Questioning Medicine, sweet podcast.

This morning I received this tweet:

https://t.co/CKcoDOQAE4 @kidney_boy most recent podcast we find a way to make u rich @ 2:45 pic.twitter.com/6eyVJHXmGn
— Andrew Buelt DO (@AndrewBuelt) October 3, 2014

Somehow it reminded me of an email I once received from Nigeria:

REQUEST FOR URGENT BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP 

FIRST, I MUST SOLICIT YOUR STRICTEST CONFIDENCE IN THIS TRANSACTION. THIS IS BY VIRTUE OF ITS NATURE AS BEING UTTERLY CONFIDENTIAL AND ‘TOP SECRET’. I AM SURE AND HAVE CONFIDENCE OF YOUR ABILITY AND RELIABILITY TO PROSECUTE A TRANSACTION OF THIS GREAT MAGNITUDE INVOLVING A PENDING TRANSACTION REQUIRING MAXIIMUM CONFIDENCE. 

WE ARE TOP OFFICIAL OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT CONTRACT REVIEW PANEL WHO ARE INTERESTED IN IMPORATION OF GOODS INTO OUR COUNTRY WITH FUNDS WHICH ARE PRESENTLY TRAPPED IN NIGERIA. IN ORDER TO COMMENCE THIS BUSINESS WE SOLICIT YOUR ASSISTANCE TO ENABLE US TRANSFER INTO YOUR ACCOUNT THE SAID TRAPPED FUNDS. 

THE SOURCE OF THIS FUND IS AS FOLLOWS; DURING THE LAST MILITARY REGIME HERE IN NIGERIA, THE GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS SET UP COMPANIES AND AWARDED THEMSELVES CONTRACTS WHICH WERE GROSSLY OVER-INVOICED IN VARIOUS MINISTRIES. THE PRESENT CIVILIAN GOVERNMENT SET UP A CONTRACT REVIEW PANEL AND WE HAVE IDENTIFIED A LOT OF INFLATED CONTRACT FUNDS WHICH ARE PRESENTLY FLOATING IN THE CENTRAL BANK OF NIGERIA READY FOR PAYMENT. 

So I hid my checkbook before I went and checked out the podcast. No worries, they never asked me to send any money to complete the download or authorize my listening. It was just a great medical podcast. The two hosts have excellent chemistry and the discussion was astute and evidence based. I highly recommend it.

You can find Questioning Medicine in iTunes.

Kidney International, you may want to look at your podcasts.

I spend half an hour commuting to work everyday and usually listen to podcasts. My tastes mostly satisfy my unnatural Apple cravings. I listen to a lot of 5×5, TWiT and Slate podcasts, but recently I subscribed to a handful of Kidney podcasts.

I was listening to the Kidney International Podcast and they start interviewing (iTunes Link) Barry Freedman of Wake Forrest. He starts talking about the MYH9 gene. This tweaks my interest and I start paying attention, thinking to myself, “Is this gene making a comeback?” And then he starts talking about the the Nature Genetics papers from 2008. No mention of APOL1. I glance down at my iPhone, the podcast is from 2009. I was relieved that I hadn’t missed a major U-turn. Listenning to the remainder on the podcast I can’t help but smirk at the hyperbole.

His paper was on hypertension associated end-stage renal disease and its tight association with MYH9. He waxes on about how it is one of the most strongly associated genes in any common disease. He states that if you could remove the MYH9 risk variants from the African American population, 70% of the non-diabetic kidney disease would disappear. He states that MYH9 is responsible for initiating most kidney disease in African Americans and that hypertension is very unlikely to be an initiating factor in kidney disease.

If you are not familiar with the history of this wrong-turn, here is a brief overview:

  • In October 2008, Jeff Kopp, using a new technology known as admixture-mapping linkage-disequilibrium genome scan found an association with FSGS and a variant in the a gene called MYH9. The same gene variant was also associated with HIVAN. This was hailed as a major break-through explaining the excess kidney disease burden found in African Americans.
  • MYH9 had already been associated with a cohort of genetic conditions that all had glomerular pathology so the link seemed pathophysiologically sound.
  • The nephrology research world became fascinated with this gene and for about a year tremendous resources were focussed on this gene.
  • In July 2010, Science published data that showing that a different gene, APOL1, located close to MYH9 on the chromosome, was actually responsible for the high association of disease. Of note Barry Freedman is also an author of this paper.
  • Being heterozygous for APOL1 is protective against the Trypanosoma parasites that cause African Sleeping sickness
    • Trypanosoma brucei brucei infects many mammals but is unable to infect humans because human serum contains a complex, trypanosome lytic factor (TLF)
    • Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense and Trypanosoma gambiense evolved a defense against TLF and were able to infect humans.
    • A single copy of APOL1 restores TLF and makes the carrier immune to sleeping sickness
    • Two copies of the APOL1 predisposes the carrier to proteinuric kidney disease and HIVAN
    • Balanced polymorphism
    • APOL1 mutation is about 10,000 years old, but humans migrated to Europe 70,000 years ago, so Europeans, never shared in the mutation.
A more thorough rehash can be seen in my Dialysis for the Internist lecture (KeynotePDF).
While it is hilarious to listen to the certainty of Dr. Freedman’s proclamations, the incident also has a lesson for dealing with social media. Publishers, including bloggers, are constantly publishing information that expires. Facts become falsehoods and time reveals truths. However, what we have published remains. Leaving these mistakes, without editorial comment is a disservice to our readers. Even though what we wrote may be buried under dozens of posts, Google still indexes it and still sends readers to this material. Kidney International unfortunately never did another podcast, so when one subscribes to their podcast, this story is what is downloaded as “most recent.” 
Search and the permanence of internet means that we need to take responsibility for old content, in a way that wasn’t necessary in the past.