16 results on '"Mike, Fralick"'
Search Results
2. Variation in the risk of death due to COVID‐19: An international multicenter cohort study of hospitalized adults
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Kieran L, Quinn, Husam, Abdel-Qadir, Kali, Barrett, Emily, Bartsch, Andrea, Beaman, Tor, Biering-Sørensen, Michael, Colacci, Alex, Cressman, Allan, Detsky, Alexi, Gosset, Mats H, Lassen, Chris, Kandel, Yaariv, Khaykin, Lauren, Lapointe-Shaw, Erik, Lovblom, Derek R, MacFadden, Bruce, Perkins, Kenneth J, Rothman, Kristoffer G, Skaarup, Nathan, Stall, Terence, Tang, Chris, Yarnell, Jonathan, Zipursky, Matthew T, Warkentin, Mike, Fralick, and Rachael, Weagle
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Adult ,Cohort Studies ,Hospitalization ,Ontario ,Leadership and Management ,Health Policy ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Fundamentals and skills ,Hospital Mortality ,General Medicine ,Assessment and Diagnosis ,Care Planning - Abstract
There is wide variation in mortality among patients hospitalized with COVID-19. Whether this is related to patient or hospital factors is unknown.To compare the risk of mortality for patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and to determine whether the majority of that variation was explained by differences in patient characteristics across sites.An international multicenter cohort study of hospitalized adults with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 enrolled from 10 hospitals in Ontario, Canada and 8 hospitals in Copenhagen, Denmark between January 1, 2020 and November 11, 2020.Inpatient mortality. We used a multivariable multilevel regression model to compare the in-hospital mortality risk across hospitals and quantify the variation attributable to patient-level factors.There were 1364 adults hospitalized with COVID-19 in Ontario (n = 1149) and in Denmark (n = 215). In Ontario, the absolute risk of in-hospital mortality ranged from 12.0% to 39.8% across hospitals. Ninety-eight percent of the variation in mortality in Ontario was explained by differences in the characteristics of the patients. In Denmark, the absolute risk of inpatients ranged from 13.8% to 20.6%. One hundred percent of the variation in mortality in Denmark was explained by differences in the characteristics of the inpatients.There was wide variation in inpatient COVID-19 mortality across hospitals, which was largely explained by patient-level factors, such as age and severity of presenting illness. However, hospital-level factors that could have affected care, including resource availability and capacity, were not taken into account. These findings highlight potential limitations in comparing crude mortality rates across hospitals for the purposes of reporting on the quality of care.
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- 2022
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3. Association Between Diabetes and Mortality Among Adult Patients Hospitalized With COVID-19: A Cohort Study of Hospitalized Adults in Ontario, Canada, and Copenhagen, Denmark
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Orly Bogler, Afsaneh Raissi, Michael Colacci, Andrea Beaman, Tor Biering-Sørensen, Alex Cressman, Allan Detsky, Alexi Gosset, Mats Højbjerg Lassen, Chris Kandel, Yaariv Khaykin, David Barbosa, Lauren Lapointe-Shaw, Derek R. MacFadden, Alexander Pearson, Bruce A. Perkins, Kenneth J. Rothman, Kristoffer Grundtvig Skaarup, Rachael Weagle, Chris Yarnell, Michelle Sholzberg, Benazir Hodzic-Santor, Erik Lovblom, Jonathan Zipursky, Kieran L. Quinn, and Mike Fralick
