Sinopsis
New Retina Radio is a place to hear stories about retina that are told nowhere else.
Episodios
-
ARCHWAY at AAO
18/11/2020 Duración: 14minThe Port Delivery System With Ranibizumab (Genentech) is under investigation for the treatment of wet AMD in the phase 3 ARCHWAY trial, data from which was shared at this year’s AAO Annual Meeting. Nancy Holekamp, MD, sits down with NRR to provide a primary analysis of the results of ARCHWAY and discusses safety outcomes. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
New Retina Radio Journal Club: Putting the Fun Back in Journal Club
10/11/2020 Duración: 30minNew Retina Radio’s John Kitchens, MD, and Jorge Fortun, MD, introduce the premier episode of New Retina Radio Journal Club, a new series dedicated to reviewing the latest papers and how they relate to day to day clinical practice. In this episode, Dr. Fortun is joined by Cynthia Qian, MD; Christina Weng, MD, MBA; and Basil Williams, MD, to discuss two papers that address the role, or lack thereof, of anti-VEGF therapy in the treatment of neovascular age-related macular degeneration and geographic atrophy. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Clinical considerations for optimal management of patients with IRDs
30/10/2020 Duración: 37minIn this podcast, Prof. Bart Leroy (Belgium), Prof. Isabelle Audo (France) and Prof. Robert Maclaren (UK) discuss the management of patients with inherited retinal diseases (IRDs), from the initial identification of a patient with an IRD and referral to specialist center, through to the confirmation of a diagnosis using genotyping and the long-term implications for the patient of receiving that diagnosis. They discuss the current treatment landscape for patients with IRDs and outline future potential therapies on the horizon. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Combating Patient Misinformation Regarding COVID-19
16/10/2020 Duración: 43minArming patients with knowledge is key to fighting any disease. What happens when a confluence of factors create a breeding ground for an uneducated patient population? John W. Kitchens, MD (United States), is joined by Patricio Schlottmann, MD (Argentina), Nicole Eter, MD (Germany), and Adnan Tufail, MBBS, MD, FRCOphth (United Kingdom) to review tactics for educating patients and battling misinformation in the COVID-19 era. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Telemedicine & Combating Patient Misinformation
15/10/2020 Duración: 41minThe COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the use of telemedicine. How has this held up in retina now that we’ve had more than 6 months of experience under our belts? New Retina Radio host John Kitchens, MD, invites Judy E. Kim, MD; Byron Ladd, MD; and Carl D. Regillo, MD, to review how their practices have used (or not used) telemedicine during the pandemic. Also, Dr. Kitchens asks the panel how they’ve handled educating patients about the pandemic—and how they’ve tackled questions of misinformation. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Telemedicine in the COVID-19 Era
03/10/2020 Duración: 53minTelemedicine has been put to the test during the COVID-19 pandemic. How is it holding up—and just how effective will it be going forward? John W. Kitchens, MD (United States), is joined by Francesco Boscia, MD (Italy); David Steel, MBBS, FRCOphth (United Kingdom); and Ramin Tadayoni, MD, PhD (France), to discuss how much telemedicine has delivered as promised. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Academic Settings in a Pandemic: Rules and Regulations
01/10/2020 Duración: 44minThe internal regulations governing academic institutions were tested during the COVID-19 surges of spring and summer. As we move into autumn, how effective have they been—and are any worth revisiting? New Retina Radio host John Kitchens, MD, reviews this topic with Dilraj Grewal, MD, from the Duke Eye Center; Adrienne Scott, MD, from the Wilmer Eye Institute; and Elliott Sohn, MD, from University of Iowa to gain a better understanding of how institutional safeguards kept patients and staff safe, and how they may have served as (sometimes necessary) roadblocks to getting practice back to pre-pandemic levels. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Educating the Next Generation of Surgeons During COVID-19
16/09/2020 Duración: 48minThe disruptions to clinical and surgical workflows during the COVID-19 crisis are obvious. Less apparent are the downstream effects of adjustments to educational experiences. New Retina Radio host John Kitchens, MD, invites three leaders in academic retina—Sophie Bakri, MD, of the Mayo Clinic; Julia Haller, MD, of Wills Eye Hospital; and R.V. Paul Chan, MD, MSc, MBA, of the University of Illinois at Chicago—to discuss how training and selection of fellows has been altered during the COVID-19 pandemic, and to review the tactics their institutions have employed to mitigate the interference their programs have endured. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
jCell Therapy for Retinitis Pigmentosa and Phase 2B Data
31/08/2020 Duración: 10minApproaches to treating retinitis pigmentosa have included prosthetic devices and gene therapy. What if there was an approach that could treat the nearly 2 million worldwide patients with disease? Anthony Joseph, MD, discusses jCell technology, which may work independently of a patient’s genetic subtype to promote photoreceptor survival in retinitis pigmentosa patients. What data from a phase 2b trial were used to evaluate the efficacy of jCell technology? How will the therapy be tested going forward? What safety concerns should clinicians be aware of? Dr. Joseph has some answers. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] What Happens During a COVID-19 Resurgence?
