Recent Publications by CFE Educators

Recent Published articles, books, and other scholarship by Academy members, CFE Education Scientists, and CFE Faculty.
Comparison of standard versus adjusted dose of enoxaparin for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in patients with obesity and cancer.
2025
Authors: Angerman C, Ahn J, Gee-Rodriguez K, Conkey B, Tran C, Nguyen L, Guglielmo J, Roberts AJ, Lo M, Lee A, Saunders I, Willeford A, Lee D, Kim K, Cadiz C, Griffin SP, Pon T
IntroductionActive cancer and body mass index (BMI) greater than 30 kg/m have been shown to increase venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk in hospitalized patients. Optimal dosing strategies in this population remain uncertain. This study evaluated the incidence of healthcare associated VTE (HA-VTE) in patients with active malignancy and obesity, comparing adjusted versus standard dose enoxaparin for VTE prophylaxis.MethodsThis multicenter, retrospective, cohort study compared enoxaparin 40 mg subcutaneously (SC) daily with adjusted enoxaparin dosing (> 40 mg SC daily) for VTE prophylaxis in hospitalized adult patients with a BMI greater than 30 kg/m who received cancer therapy between January 1, 2020, and August 17, 2023. The primary outcome was incidence of HA-VTE. Secondary outcomes included VTE type and bleeding events. Descriptive statistics were used for all outcomes.ResultsA total of 330 patients were included, with a median BMI of 33.7 kg/m² (IQR 31.6-37.9 kg/m²). Standard dose enoxaparin was administered to 300 patients, while 30 received adjusted doses. HA-VTE occurred in 13 patients in the standard dose group, with no HA-VTE events in the adjusted group (p = 0.245). In the standard dose group, 4 patients had minor bleeds, and 2 had clinically relevant non-major bleeds. One minor bleed occurred in the adjusted group (p = 0.490).ConclusionsHA-VTE was more frequent in the standard dosing group, though the small sample size limits the clinical significance. Patients on adjusted doses did not have increased bleeding events. Further research is needed to determine optimal thromboprophylaxis strategies for cancer patients with a BMI over 30 kg/m².
View on PubMedStereotactic radiotherapy in children and young adults: Can we apply adult treatment paradigms?
2025
Authors: Tsang DS, Murphy E, Salerno KE, Parkes J, Hiniker SM, Braunstein S
Spot-Scanning Confocal Photon Beams for Hypofractionated Brain Radiosurgery.
2025
Authors: Ma L, Luan S, Dang NP, Ziemer B, Braunstein S, McDermott M, Yu C, Zada G, Chang EL
A bad break: mechanisms and assessment of acute and chronic pain after bone fracture.
2025
Authors: Nishimura H, Layne J, Yamaura K, Marcucio R, Morioka K, Basbaum AI, Weinrich JAP, Bahney CS
A Multi-Institutional Analysis of Contralateral Axillary Metastases: Advanced Local-Regional Disease Divergent from Stage IV Breast Cancer.
2025
Authors: Flanagan MR, van den Bruele AMB, Downs-Canner SM, Thomas SM, Gallagher KK, Jakub JW, Tevis SEA, Verdial FC, Zhang JQ, Elmore LC, Mukhtar RA, Brennan M, Lillie M, Gibson TC, Verosky A, Plichta JK, Rosenberger LH
Moving Beyond Simplistic Research Design in Health Professions Education: What a One-Group Pretest-Posttest Design Will Not Prove.
2025
Authors: Bierer SB, Beck Dallaghan G, Borges NJ, Brondfield S, Fung CC, Huggett KN, Teal CR, Thammasitboon S, Colbert CY
Evaluation of an Alternative Approach to Managing Diabetic Ketoacidosis: Combination Rapid-Acting and Basal Subcutaneous Insulin (CRABI-DKA).
2025
Authors: Ibarra F, Cruz M, Chinnock B, Sunde C, Campagne D, Uller M
Long-Acting HIV Treatment in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Addressing the Public Health Need.
2025
Authors: Ehrenkranz PD, Reid MJA, Doherty M, Kim PS
Efficacy of enhanced stress resilience training for intensive-care unit nurses: a randomized waitlist control trial.
2025
Authors: Lee SJ, Cunningham B, Childers M, Yefimova M, Kim H, Hoffmann T, Lebares C
Neuropsychiatric decline and status epilepticus in pregnancy.
2025
Authors: Karmarkar A, Gelfand J, Tackett N, Black E, Desailly-Chanson R, Lapointe R