03so the, you know, the
- 34:03platelet count the actual platelet
- 34:05count is is way much
- 34:07higher. And,
- 34:09and I
- 34:10sort of, like,
- 34:11you know, see that a
- 34:12lot more with with,
- 34:14with, inflammatory,
- 34:17states.
- 34:18But, anyway, smear is pretty
- 34:19useful,
- 34:20especially you're also looking for
- 34:22other atypical, you know, cells
- 34:23or, you know, sometimes they're
- 34:24not reported or they're within
- 34:26the normal range and and,
- 34:28and you appreciate, you know,
- 34:29they maybe,
- 34:31or question this poise or
- 34:32or,
- 34:33so smear becomes very important.
- 34:34And then and then ferritin,
- 34:36and with with that, what
- 34:37I mean is iron iron
- 34:38studies, I personally just, you
- 34:40know, get ferritin, and that's
- 34:42my iron panel. But,
- 34:44but, you know, in in
- 34:46outpatients,
- 34:47the most common cause of,
- 34:49of thrombocytosis
- 34:50is is,
- 34:51is iron deficiency and, you
- 34:53know, now the the biology
- 34:54and the mechanism behind it
- 34:56is also,
- 34:57very well known.
- 34:59In fact, you can kind
- 35:00of divide the humanity into
- 35:01two, those who would, you
- 35:02know, really have thrombocytosis
- 35:04and those who wouldn't with
- 35:05iron deficiency. And so, so
- 35:06this is, you know, you
- 35:07know, perhaps the most common,
- 35:09cause
- 35:10with, iron deficiency being,
- 35:12for for thrombocytosis.
- 35:13And then once, you know,
- 35:15you've really,
- 35:17really ruled out all of
- 35:19this, which is, you know,
- 35:20normal inflammation, infection, surgery even,
- 35:23you know, three months ago.
- 35:25They're up to date with
- 35:26cancer screening and and everything.
- 35:28And,
- 35:29then, you know, the the
- 35:31likelihood
- 35:32of a persistent
- 35:33thrombocytosis
- 35:37being
- 35:37essential thrombocytosis
- 35:39or thrombocythemia,
- 35:42is, you
- 35:43know, is more.
- 35:45So,
- 35:46and and then, you know,
- 35:47that's really,
- 35:49really,
- 35:50diagnosed
- 35:51by,
- 35:52by mutation testing. So fifty
- 35:54percent of them those will
- 35:55have JAK two v six
- 35:56one seven f mutation,
- 35:58and then about, you know,
- 35:59thirty percent will have CALR.
- 36:01And then, you know, five
- 36:01to ten percent will have
- 36:03the MIPL or MPL mutation.
- 36:05So, you know, that makes
- 36:05it eighty, eighty five percent,
- 36:07and the remaining,
- 36:08would, you know, require a
- 36:09bone or biopsy,
- 36:10for diagnosis.
- 36:12And and, you know, and
- 36:13these days, we are we
- 36:14are with sending a bigger
- 36:16myeloid, you know, panels. We
- 36:18are, we are finding,
- 36:20other rare mutations that are
- 36:21associated with essential thrombocytosis.
- 36:23And so
- 36:24so that's,
- 36:25that's really the laboratory workup.
- 36:29Next slide, please.
- 36:32And so just summarizing,
- 36:33you know, what I just
- 36:34said, you know, most common
- 36:36etiology is iron deficiency, and
- 36:38so your iron panel,
- 36:40is is, you know it
- 36:42probably will rule out,
- 36:44you know, good, you know,
- 36:46twenty, thirty, thirty percent of
- 36:47the cases,
- 36:49and then followed by by
- 36:50reactive or secondary cases such
- 36:52as, you know, post up
- 36:53status or, you know, in
- 36:54in chronic inflammatory conditions.
