18 results on '"Alan Daniels"'
Search Results
2. Identifying Subsets of Patients With Adult Spinal Deformity Who Maintained a Positive Response to Nonoperative Management
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Peter G. Passias, Waleed Ahmad, Peter Tretiakov, Oscar Krol, Frank Segreto, Renaud Lafage, Virginie Lafage, Alex Soroceanu, Alan Daniels, Jeffrey Gum, Breton Line, Andrew J. Schoenfeld, Shaleen Vira, Robert Hart, Douglas Burton, Justin S. Smith, Christopher P. Ames, Christopher Shaffrey, Frank Schwab, and Shay Bess
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Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
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3. Re: 'Malpractice Against Shoulder Surgeons What the Data Says'
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Andrew, Green and Alan, Daniels
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- 2022
4. Motivations and impact of international rotations in low- and middle-income countries for orthopaedic surgery residents: Are we on the same page?
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Heather J. Roberts, Patrick D. Albright, David W. Shearer, Nae Won, Madeline C. MacKechnie, R. Richard Coughlin, Theodore Miclau, Saam Morshed, Sanjeev Sabharwal, John Dawson, Brian Davis, Alan Daniels, Milton Little, John Garlich, Chad Coles, Ross Leighton, Michael Maceroli, Sandra Hobson, Chris Bray, Duretti Fufa, Sariah Khormaee, Brian Mullis, Roman M. Natoli, Babar Shafiq, Jimmy Mackenzie, Danny Wongworawat, Lee Zuckerman, Joshua Speirs, Charles F. Carr, Michael Mackechnie, George Dyer, Melvin Makhni, Kiran Agarwal-Harding, Brandon Yuan, Matt Beal, Danielle Chun, Andrew Furey, Brad Petrisor, Yongjung Kim, Ken Egol, Christian Pean, Blake Schultz, Darin Friess, Zach Working, Grant Sun, Henry Boateng, Michael Gardner, Malcolm DeBaun, Saquib Rehman, Eric Gokcen, J. Milo Sewards, Nicholas Bernthal, Zachary Burke, Alex Upfill Brown, Melissa Esparza, Peter O'Brien, David Stockton, Kevin Neal, Nathan O'Hara, Arun Hariharan, Peter Cole, Ann Van Heest, Patrick Horst, Brandon Kelly, Mauricio Kfuri, Karl Lalonde, Jaimo Ahn, Samir Mehta, Matt Winterton, Luke Lopas, James Kellam, Thomas Higgins, Iain Elliot, Paul Whiting, Jordan T. Shaw, Nathaniel M. Wilson, William Obremskey, Cassandra A. Lee, Keith Kenter, Joseph Weistroffer, Josh Veenstra, David Knowles, Devin Conway, Aung Thein Htay, Myat Thu Wynn, Dr Peter Smitham, Dr Dino Aguilar, Amanda J. McCoy, Kiprono Koech, Ian Orwa, Marvin Wekesa, Francis Mbugua, Daniel D. Galat, John Mandela, David Jomo, James Kinyua, Mbonisi Malaba, Felix Kuguru, Fasto Yugusuk, Pierre Woolley, Marc-Alain Pean, Billy Haonga, Edmund Eliezer, Samuel Hailu, Fre Alemseged, Linda Chokotho, Allman Tinoco, Bibek Banskota, Scott Nelson, and Francisco Alberto Hernandez Vargas
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,International Cooperation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developing country ,Racism ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedic Procedures ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Developing Countries ,Reciprocity (cultural anthropology) ,media_common ,Surgeons ,Motivation ,business.industry ,Internship and Residency ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Orthopedics ,Low and middle income countries ,Family medicine ,General partnership ,North America ,Orthopedic surgery ,Female ,Surgery ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Despite interest among North American orthopaedic residents to pursue rotations in resource-limited settings, little is known regarding resident motivations and impact on host surgeons. Methods Surveys were distributed to North American orthopaedic surgeons and trainees who participated in international rotations during residency to assess motivations for participation and to orthopaedic surgeons at partnering low- and middle-income country (LMIC) institutions to assess impact of visiting trainees. Results Responses were received from 136 North American resident rotators and 51 LMIC host surgeons and trainees. North American respondents were motivated by a desire to increase surgical capacity at the LMIC while host surgeons reported a greater impact from learning from residents than on surgical capacity. Negative aspects reported by hosts included selfishness, lack of reciprocity, racial discrimination, competition for surgical experience, and resource burdens. Conclusions The motivations and impact of orthopaedic resident rotations in LMICs need to be aligned. Host perceptions and bidirectional educational exchange should be incorporated into partnership guidelines.
