80 results on '"Vafaie M"'
Search Results
2. Infarktdiagnostik beim kritisch kranken, beatmeten Patienten
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Vafaie, M., Stoyanov, K. M., and Giannitsis, E.
- Published
- 2019
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3. Essenzielle kardiale Biomarker in der Differenzialdiagnose des akuten Thoraxschmerzes: Ein Update
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Vafaie, M., Giannitsis, E., and Katus, H. A.
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- 2018
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4. Diagnosis of Non-ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (NSTEMI)
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Vafaie, M., primary and Giannitsis, E., additional
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- 2018
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5. OBSOLETE: Diagnosis of Non ST-Elevation Myocardial infarction (NSTEMI)
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Vafaie, M., primary
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- 2018
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6. Diagnostic value of circulating microRNAs compared to high-sensitivity troponin T for the detection of non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction
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Biener, M, primary, Giannitsis, E G, additional, Thum, T, additional, Baer, C, additional, Costa, A, additional, Andrzejewski, T, additional, Stoyanov, K M, additional, Vafaie, M, additional, Meder, B, additional, Katus, H A, additional, De Gonzalo Calvo, D, additional, and Mueller-Hennessen, M, additional
- Published
- 2021
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7. Prognostic and reclassification value of serum cathepsin S over the GRACE risk score in patients with non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome
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Sopova, K, primary, Georgiopoulos, G, additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M, additional, Sachse, M, additional, Vlachogiannis, N, additional, Biener, M, additional, Vafaie, M, additional, Katus, H, additional, Spyridopoulos, I, additional, Giannitsis, I, additional, Stamatelopoulos, K, additional, and Stellos, K, additional
- Published
- 2020
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8. Combined testing of copeptin and high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T at presentation in comparison to other algorithms for rapid rule-out of acute myocardial infarction
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Mueller-Hennessen, M, Lindahl, B, Giannitsis, E, Vafaie, M, Biener, M, Haushofer, AC, Seier, J, Christ, M, Alquezar-Arbe, A, DeFilippi, CR, McCord, J, Body, R, Panteghini, M, Jernberg, T, Plebani, M, Verschuren, F, French, JK, Christenson, RH, Dinkel, C, Katus, HA, Mueller, C, and TRAPID-AMI Investigators
- Subjects
Rapid AMI rule-out ,Copeptin ,Dual-marker strategy ,High-sensitivity cardiac troponin T - Abstract
Background: We aimed to directly compare the diagnostic and prognostic performance of a dual maker strategy (DMS) with combined testing of copeptin and high-sensitivity (hs) cardiac troponin T (cTnT) at time of presentation with other algorithms for rapid rule-out of acute myocardial infarction (AM1). Methods: 922 patients presenting to the emergency department with suspected AMI and available baseline copeptin measurements qualified for the present TRAPID-AMI substudy. Diagnostic measures using the DMS (copeptin
- Published
- 2019
9. P5519Effects of crowding in the emergency department on time dependent processes and outcomes using fast diagnostic protocols in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome
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Giannitsis, E, primary, Biener, M, additional, Hund, H, additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M, additional, Vafaie, M, additional, Katus, H A, additional, and Stoyanov, K M, additional
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- 2019
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10. 5192Management and outcomes of patients with unstable angina with undetectable, normal, or intermediate hsTnT levels - A RAPID CPU substudy
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Biener, M, primary, Giannitsis, E, additional, Hund, H, additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M, additional, Vafaie, M, additional, Gandowitz, J, additional, Riedle, C, additional, Loehr, J, additional, Katus, H A, additional, and Stoyanov, K M, additional
