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This week’s Medicine Key Highlights

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This week’s Medicine Key Highlights

Last updated: March 16, 2026 3:58 pm
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Key Highlights

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Cushing syndrome, caused by too much cortisol, is often missed because its symptoms are common and its diagnosis is tricky. A new review suggests that tracking a patient’s daily cortisol rhythm, not just single measurements, could be key to better diagnosis and treatment.
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A study of over 2,200 patients with cardiac amyloidosis found that nearly 40% had reduced heart pumping function, not just the preserved function it’s known for. This finding is crucial because it means doctors should look for this condition in a wider range of heart failure patients for earlier diagnosis.
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A study found that the antiviral drug nirmatrelvir/ritonavir (Paxlovid) is safe and works well in people with severe kidney disease and COVID-19 when given at a lower dose. This is important because these patients are at very high risk from COVID-19 and often can’t take standard antiviral doses.
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A large European study shows that lung disease linked to a certain type of autoimmune vasculitis is common and often severe, with a specific scarring pattern seen on scans predicting worse outcomes. The drug rituximab may help slow the decline in lung function for these patients.
Source →

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A clinical trial successfully created a step-by-step plan for UK hospitals to offer a minimally invasive weight loss procedure called endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty. This provides a practical roadmap to expand treatment options for obesity within the constraints of the public healthcare system.
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