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- 2021
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5. Evolution of Adult Cervical Deformity Surgery Clinical and Radiographic Outcomes Based on a Multicenter Prospective Study: Are Behaviors and Outcomes Changing With Experience?
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Peter G, Passias, Oscar, Krol, Kevin, Moattari, Tyler K, Williamson, Virginie, Lafage, Renaud, Lafage, Han Jo, Kim, Alan, Daniels, Bassel, Diebo, Themistocles, Protopsaltis, Gregory, Mundis, Khaled, Kebaish, Alexandra, Soroceanu, Justin, Scheer, D Kojo, Hamilton, Eric, Klineberg, Andrew J, Schoenfeld, Shaleen, Vira, Breton, Line, Robert, Hart, Douglas C, Burton, Frank A, Schwab, Christopher, Shaffrey, Shay, Bess, Justin S, Smith, and Christopher P, Ames
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Adult ,Posture ,Quality of Life ,Odds Ratio ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Retrospective Studies ,Osteotomy - Abstract
Retrospective cohort study.Assess changes in outcomes and surgical approaches for adult cervical deformity surgery over time.As the population ages and the prevalence of cervical deformity increases, corrective surgery has been increasingly seen as a viable treatment. Dramatic surgical advancements and expansion of knowledge on this procedure have transpired over the years, but the impact on cervical deformity surgery is unknown.Adult cervical deformity patients (18 yrs and above) with complete baseline and up to the two-year health-related quality of life and radiographic data were included. Descriptive analysis included demographics, radiographic, and surgical details. Patients were grouped into early (2013-2014) and late (2015-2017) by date of surgery. Univariate and multivariable regression analyses were used to assess differences in surgical, radiographic, and clinical outcomes over time.A total of 119 cervical deformity patients met the inclusion criteria. Early group consisted of 72 patients, and late group consisted of 47. The late group had a higher Charlson Comorbidity Index (1.3 vs. 0.72), more cerebrovascular disease (6% vs. 0%, both P0.05), and no difference in age, frailty, deformity, or cervical rigidity. Controlling for baseline deformity and age, late group underwent fewer three-column osteotomies [odds ratio (OR)=0.18, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.06-0.76, P =0.014]. At the last follow-up, late group had less patients with: a moderate/high Ames horizontal modifier (71.7% vs. 88.2%), and overcorrection in pelvic tilt (4.3% vs. 18.1%, both P0.05). Controlling for baseline deformity, age, levels fused, and three-column osteotomies, late group experienced fewer adverse events (OR=0.15, 95% CI: 0.28-0.8, P =0.03), and neurological complications (OR=0.1, 95% CI: 0.012-0.87, P =0.03).Despite a population with greater comorbidity and associated risk, outcomes remained consistent between early and later time periods, indicating general improvements in care. The later cohort demonstrated fewer three-column osteotomies, less suboptimal realignments, and concomitant reductions in adverse events and neurological complications. This may suggest a greater facility with less invasive techniques.