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Endocrinology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Internal Medicine ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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4. Federated learning for predicting clinical outcomes in patients with COVID-19
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Jiahui Guan, Krishna Juluru, Yothin Rakvongthai, Benjamin S. Glicksberg, Watsamon Jantarabenjakul, Li-Chen Fu, Mike Fralick, Anthony Costa, Quanzheng Li, Andrew Feng, Eric K. Oermann, Joshua D. Kaggie, Xihong Lin, Pedro Mário Cruz e Silva, Deepeksha Bhatia, Byung Seok Kim, Hitoshi Mori, Pablo F. Damasceno, Peiying Ruan, Yuhong Wen, Hao-Hsin Shin, Amilcare Gentili, Weichung Wang, Chiu-Ling Lai, Jason C. Crane, Andrew N. Priest, Soo-Young Park, Peerapon Vateekul, Matheus Ribeiro Furtado de Mendonça, Gustavo César de Antônio Corradi, Griffin Lacey, Meena AbdelMaseeh, Yu Rim Lee, Tatsuya Kodama, Pierre Elnajjar, Krishna Nand Keshava Murthy, Xiang Li, Evan Leibovitz, Vitor Lavor, Christopher P. Hess, Colin B. Compas, Stefan Gräf, Masoom A. Haider, Daguang Xu, Nicola Rieke, Thanyawee Puthanakit, Sarah E Hickman, Hui Ren, Marcio Aloisio Bezerra Cavalcanti Rockenbach, Jung Gil Park, Jesse Tetreault, Hisashi Sasaki, Min Kyu Kang, Won Young Tak, Chun-Nan Hsu, Fiona J. Gilbert, Chin Lin, Varun Buch, Felipe Kitamura, Tony Mazzulli, Eddie Huang, Abood Quraini, Shelley McLeod, Young Joon Kwon, Gustavo Nino, Dufan Wu, Chien-Sung Tsai, Mona Flores, Baris Turkbey, Sira Sriswasdi, Pochuan Wang, Mohammad Adil, Aoxiao Zhong, Chih-Hung Wang, Sheng Xu, C. K. Lee, Isaac Yang, Marius George Linguraru, Holger R. Roth, Chia-Jung Hsu, Anas Z. Abidin, Thomas M. Grist, Hirofumi Obinata, Sheridan Reed, Andrew Liu, Ahmed Harouni, Natalie Gangai, Ittai Dayan, Kristopher Kersten, Stephanie Harmon, Jae Ho Sohn, John Garrett, Bradford J. Wood, Sharmila Majumdar, Bernardo Bizzo, Shuichi Kawano, Keith J. Dreyer, Carlos Tor-Díez, and Chia-Cheng Lee
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Information privacy ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Vital signs ,General Medicine ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Data sharing ,Data exchange ,Health care ,medicine ,Generalizability theory ,Medical physics ,In patient ,business - Abstract
Federated learning (FL) is a method used for training artificial intelligence models with data from multiple sources while maintaining data anonymity, thus removing many barriers to data sharing. Here we used data from 20 institutes across the globe to train a FL model, called EXAM (electronic medical record (EMR) chest X-ray AI model), that predicts the future oxygen requirements of symptomatic patients with COVID-19 using inputs of vital signs, laboratory data and chest X-rays. EXAM achieved an average area under the curve (AUC) >0.92 for predicting outcomes at 24 and 72 h from the time of initial presentation to the emergency room, and it provided 16% improvement in average AUC measured across all participating sites and an average increase in generalizability of 38% when compared with models trained at a single site using that site’s data. For prediction of mechanical ventilation treatment or death at 24 h at the largest independent test site, EXAM achieved a sensitivity of 0.950 and specificity of 0.882. In this study, FL facilitated rapid data science collaboration without data exchange and generated a model that generalized across heterogeneous, unharmonized datasets for prediction of clinical outcomes in patients with COVID-19, setting the stage for the broader use of FL in healthcare. Federated learning, a method for training artificial intelligence algorithms that protects data privacy, was used to predict future oxygen requirements of symptomatic patients with COVID-19 using data from 20 different institutes across the globe.
