Reviews & Analysis

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  • Aspirin is probably the most commonly used drug worldwide and has major analgesic, antipyretic and antiplatelet activities. Data from the Physicians' Health Study now suggest that regular use of low-dose aspirin might help reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus by around 14% in otherwise healthy men.

    • Guido Lastra
    • Adam Whaley-Connell
    News & Views
  • Traditional methods of male contraception, such as condoms and vasectomy, are unacceptable to many couples as they can be unreliable or the effects not easily reversed. Depot administration of male hormonal contraception could provide a safe, effective, reliable and reversible alternative, report researchers in China.

    • John K. Amory
    News & Views
  • Evidence of gradual increases in serum concentration of C-peptide as pregnancy progresses in women with type 1 diabetes mellitus provides novel insight into mechanisms of β-cell failure and regeneration, and the potential role of C-peptide in diabetes mellitus and health.

    • Nigel J. Brunskill
    News & Views
  • The traditional view of nonclassic congenital adrenal hyperplasia is that affected individuals are not glucocorticoid-deficient. The results of a French study now cast doubts on this assumption, however, and raise important issues for classification and management of patients with this common genetic disorder.

    • Nils Krone
    • Paul M. Stewart
    News & Views
  • Intensive insulin therapy to maintain tight glucose control is associated with reduced morbidity and mortality in adult patients hospitalized with critical illnesses. Can the same rationale also be applied to critically ill children admitted to the pediatric intensive-care unit?

    • Michael S. D. Agus
    • Eliotte L. Hirshberg
    News & Views
  • The advent of high-throughput molecular analysis has appreciably improved the diagnostic and prognostic workup of several types of cancer. A French study now offers hope that benign and malignant adrenocortical tumors can be distinguished on the basis of distinct differences in their gene-expression profiles.

    • Matthias J. Betz
    • Felix Beuschlein
    News & Views
  • Trends in the presentation and management of insulinoma observed at the Mayo Clinic over the past 20 years have been reviewed in a new study. The findings shed light on poorly known and new findings of insulinoma and enable critical appraisal of current guidelines for the diagnosis and management of this condition.

    • Maria Vittoria Davì
    • Massimo Falconi
    News & Views
  • The incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus is rising, which increases the demand for cardiovascular prevention treatments. This situation raises an important question: should all individuals with this disorder be considered to have a high risk of cardiovascular events and be treated with preventative therapy, such as statins, or should risk-prediction regimens be used to guide therapy?

    • Kausik K. Ray
    • Naveed Sattar
    News & Views
  • Persistent hyperglycemia increases the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus who have a history of acute myocardial infarction. Whether clinicians should target prandial glucose levels rather than basal glucose levels to reduce this excess risk is keenly debated.

    • Louis Monnier
    • Claude Colette
    News & Views
  • Hypoglycemia is the major barrier to good glycemic control in patients with diabetes mellitus. Furthermore, randomized controlled trials have emphasized the grave risks associated with severe hypoglycemia in patients with long-standing type 2 diabetes mellitus, and hypoglycemia has also been recognized as a complication of bariatric surgery. New Endocrine Society guidelines on adult hypoglycemic disorders are, therefore, extremely pertinent.

    • Stephen N. Davis
    News & Views
  • Increases in rates of bariatric surgery are staggering, and many obese individuals who undergo such procedures are women of reproductive age. So, how does the surgery affect women's fertility and pregnancy outcomes thereafter? A new systemic review aimed to find out.

    • Elizabeth S. Ginsburg
    News & Views
  • A clinical review of studies on bisphosphonate therapy for pediatric osteoporosis has revealed that they increase BMD, but whether they also improve fracture rates or functions of daily life is unclear. Can the findings of this clinical review help inform clinicians whether, when and how to use these agents in children?

    • Joan C. Marini
    News & Views
  • Clinical investigation of enlarged, local lymph nodes after surgery for papillary thyroid carcinoma is problematic. Use of the fine-needle aspiration thyroglobulin assay could help to identify patients whose disease has progressed to lymph-node metastasis.

    • Giuseppe Costante
    • Sebastiano Filetti
    News & Views
  • Pediatric obesity is a global phenomenon in danger of spiraling out of control. New guidelines from the Endocrine Society offer expert opinion on the prevention and management of this challenging health-care problem.

    • Erinn T. Rhodes
    • David S. Ludwig
    News & Views
  • Controversy surrounds the skeletal consequences of altered thyroid function. According to the latest report from the Tromsø population survey, however, variations of serum TSH concentration that remain within the normal range do not greatly influence BMD.

    • Douglas C. Bauer
    News & Views
  • In the past few years, new genetic risk factors for type 2 diabetes mellitus have been identified in large-scale studies of genetic associations. But can their inclusion in clinically based risk models improve disease prediction?

    • Jeremy B. M. Jowett
    News & Views
  • A region of chromosome 9p21 is linked to an increased risk of coronary artery disease in the general population. Variants of the same allele might also affect risk of cardiovascular disease in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, according to a new study.

    • Stefano Del Prato
    News & Views
  • The use of aspirin for the primary prevention of cardiovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus is controversial. According to the findings of a Japanese trial, aspirin does not reduce the risk of cardiovascular events in this group of patients, unless they are aged 65 years and above.

    • John A. Colwell
    News & Views
  • Autoimmune thyroiditis has increased prevalence in patients with celiac disease and vice versa. New research suggests that serum transglutaminase 2 autoantibodies, which are present in patients with celiac disease, might have a role in the development of thyroid dysfunction.

    • Leonidas H. Duntas
    News & Views