- 36:57Many times,
- 36:58we'd finish on the whole
- 36:59workup including bone marrow biopsy
- 37:01in a younger person and
- 37:02and,
- 37:03and not, you know, not
- 37:05really get a diagnosis. And
- 37:07and and that's
- 37:08that's, you know, that's perhaps
- 37:10because of, you know,
- 37:12I have, you know, kind
- 37:13of, you know, seen people
- 37:15developing diabetes or, you know,
- 37:16very general
- 37:17kind of mild chronic inflammatory
- 37:19sort of,
- 37:21states. And then once, these
- 37:23have been ruled out, then,
- 37:24you know, a
- 37:26workup for
- 37:28for,
- 37:29myeloproliferative
- 37:31neoplasm,
- 37:32is is justified. And, you
- 37:34know, that can just,
- 37:35be started off with JAK2
- 37:37mutation,
- 37:38and then reflects to other
- 37:39mutations followed by a pulmonary
- 37:40biopsy.
- 37:45Alright. No. Thank you. So
- 37:46this like I said, this
- 37:47case is sort of ongoing.
- 37:48I'm suspecting we won't find
- 37:50the cause, but we have
- 37:51the smear,
- 37:52still coming on. And and
- 37:53then just,
- 37:55one
- 37:56final plug on on the
- 37:57pathway. So,
- 37:59you know, when you're putting
- 38:00at least for me, when
- 38:01I'm putting in the smear
- 38:03order, if I if you
- 38:04type in peripheral smear, it
- 38:06it doesn't always show,
- 38:08on the order what you
- 38:09want.
- 38:10But if you click on
- 38:12it from the pathway,
- 38:14it pops up. And so
- 38:15for those of you taking
- 38:16notes at home, it's peripheral
- 38:18smear for pathology.
- 38:20If you type in
- 38:21peripheral,
- 38:23blood or peripheral blood smear,
- 38:25you actually doesn't always show
- 38:27up in EPIC.
- 38:28So another,
- 38:30plug on on on the
- 38:31pathway for,
- 38:34in some ways, it may
- 38:35be sometimes worth the time
- 38:36to go in just to
- 38:37make the ordering,
- 38:39easier.
- 38:40And so,
- 38:42but, like I said, her
- 38:43case is ongoing. I'm suspecting,
- 38:46since she's been relatively stable
- 38:47in the four fifty to
- 38:49five twenty five range that
- 38:50we will probably not find
- 38:52anything,
- 38:53pathologic.
- 38:55But I'm happy to when
- 38:57I'm back, if people want,
- 38:59give a another update.
- 39:02I don't I have been
- 39:04following the chat. I don't
- 39:05know if there's any questions.
- 39:07Otherwise, I'm gonna pass them
- 39:08back back over.
- 39:11Yeah. No. We have not
- 39:12gotten any questions,
- 39:14although we had a a
- 39:16couple of other things that
- 39:17we didn't know if we
- 39:18were gonna have time to
- 39:19discuss, and and so maybe
- 39:20we can,
- 39:22pull those in. And if
- 39:23you do have questions, please
- 39:25enter them in the q
- 39:27and a.
- 39:28Well, I have one. If
- 39:29that's something too. Yeah. Thanks
- 39:31for going. Yeah. Okay. Good.
- 39:33Yeah. No. You mine mine
- 39:35is a question, so it's
- 39:36a complete change. So you
- 39:37do
- 39:38Okay. I I was actually
- 39:39gonna ask, because I probably
- 39:41missed it in your case
- 39:42and maybe to doctor Sharda
- 39:43as well,
- 39:47about if your patient's body
- 39:48mass index and if they're
- 39:50obese. You might have said
- 39:51that, and I missed it.
- 39:52But I think
- 39:53yeah. Good question. I think
- 39:55I see that a lot
- 39:56in practice as part of
- 39:57this
- 39:59inflammatory
- 40:01state. Right.
- 40:02Yeah. Yeah. And I I,
- 40:04no. I I complete her
- 40:05BMI is thirty seven,
- 40:08and that's why I think
- 40:09we're not gonna find a
- 40:10pathological cause.
