1,474 results on '"Jeffrey P"'
Search Results
2. MP34-13 HIGH NOCTURIA PREVALENCE IN PEOPLE LIVING WITH DISABILITIES: A NATIONAL HEALTH AND NUTRITION EXAMINATION SURVEY ANALYSIS
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Elia, Marlie, primary, Khosla, Lakshay, additional, and Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional
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- 2024
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3. MP26-05 EFFECT OF ANTIHISTAMINE ON URETERAL STENT-RELATED SYMPTOMS: A DOUBLE-BLIND RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
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Han, David S., primary, Margolin, Ezra J., additional, Movassaghi, Miyad, additional, Johnson, Jeffrey P., additional, Chowdhury, Mahveesh, additional, Pingle, Srinath-Reddi, additional, Golon, Ron, additional, Schulster, Michael L., additional, Weiner, David M., additional, and Shah, Ojas, additional
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- 2024
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4. Symptom Variability and Early Symptom Regression in the MAPP Study: A Prospective Study of Urological Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome
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Stephens-Shields, Alisa J, Clemens, J Quentin, Jemielita, Thomas, Farrar, John, Sutcliffe, Siobhan, Hou, Xiaoling, Landis, J Richard, Hanno, Philip, Kirkali, Ziya, Kusek, John W, Lucia, M Scott, Moldwin, Robert M, Mullins, Chris, Pontari, Michel A, Klumpp, David J, Schaeffer, Anthony J, Apkarian, Apkar, Cella, David, Farmer, Melissa A, Fitzgerald, Colleen, Gershon, Richard, Griffith, James W, Heckman, Charles J, Jiang, Mingchen, Keefer, Laurie, Marko, Darlene S, Michniewicz, Jean, Parrish, Todd, Tu, Frank, Mayer, Emeran A, Rodríguez, Larissa V, Alger, Jeffry, Ashe-McNalley, Cody P, Ellingson, Ben, Heendeniya, Nuwanthi, Kilpatrick, Lisa, Kulbacki, Cara, Kutch, Jason, Labus, Jennifer S, Naliboff, Bruce D, Randal, Fornessa, Smith, Suzanne R, Kreder, Karl J, Bradley, Catherine S, Eno, Mary, Greiner, Kris, Luo, Yi, Lutgendorf, Susan K, O’Donnell, Michael A, Ziegler, Barbara, Clauw, Daniel J, As-Sanie, Suzie, Berry, Sandra, Grayhack, Clara, Halvorson, Megan E, Harris, Richard, Harte, Steve, Ichesco, Eric, Oldendorf, Ann, Scott, Katherine A, Williams, David A, Buchwald, Dedra, Afari, Niloofar, Krieger, John, Miller, Jane, Richey, Stephanie, Robertson, Kelly, Ross, Susan O, Spiro, Roberta, Sundsvold, TJ, Strachan, Eric, Yang, Claire C, Andriole, Gerald L, Lai, H Henry, Bristol, Rebecca L, Colditz, Graham, Deutsch, Georg, Gardner, Vivien C, Gereau, Robert W, Henderson, Jeffrey P, Hong, Barry A, Hooton, Thomas M, Ness, Timothy J, North, Carol S, Spitznagle, Theresa M, Anger, Jennifer, Freeman, Michael, Kim, Jayoung, Eilber, Karyn, Van Eyk, Jennifer, Yang, Wei, Funari, Vincent, Cha, Jeena, and Barrell, Ted
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Clinical Research ,Urologic Diseases ,Adult ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Prospective Studies ,Prostatitis ,Symptom Assessment ,Time Factors ,MAPP Research Network ,cystitis ,epidemiologic research design ,interstitial ,pain ,prostate ,symptom assessment - Abstract
PurposeWe examined symptom variability in men and women with urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome. We describe symptom fluctuations as related to early symptom regression and its effect on estimated 1-year symptom change. We also describe a method to quantify patient specific symptom variability.Materials and methodsSymptoms were assessed biweekly in 424 subjects with urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome during 1 year. To evaluate the impact of early symptom regression subjects were classified as improved, no change or worse according to the rate of change using 1) all data, 2) excluding week 0 and 3) excluding weeks 0 and 2. Patient specific, time varying variability was calculated at each interval using a sliding window approach. Patients were classified as high, medium or low variability at each time and ultimately as high or low variability overall based on the variability for the majority of contacts.ResultsPrior to excluding early weeks to adjust for early symptom regression 25% to 38% and 5% to 6% of patients were classified as improved and worse, respectively. After adjustment the percent of patients who were improved or worse ranged from 15% to 25% and 6% to 9%, respectively. High and low variability phenotypes were each identified in 25% to 30% of participants.ConclusionsPatients with urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome show symptom variability. At study enrollment patients had worse symptoms on average, resulting in a regression effect that influenced the estimated proportion of those who were improved or worse. Prospective studies should include a run-in period to account for regression to the mean and other causes of early symptom regression. Further, symptom variability may be quantified and used to characterize longitudinal symptom profiles of urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome.
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- 2016
5. Relationship between Chronic Nonurological Associated Somatic Syndromes and Symptom Severity in Urological Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndromes: Baseline Evaluation of the MAPP Study
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Krieger, John N, Stephens, Alisa J, Landis, J Richard, Clemens, J Quentin, Kreder, Karl, Lai, H Henry, Afari, Niloofar, Rodríguez, Larissa, Schaeffer, Anthony, Mackey, Sean, Andriole, Gerald L, Williams, David A, Hanno, Philip, Kirkali, Ziya, Kusek, John W, Lucia, M Scott, Mullins, Chris, Pontari, Michel A, Klumpp, David J, Schaeffer, Anthony J, Apkarian, Apkar, Cella, David, Farmer, Melissa A, Fitzgerals, Colleen, Gershon, Richard, Griffith, James W, Heckman, Charles J, Jiang, Mingchen, Keeper, Laurie, Parrish, Todd, Tu, Frank, Marko, Darlene S, Mayer, Emeran A, Rodríguez, Larissa V, Alger, Jeffry, Ashe-McNalley, Cody P, Ellingson, Ben, Kilpatrick, Lisa, Kutch, Jason, Labus, Jennifer S, Naliboff, Bruce D, Heendeniya, Nuwanthi, Randal, Fornessa, Smith, Suzanne R, Kreder, Karl J, Bradley, Catherine S, Luo, Yi, Lutgendorf, Susan K, O'Donnell, Michael A, Eno, Mary, Greiner, Kris, Ziegler, Barbara, Clauw, Daniel J, As-Sanie, Suzie, Harris, Richard, Harte, Steve, Oldendorf, Ann, Berry, Sandra, Halvorson, Megan E, Ichesco, Eric, Scott, Katherine A, Buchwald, Dedra, Krieger, John, Miller, Jane, Strachan, Eric, Yang, Claire C, Richey, Stephanie, Ross, Susan O, Spiro, Roberta, Sundsvold, TJ, Bristol, Rebecca L, Gardner, Vivien C, Colditz, Graham, Deutsch, Georg, Gereau, Robert W, Henderson, Jeffrey P, Hone, Barry A, Hooton, Thomas M, Ness, Timothy J, North, Carol S, Sutcliffe, Siobhan, Spitznagle, Theresa M, Robinson, Nancy, Stephens, Alisa, Barrell, Ted, Hou, Xiaoling, Howard, Tamara, Wang, Yanli, and van Bokhoven, Andrie
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Depression ,Urologic Diseases ,Chronic Pain ,Mental Health ,Pain Research ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Chronic Disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Cystitis ,Interstitial ,Female ,Humans ,Interdisciplinary Communication ,Male ,Pelvic Pain ,Severity of Illness Index ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Symptom Assessment ,Syndrome ,urinary bladder ,cystitis ,interstitial ,male ,female ,questionnaires ,MAPP Research Network - Abstract
PurposeWe used MAPP data to identify participants with urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes only or a chronic functional nonurological associated somatic syndrome in addition to urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes. We characterized these 2 subgroups and explored them using 3 criteria, including 1) MAPP eligibility criteria, 2) self-reported medical history or 3) RICE criteria.Materials and methodsSelf-reported cross-sectional data were collected on men and women with urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes, including predominant symptoms, symptom duration and severity, nonurological associated somatic syndrome symptoms and psychosocial factors.ResultsOf 424 participants with urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes 162 (38%) had a nonurological associated somatic syndrome, including irritable bowel syndrome in 93 (22%), fibromyalgia in 15 (4%), chronic fatigue syndrome in 13 (3%) and multiple syndromes in 41 (10%). Of 233 females 103 (44%) had a nonurological associated somatic syndrome compared to 59 of 191 males (31%) (p = 0.006). Participants with a nonurological associated somatic syndrome had more severe urological symptoms and more frequent depression and anxiety. Of 424 participants 228 (54%) met RICE criteria. Of 228 RICE positive participants 108 (47%) had a nonurological associated somatic syndrome compared to 54 of 203 RICE negative patients (28%) with a nonurological associated somatic syndrome (p < 0.001).ConclusionsNonurological associated somatic syndromes represent important clinical characteristics of urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes. Participants with a nonurological associated somatic syndrome have more severe symptoms, longer duration and higher rates of depression and anxiety. RICE positive patients are more likely to have a nonurological associated somatic syndrome and more severe symptoms. Because nonurological associated somatic syndromes are more common in women, future studies must account for this potential confounding factor in urological chronic pelvic pain syndromes.
