
Episode SummaryDr. George Tolis, section chief of coronary and general cardiac surgery at Brigham and Women's Hospital, joins Drs. Koka and DiGiorgio for a wide-ranging conversation on the state of cardiac surgery. He makes the case that TAVR — while genuinely transformative for the right patient — is being systematically applied too broadly, driven by industry incentive and the erosion of meaningful surgical consent. He discusses his collaboration with John Ioannidis that found no statistically significant mortality benefit for any new cardiac surgery technique introduced over the past 35 years, the paper's rejection by every major surgical journal, and what he paid out of pocket to make it open access. The conversation moves to the collapse of surgical training — fragmented pathways, work hour restrictions that leave residents unprepared for attending life, an academic promotion system that ignores teaching, and a culture that routes incompetent trainees around rather than out — and closes with a brief on Vasily Kolesov, the Soviet surgeon from Leningrad who performed the world's first documented coronary bypass years before Favaloro, and whose work was buried by the Cold War.Chapter Markers00:00 Introduction01:02 Air-cooled VWs, concert piano, and how Dr. Tolis got here02:40 TAVR: genuine breakthrough or being abused?08:02 Finding the TAVR threshold — and why informed consent is the real problem11:46 Collaborating with John Ioannidis: no mortality benefit for 35 years of new techniques20:02 Why the major surgical journals wouldn't touch the paper21:52 Minimally invasive surgery: minimal access vs. minimally invasive26:24 When do CABG survival curves diverge — and what does it mean?30:05 Surgeons signing off on TAVRs in young patients33:51 Health system economics and the heart team dynamic37:50 How to actually pick a good surgeon (ask the scrub nurses)40:36 Cardiac surgery training: the three pathways problem44:04 Work hour restrictions and the residency simulation gap51:16 General surgery is like MTV — they don't operate anymore53:21 A resident who finished training without ever applying a cross-clamp56:34 How to evaluate if a program actually trains59:27 Academic promotion has nothing to do with teaching01:01:33 Dr. Tolis's resident outcomes database and three papers nobody cared about01:05:32 The training timeline: finishing at 49, no runway left01:07:08 One-size-fits-all RRC rules for cardiac surgery and psychiatry01:09:16 Cardiac surgery as a disposition, not a therapy01:12:24 When ECMO becomes the final common path01:13:38 How you become nationally recognized without being a good surgeon01:17:16 Vasily Kolesov: the Soviet surgeon who did the first bypassCo-Host Handles@anish_koka and @drdigiorgioShow Handle@drsloungepodSubscribe LinksSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/44vw8eirsKKnjgNIrdDvrRApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-doctors-lounge/id1832097658YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheDoctorsLoungePod
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