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Psychiatry Advisor
Using covariate analysis of records from more than 1.2 million children over 17 years, these researchers conclude that the elevated risk for neonatal seizures and childhood epilepsy in children who were exposed to SSRIs or SNRIs during pregnancy can be attributed to the indicated SSRI and SNRI use for pregnant women, history of parental epilepsy, and other covariates, rather than the use of the medication itself.
Obstetrics & Gynecology July 19th 2022
ReachMD
Offering 0.25 credits, this 30-minute CME program discusses the new cervical cancer screening guidelines recently published by both the American Society for Colonoscopy and Cervical Pathology (ASCCP) and the American Cancer Society (ACS).
Obstetrics & Gynecology July 13th 2022
MDLinx
‘Bikini medicine’ (see the Boston Globe article) is an outdated, sexist idea that men and women should be cared for similarly — dubbed as such due to the mistaken belief that women’s health only differs in the parts of women that bikinis cover. A ridiculous notion, considering that cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, and autoimmune diseases affect women differently than men. Last time we checked, the bikini doesn’t cover any of them.
Cardiology July 13th 2022
Northwestern Medicine
Blocking expression of FOXK2 in cancer stem cells inhibited growth of these cells, reducing their so-called “stemness,” making them more like normal cells.
Obstetrics & Gynecology May 11th 2022
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Mirvetuximab soravtansine generated an objective response in nearly 1/3 of patients participating. That compares with response rates in the single digits for current treatments in patients whose ovarian cancer doesn’t respond to platinum-based chemotherapy.
Journal of Clinical Oncology
This editorial reflects on the work by Lei and colleagues in teasing out hrHPV-negative vs. positive ovarian cancers with a 15-year follow up. But what to do with the knowledge?