9 results on '"Juhee Song"'
Search Results
2. Predicting Lymph Node Metastasis in Non-small Cell Lung Cancer
- Author
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Louis Lam, Joseph Cicenia, Joshua Filner, Carlos Aravena, Michael Simoff, Liang Li, Humberto Choi, Sofia Molina, Avi Cohen, Lakshmi Mudambi, Septimiu Murgu, Manuel Ribeiro, Sonali Sethi, Laila Noor, Daniel P Steinfort, D. Kevin Duong, Harmeet Bedi, Donald R. Lazarus, Thomas R. Gildea, Lonny Yarmus, Timothy Saettele, Mark Deffebach, Michael Machuzak, Atul C. Mehta, Gabriela Martinez-Zayas, Labib Debiane, Muhammad H. Arain, Adriana M. Rueda, Diana H. Yu, Laura Frye, Carlos A. Jimenez, Francisco A. Almeida, David Ost, Jeffrey Thiboutot, Horiana B. Grosu, Asha Bonney, Tarek Dammad, D. Kyle Hogarth, Juhee Song, Ala Eddin S. Sagar, Junsheng Ma, David Feller-Kopman, George A. Eapen, and Roberto F. Casal
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Solitary pulmonary nodule ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Calibration (statistics) ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,SABR volatility model ,medicine.disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030228 respiratory system ,Brier score ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Lung cancer staging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Lung cancer ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background Two models, the Help with the Assessment of Adenopathy in Lung cancer (HAL) and Help with Oncologic Mediastinal Evaluation for Radiation (HOMER), were recently developed to estimate the probability of nodal disease in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) as determined by endobronchial ultrasound-transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA). The objective of this study was to prospectively externally validate both models at multiple centers. Research Question Are the HAL and HOMER models valid across multiple centers? Study Design and Methods This multicenter prospective observational cohort study enrolled consecutive patients with PET-CT clinical-radiographic stages T1-3, N0-3, M0 NSCLC undergoing EBUS-TBNA staging. HOMER was used to predict the probability of N0 vs N1 vs N2 or N3 (N2|3) disease, and HAL was used to predict the probability of N2|3 (vs N0 or N1) disease. Model discrimination was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (ROC-AUC), and calibration was assessed using the Brier score, calibration plots, and the Hosmer-Lemeshow test. Results Thirteen centers enrolled 1,799 patients. HAL and HOMER demonstrated good discrimination: HAL ROC-AUC = 0.873 (95%CI, 0.856-0.891) and HOMER ROC-AUC = 0.837 (95%CI, 0.814-0.859) for predicting N1 disease or higher (N1|2|3) and 0.876 (95%CI, 0.855-0.897) for predicting N2|3 disease. Brier scores were 0.117 and 0.349, respectively. Calibration plots demonstrated good calibration for both models. For HAL, the difference between forecast and observed probability of N2|3 disease was +0.012; for HOMER, the difference for N1|2|3 was −0.018 and for N2|3 was +0.002. The Hosmer-Lemeshow test was significant for both models (P = .034 and .002), indicating a small but statistically significant calibration error. Interpretation HAL and HOMER demonstrated good discrimination and calibration in multiple centers. Although calibration error was present, the magnitude of the error is small, such that the models are informative.