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- 2022
6. The Benefit of Addressing Malalignment In Revision Surgery for Proximal Junctional Kyphosis Following ASD Surgery
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Peter G, Passias, Oscar, Krol, Tyler K, Williamson, Virginie, Lafage, Renaud, Lafage, Justin S, Smith, Breton, Line, Shaleen, Vira, Shaina, Lipa, Alan, Daniels, Bassel, Diebo, Andrew, Schoenfeld, Jeffrey, Gum, Khaled, Kebaish, Paul, Park, Gregory, Mundis, Richard, Hostin, Manush, Gupta, Robert, Eastlack, Neel, Anand, Christopher, Ames, Robert, Hart, Douglas, Burton, Frank J, Schwab, Christopher, Shaffrey, Eric, Klineberg, and Shay, Bess
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Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Retrospective cohort study.Understand the benefit of addressing malalignment in revision surgery for PJK.Proximal junctional kyphosis(PJK) is a common cause of revision surgery for ASD patients. During a revision, surgeons may elect to perform a proximal extension of the fusion, or also correct the source of the lumbo-pelvic mismatch.Recurrent PJK following revision surgery was the primary outcome. Revision surgical strategy was the primary predictor(proximal extension of fusion alone compared to combined sagittal correction and proximal extension). Multivariable logistic regression determined rates of recurrent PJK between the two surgical groups with lumbo-pelvic surgical correction assessed through improving ideal alignment in one or more alignment criteria(Global Alignment and Proportionality[GAP],Roussouly-type, and Sagittal Age-Adjusted Score[SAAS]).151 patients underwent revision surgery for PJK. PJK occurred at a rate of 43.0%, and PJF at 12.6%. Patients proportioned in GAP post-revision had lower rates of recurrent PJK(23% vs. 42%;OR: 0.3,95% CI:[0.1-0.8];P=0.024). Following adjusted analysis, patients who were ideally aligned in 1 of 3 criteria (Matching in SAAS and/or Roussouly matched and/or achieved GAP proportionality) had lower rates of recurrent PJK (36% vs. 53%;OR: 0.4,95% CI:[0.1-0.9];P=0.035) and recurrent PJF(OR: 0.1,95% CI:[0.02-0.7];P=0.015). Patients ideally aligned in 2 of 3 criteria avoid any development of PJF(0% vs. 16%, P0.001).Following revision surgery for proximal junctional kyphosis, patients with persistent poor sagittal alignment showed increased rates of recurrent proximal junctional kyphosis compared with patients who had abnormal lumbo-pelvic alignment corrected during the revision. These findings suggest addressing the root cause of surgical failure in addition to proximal extension of the fusion may be beneficial.
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- 2022
7. Evolution of Proximal Junctional Kyphosis and Proximal Junctional Failure Rates Over 10 Years of Enrollment in a Prospective Multicenter Adult Spinal Deformity Database
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Basel Sheikh, Alshabab, Renaud, Lafage, Justin S, Smith, Han Jo, Kim, Gregory, Mundis, Eric, Klineberg, Christopher, Shaffrey, Alan, Daniels, Christopher, Ames, Munish, Gupta, Douglas, Burton, Richard, Hostin, Shay, Bess, Frank, Schwab, and Virginie, Lafage
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Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Male ,Postoperative Complications ,Spinal Fusion ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Female ,Kyphosis ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,Musculoskeletal Abnormalities ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Retrospective cohort study.The aim of this study was to investigate the evolution of proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) rate over 10-year enrollment period within a prospective database.PJK is a common complication following adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery and has been intensively studied over the last decade.Patients with instrumentation extended to the pelvis and minimum 2-year follow-up were included. To investigate evolution of PJK/proximal junctional failure (PJF) rate, a moving average of 321 patients was calculated across the enrollment period. Logistic regression was used to investigate the association between the date of surgery (DOS) and PJK and/or PJF. Comparison of PJK/PJF rates, demographics, and surgical strategies was performed between the first and second half of the cohort.A total of 641 patients met inclusion criteria (age: 64±10 years, 78.2% female, body mass index: 28.3±5.7). The overall rate of radiographic PJK at 2 years was 47.9%; 12.9% of the patients developed PJF, with 31.3% being revised within 2-year follow-up. Stratification by DOS produced two halves. Between these two periods, rate of PJK and PJF demonstrated nonsignificant decrease (50.3%-45.5%, P =0.22) and (15.0%-10.9%, P =0.12), respectively. Linear interpolation suggested a decrease of 1.2% PJK per year and 1.0% for PJF. Patients enrolled later in the study were older and more likely to be classified as pure sagittal deformity ( P0.001). There was a significant reduction in the use of three-column osteotomies ( P0.001), an increase in anterior longitudinal ligament release ( P0.001), and an increase in the use of PJK prophylaxis (31.3% vs 55.1%). Logistical regression demonstrated no significant association between DOS and radiographic PJK ( P =0.19) or PJF ( P =0.39).Despite extensive research examining risk factors for PJK/PJF and increasing utilization of intraoperative PJK prophylaxis techniques, the rate of radiographic PJK and/or PJF did not significantly decrease across the 10-year enrollment period of this ASD database.