- Published
- 2019
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11. 3302Effects of implementation of the ESC 0/1-hour algorithm on efficiacy and safety of discharge after rule-out in a consecutive cohort of patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome - RAPID-CPU study
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Stoyanov, K M, primary, Hund, H, additional, Biener, M, additional, Gandowitz, J, additional, Riedle, C, additional, Loehr, J, additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M, additional, Vafaie, M, additional, Katus, H A, additional, and Giannitsis, E, additional
- Published
- 2019
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12. 2228Circulating serum extracellular matrix degradation enzyme cathepsin S predicts mortality and improves risk stratification over the GRACE score in patients with non-ST elevation acute coronary syndrom
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Sopova, K, primary, Georgiopoulos, G, additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M, additional, Sachse, M, additional, Vlachogiannis, N, additional, Bakogiannis, C, additional, Biener, M, additional, Vafaie, M, additional, Gatsiou, A, additional, Zaman, A, additional, Katus, H, additional, Spyridopoulos, I, additional, Giannitsis, E, additional, Stamatelopoulos, K, additional, and Stellos, K, additional
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- 2019
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13. Amyloid- (1-40) and Mortality in Patients With Non–ST-Segment Elevation Acute Coronary Syndrome A Cohort Study
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Stamatelopoulos, K. Mueller-Hennessen, M. Georgiopoulos, G. Sachse, M. Boeddinghaus, J. Sopova, K. Gatsiou, A. Amrhein, C. Biener, M. Vafaie, M. Athanasouli, F. Stakos, D. Pateras, K. Twerenbold, R. Badertscher, P. Nestelberger, T. Dimmeler, S. Katus, H.A. Zeiher, A.M. Mueller, C. Giannitsis, E. Stellos, K.
- Abstract
Background: Amyloid- (1-40) (A40) is implicated in mechanisms related to plaque destabilization and correlates with adverse outcomes in stable coronary artery disease. Objective: To determine the prognostic and reclassification value of baseline circulating levels of A40 after adjustment for the Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE) score, which is widely recommended for risk stratification in non–ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS). Design: Retrospective cohort study using data from 2 independent prospective cohorts, the Heidelberg study (n = 1145) and the validation multicenter international APACE (Advantageous Predictors of Acute Coronary Syndrome Evaluation) study (n = 734). Setting: Academic hospitals in 7 European countries. Participants: Patients with adjudicated NSTE-ACS followed for a median of 21.9 and 24.9 months in the Heidelberg and APACE studies, respectively. Measurements: All-cause mortality was the primary end point. Results: Amyloid- (1-40) was associated with mortality after multivariate adjustment for age, sex, diabetes mellitus, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T and C-reactive protein, revascularization, and ACS type (Heidelberg cohort hazard ratio [HR] for 80th vs. 20th percentiles, 1.66 [95% CI, 1.06 to 2.61; P = 0.026]; APACE cohort HR, 1.50 [CI, 1.15 to 1.96; P = 0.003]). It was also associated with mortality after adjustment for the GRACE score (Heidelberg cohort HR for 80th vs. 20th percentiles, 1.11 [CI, 1.04 to 1.18; P = 0.001]; APACE cohort HR, 1.39 [CI, 1.02 to 1.88; P = 0.036]). Amyloid- (1-40) correctly reclassified risk for death over the GRACE score (net reclassification index, 33.4% and 47.1% for the Heidelberg and APACE cohorts, respectively) (P < 0.05). Limitation: At low concentrations of A40, dose–response associations with mortality differed between cohorts, possibly because of varying blood preparations used to measure A40. Conclusion: Circulating A40 is a predictor of mortality and improves risk stratification of patients with NSTE-ACS over the GRACE score recommended by clinical guidelines. The clinical application of A40 as a novel biomarker in NSTE-ACS should be further explored and validated. © 2018 American College of Physicians. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2018
14. OBSOLETE: Diagnosis of Non ST-Elevation Myocardial infarction (NSTEMI)
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Vafaie, M.