- Published
- 2021
3. Incidence and Location of Atelectasis Developed During Bronchoscopy Under General Anesthesia
- Author
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Roberto F. Casal, Horiana B. Grosu, Muhammad H. Arain, Ala Eddin S. Sagar, Mathieu Marcoux, Georgie A. Eapen, David Ost, Bruce F. Sabath, Juhee Song, Mona Sarkiss, and Carlos A. Jimenez
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Lung ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Intraclass correlation ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Atelectasis ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Right bronchus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030228 respiratory system ,Bronchoscopy ,Laryngeal mask airway ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Despite the many advances in peripheral bronchoscopy, its diagnostic yield remains suboptimal. With the use of cone-beam CT imaging we have found atelectasis mimicking lung tumors or obscuring them when using radial-probe endobronchial ultrasound (RP-EBUS), but its incidence remains unknown. Research Question What are the incidence, anatomic location, and risk factors for developing atelectasis during bronchoscopy under general anesthesia? Study Design and Methods We performed a prospective observational study in which patients undergoing peripheral bronchoscopy under general anesthesia were subject to an atelectasis survey carried out by RP-EBUS under fluoroscopic guidance. The following dependent segments were evaluated: right bronchus 2 (RB2), RB6, RB9, and RB10; and left bronchus 2 (LB2), LB6, LB9, and LB10. Images were categorized either as aerated lung (“snowstorm” pattern) or as having a nonaerated/atelectatic pattern. Categorization was performed by three independent readers. Results Fifty-seven patients were enrolled. The overall intraclass correlation agreement among readers was 0.82 (95% CI, 0.71-0.89). Median time from anesthesia induction to atelectasis survey was 33 min (range, 3-94 min). Fifty-one patients (89%; 95% CI, 78%-96%) had atelectasis in at least one of the eight evaluated segments, 45 patients (79%) had atelectasis in at least three, 41 patients (72%) had atelectasis in at least four, 33 patients (58%) had atelectasis in at least five, and 18 patients (32%) had atelectasis in at least six segments. Right and left B6, B9, and B10 segments showed atelectasis in > 50% of patients. BMI and time to atelectasis survey were associated with increased odds of having more atelectatic segments (BMI: OR, 1.13 per unit change; 95% CI, 1.034-1.235; P = .007; time to survey: OR, 1.064 per minute; 95% CI, 1.025-1.105; P = .001). Interpretation The incidence of atelectasis developing during bronchoscopy under general anesthesia in dependent lung zones is high, and the number of atelectatic segments is greater with higher BMI and with longer time under anesthesia. Clinical Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov ; No.: NCT03523689; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov .
- Published
- 2020
4. Ventilatory Strategy to Prevent Atelectasis During Bronchoscopy Under General Anesthesia: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial (Ventilatory Strategy to Prevent Atelectasis -VESPA- Trial)
- Author
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Moiz, Salahuddin, Mona, Sarkiss, Ala-Eddin S, Sagar, Ioannis, Vlahos, Christopher H, Chang, Archan, Shah, Bruce F, Sabath, Julie, Lin, Juhee, Song, Teresa, Moon, Peter H, Norman, George A, Eapen, Horiana B, Grosu, David E, Ost, Carlos A, Jimenez, Gouthami, Chintalapani, and Roberto F, Casal
- Abstract
Atelectasis negatively influences peripheral bronchoscopy, increasing CT scan-body divergence, obscuring targets, and creating false-positive radial-probe endobronchial ultrasound (RP-EBUS) images.Can a ventilatory strategy reduce the incidence of atelectasis during bronchoscopy under general anesthesia?Randomized controlled study (1:1) in which patients undergoing bronchoscopy were randomized to receive standard ventilation (laryngeal mask airway, 100% FioSeventy-six patients were analyzed, 38 in each group. The proportion of patients with any atelectasis according to chest CT scan at time 2 was 84.2% (95% CI, 72.6%-95.8%) in the control group and 28.9% (95% CI, 15.4%-45.9%) in the VESPA group (P .0001). The proportion of patients with bilateral atelectasis at time 2 was 71.1% (95% CI, 56.6%-85.5%) in the control group and 7.9% (95% CI, 1.7%-21.4%) in the VESPA group (P .0001). At time 2, 3.84 ± 1.67 (mean ± SD) bronchial segments in the control group vs 1.21 ± 1.63 in the VESPA group were deemed atelectatic (P .0001). No differences were found in the rate of complications.VESPA significantly reduced the incidence of atelectasis, was well tolerated, and showed a sustained effect over time despite bronchoscopic nodal staging maneuvers. VESPA should be considered for bronchoscopy when atelectasis is to be avoided.ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT04311723; URL: www.gov.