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- 2015
6. Comparative Analyses and Ablation Efficiency of Thulium Fiber Laser by Stone Composition.
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Johnson, Jeffrey, Lee, Justin, Movassaghi, Miyad, Han, David, Pingle, Srinath-Reddi, Williams, James, Schulster, Michael, Gorroochurn, Prakash, Yinming Shao, Shah, Ojas, Teichman, Joel M. H., Katta, Nitesh, and Milner, Thomas E.
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Purpose: There are limited data on ablation effects of thulium fiber laser (TFL) settings with varying stone composition. Similarly, little is known surrounding the photothermal effects of TFL lithotripsy regarding the chemical and structural changes after visible char formation. We aim to understand the TFL's ablative efficiency across various stone types and laser settings, while simultaneously investigating the photothermal effects of TFL lithotripsy. Materials and Methods: Human specimens of calcium oxalate monohydrate, calcium oxalate dihydrate, uric acid, struvite, cystine, carbonate apatite, and brushite stones were ablated using 13 prespecified settings with the Coloplast TFL Drive. Pre- and postablation mass, ablation time, and total energy were recorded. Qualitative ablative observations were recorded at 1-minute intervals with photographs and gross description. Samples were analyzed with Fouriertransform infrared spectroscopy pre- and postablation and electron microscopy postablation to assess the photothermal effects of TFL. Results: Across all settings and stone types, 0.05 J ≥ 1000 Hz was the best numerically efficient ablation setting. When selected for more clinically relevant laser settings (ie, 10-20 W), 0.2 J =≥100 Hz, short pulse was the most numerically efficient setting for calcium oxalate dihydrate, cystine, and struvite stones. Calcium oxalate monohydrate ablated with the best numerical efficiency at 0.4 J ≥ 40 Hz, short pulse. Uric acid and carbonate apatite stones ablated with the best numerical efficiency at 0.3 J ≥ 60 Hz, short pulse. Brushite stones ablated with the best numerical efficiency at 0.5 J ≥ 30 Hz, short pulse. Pulse duration impacted ablation effectiveness greatly with 6/8 (75%) of inadequate ablations occurring in medium or long pulse settings. The average percent of mass lost during ablation was 57%; cystine stones averaged the highest percent mass lost at 71%. Charring was observed in 36/91 (40%) specimens. Charring was most often seen in uric acid, cystine, and brushite stones across all laser settings. Electron microscopy of char demonstrated a porous melting effect different to that of brittle fracture. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy of brushite char demonstrated a chemical composition change to amorphous calcium phosphate. Conclusions: We describe the optimal ablation settings based on stone composition, which may guide urologists towards more stone-specific care when using thulium laser for treating renal stones (lower energy settings would be safer for ureteral stones). For patients with unknown stone composition, lasers can be preset to target common stone types or adjusted based on visual cues. We recommend using short pulse for all TFL lithotripsy of calculi and altering the settings based on visual cues and efficiency to minimize the charring, an effect which can make the stone refractory to further dusting and fragmentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Risk of Biochemical Recurrence in Patients With Grade Group 1 Prostate Cancer With Extraprostatic Extension Treated With Radical Prostatectomy.
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Rezaee, Michael E., Pallauf, Maximilian, Fletcher, Sean A., Han, Misop, Pavlovich, Christian P., Chien-Kuang Cornelia Ding, Epstein, Jonathan I., Allaf, Mohamad E., Trock, Bruce J., Singla, Nirmish, Robinson, Hunter S., Cole, Matthew W., and Tosoian, Jeffrey J.
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Purpose: We sought to examine the association of extraprostatic extension (EPE) with biochemical recurrence (BCR) separately in men with Grade Group (GG) 1 and GG2 prostate cancer (PCa) treated with radical prostatectomy. Materials and Methods: We reviewed our institutional database of patients who underwent radical prostatectomy for PCa between 2005 and 2022 and identified patients with GG1 and GG2 disease on final pathology. Fine-Gray competing risk models with an interaction between EPE (yes vs no) and GG (GG1 vs GG2) were used to examine the relationship between disease group and BCR-free survival. Results: The cohort consisted of 6309 men, of whom 169/2740 (6.2%) with GG1 disease had EPE while 1013/3569 (28.4%) with GG2 disease had EPE. Median follow-up was 4 years. BCR occurred in 400/6309 (6.3%) patients. For men with GG1, there was no statistically significant difference in BCR-free survival for men with vs without EPE (subdistribution HR = 0.88; 95% CI: 0.37-2.09). However, for GG2 patients BCR-free survival was significantly worse for those with vs without EPE (subdistribution HR = 1.97, 95% CI: 1.54-2.52). Conclusions: Although there is a subset of GG1 PCas capable of invading through the prostatic capsule, patients with GG1 PCa and EPE at prostatectomy experience similar biochemical recurrence and survival outcomes compared to GG1 patients without EPE. However, among men with GG2, EPE connotes a worse prognosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Impact of Left-Digit Age Bias in the Treatment of Localized Prostate Cancer
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Aaron Brant, Patrick Lewicki, Xian Wu, Christina Sze, Jeffrey P. Johnson, Spyridon P. Basourakos, Camilo Arenas-Gallo, Daniel Shoag, Christopher E. Barbieri, Nicholas G. Zaorsky, and Jonathan E. Shoag
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Male ,Prostatectomy ,Urology ,Prostate ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Grading ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Aged - Abstract
Left-digit bias is a phenomenon in which the leftmost digit of a number disproportionately influences decision making. We measured the effect of left-digit age bias on treatment recommendations for localized prostate cancer.We included men with clinically localized prostate adenocarcinoma in Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results from 2004 to 2018 and the National Cancer Database from 2004 to 2016. Primary outcomes were recommendations for radiation therapy and radical prostatectomy. Regression discontinuity was used to assess whether age increase from 69 to 70 years was associated with disproportionate changes in treatment recommendations.In Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results, discontinuities were found in the proportion of patients recommended for radiation among the entire cohort (effect size 2.2%,In patients with localized prostate cancer, left-digit age change from 69 to 70 was associated with disproportionately increased recommendations for radiation and decreased recommendations for prostatectomy.
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- 2022
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9. Differences in the Prevalence of Nocturnal Polyuria in the U.S. by Definition: Results from the Epidemiology of Nocturnal Polyuria Study
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J. L. H. Ruud Bosch, Christopher R. Chapple, Elizabeth R. Mueller, Matt T. Rosenberg, Bilal Chughtai, Kristian Juul, Karin S. Coyne, Fredrik L. Andersson, Elizabeth D. Bacci, Jason C. Simeone, and Jeffrey P. Weiss
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Adult ,Male ,Polyuria ,Urinary Bladder, Overactive ,Urology ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Urination ,Female ,Nocturia - Abstract
Prevalence data on nocturnal polyuria (NP), nocturia caused by overproduction of urine during sleep, is primarily limited to men and varies by NP definition. This U.S.-representative epidemiological study of men and women ≥30 years old assessed the prevalence of NP.Consenting participants completed the baseline EpiNP (Epidemiology of Nocturnal Polyuria) survey (eg Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Tool, comorbidities). All reporting ≥2 voids/night and a target of 100 random respondents reporting 0 or 1 void/night were asked to complete 3-day bladder diaries. NP was defined as nocturnal polyuria index (NPI)0.33 (NPI33) and nocturnal urine production90 ml/hour (NUP90). Extrapolated prevalence was stratified by sex and subgroups: idiopathic (without underlying causes), associated with overactive bladder (NPOAB), bladder outlet obstruction (NPBOO; men) and comorbidities. Voided volumes and timing, including first uninterrupted sleep period, were assessed by subgroup.A total of 10,190 individuals completed the baseline survey; mean age (range) was 54.4 (30-95). A total of 3,938 individuals were invited to complete the diary; 1,763 (49.3%) completed 3-day bladder diaries. Urine production (maximum nighttime volume, total volume, nocturnal urine production, nocturia index) was higher in both men and women with idiopathic NP and comorbidities. The median number of nighttime voids was greatest for NPBOO in men and NPOAB in women. Bother associated with nighttime voiding differed by NP subgroup but was highest in NPBOO for men (NPI33: 69.6%; NUP90: 71.1%) and NPOAB for women (NPI33: 67.5%; NUP90: 66.0%).This population-based NP prevalence study including men and women characterizes NP subgroups and provides insights into nocturia treatment by emphasizing factors influencing urine production versus factors influencing bladder capacity.