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- 2021
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5. Cost-effectiveness of remdesivir plus usual care versus usual care alone for hospitalized patients with COVID-19: an economic evaluation as part of the Canadian Treatments for COVID-19 (CATCO) randomized clinical trial
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Vincent I. Lau, Robert Fowler, Ruxandra Pinto, Alain Tremblay, Sergio Borgia, François M. Carrier, Matthew P. Cheng, John Conly, Cecilia T. Costiniuk, Peter Daley, Erick Duan, Madeleine Durand, Patricia S. Fontela, George Farjou, Mike Fralick, Anna Geagea, Jennifer Grant, Yoav Keynan, Kosar Khwaja, Nelson Lee, Todd C. Lee, Rachel Lim, Conar R. O’Neil, Jesse Papenburg, Makeda Semret, Michael Silverman, Wendy Sligl, Ranjani Somayaji, Darrell H.S. Tan, Jennifer L.Y. Tsang, Jason Weatherald, Cedric Philippe Yansouni, Ryan Zarychanski, and Srinivas Murthy
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Adult ,Canada ,Alanine ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Adenosine Monophosphate ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment - Abstract
The role of remdesivir in the treatment of hospitalized patients with COVID-19 remains ill-defined. We conducted a cost-effectiveness analysis alongside the Canadian Treatments for COVID-19 (CATCO) open-label, randomized clinical trial evaluating remdesivir.Patients with COVID-19 in Canadian hospitals from Aug. 14, 2020, to Apr. 1, 2021, were randomly assigned to receive remdesivir plus usual care versus usual care alone. Taking a public health care payer's perspective, we collected in-hospital outcomes and health care resource utilization alongside estimated unit costs in 2020 Canadian dollars over a time horizon from randomization to hospital discharge or death. Data from 1281 adults admitted to 52 hospitals in 6 Canadian provinces were analyzed.The total mean cost per patient was $37 918 (standard deviation [SD] $42 413; 95% confidence interval [CI] $34 617 to $41 220) for patients randomly assigned to the remdesivir group and $38 026 (SD $46 021; 95% CI $34 480 to $41 573) for patients receiving usual care (incremental cost -$108 [95% CI -$4953 to $4737],From a health care payer perspective, treating patients hospitalized with COVID-19 with remdesivir and usual care appears to be preferrable to treating with usual care alone, albeit with marginal incremental cost and small clinical effects. The added cost of remdesivir was offset by shorter lengths of stay in the intensive care unit and less need for ventilation.ClinicalTrials. gov, no. NCT04330690.
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- 2022
6. The association between diabetes and mortality among patients hospitalized with COVID-19: Cohort Study of Hospitalized Adults in Ontario, Canada and Copenhagen, Denmark
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Orly Bogler, Afsaneh Raissi, Michael Colacci, Andrea Beaman, Tor Biering-Sørensen, Alex Cressman, Allan Detsky, Alexi Gosset, Mats Højbjerg Lassen, Chris Kandel, Yaariv Khaykin, David Barbosa, Lauren Lapointe Shaw, Derek R. MacFadden, Alexander Pearson, Bruce Perkins, Kenneth J. Rothman, Kristoffer Grundtvig Skaarup, Rachael Weagle, Chris Yarnell, Michelle Sholzberg, Bena Hodzic-Santor, Erik Lovblom, Jonathan Zipursky, Kieran L. Quinn, and Mike Fralick
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ImportanceDiabetes has been reported to be associated with an increased risk of death among patients with COVID-19. However, available studies lack detail on COVID illness severity and measurement of relevant comorbidities.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsWe conducted a multicenter, retrospective cohort study of patients over the age of 18 years who were hospitalized with COVID-19 between January 1, 2020 and November 30, 2020 in Ontario, Canada and Copenhagen, Denmark. Chart abstraction emphasizing co-morbidities and disease severity was performed by trained research personnel. The association between diabetes and death was measured using Poissson regression.Main Outcomes and Measureswithin hospital 30-day risk of death.ResultsOur study included 1018 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 in Ontario and 305 in Denmark, of whom 405 and 75 patients respectively had pre-existing diabetes. In both Ontario and Denmark, patients with diabetes were more likely to be older, have chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, higher troponin levels, and to receive antibiotics compared with adults who did not have diabetes. In Ontario, the crude mortality rate ratio among patients with diabetes was 1.60 [1.24 – 2.07 95% CI] and in the adjusted regression model was 1.19 [0.86 – 1.66 95% CI]. In Denmark, the crude mortality rate ratio among patients with diabetes was 1.27 (0.68 – 2.36 95% CI) and in the adjusted model was 0.87 (0.49 – 1.54 95% CI)]. Meta-analyzing the two rate ratios from each region resulted in a crude mortality rate ratio of 1.55 (95% CI 1.22,1.96) and an adjusted mortality rate ratio of 1.11 (95% CI 0.84, 1.47).ConclusionsPresence of diabetes was not strongly associated with in-hospital COVID mortality independent of illness severity and other comorbidities.