28/08/2020 Duración: 43minA COVID-19 resurgence seems increasingly likely as autumn and winter approach the United States, forcing people indoors and increasing transmission risk. What can retina clinicians learn from the spring and summers waves of COVID-19 infections that could be applied to the cooler months of 2020? John W. Kitchens, MD, invites Steve Charles, MD; Amy Schefler, MD; and Jayanth Sridhar, MD, to gameplan the future of retina clinics. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Technology and COVID-19: Necessity Is the Mother of Invention
26/08/2020 Duración: 47minRetina’s ability to adjust to a new environment should be commended. Which of the technologies introduced during the COVID-19 era are stopgaps and which will be a permanent part of the treatment landscape? John W. Kitchens, MD (United States), is joined by María H. Berrocal, MD (United States); Jean-Francois Korobelnik, MD, PhD (France); and Manish Nagpal, MBBS, MS, FRCS (Edin) (India), to forecast the future of retina’s technologic milieu. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Treat-and-Extend in the Real World
21/08/2020 Duración: 13minTreat-and-extend therapy is a common tactic employed by retina specialists for treating wet AMD patients. What new data will grow the body of information retina specialists already draw on when making decisions about treatment regimen? Michael Singer, MD, shares details from a retrospective review of patient data over a 2-year period during which treat-and-extend regimens were employed. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Opioid Prescribing Patterns Among Retina Specialists
12/08/2020 Duración: 09minIn the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, medicine cannot forget about the raging opioid epidemic taking place in the United States. What role to retina specialists play in fueling the opioid crisis, and how has their behavior changed for the better over time? Yoshihiro Yonekawa, MD, shares his research about opioid prescribing rates among retina specialists, tracing the field’s behavior over time, and offering a window into the specialty’s role in the crisis. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Continuous Dosing in LADDER
04/08/2020 Duración: 07minThe phase 2 LADDER study showed the Port Delivery System for ranibizumab was worthy of a phase 3 trial. Was the device able to deliver a continuous dose of therapy that was similar to what you’d find in monthly injection patients? Dilsher Dhoot, MD, reviews the pharmacokinetic data that researchers used to determine the rate of drug release and therapeutic benefit and previews the phase 3 ARCHWAY trial. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] COVID-19 Clinical and Surgical Protocols: Which Changes Are Here to Stay?
03/08/2020 Duración: 52minProtocols for clinical and surgical settings have been altered in the COVID-19 era. Which of those protocols are temporary, and which protocols will be a permanent part of practice? To answer this question, New Retina Radio host John W. Kitchens, MD, invites María Ana Castellanos-Martinez, MD (Mexico) and Matteo Forlini, MD (Italy) for a roundtable discussion on the future of retina care in the wake of COVID-19–related changes. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
[Back to Practice] Education as In-Person Meetings Are Paused
30/07/2020 Duración: 54minConferences are an essential dynamic to the retina ecosystem that have been disrupted during the COVID-19 crisis. How will the field advance without in-person meetings? New Retina Radio host John W. Kitchens, MD, invites EURETINA General Secretary Anat Loewenstein, MD, and ASRS President Timothy G. Murray, MD, MBA, to discuss the future of in-person education, the evolving dynamics of physician-industry collaboration, and the solutions that retina societies have relied on to maintain retina’s camaraderie. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Faricimab in Phase 2 and 3
30/06/2020 Duración: 09minSafe and effective long-duration therapy in wet AMD treatment could be the solution to increasing patient adherence. Are we on the brink of a major breakthrough? Carl Danzig, MD, reviews the phase 2 STAIRWAY study, which evaluated the safety and efficacy of faricimab (Genentech/Roche) for the treatment of wet AMD, and previews the coming phase 3 trials TENAYA and LUCERNE. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Anti-VEGF, A Biography: Part 3
15/06/2018 Duración: 34minThis story started in the early days of VEGF's isolation in the 1970s and brought us to the discovery of ranibizumab and bevacizumab in the mid 2000s. The data revealed at the ASRS meeting in 2005 would change retina forever-and usher in a new competitor with a chance to disrupt the landscape yet again. Don't miss the final episode of this fascinating and important story told by those that lived it. We're bringing back some of the voices you've heard before, and some new ones, too. John D. Pitcher III, MD, invites Bob Avery, MD; David Brown, MD; Jeffrey Heier, MD; Nancy Holekamp, MD; Kirk Packo, MD; Phillip Rosenfeld, MD, PhD; and Bob Vitti, MD, to tell the latest chapter of anti-VEGF's biography. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Anti-VEGF, A Biography: Part 2
22/11/2017 Duración: 35minNew Retina Radio continues its biography of anti-VEGF. John D. Pitcher III, MD, picks up the story where we left off: in a world where pegaptanib was the only intravitreal injection approved for treating wet AMD. But a deep dive into the literature and a few calculations on the back of a napkin are about to change retina practice forever. Guests in this episode include Bob Avery, MD; Dave Brown, MD; Anne Fung, MD; Jeffrey Heier, MD; Andrew Moshfeghi, MD, MBA; Kirk Packo, MD; and Philip Rosenfeld, MD, PhD. This editorially independent podcast is supported with advertising.
-
Beyond the Walls of ORs and Borders of Nations
28/08/2017 Duración: 31minPracticing retina in the developing world means facing frustrating, unexpected, and sometimes dangerous circumstances. Don D'Amico, MD, R.V. Paul Chan, MD, and Pravin Dugel, MD, share their stories of engaging medical communities from Tanzania to Armenia and Vietnam to Nepal. This podcast is editorially independent.