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- 2022
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10. PD33-12 RELATIONSHIP OF SLEEP-RELATED FACTORS TO NOCTURIA IN THE ABSENCE OF SLEEP DISORDERS
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Khosla, Lakshay, primary, Huang, Aaron J., additional, Gong, Susan, additional, Lazar, Jason M., additional, Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional, and Kabarriti, Abdo E., additional
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- 2023
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11. PD33-12 RELATIONSHIP OF SLEEP-RELATED FACTORS TO NOCTURIA IN THE ABSENCE OF SLEEP DISORDERS
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Lakshay Khosla, Aaron J. Huang, Susan Gong, Jason M. Lazar, Jeffrey P. Weiss, and Abdo E. Kabarriti
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Urology - Published
- 2023
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12. Evaluating the Effectiveness of Artificial Intelligenceepowered Large Language Models Application in Disseminating Appropriate and Readable Health Information in Urology.
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Davis, Ryan, Eppler, Michael, Ayo-Ajibola, Oluwatobiloba, Loh-Doyle, Jeffrey C., Nabhani, Jamal, Samplaski, Mary, Gill, Inderbir, and Cacciamani, Giovanni E.
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LANGUAGE models ,READABILITY (Literary style) ,CHATGPT ,NATURAL languages ,UROLOGY ,SEARCH engines ,TUMOR lysis syndrome - Abstract
Purpose: The Internet is a ubiquitous source of medical information, and natural language processors are gaining popularity as alternatives to traditional search engines. However, suitability of their generated content for patients is not well understood. We aimed to evaluate the appropriateness and readability of natural language processor-generated responses to urology-related medical inquiries. Materials and Methods: Eighteen patient questions were developed based on Google Trends and were used as inputs in ChatGPT. Three categories were assessed: oncologic, benign, and emergency. Questions in each category were either treatment or sign/symptom-related questions. Three native English-speaking Board-Certified urologists independently assessed appropriateness of ChatGPT outputs for patient counseling using accuracy, comprehensiveness, and clarity as proxies for appropriateness. Readability was assessed using the Flesch Reading Ease and Flesh-Kincaid Reading Grade Level formulas. Additional measures were created based on validated tools and assessed by 3 independent reviewers. Results: Fourteen of 18 (77.8%) responses were deemed appropriate, with clarity having the most 4 and 5 scores (P [ .01). There was no significant difference in appropriateness of the responses between treatments and symptoms or between different categories of conditions. The most common reason from urologists for low scores was responses lacking information dsometimes vital information. The mean (SD) Flesch Reading Ease score was 35.5 (SD[10.2) and the mean Flesh-Kincaid Reading Grade Level score was 13.5 (1.74). Additional quality assessment scores showed no significant differences between different categories of conditions. Conclusions: Despite impressive capabilities, natural language processors have limitations as sources of medical information. Refinement is crucial before adoption for this purpose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Differences in the Prevalence of Nocturnal Polyuria in the U.S. by Definition: Results From the Epidemiology of Nocturnal Polyuria Study. Reply.
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Bosch, J. L. H. Ruud, primary, Chapple, Christopher R., additional, Mueller, Elizabeth R., additional, Rosenberg, Matt T., additional, Chughtai, Bilal, additional, Juul, Kristian, additional, Coyne, Karin S., additional, Andersson, Fredrik L., additional, Bacci, Elizabeth D., additional, Simeone, Jason C., additional, and Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional
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- 2023
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14. Impact of Left-Digit Age Bias in the Treatment of Localized Prostate Cancer
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Brant, Aaron, primary, Lewicki, Patrick, additional, Wu, Xian, additional, Sze, Christina, additional, Johnson, Jeffrey P., additional, Basourakos, Spyridon P., additional, Arenas-Gallo, Camilo, additional, Shoag, Daniel, additional, Barbieri, Christopher E., additional, Zaorsky, Nicholas G., additional, and Shoag, Jonathan E., additional
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- 2022
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15. Differences in the Prevalence of Nocturnal Polyuria in the U.S. by Definition: Results From the Epidemiology of Nocturnal Polyuria Study. Reply
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J. L. H. Ruud Bosch, Christopher R. Chapple, Elizabeth R. Mueller, Matt T. Rosenberg, Bilal Chughtai, Kristian Juul, Karin S. Coyne, Fredrik L. Andersson, Elizabeth D. Bacci, Jason C. Simeone, and Jeffrey P. Weiss
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Urology - Published
- 2023
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16. Vesicourethral Anastomotic Stenosis Following Radical Prostatectomy: Risk Factors, Natural History, and Treatment Outcomes.
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Britton, Cameron J., Sharma, Vidit, Fadel, Anthony E., Bearrick, Elizabeth, Findlay, Bridget L., Frank, Igor, Tollefson, Matthew K., Karnes, R. Jeffrey, and Viers, Boyd R.
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RADICAL prostatectomy ,URETHRA diseases ,TRANSURETHRAL prostatectomy ,STENOSIS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,ENDOSCOPIC surgery - Abstract
Purpose: Vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis after radical prostatectomy is a complication with significant adverse quality-of-life implications. Herein, we identify groups at risk for vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis and further characterize the natural history and treatment patterns. Materials and Methods: Years 1987-2013 of a prospectively maintained radical prostatectomy registry were queried for patients with the diagnosis of vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis, defined as symptomatic and inability to pass a 17F cystoscope. Patients with follow-up less than 1 year, preoperative anterior urethral stricture, transurethral resection of prostate, prior pelvic radiotherapy, and metastatic disease were excluded. Logistic regression was performed to identify predictors of vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis. Functional outcomes were characterized. Results: Out of 17,904 men, 851 (4.8%) developed vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis at a median of 3.4 months. Multivariable logistic regression identified associations with vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis including adjuvant radiation, BMI, prostate volume, urine leak, blood transfusion, and nonnerve-sparing techniques. Robotic approach (OR 0.39, P < .01) and complete nerve sparing (OR 0.63, P < .01) were associated with reduced vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis formation. Vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis was independently associated with 1 or more incontinence pads/d at 1 year (OR 1.76, P < .001). Of the patients treated for vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis, 82% underwent endoscopic dilation. The 1- and 5-year vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis retreatment rates were 34% and 42%, respectively. Conclusions: Patient-related factors, surgical technique, and perioperative morbidity influence the risk of vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis after radical prostatectomy. Ultimately, vesicourethral anastomotic stenosis is independently associated with increased risk of urinary incontinence. Endoscopic management is temporizing for most men, with a high rate of retreatment by 5 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Prostate Health Index Density Outperforms Prostate-specific Antigen Density in the Diagnosis of Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer in Equivocal Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Prostate: A Multicenter Evaluation.