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- 2022
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7. Effects of Remdesivir in Hospitalized Patients with COVID-19: Systematic Review and Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis of Randomized Clinical Trials
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Alain Amstutz, Benjamin Speich, France Mentré, Corina Silvia Rueegg, Drifa Belhadi, Lambert Assoumou, Charles Burdet, Srinivas Murthy, Lori Elizabeth Dodd, Yeming Wang, Kari Tikkinen, Florence Ader, Maya Hites, Maude Bouscambert-Duchamp, Mary-Anne Trabaud, Mike Fralick, Todd Campbell Lee, Ruxandra Pinto, Andreas Barratt-Due, Fridtjof Lund-Johansen, Fredrik Müller, Olli Nevalainen, Bin Cao, Tyler Bonnett, Alexandra Griessbach, Ala Taji Heravi, Christof Schönenberger, Perrine Janiaud, Laura Werlen, Soheila Aghlmandi, Stefan Schandelmaier, Yazdan Yazdanpanah, Dominique Costagliola, Inge Christoffer Olsen, and Matthias Briel
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- 2022
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8. Prone positioning of patients with moderate hypoxia due to COVID-19: A multicenter pragmatic randomized trial [COVID-PRONE]
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Erin Worndl, Kevin Venus, Irfan A Dhalla, Melissa Bregger, Haseena Hussein, Lee Fidler, Alexis Gordon, Travis Carpenter, Michael Colacci, Richard Dunbar-Yaffe, Laveena Munshi, Amanda Cooke, Bruno R da Costa, Covid Prone Investigators, Lana A Castellucci, Mike Fralick, Karen Britto, Terence Tang, Rachel Hensel, Laura Branfield Day, Stephanie Go, Fahad Razak, Amol A. Verma, Thomas E. MacMillan, Keren Mandelzweig, Daniel Tamming, Jonathan S. Zipursky, and Rob Fowler
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Mechanical ventilation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Randomization ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Odds ratio ,law.invention ,Prone position ,Respiratory failure ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Interquartile range ,Fraction of inspired oxygen ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesTo assess the effectiveness of prone positioning to reduce the risk of death or respiratory failure in non-critically ill patients hospitalized with COVID-19DesignPragmatic randomized clinical trial of prone positioning of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 across 15 hospitals in Canada and the United States from May 2020 until May 2021.SettingsPatients were eligible is they had a laboratory-confirmed or a clinically highly suspected diagnosis of COVID-19, required supplemental oxygen (up to 50% fraction of inspired oxygen [FiO2]), and were able to independently prone with verbal instruction. (NCT04383613).Main Outcome MeasuresThe primary outcome was a composite of in-hospital death, mechanical ventilation, or worsening respiratory failure defined as requiring at least 60% FiO2 for at least 24 hours. Secondary outcomes included the change in the ratio of oxygen saturation to FiO2 (S/F ratio).ResultsA total of 248 patients were included. The trial was stopped early on the basis of futility for the pre-specified primary outcome. The median time from hospital admission until randomization was 1 day, the median age of patients was 56 years (interquartile range [IQR] 45,65), 36% were female, and 90% of patients were receiving oxygen via nasal prongs at the time of randomization. The median time spent prone in the first 72 hours was 6 hours total (IQR 1.5,12.8) for the prone arm compared to 0 hours (0,2) in the control arm. The risk of the primary outcome was similar between the prone group (18 [14.3%] events) and the standard care group (17 [13.9%] events), odds ratio 0.92 (95% CI 0.44 to 1.92). The change in the S/F ratio after 72 hours was similar for patients randomized to prone compared to standard of care.ConclusionAmong hypoxic but not critically patients with COVID-19 in hospital, a multifaceted intervention to increase prone positioning did not improve outcomes. Adherence to prone positioning was poor, despite multiple efforts. Subsequent trials of prone positioning should aim to develop strategies to improve adherence to awake prone positioning.What is already known on this topicProne positioning is considered standard of care for mechanically ventilated patients who have severe acute respiratory distress syndrome. Recent data suggest prone positioning is beneficial for patients with COVID-19 who are requiring high flow oxygen. It is unknown of prone positioning is beneficial for patients not on high flow oxygen.What this study addsProne positioning is generally not well tolerated and innovative approaches are needed to improve adherence. Clinical and physiologic outcomes were not improved with prone positioning among hypoxic but not critically ill patients hospitalized with COVID-19.