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- 2015
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15. P4587High-sensitivity cardiac troponin T and stroke risk in patients admitted to an emergency department with atrial fibrillation
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Vafaie, M., primary, Giannitsis, E., additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M., additional, Biener, M., additional, Gorochow, E., additional, Katus, H.A., additional, and Stoyanov, K.M., additional
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- 2017
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16. P843Risk prediction in stable cardiovascular disease using a single biomarker strategy with high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T compared to the HeartSCORE
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Biener, M., primary, Giannitsis, E., additional, Kuhner, M., additional, Zelniker, T., additional, Mueller-Hennessen, M., additional, Vafaie, M., additional, and Katus, H.A., additional
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- 2017
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17. The City of Hope‑Quality of Life‑Ostomy Questionnaire: Persian Translation and Validation
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Anaraki, F, Vafaie, M, Behboo, R, Esmaeilpour, S, Maghsoodi, N, Safaee, A, and Grant, M
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City of Hope‑quality of life questionnaire‑Ostomy questionnaire, Ostomy, Quality‑of‑life, Reliability, Validity - Abstract
Background: Since there is no disease‑specific instrument for measuring quality‑of‑life (QOL) in Ostomy patients in Persian language. Aim: This study was designed to translate and evaluate the validity and reliability of City of Hope‑quality of life‑Ostomy questionnaire (COH‑QOL‑Ostomy questionnaire). Subjects and Methods: This study was designed as cross‑sectional study. Reliability of the subscales and the summary scores were demonstrated by intra‑class correlation coefficients. Pearson’s correlations of an item with its own scale and other scales were calculated to evaluated convergent and discriminant validity. Clinical validity was also evaluated by known‑group comparisons. Results: Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for all subscales was about 0.70 or higher. Results of interscale correlation were satisfactory and each subscale only measured a single and specified trait. All subscales met the standards of convergent and discriminant validity. Known group comparison analysis showed significant differences in social and spiritual well‑being. Conclusion: The findings confirmed the reliability and validity of Persian version of COH‑QOL‑Ostomy questionnaire. The instrument was also well received by the Iranian patients. It can be considered as a valuable instrument to assess the different aspects of health related quality‑of‑life in Ostomy patients and used in clinical research in the future.Keywords: City of Hope‑quality of life questionnaire‑Ostomy questionnaire, Ostomy, Quality‑of‑life, Reliability, Validity
- Published
- 2015
18. Effect of feeding regime, batch and continuous, on aerobic granulation process treating industrial soft drink wastewater
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Vafaie, M., Zinatizadeh, A.A., and Asadi, A.
- Abstract
Aerobic granular sludge process, as an effective biotechnological process, was increasingly drawing the interest of researchers in the area of biological wastewater treatment. In this research, laboratory experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of feeding regime on the granulation process in a sequencing batch reactor (SBR) and continuous feed and intermittent discharge (CFID) bioreactor treating soft drink wastewater. To have a proper comparison between batch and CFID regimes, both bioreactors were operated under the same conditions with the initial chemical oxygen demand (COD) concentrations of 300 and 500 mg/L and cycle time of 4 h. From the results, contrasting to CFID regime, the batch regime was capable to form granular sludge at the applied conditions. To investigate the aerobic granulation process in the CFID bioreactor, hydraulic retention time (HRT) values of 8 and 12 h with idling times of 60 and 90 min, respectively, were examined. In the CFID bioreactor, at HRT of 8 h (CODinof 500 mg/L), the aerobic granules started to be appeared. By increasing HRT to 12 h (CODinof 1,000 mg/L), the aerobic granules were enlarged with more stability. As a conclusion, the higher values of HRT favored the granulation process in the CFID bioreactor. In addition, from the scanning electron microscopic images, the granules formed in the SBR and CFID bioreactor showed different structures.
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- 2017
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19. Electrical Tunability of Quantum-Dot-in-Perovskite Solids.
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Haque MA, Zhu T, Tounesi R, Lee S, Vafaie M, Huerta Hernandez L, Davaasuren B, Genovese A, Sargent EH, and Baran D
- Abstract
The quantum-dot-in-perovskite matrix (DIM) is an emerging class of semiconductors for optoelectronics enabled by their complementary charge transport properties and stability improvements. However, a detailed understanding of the pure electrical properties in DIM is still in its early stage. Here, we developed PbS quantum dot-in-CsSnI
3 matrix solids exhibiting improved electrical properties and enhanced stability. PbS incorporation reduces the tensile strain of DIM films compared to that of pristine CsSnI3 , consequently increasing the electrical conductivity. Electrical conductivity is tunable between 20 and 130 S/cm as a function of PbS concentration. Notably, a decoupling of electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficient is observed upon PbS addition into the perovskite matrix, which is attractive for thermoelectric applications. Density functional theory analysis reveals that at low concentrations of PbS, light holes/electrons govern the overall transport properties in DIM, while heavy holes/electrons begin to dominate as the PbS concentration increases. Understanding the electrical properties would help for designing DIMs with specific properties for various technological applications.- Published
- 2024
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20. Resurfacing of InAs Colloidal Quantum Dots Equalizes Photodetector Performance across Synthetic Routes.