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Peter Ka-Fung Chiu, Jeffrey J. Leow, Chih-Hung Chiang, Mok, Alex, Kai Zhang, Po-Fan Hsieh, Yao Zhu, Wayne Lam, Woon-Chau Tsang, Yu-Hua Fan, Tzu-Ping Lin, Tsz-Yeung Chan, Yuen-Chun Teoh, Jeremy, Peggy Sau-Kwan Chu, Gang Zhu, Ding-Wei Ye, Hsi-Chin Wu, Teck-Wei Tan, Hok-Leung Tsu, James, and Chi-Fai Ng
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PROSTATE cancer ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PROSTATE-specific antigen ,PROSTATE ,CANCER diagnosis ,PROSTATE cancer patients - Abstract
Purpose: We compare Prostate Health Index, Prostate Health Index density, and PSA density in predicting clinically significant prostate cancer in MRI-guided prostate biopsy. Materials and Methods: This is a multicenter evaluation of prospectively maintained prostate biopsy databases at 10 urology centers. Men with Prostate Health Index and MRI-guided targeted and systematic prostate biopsy performed and without prior prostate cancer diagnosis were included. The additional value of PSA density, Prostate Health Index, and Prostate Health Index density to MRI PI-RADS (Prostate Imaging Reporting & Data System) score was evaluated with multivariable analyses, area under the curve, and decision curve analyses. The proportion of unnecessary biopsies that can be avoided are estimated for clinically significant prostate cancer (International Society of Urological Pathology group >2 prostate cancer). Results: A total of 1,215 men were analyzed. Prostate cancer and clinically significant prostate cancer were diagnosed in 51% (617/1,215) and 35% (422/1,215) of men, respectively. Clinically significant prostate cancer was diagnosed in 4.4% (3/68), 15% (72/470), 39% (176/446), and 74% (171/231) of highest PI-RADS score of 2, 3, 4, and 5 lesions, respectively. In multivariable analyses, independent predictors for clinically significant prostate cancer detection included Prostate Health Index (OR 1.04), prostate volume (OR 0.97), and PI-RADS score 4 (OR 2.81) and 5 (OR 8.34). Area under the curve for clinically significant prostate cancer of PI-RADS D Prostate Health Index density (0.85) was superior to PI-RADSDPSA density (0.81), Prostate Health Index density (0.81), Prostate Health Index (0.78), PI-RADS (0.76), PSA density (0.72), and PSA (0.60) in the whole cohort, and the superiority of Prostate Health Index density was also observed in PI-RADS 3 lesions. Decision curve analysis showed Prostate Health Index density achieving the best net clinical benefit in PI-RADS 3 or 4 cases. Among PI-RADS 3 lesions, using cutoffs of PSA density 0.15, Prostate Health Index 38.0, and Prostate Health Index density 0.83 could reduce 58%, 67%, and 72% of unnecessary biopsies, respectively. Conclusions: Prostate Health Index density outperformed Prostate Health Index or PSA density in clinically significant prostate cancer detection in men with multiparametric MRI performed, and further reduced unnecessary biopsies in PI-RADS 3 lesions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Differences in the Prevalence of Nocturnal Polyuria in the U.S. by Definition: Results from the Epidemiology of Nocturnal Polyuria Study
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Bosch, J. L. H. Ruud, primary, Chapple, Christopher R., additional, Mueller, Elizabeth R., additional, Rosenberg, Matt T., additional, Chughtai, Bilal, additional, Juul, Kristian, additional, Coyne, Karin S., additional, Andersson, Fredrik L., additional, Bacci, Elizabeth D., additional, Simeone, Jason C., additional, and Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional
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- 2022
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19. MP18-01 THE EFFECT OF AGING ON URINE NATRIURETIC PEPTIDES IN NOCTURIA AND NOCTURNAL POLYURIA
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Lakshay Khosla, Joseph U. Boroda, Joshua Salama, Syed N. Rahman, Danielle J. Gordon, Matthew W. Moy, Yonatan Akivis, Alla Akivis, Jason M. Lazar, Jeffrey P. Weiss, and Lori A. Birder
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Urology - Published
- 2022
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20. Impact of Maximal Transurethral Resection on Pathological Outcomes at Cystectomy in a Large, Multi-institutional Cohort.
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Kirk, Peter S., Lotan, Yair, Zargar, Homayoun, Fairey, Adrian S., Dinney, Colin P., Mir, Maria C., Krabbe, Laura-Maria, Cookson, Michael S., Jacobson, Niels-Erik, Montgomery, Jeffrey S., Vasdev, Nikhil, Yu, Evan Y., Xylinas, Evanguelos, Kassouf, Wassim, Dall’Era, Marc A., Sridhar, Srikala S., McGrath, Jonathan S., Aning, Jonathan, Shariat, Shahrokh F., and Thorpe, Andrew C.
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TRANSURETHRAL prostatectomy ,ILEAL conduit surgery ,SURGICAL margin ,CYSTECTOMY ,TRANSURETHRAL resection of bladder ,CANCER invasiveness ,NEOADJUVANT chemotherapy - Abstract
Purpose: While the presence of residual disease at the time of radical cystectomy for bladder cancer is an established prognostic indicator, controversy remains regarding the importance of maximal transurethral resection prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. We characterized the influence of maximal transurethral resection on pathological and survival outcomes using a large, multi-institutional cohort. Materials and Methods: We identified 785 patients from a multi-institutional cohort undergoing radical cystectomy for muscle-invasive bladder cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. We employed bivariate comparisons and stratified multivariable models to quantify the effect of maximal transurethral resection on pathological findings at cystectomy and survival. Results: Of 785 patients, 579 (74%) underwent maximal transurethral resection. Incomplete transurethral resection was more frequent in patients with more advanced clinical tumor (cT) and nodal (cN) stage (P < .001 and P < .01, respectively), with more advanced ypT stage at cystectomy and higher rates of positive surgical margins (P < .01 and P < .05, respectively). In multivariable models, maximal transurethral resection was associated with downstaging at cystectomy (adjusted odds ratio 1.6, 95% CI 1.1-2.5). In Cox proportional hazards analysis, maximal transurethral resection was not associated with overall survival (adjusted HR 0.8, 95% CI 0.6-1.1). Conclusions: In patients undergoing transurethral resection for muscle-invasive bladder cancer prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy, maximal resection may improve pathological response at cystectomy. However, the ultimate effects on long-term survival and oncologic outcomes warrant further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. A Urine-based DNA Methylation Marker Test to Detect Upper Tract Urothelial Carcinoma: A Prospective Cohort Study.
- Author
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Ghoreifi, Alireza, Ladi-Seyedian, Seyedeh-Sanam, Piatti, Paolo, Chew, Yap Ching, Jara, Benjamin, Sanossian, Lucy, Bhasin, Jeffrey M., Yamada, Taikun, Fuchs, Gerhard, Bhanvadia, Sumeet, Sotelo, Rene, Hung, Andrew, Aron, Monish, Desai, Mihir, Gill, Inderbir, Daneshmand, Siamak, Liang, Gangning, and Djaladat, Hooman
- Subjects
TRANSITIONAL cell carcinoma ,DNA methylation ,LOCUS of control ,TUMOR markers ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Purpose: We explored the accuracy of a urine-based epigenetic test for detecting upper tract urothelial carcinoma. Materials and Methods: Under an Institutional Review Board–approved protocol, urine samples were prospectively collected from primary upper tract urothelial carcinoma patients before radical nephroureterectomy, ureterectomy, or ureteroscopy between December 2019 and March 2022. Samples were analyzed with Bladder CARE, a urine-based test that measures the methylation levels of 3 cancer biomarkers (TRNA-Cys, SIM2, and NKX1-1) and 2 internal control loci using methylation-sensitive restriction enzymes coupled with quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Results were reported as the Bladder CARE Index score and quantitatively categorized as positive (>5), high risk (2.5-5), or negative (<2.5). The findings were compared with those of 1:1 sex/age-matched cancer-free healthy individuals. Results: Fifty patients (40 radical nephroureterectomy, 7 ureterectomy, and 3 ureteroscopy) with a median (IQR) age of 72 (64-79) years were included. Bladder CARE Index results were positive in 47, high risk in 1, and negative in 2 patients. A significant correlation was found between Bladder CARE Index values and tumor size. Urine cytology was available for 35 patients, of whom 22 (63%) results were false-negative. Upper tract urothelial carcinoma patients had significantly higher Bladder CARE Index values compared to the controls (mean 189.3 vs 1.6, P < .001). The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the Bladder CARE test for detecting upper tract urothelial carcinoma were 96%, 88%, 89%, and 96%, respectively. Conclusions: Bladder CARE is an accurate urine-based epigenetic test for the diagnosis of upper tract urothelial carcinoma, with much higher sensitivity than standard urine cytology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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22. Concomitant vs Staged Therapeutic Inguinal Lymphadenectomy in Clinically Node Positive Penile Squamous Cell Carcinoma: Does It Make a Difference?
- Author
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Huelster, Heather L., Chang, Andrew, Rose, Kyle M., Bandini, Marco, Albersen, Maarten, Roussel, Eduard, Chipollini, Juan, Yao Zhu, Ding-Wei Ye, Ornellas, Antonio A., Catanzaro, Mario, Marandino, Laura, Pederzoli, Filippo, Hakenberg, Oliver W., Heidenreich, Axel, Haidl, Friederike, Watkin, Nick, Ager, Michael, Ahmed, Mohamed E., and Karnes, Jeffrey R.