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- 2021
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9. Health Services
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Janice L. Kwan, Amol A. Verma, Shail Rawal, Lauren Lapointe-Shaw, Matthew J. Burke, Terence Tang, Mike Fralick, Yishan Guo, Nicola Goldberg, Adina Weinerman, Fahad Razak, and Sagar Rohailla
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Context (language use) ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,cardiovascular system ,Patent foramen ovale ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Transthoracic echocardiogram ,business ,Stroke ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Foramen ovale (heart) ,Cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transthoracic echocardiography is routinely performed in patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) to help plan secondary stroke management, but recent data evaluating its usefulness in this context are lacking. We sought to evaluate the value of echocardiography for identifying clinically actionable findings for secondary stroke prevention. METHODS: We conducted a multicentre cohort study of patients admitted to hospital with stroke or TIA between 2010 and 2015 at 2 academic hospitals in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Clinically actionable echocardiographic findings for secondary stroke prevention included cardiac thrombus, patent foramen ovale, atrial myxoma or valvular vegetation. We identified patient characteristics associated with clinically actionable findings using logistic regression. RESULTS: Of the 1862 patients with stroke or TIA we identified, 1272 (68%) had at least 1 echocardiogram. Nearly all echocardiograms were transthoracic; 1097 (86%) were normal, 1 (0.08%) had an atrial myxoma, 2 (0.2%) had a valvular vegetation, 11 (0.9%) had a cardiac thrombus and 66 (5.2%) had a PFO. Patent foramen ovale was less likely among patients older than 60 years (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.20–0.57), with prior stroke or TIA (adjusted OR 0.31, 95% CI 0.09–0.76) or with dyslipidemia (adjusted OR 0.39, 95% CI 0.15–0.84). Among the 130 patients with cryptogenic stroke who had an echocardiogram (n = 110), a PFO was detected in 19 (17%) on transthoracic echocardiogram. INTERPRETATION: Most patients with stroke or TIA had a normal echocardiogram, with few having clinically actionable findings for secondary stroke prevention. Clinically actionable findings, specifically PFO, were more common in patients with cryptogenic stroke.