- 40:11This wasn't a a question,
- 40:13but it makes me think
- 40:14of something like,
- 40:16we didn't talk about, leukocytosis,
- 40:18but
- 40:19I I sort of feel
- 40:20and I and I haven't
- 40:21looked this up. So I
- 40:22I this is obvious to
- 40:23everyone else. I I apologize
- 40:25that that a fair amount
- 40:26of people with, you know,
- 40:27higher levels of obesity
- 40:29seem to have like a
- 40:31white counts of ten to
- 40:33twelve, you know, nothing that's
- 40:35sort of triggering a workup,
- 40:36but seems to have. And
- 40:38so I wonder, like you
- 40:39said, if there's another sort
- 40:40of, like, and you said,
- 40:41like maybe there's a little
- 40:42bit of non pathologic
- 40:44chronic inflammation
- 40:46that's driving some of these,
- 40:48thrombocytosis
- 40:49that may be causing a
- 40:49little bit of leukocytosis
- 40:51because I do see that
- 40:52a lot. So good question
- 40:53about the the the BMI.
- 40:55Yeah. Hers was is thirty
- 40:56seven.
- 40:59Yeah. And yes, I think
- 41:00we see a lot of
- 41:01patients with leukocytosis
- 41:03who are,
- 41:04with an elevated BMI,
- 41:06and there's increasing,
- 41:08I think, literature on that,
- 41:11that I've looked at that
- 41:12I think is,
- 41:13really fascinating. So yeah.
- 41:18We have a a comment
- 41:19from Mary Anne Davies.
- 41:22Thank you for a fabulous
- 41:23presentation and thrilled that you
- 41:25highlight the care signature pathways
- 41:26and the value for primary
- 41:28care. Mary Anne, thanks for
- 41:29the work that you and
- 41:30your team do
- 41:31on the signature care pathway,
- 41:33and thank you for sharing
- 41:34the slides that we some
- 41:36of the slides that we
- 41:37used. So thank you. Yeah.
- 41:40No. And they're they're well
- 41:41done. I agree with Frank.
- 41:43Yeah. Yeah. And and the
- 41:44fact that they're living and
- 41:45get,
- 41:46updated.
- 41:47So right. We we highlighted
- 41:49these topics because there was
- 41:50a couple of new ones,
- 41:51but they they'll change as
- 41:53as need be, which is
- 41:54which is great.
- 41:58But I don't know if
- 41:59there's no other questions at
- 42:00a time. I did have
- 42:01one question. We see a
- 42:02lot of elevated fair, you
- 42:04know, through all these, all
- 42:06both of these cases, right?
- 42:07The workup was let's get
- 42:09some iron studies.
- 42:10And
- 42:11I will say,
- 42:12in primary care,
- 42:14I do see a lot
- 42:15of iron studies that show
- 42:17an elevated ferritin
- 42:19and, and
- 42:21often
- 42:22my mind goes to, could,
- 42:24is this
- 42:25hemochromatosis
- 42:26and do I need to
- 42:27worry about hemochromatosis?
- 42:29And so, I had a
- 42:30question of, of, you know,
- 42:32you know what would be
- 42:34maybe the best marker
- 42:36or trigger that you would
- 42:37wanna share, with your primary
- 42:40care
- 42:40colleagues of
- 42:42when is it worth the
- 42:43the the testing for hemochromatosis?
- 42:49I
- 42:50I think by an iron
- 42:51saturation of more than forty
- 42:53five percent is usually a,
- 42:57a better test to kinda
- 42:59screen for hemochromatosis.
- 43:01So I think,
- 43:02but certainly other ways that
- 43:03someone might come to us
- 43:04too. I mean, sometimes patients
- 43:06have had,
- 43:07you know, an MRI. And
- 43:08if there's sort of iron
- 43:09deposition of on, like, a
- 43:10liver MRI, I think that's
- 43:11certainly
- 43:12like, we think about that
- 43:13as well. But the ferritin,
- 43:15you know,
- 43:16in a similar
- 43:17thing and has a lot
- 43:18of sort of reactive you
- 43:19know, as an acute phase
- 43:20reactant, we might see a
- 43:21high ferritin or from liver
- 43:23diseases and
- 43:25and other spaces, alcohol.
- 43:27I don't know, doctor Sharda,
- 43:28your thoughts.