- Subjects
LYMPHADENECTOMY ,PENILE cancer ,SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma ,LYMPH node surgery ,HEALTH facilities ,TUMOR surgery ,OVERALL survival - Abstract
Purpose: Inguinal lymph node dissection within 3 months of primary tumor resection in penile cancer has been associated with longer recurrence-free and cancer-specific survival. However, the optimal timing and effect of lymphadenectomy performed concurrently at the time of primary lesion management on oncologic outcomes in clinically lymph node positive penile squamous cell carcinoma remains unknown. Materials and Methods: An international, multicenter cohort of 966 penile cancer cases was queried for penile squamous cell carcinoma management after the year 2000, clinically lymph node positive status, and performance of penile surgery and inguinal lymph node dissection. Cohorts were stratified as concomitant if inguinal lymph node dissection and penile surgery occurred on the same date or staged when inguinal lymph node dissection was performed after penile resection. Rates and patterns of penile squamous cell carcinoma recurrence were reported. Distant recurrence-free, cancer-specific, and overall survival were estimated using Kaplan-Meier analyses and groups compared with log-rank testing. Results: Of 253 contemporary men with clinically lymph node positive penile squamous cell carcinoma, 96 (38%) underwent concomitant inguinal lymph node dissection and 157 (62%) had inguinal lymph node dissection performed in a staged manner. Penile cancer was most likely to recur distantly (19%) followed by in the groin (14%) or pelvis (5%). There were no differences in distant recurrence-free, cancer-specific, or overall survival between management strategies. Multivariable analysis adjusting for stage, treatment center, and perioperative chemoradiation also demonstrated no recurrence-free, cancer-specific, or overall survival benefit between management strategies. Conclusions: Inguinal lymph node dissection performed concurrently with excision of the penile tumor for clinically node positive penile squamous cell carcinoma is not associated with differences in recurrence-free, cancer-specific, or overall survival compared to staged lymph node dissection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Intraoperative Blood Transfusion Is Associated With Increased Risk of Venous Thromboembolism After Radical Cystectomy.
- Author
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Myers, Amanda, Frank, Igor, Shah, Paras H., Tarrell, Robert F., Baird, Bryce, Dora, Chandler, Karnes, R. Jeffrey, Thompson, R. Houston, Tollefson, Matthew K., Boorjian, Stephen A., and Lyon, Timothy D.
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BLOOD transfusion ,THROMBOEMBOLISM ,CYSTECTOMY ,ILEAL conduit surgery ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,BLADDER cancer - Abstract
Purpose: Our objective was to examine whether perioperative blood transfusion is associated with venous thromboembolism following radical cystectomy adjusting for both patient- and disease-related factors. Materials and Methods: Patients who underwent radical cystectomy for bladder cancer from 1980-2020 were identified in the Mayo Clinic cystectomy registry. Blood transfusion during the initial postoperative hospitalization was analyzed as a 3-tiered variable: no transfusion, postoperative transfusion alone, or intraoperative with or without postoperative transfusion. The primary outcome was venous thromboembolism within 90 days of radical cystectomy. Associations between clinicopathological variables and 90-day venous thromboembolism were assessed using multivariable logistic regression, with transfusion analyzed as both a categorical and a continuous variable. Results: A total of 3,755 radical cystectomy patients were identified, of whom 162 (4.3%) experienced a venous thromboembolism within 90 days of radical cystectomy. Overall, 2,112 patients (56%) received a median of 1 (IQR: 0-3) unit of blood transfusion, including 811 (38%) with intraoperative transfusion only, 572 (27%) with postoperative transfusion only, and 729 (35%) with intraoperative and postoperative transfusion. On multivariable analysis, intraoperative with or without postoperative blood transfusion was associated with a significantly increased risk of venous thromboembolism (adjusted OR 1.73, 95% CI 1.17-2.56, P = .002). Moreover, when analyzed as a continuous variable, each unit of blood transfused intraoperatively was associated with 7% higher odds of venous thromboembolism (adjusted OR 1.07, 95% CI 1.01-1.13, P = .03). Conclusions: Intraoperative blood transfusion was significantly associated with venous thromboembolism within 90 days of radical cystectomy. To ensure optimal perioperative outcomes, continued effort to limit blood transfusion in radical cystectomy patients is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. MP18-01 THE EFFECT OF AGING ON URINE NATRIURETIC PEPTIDES IN NOCTURIA AND NOCTURNAL POLYURIA
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Khosla, Lakshay, primary, Boroda, Joseph U., additional, Salama, Joshua, additional, Rahman, Syed N., additional, Gordon, Danielle J., additional, Moy, Matthew W., additional, Akivis, Yonatan, additional, Akivis, Alla, additional, Lazar, Jason M., additional, Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional, and Birder, Lori A., additional
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- 2022
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25. MP63-06 DIASTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE REDUCTION IS ASSOCIATED WITH IMPROVEMENT IN NOCTURIA
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Jeffrey P. Weiss, Christina W. Agudelo, Jason Lazar, Thomas F. Monaghan, Dennis J. Robins, and Connelly D Miller
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Reduction (complexity) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood pressure ,business.industry ,Urology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Nocturia ,medicine.symptom ,business - Published
- 2021
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26. PD66-08 ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION AND NOCTURIA IN MIDDLE-AGED ADULTS: RESULTS FROM THE NATIONAL HEALTH AND NUTRITION EXAMINATION SURVEY
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Muchi Ditah Chobufo, Jason Lazar, Syed N. Rahman, Christina W. Agudelo, Donald L. Bliwise, Alan J. Wein, Karel Everaert, Thomas F. Monaghan, Upeksha Sewwandi Alwis, and Jeffrey P. Weiss
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National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,business.industry ,Urology ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Nocturia ,medicine.symptom ,Association (psychology) ,business ,Alcohol consumption - Published
- 2021
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27. MP02-02 A NEW BLADDER-DIARY DERIVED METRIC TO QUANTITATE PRE-EMPTIVE VOIDING BEHAVIOR IN OAB
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Wade Bushman, Max Edeson, Kevin Rychik, Jeffrey P. Weiss, and Jerry G. Blaivas
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,Functional bladder capacity ,Void (composites) ,Medicine ,Metric (unit) ,Bladder diary ,business ,Volume (compression) - Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE:The functional bladder capacity (FBC) is the largest voided volume recorded in a bladder diary. We define the minimum number of times a person must void based on their FB...
- Published
- 2021
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28. PD66-08 ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION AND NOCTURIA IN MIDDLE-AGED ADULTS: RESULTS FROM THE NATIONAL HEALTH AND NUTRITION EXAMINATION SURVEY
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Alwis, Upeksha S., primary, Chobufo, Muchi D., additional, Agudelo, Christina W., additional, Rahman, Syed N., additional, Everaert, Karel, additional, Lazar, Jason M., additional, Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional, Bliwise, Donald L., additional, Wein, Alan J., additional, and Monaghan, Thomas F., additional
- Published
- 2021
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29. Phenotyping the Association between Nocturia and Hypertension: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Rahman, Syed N., primary, Cao, Daniel J., additional, Monaghan, Thomas F., additional, Flores, Viktor X., additional, Vaysblat, Michael, additional, Moy, Matthew W., additional, Agudelo, Christina W., additional, Lazar, Jason M., additional, and Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional
- Published
- 2021
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30. MP16-17 PHASE I STUDY OF INTRAVESICAL FC-OPTIMIZED ANTI-CD40 AGONIST ANTIBODY 2141-V11 FOR NON-MUSCLE INVASIVE BLADDER CANCER (NMIBC) UNRESPONSIVE TO BACILLUS CALMETTE-GUERIN (BCG).
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Bochner, Bernard H., Alam, Muneeb, Osorio, Juan C., Wong, Jeffrey L., Knorr, David, Blanchard, Lucas, Angulo-Lozano, Juan, Whiting, Karissa, Seshan, Venkatraman E., Donahue, Timothy, Cha, Eugene, Goh, Alvin, Smith, Robert, Dalbagni, Guido, Hernandez, Christian, McCarter, Melissa, Pietzak, Eugene J., Rosenberg, Jonathan E., and Ravetch, Jeffrey V.
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NON-muscle invasive bladder cancer ,BLADDER cancer ,BCG immunotherapy - Published
- 2024
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31. MP02-18 APPROPRIATENESS OF IMAGING FOR LOW-RISK PROSTATE CANCER – REAL WORLD DATA FROM THE PENNSYLVANIA UROLOGIC REGIONAL COLLABORATION (PURC).