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- 2022
8. Letter to the Editor regarding Lynch et al: 'Malpractice against shoulder surgeons: what the data say'
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Andrew Green and Alan Daniels
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Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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9. Establishment of an Individualized Distal Junctional Kyphosis Risk Index following the Surgical Treatment of Adult Cervical Deformities
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Peter G, Passias, Sara, Naessig, Navraj, Sagoo, Lara, Passfall, Waleed, Ahmad, Renaud, Lafage, Virginie, Lafage, Shaleen, Vira, Andrew J, Schoenfeld, Cheongeun, Oh, Themistocles, Protopsaltis, Han Jo, Kim, Alan, Daniels, Robert, Hart, Douglas, Burton, Eric O, Klineberg, Shay, Bess, Frank, Schwab, Christopher, Shaffrey, Christopher P, Ames, and Justin S, Smith
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Male ,Adult ,Postoperative Complications ,Spinal Fusion ,Humans ,Pain ,Female ,Kyphosis ,Thoracic Vertebrae ,Retrospective Studies ,Musculoskeletal Abnormalities - Abstract
A retrospective review of a multicenter comprehensive cervical deformity (CD) database.To develop a novel risk index specific to each patient to aid in patient counseling and surgical planning to minimize postop distal junctional kyphosis (DJK) occurrence.DJK is a radiographic finding identified after patients undergo instrumented spinal fusions which can result in sagittal spinal deformity, pain and disability, and potentially neurological compromise. DJK is considered multifactorial in nature and there is a lack of consensus on the true etiology of DJK.CD patients with baseline (BL) and at least one-year postoperative radiographic follow-up were included. A patient-specific DJK score was created through use of unstandardized Beta weights of a multivariate regression model predicting DJK (end of fusion construct to the second distal vertebra change in this angle by-10° from BL to postop).A total of 110 CD patients included (61 yr, 66.4% females, 28.8 kg/m 2 ). In all, 31.8% of these patients developed DJK (16.1% three males, 11.4% six males, 62.9% one-year). At BL, DJK patients were more frail and underwent combined approach more (both P0.05). Multivariate model regression analysis identified individualized scores through creation of a DJK equation: -0.55+0.009 (BL inclination)-0.078 (preinflection)+5.9×10 -5 (BL lowest instrumented vertebra angle) + 0.43 (combine approach)-0.002 (BL TS-CL)-0.002 (BL pelvic tilt)-0.031 (BL C2 - C7) + 0.02 (∆T4-T12)+ 0.63 (osteoporosis)-0.03 (anterior approach)-0.036 (frail)-0.032 (3 column osteotomy). This equation has a 77.8% accuracy of predicting DJK. A score ≥81 predicted DJK with an accuracy of 89.3%. The BL reference equation correlated with two year outcomes of Numeric Rating Scales of Back percentage ( P =0.003), reoperation ( P =0.04), and minimal clinically importance differences for 5-dimension EuroQol questionnaire ( P =0.04).This study proposes a novel risk index of DJK development that focuses on potentially modifiable surgical factors as well as established patient-related and radiographic determinants. The reference model created demonstrated strong correlations with relevant two-year outcome measures, including axial pain-related symptoms, occurrence of related reoperations, and the achievement of minimal clinically importance differences for 5-dimension EuroQol questionnaire.
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- 2021
10. At What Point Should the Thoracolumbar Region Be Addressed in Patients Undergoing Corrective Cervical Deformity Surgery?