- 43:31No. I agree. And and
- 43:32and then it becomes tough
- 43:34because, you know,
- 43:36because,
- 43:38the the you know, many
- 43:39times we end up seeing,
- 43:41seeing,
- 43:43people who've already had, mutation
- 43:45testing and then, you know,
- 43:46they have either the h
- 43:48sixty three d or just,
- 43:49you know, they're heterozygous and
- 43:50then, you know, you're just
- 43:51stuck with someone with a
- 43:52ferritin of seven eight hundred
- 43:54who perhaps is, you know,
- 43:56if you follow the, you
- 43:57know, if you're a tourist
- 43:58and follow the textbook,
- 44:00you, you know, you shouldn't
- 44:01be phlebotomizing
- 44:03and but, you know, you
- 44:05end up do you know,
- 44:06you're just stuck there in
- 44:07the middle. But, yeah, ferritin
- 44:08becomes
- 44:09really tough too. And it's
- 44:11got very half longer, much
- 44:13longer half life, I feel.
- 44:15I guess, you know, not
- 44:16half life in terms of
- 44:17the protein, but, like, you
- 44:18know, just physiologically
- 44:20because
- 44:21after acute infections, I I
- 44:23think, you know, in surgeries,
- 44:25ferritin is gonna be high
- 44:26for a very long time.
- 44:27And so then it becomes
- 44:29hard to, you know, obese
- 44:30peep you know, individuals,
- 44:32diabetes,
- 44:33having surgery, or, you know,
- 44:34foot infection. You know? It
- 44:36just becomes very difficult,
- 44:38at some point. Yeah.
- 44:42Yeah. That that so that
- 44:43that was another good pearl.
- 44:45That in the SGLT
- 44:46two inhibitors,
- 44:48those are some good pearls,
- 44:50to lymph by.
- 44:52Yeah. I'm I'm curious.
- 44:54Now I know that this
- 44:56could be an entire presentation
- 44:58in and of itself,
- 45:00but, you know, we talked
- 45:01about high platelets. And,
- 45:03you know, now that patients
- 45:05can see their own results
- 45:08in my chart,
- 45:09we get a lot of
- 45:10very pointed questions.
- 45:12You know, the ferritin would
- 45:14be an example
- 45:15on platelets. And, you know,
- 45:17are you sure there's nothing
- 45:18wrong? And I wanna see
- 45:20a a specialist. I mean,
- 45:21it it's a kind of
- 45:22interesting situation where we you
- 45:24know, things that we never
- 45:26had to completely
- 45:27explain, we we now have
- 45:28to explain.
- 45:30And, you know, there's always
- 45:31a a kind of fear
- 45:32of, like, are we dismissing
- 45:33something when it gets called
- 45:35up that way.
- 45:36And and the other thing
- 45:37that comes up a lot
- 45:38is, you know, these kind
- 45:39of intermittent,
- 45:40very mildly low platelet counts,
- 45:44where, you know, if you
- 45:45can actually do a smear
- 45:46and see clumping, you're like,
- 45:48amen. Hallelujah. Nothing to do.
- 45:51But but otherwise,
- 45:53again, I I don't think
- 45:54people bleed until they go
- 45:56significantly
- 45:57lower, but what should be
- 45:58our threshold for doing a
- 46:00workup?
- 46:01And and what should we
- 46:02tell patients when it's just
- 46:04really not a problem? They're
- 46:05only very mildly lower.
- 46:12Anish, I think it's your
- 46:13turn. Okay. Yeah. You're up.
- 46:14No. I agree. And I
- 46:16think I think,
- 46:18I I don't I I
- 46:19don't think there's even a
- 46:20term called minimal thrombocytopenia,
- 46:22but I tend to use
- 46:23it even in my description
- 46:25and
- 46:26because, you know, if you
- 46:27again, if you're a purist
- 46:28like I am,
- 46:30you know, definition of thrombocytopenia
- 46:31is less than hundred actually
- 46:32because, you know, people have
- 46:33gotten together and actually the
- 46:35world thrombocytopenia
- 46:36whatever, so, you know, is
- 46:38less than one hundred. But
- 46:39if you see the
- 46:41CBC and what you know,
- 46:42any lab, they would Yeah.
- 46:44Still report normal as one
- 46:46forty, one fifty, one to
- 46:47sixty, whatever their, you know,
- 46:48lower ranges.