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Mercedes, Raidizon, Zook, Elizabeth, Eidelman, Eric, Tomaszewski, Jeffrey, Ginzburg, Serge, Uzzo, Robert, Smaldone, Marc, Danella, John, Guzzo, Thomas J., Lee, Daniel, Belkoff, Laurence, Walker, Jeffrey, Reese, Adam, Shah, Mihir, Jacobs, Bruce, and Raman, Jay D.
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PROSTATE cancer ,RADIONUCLIDE imaging ,POSITRON emission tomography ,PROSTATE cancer patients - Published
- 2024
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32. Salvage Surgery Rates for Pediatric Testicular Torsion: Comparison of the Pre- and Post-Quality Metric Eras.
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Chun, Brian, Colaco, Marc, Fox, Janelle A., Cannon, Glenn M., Schneck, Francis X., Chaudhry, Rajeev, and Villanueva, Jeffrey
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SPERMATIC cord torsion ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,PEDIATRIC surgery ,TESTIS surgery ,ORCHIOPEXY ,NOSOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose: Pediatric testicular torsion is a urological emergency that requires timely intervention. In 2015, quality metrics for testicular torsion were implemented in the U.S. News & World Report "Best Children's Hospitals" rankings. Our study examines and compares testicular salvage surgery rates before and after the institution of national quality metrics from a multi-institutional database. Materials and Methods: The Pediatric Health Information System-was surveyed for all testicular torsion encounters using ICD (International Classification of Diseases), Ninth and Tenth Revisions coding from 52 hospitals between January 2010 and December 2019. Patients <1 year and -18 years of age were excluded. Only hospitals that reported outcomes before and after quality scoring were included. Testicular salvage surgery was defined as patients having undergone orchiopexy without concomitant orchiectomy. Age, race, distance from hospital, household income and insurance status were compared. Results: A total of 890 patients (551 pre-metric and 339 post-metric) from 38 hospitals were included. The testicular salvage surgery rate was 12.5% higher in the post-metric cohort (70.9% versus 58.4%). Hospital compliance to testicular torsion quality metrics increased from 62% in 2015 to 98% in 2019. Mean age, race, distance to hospital, household income, insurance status and use of ultrasound were not statistically different between pre- and post-metric cohorts. Conclusions: Since the implementation of quality metrics, salvage surgery rates for testicular torsion increased to 70.9%, an improvement of 12.5% when compared to pre-metric outcomes. Patient factors were similar between the 2 groups. Multiinstitutional prospective data are needed to validate this database study and evaluate overall testicular salvage rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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33. MP02-03 NOCTURNAL URINE SAMPLING AS A PATIENT-CENTERED ALTERNATIVE TO VOIDING DIARIES IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF NOCTURNAL POLYURIA
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Joseph G. Verbalis, Rebecca Haddad, Jeffrey P. Weiss, Thomas F. Monaghan, Johan Vande Walle, Denys Marie-Astrid, Kim Pauwaert, Christina W. Agudelo, Alan J. Wein, Donald L. Bliwise, Karel Everaert, An-Sofie Goessaert, and Jason Lazar
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nocturnal polyuria ,business.industry ,Urology ,Gold standard ,Nocturnal ,urologic and male genital diseases ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,medicine ,Nocturia ,medicine.symptom ,Urine sample ,business ,Patient centered - Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVE:Nocturnal polyuria (NP) is the most common cause of nocturia. The 24-hour voiding diary is a gold standard in the diagnosis of NP, but patient adherence to voiding diarie...
- Published
- 2020
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34. MP81-20 SNP RS7824364 INCREASES THE RISK OF A POSITIVE PROSTATE CANCER BIOPSY: RESULTS FROM THE PREDICTION OF PROSTATE CANCER AMONG AFRICAN AMERICAN AND PUERTO RICAN MEN (POPCAP) STUDY
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Arun Sreekumar, Curtis A. Pettaway, Don Griffith, Jian Gu, Xuelin Huang, Patricia Troncoso, Jeffrey P. Jones, Pamela Roberson, Graciela M. Nogueras González, Steven E. Canfield, Xuemei Wang, Michael E. Scheurer, Michael Ittmann, Margarita Irizarry-Ramírez, Chad D. Huff, and Lisly Chery
- Subjects
African american ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Urology ,Puerto rican ,medicine.disease ,Prostate cancer ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,SNP ,business - Published
- 2020
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35. RE: A High Percent Free Prostate Specific Antigen in the Setting of Biochemical Recurrence after Radical Prostatectomy is Associated with Poorer Outcomes: A Validation Study Using Prospectively Collected Biobank Specimens
- Author
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Rahman, Syed N., primary, Flores, Viktor X., additional, Monaghan, Thomas F., additional, and Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional
- Published
- 2021
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36. RE: A High Percent Free Prostate Specific Antigen in the Setting of Biochemical Recurrence after Radical Prostatectomy is Associated with Poorer Outcomes: A Validation Study Using Prospectively Collected Biobank Specimens
- Author
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Thomas F. Monaghan, Syed N. Rahman, Viktor X. Flores, and Jeffrey P. Weiss
- Subjects
Male ,Prostatectomy ,Oncology ,Biochemical recurrence ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Validation study ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Prostate ,Seminal Vesicles ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Percent Free Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Biobank ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,business ,Biological Specimen Banks - Published
- 2021
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37. Long-Term Risk of Clinical Progression Utilizing Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Locally Recurrent Prostate Cancer in Patients with Biochemical Recurrence following Radical Prostatectomy.
- Author
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Takashi Tanaka, Kawashima, Akira, Rangel, Laureano J., Schulte, Phillip J., Froemming, Adam T., King, Bernard F., Mynderse, Lance A., and Karnes, R. Jeffrey
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PROSTATE cancer ,RADICAL prostatectomy ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PROSTATE cancer patients ,DISEASE progression ,PROSTATE-specific antigen - Abstract
Purpose: Our goal was to evaluate the long-term prognostic value of magnetic resonance imaging of the prostatectomy bed in patients with biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer. Materials and Methods: Men with biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy who were studied by prostatectomy bed magnetic resonance imaging for suspected local recurrence were retrospectively evaluated. Locally recurrent tumors were noted and measured from imaging reports. Patients with nodal/bone lesions at the time of imaging were excluded. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses were used to assess systemic progression-free and prostate cancer-specific survival. Results: A total of 896 men were enrolled and the imaging positive and negative groups for local recurrent tumor consisted of 441 and 455 men, respectively. On univariate analysis, preoperative prostate specific antigen (p[0.02), clinical tumor stage (p[0.006), pathological Gleason score from prostatectomy (p[0.02), subsequent salvage radiotherapy (p <0.001), biochemical recurrence to magnetic resonance imaging time interval (p <0.001), age at magnetic resonance imaging (p[0.047) and prostate specific antigen at magnetic resonance imaging (p <0.001) were significantly different between magnetic resonance imaging positive and negative groups. Patients with negative magnetic resonance imaging results had worse systemic progression-free survival rates (p[0.025) and better prostate cancer-specific survival (p[0.016) than those with recurrence. Larger lesion size significantly increased risk of prostate cancer death (hazard ratio: 1.07; p <0.001). On multivariable analysis, pathological Gleason scores -7 were independent prognostic factors of systemic progression (p <0.05). Conclusions: Prostatectomy bed magnetic resonance imaging provides long-term prognostic information for the evaluation of patients with biochemical recurrence after prostatectomy. Post-prostatectomy patients with recurrent lesions on imaging had longer progression-free survival but shorter prostate cancer-specific survival compared to those without lesions. Additionally, those with larger lesions were associated with poorer cancer-specific survival. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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38. One-Year Results for the ROBUST III Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluating the Optilume® Drug-Coated Balloon for Anterior Urethral Strictures.