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Peter G, Passias, Katherine E, Pierce, Sara, Naessig, Waleed, Ahmad, Lara, Passfall, Renaud, Lafage, Virginie, Lafage, Han Jo, Kim, Alan, Daniels, Robert, Eastlack, Eric, Klineberg, Breton, Line, Praveen, Mummaneni, Robert, Hart, Douglas, Burton, Shay, Bess, Frank, Schwab, Christopher, Shaffrey, Justin S, Smith, and Christopher P, Ames
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Cervical Vertebrae ,Lordosis ,Humans ,Kyphosis ,Postoperative Period ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Retrospective cohort study.The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of cervical to thoracolumbar ratios on poor outcomes in cervical deformity (CD) corrective surgery.Consideration of distal regional and global alignment is a critical determinant of outcomes in CD surgery. For operative CD patients, it is unknown whether certain thoracolumbar parameters play a significant role in poor outcomes and whether addressing such parameters is warranted.Included: surgical CD patients (C2-C7 Cobb10°, cervical lordosis [CL]10°, C2-C7 sagittal vertical axis (cSVA)4 cm, or chin-brow vertical angle25°) with baseline and 1-year data. Patients were assessed for ratios of preop cervical and global parameters including: C2 Slope/T1 slope, T1 slope minus C2-C7 lordosis (TS-CL)/mismatch between pelvic incidence and lumbar lordosis (PI-LL), cSVA/sagittal vertical axis (SVA). Deformity classification ratios of cervical (Ames-ISSG) to spinopelvic (SRS-Schwab) were investigated: cSVA modifier/SVA modifier, TS-CL modifier/PI-LL modifier. Cervical to thoracic ratios included C2-C7 lordosis/T4-T12 kyphosis. Correlations assessed the relationship between ratios and poor outcomes (major complication, reoperation, distal junctional kyphosis (DJK), or failure to meet minimal clinically important difference [MCID]). Decision tree analysis through multiple iterations of multivariate regressions assessed cut-offs for ratios for acquiring suboptimal outcomes.A total of 110 CD patients were included (61.5 years, 66% F, 28.8 kg/m2). Mean preoperative radiographic ratios calculated: C2 slope/T1 slope of 1.56, TS-CL/PI-LL of 11.1, cSVA/SVA of 5.4, CL/thoracic kyphosis (TK) of 0.26. Ames-ISSG and SRS-Schwab modifier ratios: cSVA/SVA of 0.1 and TS-CL/PI-LL of 0.35. Pearson correlations demonstrated a relationship between major complications and baseline TS-CL/PI-LL, Ames TS-CL/Schwab PI-LL modifiers, and the CL/TK ratios (P 0.050). Reoperation had significant correlation with TS-CL/PI-LL and cSVA/SVA ratios. Postoperative DJK correlated with C2 slope/T1 slope and CL/TK ratios. Not meeting MCID for Neck Disability Index (NDI) correlated with CL/TK ratio and not meeting MCID for EQ5D correlated with Ames TS-CL/Schwab PI-LL.Consideration of cervical to global alignment is a critical determinant of outcomes in CD corrective surgery. Key ratios of cervical to global alignment correlate with suboptimal clinical outcomes. A larger cervical lordosis to TK predicted postoperative complication, DJK, and not meeting MCID for NDI.Level of Evidence: 4.
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- 2021
11. Examination of the Economic Burden of Frailty in Patients With Adult Spinal Deformity Undergoing Surgical Intervention
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Peter G. Passias, Waleed Ahmad, Nicholas Kummer, Renaud Lafage, Virginie Lafage, Khaled Kebaish, Alan Daniels, Eric Klineberg, Alex Soroceanu, Jeffrey Gum, Breton Line, Robert Hart, Douglas Burton, Robert Eastlack, Amit Jain, Justin S. Smith, Christopher P. Ames, Christopher Shaffrey, Frank Schwab, Richard Hostin, and Shay Bess
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Adult ,Frailty ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Surgery ,Financial Stress ,Neurology (clinical) ,Kyphosis ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
With increasing interest in cost optimization, costs of adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery intersections with frailty merit investigation.To investigate costs associated with ASD and frailty.Patients with ASD (scoliosis ≥20°, sagittal vertical axis [SVA] ≥5 cm, pelvic tilt ≥ 25°, or thoracic kyphosis ≥ 60°) with baseline and 2-yr radiographic data were included. Patients were severely frail (SF), frail (F), or not frail (NF). Utility data were converted from Oswestry Disability Index to Short-Form Six-Dimension. Quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) used 3% rate for decline to life expectancy. Costs were calculated using PearlDiver. Loss of work costs were based on SRS-22rQ9 and US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Accounting for complications, length of stay, revisions, and death, cost per QALY at 2 yr and life expectancy were calculated.Five hundred ninety-two patients with ASD were included (59.8 ± 14.0 yr, 80% F, body mass index: 27.7 ± 6.0 kg/m2, Adult Spinal Deformity-Frailty Index: 3.3 ± 1.6, and Charlson Comorbidity Index: 1.8 ± 1.7). The average blood loss was 1569.3 mL, and the operative time was 376.6 min, with 63% undergoing osteotomy and 54% decompression. 69.3% had a posterior-only approach, 30% combined, and 0.7% anterior-only. 4.7% were SF, 22.3% F, and 73.0% NF. At baseline, 104 were unemployed losing $971.38 weekly. After 1 yr, 62 remained unemployed losing $50 508.64 yearly. With propensity score matching for baseline SVA, cost of ASD surgery at 2 yr for F/SF was greater than that for NF ($81 347 vs $69 722). Cost per QALY was higher for F/SF at 2 yr than that for NF ($436 473 vs $430 437). At life expectancy, cost per QALY differences became comparable ($58 965 vs $58 149).Despite greater initial cost, F and SF patients show greater improvement. Cost per QALY for NF and F patients becomes similar at life expectancy.