- 46:50And so
- 46:51I and it's a lot
- 46:52you know, it's more common
- 46:54than
- 46:55than thrombocytosis
- 46:57or I would say, at
- 46:58least in my experience. And
- 47:00and and I agree. I
- 47:02mean, it becomes I I
- 47:03think they just need reassurance.
- 47:06I, you know, I I
- 47:07we see plenty of it.
- 47:08I I see plenty of
- 47:09it for referrals.
- 47:11But,
- 47:13but they, you know, it
- 47:14just needs they just need
- 47:15reassurance because I agree with
- 47:17you that
- 47:18that, you know,
- 47:20usually,
- 47:21there's no bleeding even at
- 47:23fifty. Or, you know, fifty
- 47:24is a you know, you
- 47:25can get a hip hip
- 47:26replacement. I mean, you know,
- 47:28so,
- 47:29you know, it's usually been
- 47:31the most the risk of
- 47:33major bleeding is five percent
- 47:34with less than twenty. So
- 47:36so, you know, the the
- 47:37you you don't there's a
- 47:38lot of redundancy and, you
- 47:40know, there's
- 47:40so usually,
- 47:42hundred you know, if they're
- 47:43great really greater than hundred
- 47:45and you have repeated it,
- 47:47you know, and it's still
- 47:48greater than hundred and or
- 47:49it bounces around, it really,
- 47:51I think, is very reassuring.
- 47:54And, you know, and and
- 47:55that you know, one one
- 47:56could just be clear that,
- 47:57actually,
- 47:58the real, you know, we
- 48:00call low platelets, you know,
- 48:02on the medicine you know,
- 48:03from the real definition is
- 48:05less than one hundred.
- 48:08So
- 48:10That is another great pearl.
- 48:12We have, like, just pearls
- 48:14flowing. These are really wonderful
- 48:16because, you know,
- 48:18I don't know about you,
- 48:19Frank. I see, you know,
- 48:20CBCs. I, you know, I
- 48:22probably look at,
- 48:23I don't know, twenty, thirty
- 48:25a day. You know, it's
- 48:26a lot, and and they
- 48:27all have things just outside
- 48:28of normal.
- 48:30And so, this is very
- 48:32helpful,
- 48:33to not kind of over
- 48:34refer things that are, you
- 48:35know, pretty clearly fine.
- 48:37Yeah. I think that I
- 48:38I agree with everything doctor
- 48:40Shutter just said. And I
- 48:40think that,
- 48:42like, the
- 48:44sometimes, like, just in terms
- 48:45of what to say to
- 48:46patients, you know, and, you
- 48:48know, just
- 48:49some some patients, I think,
- 48:51accept that idea of, like,
- 48:52you could have a surgery
- 48:53at this level. You know?
- 48:54And then that's, I think,
- 48:55just, like, clinically, people could
- 48:57that somehow resonates with people.
- 48:58I think, you know, if
- 48:59there's assuming it's just isolated
- 49:01thrombocytopenia
- 49:02and not there's no other
- 49:04kind of cell lines. I
- 49:06think the age of the
- 49:07patient. Right? Like and then
- 49:08I guess just as I'm
- 49:10sure we do, you know,
- 49:11even if it was mildly
- 49:12low, I guess I would
- 49:13just add that if it
- 49:14was recently much higher than,
- 49:15like, maybe I would maybe
- 49:17I personally would monitor it.
- 49:18And then
- 49:19I don't know. I look
- 49:20at the mean platelet volume,
- 49:21which, you know, might be
- 49:22one of the things that
- 49:23the other gets disregarded. But
- 49:24if it's a little bit
- 49:26high, I mean, sometimes I
- 49:27think that's kind of these
- 49:28autoimmune ish people. Not that
- 49:30anything needs to be done,
- 49:31but
- 49:34I think that that's something
- 49:35we see a lot in
- 49:36practice. But I think it's,
- 49:39yeah, I think just sort
- 49:41of how we reassure patients
- 49:43in general is hard. I
- 49:44think that
- 49:46it's a difficult
- 49:48there's a lot of things
- 49:49on a CBC that we
- 49:51don't really probably look at
- 49:52in such great detail, but
- 49:53to patients that MCHC
- 49:55is crucial to their,
- 49:57you
- 49:58know, well-being. And that's hard,
- 49:59I think, too. It's just
- 50:00like the number of data
- 50:02points. You know? I think
- 50:03if I may, like, I
- 50:04think,
- 50:09but just wanted to bring
- 50:10it up. But that, like,
- 50:11you know, for for someone
- 50:12we're dealing with who's really
- 50:14not being reassured and would
- 50:15really like, you know,
- 50:17like, even one sentence from,
- 50:19you know, for from a
- 50:21specialist.