- Author
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Elliott, Sean P., Coutinho, Karl, Robertson, Kaiser J., D'Anna, Richard, Chevli, Kent, Carrier, Serge, Aube-Peterkin, Melanie, Cantrill, Christopher H., Ehlert, Michael J., Te, Alexis E., Dann, Jeffrey, DeLong, Jessica M., Brandes, Steven B., Hagedorn, Judith C., Levin, Richard, Schlaifer, Amy, DeSouza, Euclid, DiMarco, David, Erickson, Brad A., and Natale, Richard
- Subjects
URETHRA stricture ,URINARY tract infections ,ENDOSCOPIC surgery ,BLADDER obstruction ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CYSTOSCOPY - Abstract
Purpose: The Optilume( drug-coated balloon (DCB) is a urethral dilation balloon with a paclitaxel coating that combines mechanical dilation for immediate symptomatic relief with local drug delivery to maintain urethral patency. The ROBUST III study is a randomized, single-blind trial evaluating the safety and efficacy of the Optilume DCB against endoscopic management of recurrent anterior urethral strictures. Materials and Methods: Eligible patients were adult males with anterior strictures (12Fr in diameter and (3 cm in length, at least 2 prior endoscopic treatments, International Prostate Symptom Score 11 and maximum flow rate <15 ml per second. A total of 127 subjects were enrolled at 22 sites. The primary study end point was anatomical success (14Fr by cystoscopy or calibration) at 6 months. Key secondary end points included freedom from repeat treatment, International Prostatic Symptom Score and peak flow rate. The primary safety end point included freedom from serious device- or procedure-related complications. Results: Baseline characteristics were similar between groups, with subjects having an average of 3.6 prior treatments and average length of 1.7 cm. Anatomical success for Optilume DCB was significantly higher than control at 6 months (75% vs 27%, p <0.001). Freedom from repeat intervention was significantly higher in the Optilume DCB arm. Immediate symptom and urinary flow rate improvement was significant in both groups, with the benefit being more durable in the Optilume DCB group. The most frequent adverse events included urinary tract infection, post-procedural hematuria and dysuria. Conclusions: The results of this randomized controlled trial support that Optilume is safe and superior to standard direct vision internal urethrotomy/dilation for the treatment of recurrent anterior urethral strictures <3 cm in length. The Optilume DCB may serve as an important alternative for men who have had an unsuccessful direct vision internal urethrotomy/dilation but want to avoid or delay urethroplasty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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39. Utility of Blue Light Cystoscopy for Post-bacillus Calmette-Guérin Bladder Cancer Recurrence Detection: Implications for Clinical Trial Recruitment and Study Comparisons.
- Author
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Chappidi, Meera R., Heiko Yang, Meng, Maxwell V., Bivalacqua, Trinity J., Daneshmand, Siamak, Holzbeierlein, Jeffrey M., Kaimakliotis, Hristos Z., Konety, Badrinath, Liao, Joseph C., Pohar, Kamal, Steinberg, Gary D., Taylor, Jennifer M., Tyson, Mark D., Willard, Brian, Lotan, Yair, Porten, Sima P., and Kates, Max
- Subjects
BLADDER cancer ,CANCER relapse ,BLUE light ,EARLY detection of cancer ,CYSTOSCOPY ,CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Purpose: The utility of blue light cystoscopy (BLC) in patients receiving bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) during post-treatment cystoscopy is not well understood. Our objective was to determine if BLC improves recurrence detection in patients with non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) undergoing BCG. Materials and Methods: Using the prospective multi-institutional Cysview® Registry (2014e2019), patients with NMIBC who received BCG within 1 year prior to BLC were identified. Primary outcomes were recurrences and whether lesions were detected on white light cystoscopy (WLC), BLC or both. We calculated the percentage of cystoscopies with recurrences that were missed with WLC alone. The cystoscopy-level BLC false-positive rate was the proportion of cystoscopies with biopsies only due to BLC suspicious lesions without recurrence. Results: Of 1,703 BLCs, 282 cystoscopies were in the analytic cohort. The overall recurrence rate was 45.0% (127). With only WLC, 13% (16/127) of recurrences would have been missed as 5.7% (16/282) of cystoscopies performed had recurrence only identified with BLC. Among 16 patients with recurrence missed with WLC, 88% (14) had carcinoma in situ. The cystoscopy-level BLC false-positive rate was 5% (15). Conclusions: BLC helped detect recurrences after recent BCG that would have been missed with WLC alone. Providers should consider BLC for high-risk patients undergoing BCG and should discuss the risk of false-positives with these patients. As clinical trials of novel therapies for BCG-unresponsive disease increase and there are no clear guidelines on BLC use for post-treatment cystoscopies, it is important to consider how variable BLC use could affect enrollment in and comparisons of these studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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40. Re: Impact of Nocturia on Mortality: The Nagahama Study
- Author
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Monaghan, Thomas F., primary, Weiss, Jeffrey P., additional, and Wein, Alan J., additional
- Published
- 2020
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41. Fesoterodine for the Treatment of Nocturnal Urgency in Patients with Overactive Bladder Syndrome: An Analysis of Responders and Nonresponders
- Author
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Johnathan A. Khusid, Martin Carlsson, E.K. Mangan, and Jeffrey P. Weiss
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Urination ,Nocturnal ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Placebo ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Lower urinary tract symptoms ,Fesoterodine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Nocturia ,Single-Blind Method ,Benzhydryl Compounds ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,media_common ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Urinary bladder ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Urinary Bladder, Overactive ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Treatment Outcome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Overactive bladder ,Quality of Life ,Urological Agents ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
A recent study demonstrated improvement in nocturnal urgency in patients with overactive bladder when treated with fesoterodine. In the current study we aimed to determine which bladder diary parameters predict the response to fesoterodine in these patients.Patients with nocturnal urgency completed a 2-week, single-blind placebo run-in followed by 1:1 double-blind randomization to 12 weeks of fesoterodine or placebo. We analyzed bladder diary parameter changes from baseline to week 12, including the actual number of night voids (total number of nocturia episodes), maximum voided volume, nocturnal bladder capacity, Nocturnal Bladder Capacity Index (NBCi) (actual number of night voids - nocturnal urine volume/maximum voided volume - 1), nocturnal urine volume, the nocturia index (nocturnal urine volume/maximum voided volume) and the nocturnal polyuria index (nocturnal urine volume/24-hour volume). Additionally, we analyzed OAB-q (Overactive Bladder Questionnaire) changes.There was a linear relationship between the likelihood of being a responder for NBCi and the nocturia index. Responders had a significant decrease in nocturnal urine volume relative to baseline (-181.7 ml, p0.01). Neither group showed a significant change in maximum voided volume relative to baseline. There was a significant decrease in NBCi and the nocturia index in responders (-0.82 and -0.61, respectively, each p0.01). Responders demonstrated improvement in the OAB-q concern, coping, sleep, bother and total score metrics.Patients with nocturnal urgency secondary to overactive bladder syndrome and low nocturnal bladder capacity with a mismatch between nocturnal urine production and bladder capacity may benefit from fesoterodine. Symptom improvement appears to be mediated by increases in typical rather than maximum nocturnal voided volumes. Symptom improvement was associated with improved quality of life.
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- 2017
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42. Re: Impact of Nocturia on Mortality: The Nagahama Study
- Author
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Thomas F. Monaghan, Alan J. Wein, and Jeffrey P. Weiss
- Subjects
Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine ,Nocturia ,medicine.symptom ,business - Published
- 2020
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43. Perioperative Aspirin Use Is Associated with Bleeding Complications during Robotic Partial Nephrectomy.
- Author
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Delto, Joan C., Fleishman, Aaron, Chang, Peter, Jiang, Da David, Hyde, Sara, McAnally, Kyle, Crociani, Catrina, Jamil, Marcus, Patel, Hiten D., Pavlinec, Jonathan, Budzyn, Jeffrey, Durant, Adri, Eilender, Benjamin, Gordon, Ashley O., Huang, Mitchell M., Pierorazio, Phillip M., Raman, Jay D., Rogers, Craig, Li-Ming Su, and Wagner, Andrew A.
- Subjects
NEPHRECTOMY ,ASPIRIN ,BLOOD transfusion reaction ,HEMORRHAGE ,SECONDARY prevention ,BLOOD transfusion - Abstract
Purpose: Daily aspirin use following cardiovascular intervention is commonplace and creates concern regarding bleeding risk in patients undergoing surgery. Despite its cardio-protective role, aspirin is often discontinued 5e7 days prior to major surgery due to bleeding concerns. Single institution studies have investigated perioperative outcomes of aspirin use in robotic partial nephrectomy (RPN). We sought to evaluate the outcomes of perioperative aspirin (pASA) use during RPN in a multicenter setting. Materials and Methods: We performed a retrospective evaluation of patients undergoing RPN at 5 high volume RPN institutions. We compared perioperative outcomes of patients taking pASA (81 mg) to those not on aspirin. We analyzed the association between pASA use and perioperative transfusion. Results: Of 1,565 patients undergoing RPN, 228 (14.5%) patients continued pASA and were older (62.8 vs 56.8 years, p <0.001) with higher Charlson scores (mean 3 vs 2, p <0.001). pASA was associated with increased perioperative blood transfusions (11% vs 4%, p <0.001) and major complications (10% vs 3%, p <0.001). On multivariable analysis, pASA was associated with increased transfusion risk (OR 1.94, 1.10e3.45, 95% CI). Conclusions: In experienced hands, perioperative aspirin 81 mg use during RPN is reasonable and safe; however, there is a higher risk of blood transfusions and major complications. Future studies are needed to clarify the role of antiplatelet therapy in RPN patients requiring pASA for primary or secondary prevention of cardiovascular events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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44. Identifying the Optimal Number of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Cycles in Patients with Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer.