- Published
- 2022
5. Incidence and Location of Atelectasis Developed During Bronchoscopy Under General Anesthesia: The I-LOCATE Trial
- Author
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Ala-Eddin S, Sagar, Bruce F, Sabath, George A, Eapen, Juhee, Song, Mathieu, Marcoux, Mona, Sarkiss, Muhammad H, Arain, Horiana B, Grosu, David E, Ost, Carlos A, Jimenez, and Roberto F, Casal
- Subjects
Image-Guided Biopsy ,Male ,Pulmonary Atelectasis ,Duration of Therapy ,Incidence ,Anesthesia, General ,Cone-Beam Computed Tomography ,Risk Assessment ,Endosonography ,Risk Factors ,Bronchoscopy ,Humans ,Multiple Pulmonary Nodules ,Female ,Intraoperative Complications ,Lung ,Aged - Abstract
Despite the many advances in peripheral bronchoscopy, its diagnostic yield remains suboptimal. With the use of cone-beam CT imaging we have found atelectasis mimicking lung tumors or obscuring them when using radial-probe endobronchial ultrasound (RP-EBUS), but its incidence remains unknown.What are the incidence, anatomic location, and risk factors for developing atelectasis during bronchoscopy under general anesthesia?We performed a prospective observational study in which patients undergoing peripheral bronchoscopy under general anesthesia were subject to an atelectasis survey carried out by RP-EBUS under fluoroscopic guidance. The following dependent segments were evaluated: right bronchus 2 (RB2), RB6, RB9, and RB10; and left bronchus 2 (LB2), LB6, LB9, and LB10. Images were categorized either as aerated lung ("snowstorm" pattern) or as having a nonaerated/atelectatic pattern. Categorization was performed by three independent readers.Fifty-seven patients were enrolled. The overall intraclass correlation agreement among readers was 0.82 (95% CI, 0.71-0.89). Median time from anesthesia induction to atelectasis survey was 33 min (range, 3-94 min). Fifty-one patients (89%; 95% CI, 78%-96%) had atelectasis in at least one of the eight evaluated segments, 45 patients (79%) had atelectasis in at least three, 41 patients (72%) had atelectasis in at least four, 33 patients (58%) had atelectasis in at least five, and 18 patients (32%) had atelectasis in at least six segments. Right and left B6, B9, and B10 segments showed atelectasis in50% of patients. BMI and time to atelectasis survey were associated with increased odds of having more atelectatic segments (BMI: OR, 1.13 per unit change; 95% CI, 1.034-1.235; P = .007; time to survey: OR, 1.064 per minute; 95% CI, 1.025-1.105; P = .001).The incidence of atelectasis developing during bronchoscopy under general anesthesia in dependent lung zones is high, and the number of atelectatic segments is greater with higher BMI and with longer time under anesthesia.ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT03523689; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.
- Published
- 2020
6. Predicting Postoperative Lung Function Following Lobectomy
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David Ost, Juhee Song, Ara A. Vaporciyan, Xin Tian, Natasha Ghosh, David Eapen-John, Narda Ontiveros, Horiana B. Grosu, Arlene M. Correa, Garrett L. Walsh, Liang Li, and Ajay Sheshadri
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business ,Lung function ,Surgery - Published
- 2017
7. A Comparison Between Arterial Blood Gases, Peripheral Venous Blood Gases, and Central Venous Blood Gases in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shoc
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Pedro Quiroga, Heath D. White, Alejandro C. Arroliga, Juhee Song, Alfredo Vazquez-Sandoval, and Shirley F. Jones
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,business.industry ,Septic shock ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,Arterial blood ,Venous blood ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Severe sepsis ,Peripheral - Published
- 2012
8. Outcomes Study: 8-Year Experience of Patients With Isolated Reduction in Diffusion Capacity (Dlco)
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William G. Petersen, Rupesh K. Dave, Juhee Song, and Jorge Velazco
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Reduction (complexity) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DLCO ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Diffusion (business) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business - Published
- 2010
9. Comparison of Pleural Fluid pH Using Two Methods of Pleural Fluid Collection: Blood Gas Syringe vs Lithium-Heparin Vacuette (Green-Topped Tube GTT)
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Alfredo Vazquez Sandoval, Rupesh K. Dave, Marilynn Prince-Fiocco, Juhee Song, and William G. Petersen
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Heparin ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Surgery ,chemistry ,Anesthesia ,Pleural fluid ,Gas syringe ,medicine ,Tube (fluid conveyance) ,Lithium ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2010
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