- 50:22I think,
- 50:24for cases like that where,
- 50:25you know, it's very borderline
- 50:27thrombocytosis
- 50:28or a very borderline, you
- 50:29know, thrombocytopenia.
- 50:31I think eConsult is a
- 50:32very nice
- 50:34pathway too, and,
- 50:36and I'm not sure, you
- 50:37know, if it's, you know,
- 50:39to what
- 50:40extent kind of, you know,
- 50:41it's it it goes
- 50:43out into this, you know,
- 50:44world, like, in the the
- 50:45whole system, outer system. But
- 50:47I certainly do it, you
- 50:48know, a few weeks, a
- 50:50year, and,
- 50:51and those are you know,
- 50:52they take two, three minutes.
- 50:53I mean and,
- 50:54and, you know, someone signs
- 50:56their life that, you know,
- 50:57this is fine. You know?
- 50:58And so I I I
- 50:59think that that could, you
- 51:00know, be reassuring to everyone
- 51:02and save everyone's time,
- 51:04including patients and, you know,
- 51:05because, you know, you know,
- 51:06it could take a long
- 51:07time to get a referral
- 51:08for something like that.
- 51:10That is another very helpful
- 51:12suggestion.
- 51:14So we have, a a
- 51:15question from an anonymous attendee,
- 51:19and, it says, what pathways
- 51:21are available?
- 51:22I only saw iron deficiency.
- 51:24So all of the ones
- 51:26that we showed are in
- 51:27there.
- 51:29Actually,
- 51:30we can to that?
- 51:32Yeah.
- 51:33Oh, yeah. The give us
- 51:34a table of contents of
- 51:35that. It was, like, seven
- 51:37slide seventeen or something.
- 51:40Renee,
- 51:41are you able to
- 51:45She might have stepped away.
- 51:51I'll try to share it,
- 51:52but let's see. Yeah. Okay.
- 51:54Here it comes. Good. Always.
- 51:57Yeah. And if you can
- 51:58make that bigger.
- 52:03So we have
- 52:06thrombocytosis,
- 52:07lymphocytosis,
- 52:09ferritin evaluation,
- 52:11and erythrocytosis
- 52:13are what I'm reading
- 52:14with my face right up
- 52:15to the computer
- 52:17and bleeding
- 52:18concern for bleeding disorder.
- 52:22And and these were launched,
- 52:24they're they're a little simpler
- 52:25than some of the other
- 52:26pathways,
- 52:27and and so they were
- 52:28kind of launched. There there's
- 52:29actually some more ready to
- 52:31go in hematology,
- 52:32if, people,
- 52:34find these helpful, which I
- 52:35I think we've had a
- 52:36resounding,
- 52:37endorsement.
- 52:38Frank, you looked at that.
- 52:39You're like, these are great.
- 52:41So and, of course, there's,
- 52:42a ton of pathways in
- 52:43other things, diabetes, hypertension,
- 52:46you know, but not other
- 52:48things aside from heme as
- 52:49well.
- 52:53And whoever it is that
- 52:54asks
- 52:56can always send me a
- 52:57quick note, and I will
- 52:58make sure you have somebody
- 52:59help you find the additional
- 53:01pathways.
- 53:03Great. And, Frank, I'm gonna
- 53:05be going back.
- 53:06I was oh, and if
- 53:07you can't find it, maybe
- 53:09that's a reason to, you
- 53:11know, put it on the
- 53:12list. Maybe it's being added
- 53:13as we speak, but maybe
- 53:15it's on the list. If
- 53:16not, we could put it
- 53:17on the list.
- 53:19Exactly.