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- 2019
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10. Beyond wastewater surveillance: refining environmental pathogen detection in the built environment
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Sawith, Abeygunawardena, Rees, Kassen, and Mike, Fralick
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Wastewater-Based Epidemiological Monitoring ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Wastewater ,Built Environment - Published
- 2022
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11. Assessing the utility of lymphocyte count to diagnose COVID-19
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Fahad Razak, Mike Fralick, Lauren Lapointe-Shaw, Jessica J. Liu, Orly Bogler, Amol A. Verma, Daniel Tamming, Shail Rawal, Janice L. Kwan, and Terence Tang
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Lymphocyte ,Respiratory infection ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Pneumonia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Respiratory system ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
BackgroundCOronaVirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) can be challenging to diagnose, because symptoms are non-specific, clinical presentations are heterogeneous, and false negative tests can occur. Our objective was to assess the utility of lymphocyte count to differentiate COVID-19 from influenza or community-acquired pneumonia (CAP).MethodsWe conducted a cohort study of adults hospitalized with COVID-19 or another respiratory infection (i.e., influenza, CAP) at seven hospitals in Ontario, Canada.The first available lymphocyte count during the hospitalization was used. Standard test characteristics for lymphocyte count (×109/L) were calculated (i.e., sensitivity, specificity, area under the receiver operating curve [AUC]). All analyses were conducting using R.ResultsThere were 869 hospitalizations for COVID-19, 669 for influenza, and 3009 for CAP. The mean age across the three groups was 67 and patients with pneumonia were older than those with influenza or COVID19, and approximately 46% were woman. The median lymphocyte count was nearly identical for the three groups of patients: 1.0 ×109/L (interquartile range [IQR]:0.7,2.0) for COVID-19, 0.9 ×109/L (IQR 0.6,1.0) for influenza, and 1.0 ×109/L (IQR 0.6,2.0) for CAP. At a lymphocyte threshold of less than 2.0 ×109/L, the sensitivity was 87% and the specificity was approximately 10%. As the lymphocyte threshold increased, the sensitivity of diagnosing COVID-19 increased while the specificity decreased. The AUC for lymphocyte count was approximately 50%.InterpretationLymphocyte count has poor diagnostic discrimination to differentiate between COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses. The lymphopenia we consistently observed across the three illnesses in our study may reflect a non-specific sign of illness severity. However, lymphocyte count above 2.0 ×109/L may be useful in ruling out COVID-19 (sensitivity = 87%).
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- 2021
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12. Federated Learning used for predicting outcomes in SARS-COV-2 patients
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Matheus Ribeiro Furtado de Mendonça, Evan Leibovitz, Kristopher Kersten, Mona Flores, John Garrett, Baris Turkbey, Pablo F. Damasceno, Masoom A. Haider, Fred Kwon, Soo-Young Park, Chun-Nan Hsu, Keith J. Dreyer, Chien-Sung Tsai, Tatsuya Kodama, Daguang Xu, Min Kyu Kang, Tony Mazzulli, Andrew Feng, C. K. Lee, Isaac Yang, Deepi Bhatia, Marius George Linguraru, Byung Seok Kim, Aoxiao Zhong, Mohammad Adil, Pochuan Wang, Sheridan Reed, Peerapon Vateekul, Anas Z. Abidin, Sira Sriswa, J. D. Kaggie, Chia-Cheng Lee, Carlos Tor-Díez, Krishna Juluru, Xiang Li, Colin B. Compas, Xihong Lin, Jiahui Guan, Pierre Elnajjar, Yuhong Wen, Jung Gil Park, Hao-Hsin Shin, Amilcare Gentili, Weichung Wang, Colleen Ruan, Hui Ren, Hisashi Sasaki, Hitoshi Mori, Holger R. Roth, Felipe Kitamura, Chiu-Ling Lai, Jason C. Crane, Thomas M. Grist, Bradford J. Wood, Bernardo Bizzo, Dufan Wu, Jesse