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Ban HW, Vafaie M, Levina L, Xia P, Imran M, Liu Y, Najarian AM, and Sargent EH
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The synthesis of highly monodispersed InAs colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) is needed in InAs CQD-based optoelectronic devices. Because of the complexities of working with arsenic precursors such as tris-trimethylsilyl arsine ((TMSi)
3 As) and tris-trimethylgermyl arsine ((TMGe)3 As), several attempts have been made to identify new candidates for synthesis; yet, to date, only the aforementioned two highly reactive precursors have led to excellent photodetector device performance. We begin the present study by investigating the mechanism, finding that the use of the cosurfactant dioctylamine plays a crucial role in producing monodispersed InAs populations. Through quantitative analysis of ligands on the surface of InAs CQDs, we find that (TMGe)3 As leads to In-rich characteristics, and we document the presence of an amorphous In-oleate shell on the surface. This we find causes surface defects, and thus, we develop materials processing strategies to remove the surface shell with a view to achieving efficient charge transfer in CQD solids. As a result, we develop resurfacing protocols, tailored to each dot synthesis, that produce balanced In-to-As stoichiometry regardless of synthetic input, enabling us to fabricate NIR photodetectors that achieve best-in-class EQEs at 940 nm excitons (25-28%, biased), independent of the synthetic pathway.- Published
- 2024
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21. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Aeromonas -Associated Diarrhea Among Children in Asia.
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Sadeghi H, Aslanimehr M, Nikkhahi F, Safari R, Vafaie M, and Gholamzadeh Khoei S
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- Child, Humans, Asia epidemiology, Prevalence, Aeromonas isolation & purification, Diarrhea epidemiology, Diarrhea microbiology, Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections epidemiology, Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Diarrheal illness is a prominent public health worry in developing countries, resulting in high mortality among children. Sociodemographic characteristics and geographic settings are the main effective factors for the increased incidence of childhood diarrhea. Aeromonas is a neglected organism capable of causing dysentery and diarrhea. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to determine the prevalence of Aeromonas as an agent in the causation of diarrhea in Asian children. Methods: We conducted a systematic review using Web of Science, PubMed, Wiley Online Library, Science Direct, and Google Scholar for peer-reviewed articles published between January 2000 and February 2023. We considered studies that found Aeromonas in diarrheal stool. A random-effects model was used to determine the pooled prevalence of Aeromonas . Results: Our search returned 2,057 articles, with 17 articles from seven Asian nations being included in the systematic review. The pooled prevalence of Aeromonas was 4.5% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.9%-6.8%), with heterogeneity ( I
2 = 96.85; p < 0.001). There was a greater prevalence in areas with high population living in poverty (12.2%; 95% CI: 5.8%-24%) and lower-middle-income countries (5.0%; 95% CI: 2.7%-9.0%). In addition, the prevalence of Aeromonas was greater in South Asia (10.0%; 95% CI: 5.6%-17.2%), in India (12.9%; 95% CI: 6.8%-23%), and in countries with open defecation rate of 5%-25% (11.3%; 95% CI: 6.3%-19.2%). Conclusion: The prevalence of Aeromonas -associated diarrhea in children in Asia estimated in the present study highlighted the high burden of Aeromonas in some parts of Asia.- Published
- 2024
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22. Dicarboxylic Acid-Assisted Surface Oxide Removal and Passivation of Indium Antimonide Colloidal Quantum Dots for Short-Wave Infrared Photodetectors.
