The medical treatment of patients with Ménière's disease has long been controversial. The placebo effect of drugs used in this condition, along with the fluctuating nature of symptoms, has made proper assessment of efficacy difficult. Two drugs that have been used are betahistine and loop diuretics. The recently published ‘BEMED’ trial is a multicentre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, phase III trial on the use of betahistine dihydrochloride in Ménière's disease, conducted in 14 German tertiary referral centres.Reference Adrion, Fischer, Wagner, Gürkov, Mansmann and Strupp1 This trial found no evidence for the superiority of betahistine in low and high doses over placebo in reducing the number of acute vertigo attacks. The efficacy of loop diuretics in treating Ménière's disease is investigated by Fiorino and colleagues in this issue of The Journal of Laryngology & Otology. They found that intravenous frusemide did not modify endolymphatic hydrops, as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging.Reference Fiorino, Mattellini, Vento, Mazzocchin, Bianconi and Pizzini2 Thus, these particular medical treatments of Ménière's disease have little in the way of hard evidence behind them. In contrast, the evidence for intratympanic treatment with both gentamicinReference Watson, Nelson and Irving3 and methylprednisolone,Reference She, Lv, Du, Li, Dai and Lu4 although invasive, seems to offer better hope of symptom control.
The positive effect of tobacco smoking cessation for patients with head and neck cancer is well known, with treatment modality influencing smoking behaviour in patients with laryngeal cancer.Reference Narwani and Harries5 How to best achieve smoking cessation is contentious. An article in this issue of The Journal looks at the success of financial incentives in stopping smoking.Reference Ghosh, Philiponis, Bewley, Ransom and Mirza6 Ghosh and colleagues found that patients with head and neck cancer enrolled to receive financial incentives to stop smoking were no more likely to give up tobacco than those not incentivised in this way. This is in line with similar studies, with only 1 of 19 trials included in a recent Cochrane review showing higher quit rates when incentives were used.Reference Cahill and Perera7
Finally, a number of recent articles have focused on the management of epistaxis in patients who are anticoagulated; the findings demonstrate considerable variability and uncertainty in the treatment of these patients.Reference Hall, Blanchford, Chatrath and Hopkins8, Reference Fox, Nash, Liu and Singh9 Many practitioners recommend the cessation of anticoagulants in patients admitted to hospital with epistaxis. In this issue, Bola and colleagues conclude that patients anticoagulated with warfarin may be safely managed without stopping their anticoagulation, provided their international normalised ratio is at therapeutic or sub-therapeutic levels.Reference Bola, Marsh, Braggins, Potter and Hickey10