- Author
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D’Andrea, David, Black, Peter C., Zargar, Homayoun, Dinney, Colin P., Soria, Francesco, Cookson, Michael S., Montgomery, Jeffrey S., Kassouf, Wassim, Dall’Era, Marc A., Sridhar, Srikala S., McGrath, John S., Wright, Jonathan L., Thorpe, Andrew C., Holzbeierlein, Jeff M., Carrion, Diego M., Trapani, Ettore Di, Bivalacqua, Trinity J., North, Scott, Barocas, Daniel A., and Lotan, Yair
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CANCER invasiveness ,NEOADJUVANT chemotherapy ,BLADDER cancer ,OVERALL survival ,SURVIVAL rate ,UROTHELIUM - Abstract
Purpose: We investigated the pathological response rates and survival associated with 3 vs 4 cycles of cisplatin-based neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) in patients with cT2-4N0M0 muscle invasive bladder cancer. Materials and Methods: In this cohort study we analyzed clinical data of 828 patients treated with NAC and radical cystectomy between 2000 and 2020. A total of 384 and 444 patients were treated with 3 and 4 cycles of NAC, respectively. Pathological objective response (pOR; ypT0-Ta-Tis-T1 N0), pathological complete response (pCR; ypT0 N0), cancer-specific survival and overall survival were investigated. Results: pOR and pCR were achieved in 378 (45%; 95% CI 42, 49) and 207 (25%; 95% CI 22, 28) patients, respectively. Patients treated with 4 cycles of NAC had higher pOR (49% vs 42%, p[0.03) and pCR (28% vs 21%, p[0.02) rates compared to those treated with 3 cycles. This effect was confirmed on multivariable logistic regression analysis (pOR OR 1.46 p[0.008, pCR OR 1.57, p[0.007). On multivariable Cox regression analysis, 4 cycles of NAC were significantly associated with overall survival (HR 0.68; 95% CI 0.49, 0.94; p[0.02) but not with cancer-specific survival (HR 0.72; 95% CI 0.50, 1.04; p[0.08). Conclusions: Four cycles of NAC achieved better pathological response and survival compared to 3 cycles. These findings may aid clinicians in counseling patients and serve as a benchmark for prospective trials. Prospective validation of these findings and assessment of cumulative toxicity derived from an increased number of cycles are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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45. Testing-Related Health Impact of Transrectal and Transperineal Prostate Biopsy as Assessed by Health Utilities.
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Shankar, Prasad R., Ellimoottil, Chad, George, Arvin K., Hadj-Moussa, Miriam, Modi, Parth K., Salami, Simpa, Tosoian, Jeffrey J., Wei, John T., and Davenport, Matthew S.
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PROSTATE biopsy ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MANN Whitney U Test ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,PROSTATE cancer ,QUALITY of life - Abstract
Purpose: We sought to assess the temporary health-related quality of life (health utility) of nonmagnetic resonance imaging-guided transrectal and transperineal prostate biopsy. Materials and Methods: This is a 2-arm, prospectively enrolled, observational, patient-reported outcomes study, performed between June 2019 and November 2020 at a single academic medical center. Inclusion criteria were men undergoing an outpatient ultrasound-guided prostate biopsy (transrectal or transperineal approach, without magnetic resonance imaging guidance). Patients with a history of Gleason 7D prostate cancer were excluded. Validated survey instruments were utilized to assess baseline (Short Form 12) and testing-related (Testing Morbidities Index [TMI]) health utility states. The primary outcome was the TMI summary testing-related quality-oflife score (summary utility score; scale: 0[death and 1[perfect health). The TMI is comprised of 7 domains, spanning before, during and after testing experiences. Each domain is scored from 1 (no health impact) to 5 (extreme health impact). Testingrelated quality-of-life measures were compared with Mann-Whitney U test. Results: Enrollment rates were 80% (60/75; transrectal) and 86% (60/70; transperineal). All patients (120/120) completed the questionnaire. The TMI summary score for transrectal biopsy was not significantly different from transperineal biopsy (0.86, 95% CI 0.84e0.88 vs 0.83, 95% CI 0.81e0.85; p[0.0774). The largest difference in the testing experiences was related to intraprocedural pain (transrectal biopsy: 2.3, 95% CI 2.1e2.4; transperineal biopsy: 2.9, 95% CI 2.6e3.1; p <0.001). Conclusions: Transperineal and transrectal prostate biopsies have similar effect on temporary health-related quality-of-life. Transient differences relate to intraprocedural pain. These data can inform clinical decision making and future cost-utility models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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46. MP19-12 PRIMARY SMALL CELL CARCINOMA OF THE KIDNEY: DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS AND OUTCOMES
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Brian K. McNeil, Dennis J. Robins, Jeffrey P. Weiss, Nicholas R Suss, Andrew G. Winer, Thomas F. Monaghan, Kyle P. Michelson, and Viktor X. Flores
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Oncology ,Kidney ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Primary (chemistry) ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.disease ,Small-cell carcinoma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,Kidney disease ,Rare disease - Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES:Primary small cell carcinoma (PSCC) of the kidney represents a rare disease entity. There is little data about the characteristics, optimal therapies, and survival assoc...
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- 2019
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47. PD35-01 INCREASED DETECTION RATES OF INTERMEDIATE AND HIGH-GRADE PROSTATE CANCER IN AFRICAN-AMERICAN MEN AFTER 2012 USPSTF RECOMMENDATION AGAINST PSA SCREENING
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Viktor X. Flores, Jeffrey Arace, Andrew G. Winer, Jeffrey P. Weiss, Dennis J. Robins, and Thomas F. Monaghan
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prostate cancer ,Psa screening ,business.industry ,Urology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,African american men ,Detection rate ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2019
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48. MP26-16 RACIAL AND ECONOMIC DISPARITIES IN THE USE OF NEOADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY FOR PATIENTS WITH UROTHELIAL MUSCLE INVASIVE BLADDER CANCER
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Dennis J. Robins, Viktor X. Flores, Brian K. McNeil, Nicholas R Suss, Andrew G. Winer, Jeffrey P. Weiss, and Matthew Smith
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,Bladder cancer ,Standard of care ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Urinary diversion ,Muscle invasive ,medicine.disease ,Cystectomy ,medicine ,business ,human activities - Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES:Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) combined with radical cystectomy (RC) and urinary diversion is the standard of care in the treatment of urothelial muscle invasive bladder...
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- 2019
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49. PD61-09 COMPARISON BETWEEN THREE CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES OF SINGLE-PORT ROBOTIC RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY: A REPORT FROM THE SINGLE-PORT ADVANCED RESEARCH CONSORTIUM INVOLVING 1800 PATIENTS.
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Soputro, Nicolas A., Ramos-Carpinteyro, Roxana, Calvo, Ruben S., Moschovas, Marcio C., Manfredi, Celeste, Raver, Michael, Okhawere, Kennedy, Wang, Yuzhi, Snajdar, Elizabeth, Pedraza, Adriana M., Mikesell, Carter, Chavali, Jaya S., Almajedi, Mustafa, Lorentz, Adam, Yuh, Bertram, Nix, Jeffrey, Joseph, Jean, Kim, Moses, Rogers, Craig, and Badani, Ketan K.
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RADICAL prostatectomy ,CONSORTIA ,RETROPUBIC prostatectomy ,SURGICAL blood loss ,ROBOTICS ,URINARY catheters - Published
- 2024
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50. MP76-11 NO CLEAR INDICATION FOR PENILE IMPLANT REMOVAL AT THE TIME OF ARTIFICIAL URINARY SPHINCTER EXPLANTATION FOR CUFF EROSION.
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Gaines, Tyler M., Loh-Doyle, Jeffrey C., Maas, Marisa, Markarian, Emily, Michel, Joaquin, Matluck, Nicole, Cordon, Billy, Klein, Roger, Myrga, John, Rusilko, Paul, Livingston, Austin, Grimaud, Logan, Foreman, Jordan, Lentz, Aaron, Peterson, Andrew, Mikhail, Mark, Hwang, Alex, Shridharani, Anand, Tryfonyuk, Liliya, and Martins, Francisco
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ARTIFICIAL sphincters ,PENILE prostheses ,CUFFS (Clothing) ,EROSION - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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