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Zhang Y, Xia P, Rehl B, Parmar DH, Choi D, Imran M, Chen Y, Liu Y, Vafaie M, Li C, Atan O, Pina JM, Paritmongkol W, Levina L, Voznyy O, Hoogland S, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Heavy-metal-free III-V colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising materials for solution-processed short-wave infrared (SWIR) photodetectors. Recent progress in the synthesis of indium antimonide (InSb) CQDs with sizes smaller than the Bohr exciton radius enables quantum-size effect tuning of the band gap. However, it has been challenging to achieve uniform InSb CQDs with band gaps below 0.9 eV, as well as to control the surface chemistry of these large-diameter CQDs. This has, to date, limited the development of InSb CQD photodetectors that are sensitive to ≥ ${\ge }$ 1400 nm light. Here we adopt solvent engineering to facilitate a diffusion-limited growth regime, leading to uniform CQDs with a band gap of 0.89 eV. We then develop a CQD surface reconstruction strategy that employs a dicarboxylic acid to selectively remove the native In/Sb oxides, and enables a carboxylate-halide co-passivation with the subsequent halide ligand exchange. We find that this strategy reduces trap density by half compared to controls, and enables electronic coupling among CQDs. Photodetectors made using the tailored CQDs achieve an external quantum efficiency of 25 % at 1400 nm, the highest among III-V CQD photodetectors in this spectral region., (© 2024 The Authors. Angewandte Chemie International Edition published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
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- 2024
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23. Arresting Ion Migration from the ETL Increases Stability in Infrared Light Detectors Based on III-V Colloidal Quantum Dots.
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Xia P, Zhu T, Imran M, Pina JM, Atan O, Najarian AM, Chen H, Zhang Y, Jung E, Biondi M, Vafaie M, Li C, Grater L, Khatri A, Singh A, Hoogland S, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
III-V colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are of interest in infrared photodetection, and recent developments in CQDs synthesis and surface engineering have improved performance. Here this work investigates photodetector stability, finding that the diffusion of zinc ions from charge transport layers (CTLs) into the CQDs active layer increases trap density therein, leading to rapid and irreversible performance loss during operation. In an effort to prevent this, this work introduces organic blocking layers between the CQDs and ZnO layers; but these negatively impact device performance. The device is then, allowing to use a C60:BCP as top electron-transport layer (ETL) for good morphology and process compatibility, and selecting NiO
X as the bottom hole-transport layer (HTL). The first round of NiOX -based devices show efficient light response but suffer from high leakage current and a low open-circuit voltage (Voc) due to pinholes. This work introduces poly[bis(4-phenyl) (2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)amine] (PTAA) with NiOX NC to form a hybrid HTL, an addition that reduces pinhole formation, interfacial trap density, and bimolecular recombination, enhancing carrier harvesting. The photodetectors achieve 53% external quantum efficiency (EQE) at 970 nm at 1 V applied bias, and they maintain 95% of initial performance after 19 h of continuous illuminated operation. The photodetectors retain over 80% of performance after 80 days of shelf storage., (© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
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24. 2D Hybrid Perovskites Employing an Organic Cation Paired with a Neutral Molecule.
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Najarian AM, Vafaie M, Sabatini R, Wang S, Li P, Xu S, Saidaminov MI, Hoogland S, and Sargent EH
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Two-dimensional (2D) hybrid perovskites harness the chemical and structural versatility of organic compounds. Here, we explore 2D perovskites that incorporate both a first organic component, a primary ammonium cation, and a second neutral organic module. Through the experimental examination of 42 organic pairs with a range of functional groups and organic backbones, we identify five crystallization scenarios that occur upon mixing. Only one leads to the cointercalation of the organic modules with distinct and extended interlayer spacing, which is observed with the aid of X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern analysis combined with cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and elemental analysis. We present a picture in which complementary pairs, capable of forming intermolecular bonds, cocrystallize with multiple structural arrangements. These arrangements are a function of the ratio of organic content, annealing temperature, and substrate surface characteristics. We highlight how noncovalent bonds, particularly hydrogen and halogen bonding, enable the influence over the organic sublattice in hybrid halide perovskites.