Tetreault, Andrew N. Priest, Mike Fralick, Anthony Costa, Andrew Liu, Benjamin S. Glicksberg, Griffin Lacey, Meena Abdelmaseeh, Thanyawee Puthanakit, Marcio Aloisio Bezerra Cavalcanti Rockenbach, Shelley McLeod, Pedro Mário Cruz e Silva, Chih-Hung Wang, Chia-Jung Hsu, Sarah E Hickman, Won Young Tak, Quanzheng Li, Yothin Rakvongthai, Watsamon Jantarabenjakul, Li-Chen Fu, Gustavo César de Antônio Corradi, Eric K. Oermann, Nicola Rieke, Varun Buch, Abood Quraini, Shuichi Kawano, Natalie Gangai, Yu Rim Lee, Krishna Nand Keshava Murthy, Christopher P. Hess, Stefan Gräf, Ittai Dayan, Stephanie Harmon, Jae Ho Sohn, Eddie Huang, Ahmed Harouni, Vitor de Lima Lavor, Sharmila Majumdar, Sheng Xu, Hirofumi Obinata, Fiona J. Gilbert, and Chin Lin
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federated learning ,Computer science ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Vital signs ,MEDLINE ,COVID-19 ,artificial intelligence ,Prognosis ,Data science ,Article ,Data sharing ,Machine Learning ,Data exchange ,Health care ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Set (psychology) ,business ,Anonymity - Abstract
Federated learning (FL) is a method used for training artificial intelligence models with data from multiple sources while maintaining data anonymity, thus removing many barriers to data sharing. Here we used data from 20 institutes across the globe to train a FL model, called EXAM (electronic medical record (EMR) chest X-ray AI model), that predicts the future oxygen requirements of symptomatic patients with COVID-19 using inputs of vital signs, laboratory data and chest X-rays. EXAM achieved an average area under the curve (AUC)0.92 for predicting outcomes at 24 and 72 h from the time of initial presentation to the emergency room, and it provided 16% improvement in average AUC measured across all participating sites and an average increase in generalizability of 38% when compared with models trained at a single site using that site's data. For prediction of mechanical ventilation treatment or death at 24 h at the largest independent test site, EXAM achieved a sensitivity of 0.950 and specificity of 0.882. In this study, FL facilitated rapid data science collaboration without data exchange and generated a model that generalized across heterogeneous, unharmonized datasets for prediction of clinical outcomes in patients with COVID-19, setting the stage for the broader use of FL in healthcare.
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- 2021
13. Cohorting of Non-Critically Ill COVID-19 Patients: A Multicenter Survey Study (COVID-COHORT)
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Purohit U and Mike Fralick
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Critically ill ,Multicenter survey ,Pandemic ,Cohort ,Medicine ,Context (language use) ,Survey research ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease ,Infectious agent - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has posed novel infection-control challenges for hospitals around the globe. One infection-control strategy that has been widely used in the context of other outbreaks is patient cohorting. This strategy refers to the placement of all patients exposed to the same laboratory-confirmed infectious agent in one location within the hospital. Little is known about the current utilization of this strategy with non-critically ill COVID-19 patients. An international multicenter, survey study was conducted to identify what strategies are planned or in place for patients with COVID-19 who are not critically ill. The survey was distributed from March 23-29th, 2020 to GIM physicians in Canada, USA, Denmark, Singapore, Hong Kong, and England. Of the 31 hospitals, 29 (94%) indicated that they plan on cohorting all GIM patients with COVID-19 to one location in the hospital. Among these 29 hospitals, 23 (79%) had implemented the plan at the time of the survey. The primary reasons for this decision were to limit the spread of COVID-19 and conserve PPE use. In conclusion, in the face of a novel virus there is near unanimity in the practice of patient cohorting as a potential mitigation strategy.