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- 2021
12. Prioritization of realignment associated with superior clinical outcomes for surgical cervical deformity patients
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PeterGust Passias, KatherineE Pierce, AveryE Brown, ColeA Bortz, Haddy Alas, Renaud Lafage, Oscar Krol, Dean Chou, DouglasC Burton, Breton Line, Eric Klineberg, Robert Hart, Jeffrey Gum, Alan Daniels, Kojo Hamilton, Shay Bess, Themistocles Protopsaltis, Christopher Shaffrey, FrankA Schwab, JustinS Smith, Virginie Lafage, Christopher Ames, and null International Spine Study Group
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Prioritization ,realignment ,International Spine Study Group ,Lordosis ,Radiography ,Clinical Sciences ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Quality of life ,Cervical deformity ,medicine ,In patient ,business.industry ,Minimal clinically important difference ,Neurosciences ,prioritization ,medicine.disease ,Sagittal plane ,Good Health and Well Being ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,RC925-935 ,Surgery ,Original Article ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
BackgroundTo optimize quality of life in patients with cervical deformity (CD), there may be alignment targets to be prioritized.ObjectiveTo prioritize the cervical parameter targets for alignment.MethodsIncluded: CD patients (C2-C7 Cobb >10°°, C2-C7 lordosis [CL] >10°°, cSVA > 4 cm, or chin-brow vertical angle >25°°) with full baseline (BL) and 1-year (1Y) radiographic parameters and Neck Disability Index (NDI) scores; patients with cervical (C) or cervicothoracic (CT) Primary Driver Ames type. Patients with BL Ames classified as low CD for both parameters of cSVA ( 0.050). Decision tree analysis determined cut-offs for radiographic change, prioritizing in the following order: ≥42.5° C2-T3 angle, >35.4° CL, -30.8 mm C2-T3 SVA, and ≤-33.6° TS-CL.ConclusionsCertain ratios of correction of cervical parameters contribute to improving neck disability. Prioritizing these radiographic alignment parameters may help optimize patient-reported outcomes for patients undergoing CD surgery.