- 53:20Okay. Well, it looks like
- 53:22we
- 53:24are ending nearing the end
- 53:25of our hour where Kelsey's
- 53:27daughter has announced it's time
- 53:29to come have dinner or
- 53:30something. Right?
- 53:33I was gonna ask go
- 53:34back to, Frank, your your
- 53:36background slide introducing this whole
- 53:38thing, which was sort of
- 53:39elevated blood counts and that,
- 53:42you know, there's
- 53:44it's so common.
- 53:45Every day you're looking at
- 53:46so many CBCs,
- 53:49trying to figure out what
- 53:50to do beforehand
- 53:52versus who really needs urgent
- 53:54care,
- 53:55or urgent referral or, you
- 53:58know, accessing the e referral.
- 54:00Do you do you and
- 54:02Karen feel like you have
- 54:03a good handle on that?
- 54:05Are there other instances
- 54:07where
- 54:09where
- 54:11you're you're thinking that that
- 54:12you need a little extra
- 54:14help or or that you're
- 54:15not quite sure where to
- 54:16go from there?
- 54:20Right?
- 54:21I think,
- 54:22I mean, I think, you
- 54:23know, like what Karen said,
- 54:24sometimes managing, like, sort of
- 54:26the patient expectation is sort
- 54:27of the our other job,
- 54:29right, besides just handling the
- 54:30medical stuff. And so sometimes
- 54:32there is no no amount
- 54:34of reassurance
- 54:35I can give someone.
- 54:37And so there there is
- 54:38unfortunately some
- 54:39it is what it is
- 54:40patient driven,
- 54:42referrals. I mean, I think
- 54:44the I would say the
- 54:45other ones that come up.
- 54:47So the, the gammopathy or
- 54:48the MGUS pathway, I think
- 54:50I use a fair amount,
- 54:52or or can't see myself
- 54:53using a fair amount, which
- 54:54is which is great.
- 54:56And then,
- 54:58the I think I think
- 54:59someone alluded to the you
- 55:01you see a pre op,
- 55:02someone at had asked for
- 55:05the,
- 55:06the PT and PTT and
- 55:07it's mildly elevated.
- 55:09And then you're like, well,
- 55:10now what I now what
- 55:11do we do? Right? And
- 55:12so
- 55:13so,
- 55:14you know, that's a that's
- 55:15another, I think, really, like,
- 55:17if,
- 55:17you know, you bookmark things,
- 55:19like, you know, is this
- 55:20a bookmarkable one? So those
- 55:21I think are are are
- 55:23good. I've not used, the
- 55:25eConsult as much, but I
- 55:26feel like there's just a
- 55:28a a a hidden or
- 55:30not so hidden, like, potential
- 55:32to really,
- 55:34improve the through the throughput
- 55:36between, primary care and and
- 55:38heme,
- 55:39with that. And so I
- 55:41think I feel like that's
- 55:42something that we should take
- 55:43back,
- 55:44and figure out how do
- 55:45we make this,
- 55:48more user
- 55:49used more.
- 55:51Mhmm. Yeah. It's pretty user
- 55:52friendly.
- 55:53And it it's nice, because
- 55:55so many of us kind
- 55:56of do curbsides. Right?
- 55:58We call we phone a
- 55:59friend.
- 56:00But that that's not in
- 56:01the chart,
- 56:03and it, you know, it
- 56:03it doesn't have any credit.
- 56:04The the there's actually billing
- 56:06credit for the specialist through
- 56:07the econsult. So,
- 56:09they they kind of get
- 56:10productivity credit and and and
- 56:12we get a a very
- 56:13clear answer.
- 56:15And, again, if we want
- 56:16to, we can have a
- 56:17whole another encounter to discuss
- 56:18the answer if it's complicated,
- 56:20or or we can just
- 56:21simply send the patient a
- 56:22note or or call the
- 56:23patient if it's kind of
- 56:24what we were expecting
- 56:26to say anyway.
- 56:28So
- 56:29alright. Well, I have to
- 56:31thank our speakers
- 56:32very much for all of
- 56:33the preparation
- 56:34and wisdom and pearls that
- 56:36came through,
- 56:38and, and and, Frank, for
- 56:40keeping us on