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- 2020
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14. 33-OR: A Novel Data Mining Approach to Detect Adverse Events of New Diabetes Drugs in Routine Care
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Elisabetta Patorno, Shirley V. Wang, Martin Kulldorff, Donald A. Redelmeier, Sebastian Schneeweiss, and Mike Fralick
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Canagliflozin ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,computer.software_genre ,medicine.disease ,Variable ratio ,Clinical trial ,Diabetes mellitus ,Propensity score matching ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Data mining ,Medical diagnosis ,Adverse effect ,business ,computer ,Routine care ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Clinical trials are underpowered to detect serious but rare adverse events (AEs). We applied a novel data mining approach to detect potential AEs for canagliflozin (CANA), the first marketed SGLT2 inhibitor, prior to public awareness of its potential safety concerns. In a U.S. commercial claims dataset (3/2013-9/2015), two pair-wise cohorts of patients with T2DM initiating CANA or a comparator, i.e., a DPP-4i or a GLP-1RA, were identified and propensity score matched. We used variable ratio matching with up to 4 comparators for each CANA initiator (44,733 CANA vs. 99,458 DPP-4i; and 55,974 CANA vs. 74,727 GLP-1RA). Using a tree-based scan statistic data mining method, we assessed thousands of incident outcomes in CANA vs. comparator initiators, scanning for statistical AE alerts after adjusting for multiple testing. Incident outcomes were defined by hierarchical groupings of clinically related ICD-9 codes. For inpatient and emergency room diagnoses, diabetic ketoacidosis was the only severe AE associated with CANA (p Disclosure M. Fralick: None. M. Kulldorff: None. S. Wang: Research Support; Self; Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH, Johnson & Johnson, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation. S. Schneeweiss: None. D. Redelmeier: None. E. Patorno: Other Relationship; Self; Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH. Funding National Institute on Aging (K08AG055670)
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- 2020
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15. Oral fluoroquinolone was linked to mitral and aortic regurgitation compared with amoxicillin or azithromycin
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Mike Fralick and Anne Holbrook
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Aortic Valve Insufficiency ,Amoxicillin ,General Medicine ,Regurgitation (circulation) ,Azithromycin ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Internal medicine ,cardiovascular system ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Humans ,business ,medicine.drug ,Fluoroquinolones - Abstract
Source Citation Etminan M, Sodhi M, Ganjizadeh-Zavareh S, et al. Oral fluoroquinolones and risk of mitral and aortic regurgitation. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2019;74:1444-50. 31514945
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- 2020
16. Value of routine echocardiography in the management of stroke
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Mike, Fralick, Nicola, Goldberg, Sagar, Rohailla, Yishan, Guo, Matthew J, Burke, Lauren, Lapointe-Shaw, Janice L, Kwan, Adina S, Weinerman, Shail, Rawal, Terence, Tang, Fahad, Razak, and Amol A, Verma
- Subjects
Male ,Ontario ,Heart Ventricles ,Research ,Foramen Ovale, Patent ,Middle Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Stroke ,Ischemic Attack, Transient ,cardiovascular system ,Humans ,Female ,cardiovascular diseases ,Echocardiography, Transesophageal - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transthoracic echocardiography is routinely performed in patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA) to help plan secondary stroke management, but recent data evaluating its usefulness in this context are lacking. We sought to evaluate the value of echocardiography for identifying clinically actionable findings for secondary stroke prevention. METHODS: We conducted a multicentre cohort study of patients admitted to hospital with stroke or TIA between 2010 and 2015 at 2 academic hospitals in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Clinically actionable echocardiographic findings for secondary stroke prevention included cardiac thrombus, patent foramen ovale, atrial myxoma or valvular vegetation. We identified patient characteristics associated with clinically actionable findings using logistic regression. RESULTS: Of the 1862 patients with stroke or TIA we identified, 1272 (68%) had at least 1 echocardiogram. Nearly all echocardiograms were transthoracic; 1097 (86%) were normal, 1 (0.08%) had an atrial myxoma, 2 (0.2%) had a valvular vegetation, 11 (0.9%) had a cardiac thrombus and 66 (5.2%) had a PFO. Patent foramen ovale was less likely among patients older than 60 years (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.20–0.57), with prior stroke or TIA (adjusted OR 0.31, 95% CI 0.09–0.76) or with dyslipidemia (adjusted OR 0.39, 95% CI 0.15–0.84). Among the 130 patients with cryptogenic stroke who had an echocardiogram (n = 110), a PFO was detected in 19 (17%) on transthoracic echocardiogram. INTERPRETATION: Most patients with stroke or TIA had a normal echocardiogram, with few having clinically actionable findings for secondary stroke prevention. Clinically actionable findings, specifically PFO, were more common in patients with cryptogenic stroke.
- Published
- 2019
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