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- 2021
13. The Influence of Obesity on the Operative and Non-Operative Management of Pediatric Extremity Fractures
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Neill Y. Li, Aristides Cruz, Saisanjana Kalagara, Alicia Hersey, and Alan Daniels
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Published
- 2019
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14. The Health Impact of Adult Cervical Deformity in Patients Presenting for Surgical Treatment: Comparison to United States Population Norms and Chronic Disease States Based on the EuroQuol-5 Dimensions Questionnaire
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Justin S. Smith, Breton Line, Shay Bess, Christopher I. Shaffrey, Han Jo Kim, Gregory Mundis, Justin K. Scheer, Eric Klineberg, Michael O’Brien, Richard Hostin, Munish Gupta, Alan Daniels, Michael Kelly, Jeffrey L Gum, Frank J. Schwab, Virginie Lafage, Renaud Lafage, Tamir Ailon, Peter Passias, Themistocles Protopsaltis, Todd J. Albert, K. Daniel Riew, Robert Hart, Doug Burton, Vedat Deviren, Christopher P. Ames, and International Spine Study Group
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Adult ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,Population ,Kyphosis ,Pain ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,EQ-5D ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Deformity ,Health Status Indicators ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,Stroke ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Europe ,Treatment Outcome ,Population Surveillance ,Chronic Disease ,Physical therapy ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Surgery ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Although adult cervical spine deformity (ACSD) is associated with pain and disability, its health impact has not been quantified in comparison to other chronic diseases. Objective To perform a comparative analysis of the health impact of symptomatic ACSD to US normative and chronic disease values using EQ-5D (EuroQuol-5 Dimensions questionnaire) scores. Methods ACSD patients presenting for surgical treatment were identified from a prospectively collected multicenter database. Baseline demographics and EQ-5D scores were collected and compared with US normative and disease state values. Results Of 121 ACSD patients, 115 (95%) completed the EQ-5D (60% women, mean age 61 years, previous spine surgery in 44%). Diagnoses included kyphosis with mid-cervical (63.4%), cervico-thoracic (23.5%), or thoracic (8.7%) apex and primary coronal deformity (4.3%). The mean ACSD EQ-5D index was 0.511 (standard definition = 0.224), which is 34% below the bottom 25th percentile (0.780) for similar age- and gender-matched US normative populations. Mean ACSD EQ-5D index values were worse than the bottom 25th percentile for several other disease states, including chronic ischemic heart disease (0.708), malignant breast cancer (0.708), and malignant prostate cancer (0.708). ACSD mean index values were comparable to the bottom 25th percentile values for blindness/low vision (0.543), emphysema (0.508), renal failure (0.506), and stroke (0.463). EQ-5D scores did not significantly differ based on cervical deformity type ( P = .66). Conclusion The health impact of symptomatic ACSD is substantial, with negative impact across all EQ-5D domains. The mean ACSD EQ-5D index was comparable to the bottom 25th percentile values for blindness/low vision, emphysema, renal failure, and stroke.
- Published
- 2016
15. Several routes to effective compliance
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Alan, Daniels
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Safety Management ,Guideline Adherence ,Emergencies ,Maintenance and Engineering, Hospital ,Lighting ,United Kingdom - Abstract
Alan Daniels, technical director at specialist in self-test emergency lighting and exit signs, P4, describes the latest trends in, and requirements for, emergency lighting, 'a vital part of the building services footprint in hospitals and healthcare premises'.
- Published
- 2014
16. Pediatric Spine Trauma
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Alan Daniels, Eric Lincoln, and Craig Eberson
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Medicine ,Pediatric spine ,business - Published
- 2014
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17. Development of Validated Computer Based Preoperative Predictive Model for Proximal Junction Failure or Clinically Significant Proximal Junction Kyphosis with 86% Accuracy Based on 510 Adult Spinal Deformity Patients with Two-Year Follow-Up
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null International Spine Study Group, Justin K. Scheer, Justin S. Smith, Frank J. Schwab, Virginie Lafage, Christopher I. Shaffrey, Shay Bess, Robert A. Hart, Munish C. Gupta, Themistocles S. Protopsaltis, Richard A. Hostin, Vedat Deviren, Breton Line, Alan Daniels, Bassel G. Diebo, Renaud Lafage, Lukas P. Zebala, Gregory M. Mundis, Amit Jain, Tamir Ailon, Han Jo Kim, D. Kojo Hamilton, Douglas C. Burton, Eric O. Klineberg, and Christopher P. Ames
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Computer based ,Spinal deformity ,Kyphosis ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2015
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18. Prospective Multicenter Assessment of Early Complication Rates Associated with Adult Cervical Deformity Surgery in 78 Patients
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null International Spine Study Group, Justin S. Smith, Virginie Lafage, Christopher I. Shaffrey, Themistocles S. Protopsaltis, Peter G. Passias, Frank J. Schwab, Munish C. Gupta, Michael F. O'Brien, Richard A. Hostin, Gregory M. Mundis, Robert K. Eastlack, Douglas C. Burton, Robert A. Hart, Alan Daniels, Han Jo Kim, Eric O. Klineberg, Shay Bess, Vedat Deviren, Todd J. Albert, K. Daniel Riew, and Christopher P. Ames
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cervical deformity ,fungi ,medicine ,food and beverages ,Surgery ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Early complication - Abstract
IntroductionAlthough adult cervical deformity (ACD) can have profound impact, few reports have focused on the treatment of these patients. We present early complication rates associated with surgic...
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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