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- 2023
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25. Low-loss contacts on textured substrates for inverted perovskite solar cells.
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Park SM, Wei M, Lempesis N, Yu W, Hossain T, Agosta L, Carnevali V, Atapattu HR, Serles P, Eickemeyer FT, Shin H, Vafaie M, Choi D, Darabi K, Jung ED, Yang Y, Kim DB, Zakeeruddin SM, Chen B, Amassian A, Filleter T, Kanatzidis MG, Graham KR, Xiao L, Rothlisberger U, Grätzel M, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Inverted perovskite solar cells (PSCs) promise enhanced operating stability compared to their normal-structure counterparts
1-3 . To improve efficiency further, it is crucial to combine effective light management with low interfacial losses4,5 . Here we develop a conformal self-assembled monolayer (SAM) as the hole-selective contact on light-managing textured substrates. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that cluster formation during phosphonic acid adsorption leads to incomplete SAM coverage. We devise a co-adsorbent strategy that disassembles high-order clusters, thus homogenizing the distribution of phosphonic acid molecules, and thereby minimizing interfacial recombination and improving electronic structures. We report a laboratory-measured power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 25.3% and a certified quasi-steady-state PCE of 24.8% for inverted PSCs, with a photocurrent approaching 95% of the Shockley-Queisser maximum. An encapsulated device having a PCE of 24.6% at room temperature retains 95% of its peak performance when stressed at 65 °C and 50% relative humidity following more than 1,000 h of maximum power point tracking under 1 sun illumination. This represents one of the most stable PSCs subjected to accelerated ageing: achieved with a PCE surpassing 24%. The engineering of phosphonic acid adsorption on textured substrates offers a promising avenue for efficient and stable PSCs. It is also anticipated to benefit other optoelectronic devices that require light management., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)- Published
- 2023
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26. Molecular surface programming of rectifying junctions between InAs colloidal quantum dot solids.
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Vafaie M, Morteza Najarian A, Xu J, Richter LJ, Li R, Zhang Y, Imran M, Xia P, Ban HW, Levina L, Singh A, Meitzner J, Pattantyus-Abraham AG, García de Arquer FP, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Heavy-metal-free III-V colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) show promise in optoelectronics: Recent advancements in the synthesis of large-diameter indium arsenide (InAs) CQDs provide access to short-wave infrared (IR) wavelengths for three-dimensional ranging and imaging. In early studies, however, we were unable to achieve a rectifying photodiode using CQDs and molybdenum oxide/polymer hole transport layers, as the shallow valence bandedge (5.0 eV) was misaligned with the ionization potentials of the widely used transport layers. This occurred when increasing CQD diameter to decrease the bandgap below 1.1 eV. Here, we develop a rectifying junction among InAs CQD layers, where we use molecular surface modifiers to tune the energy levels of InAs CQDs electrostatically. Previously developed bifunctional dithiol ligands, established for II-VI and IV-VI CQDs, exhibit slow reaction kinetics with III-V surfaces, causing the exchange to fail. We study carboxylate and thiolate binding groups, united with electron-donating free end groups, that shift upward the valence bandedge of InAs CQDs, producing valence band energies as shallow as 4.8 eV. Photophysical studies combined with density functional theory show that carboxylate-based passivants participate in strong bidentate bridging with both In and As on the CQD surface. The tuned CQD layer incorporated into a photodiode structure achieves improved performance with EQE (external quantum efficiency) of 35% (>1 μm) and dark current density < 400 nA cm
-2 , a >25% increase in EQE and >90% reduced dark current density compared to the reference device. This work represents an advance over previous III-V CQD short-wavelength IR photodetectors (EQE < 5%, dark current > 10,000 nA cm-2 ).- Published
- 2023
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27. Closed-Loop Error-Correction Learning Accelerates Experimental Discovery of Thermoelectric Materials.
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Choubisa H, Haque MA, Zhu T, Zeng L, Vafaie M, Baran D, and Sargent EH
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The exploration of thermoelectric materials is challenging considering the large materials space, combined with added exponential degrees of freedom coming from doping and the diversity of synthetic pathways. Here, historical data is incorporated, and is updated using experimental feedback by employing error-correction learning (ECL). This is achieved by learning from prior datasets and then adapting the model to differences in synthesis and characterization that are otherwise difficult to parameterize. This strategy is thus applied to discovering thermoelectric materials, where synthesis is prioritized at temperatures <300 °C. A previously unexplored chemical family of thermoelectric materials, PbSe:SnSb, is documented, finding that the best candidate in this chemical family, 2 wt% SnSb doped PbSe, exhibits a power factor more than 2× that of PbSe. The investigations herein reveal that a closed-loop experimentation strategy reduces the required number of experiments to find an optimized material by a factor as high as 3× compared to high-throughput searches powered by state-of-the-art machine-learning (ML) models. It is also observed that this improvement is dependent on the accuracy of the ML model in a manner that exhibits diminishing returns: once a certain accuracy is reached, factors that are instead associated with experimental pathways begin to dominate trends., (© 2023 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2023
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28. An estimation of global Aeromonas infection prevalence in children with diarrhoea: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Sadeghi H, Alizadeh A, Vafaie M, Maleki MR, and Khoei SG
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- Child, Humans, Prevalence, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diarrhea epidemiology, Water
- Abstract
Objectives: Diarrhoea is the most commonly related disease caused by Aeromonas. To improve knowledge on prevalence, this systematic review and meta-analysis was performed to evaluate the global prevalence of Aeromonas in children with diarrhoea worldwide., Methods: We systematically searched PubMed, Google scholar, Wiley Online Library, ScienceDirect, and Web of sciences to identify all cross-sectional published papers between 2000 and 10 July 2022. After initial scrutinizing, 31 papers reporting the prevalence of Aeromonas in children with diarrhoea were found to be adequate for meta-analysis. The statistical study was accompanied by using random effects models., Results: A total of 5660 identified papers, 31 cross-sectional studies encompassing 38,663 participants were included in the meta-analysis. The pooled prevalence of Aeromonas in children with diarrhoea worldwide was 4.2% (95% CI 3.1-5.6%). In the subgroup analysis, the highest prevalence was seen among children in Upper middle-income countries with pooled prevalence of 5.1% (95% CI 2.8-9.2%). The prevalence of Aeromonas in children with diarrhoea was higher in countries with populations of over 100 million people (9.4%; 95% CI 5.6-15.3%), and water and sanitation quality score of less than 25% (8.8%; 95% CI 5.2-14.4%). Additionally, Cumulative Forest Plot showed a decreasing trend in the prevalence of Aeromonas infection in children with diarrhoea over time (P = 0.0001)., Conclusion: The results of this study showed a better comprehension of Aeromonas prevalence in children with diarrhoea on a global scale. As well as our findings showed that much work is still required to decline the burden of bacterial diarrhoea in countries with high populations, low-level income, and unsanitary water., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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29. Electron-Transport Layers Employing Strongly Bound Ligands Enhance Stability in Colloidal Quantum Dot Infrared Photodetectors.
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Zhang Y, Vafaie M, Xu J, Pina JM, Xia P, Najarian AM, Atan O, Imran M, Xie K, Hoogland S, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Solution-processed photodetectors based on colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising candidates for short-wavelength infrared light sensing applications. Present-day CQD photodetectors employ a CQD active layer sandwiched between carrier-transport layers in which the electron-transport layer (ETL) is composed of metal oxides. Herein, a new class of ETLs is developed using n-type CQDs, finding that these benefit from quantum-size effect tuning of the band energies, as well as from surface ligand engineering. Photodetectors operating at 1450 nm are demonstrated using CQDs with tailored functionalities for each of the transport layers and the active layer. By optimizing the band alignment between the ETL and the active layer, CQD photodetectors that combine a low dark current of ≈1 × 10
-3 mA cm-2 with a high external quantum efficiency of ≈66% at 1 V are reported, outperforming prior reports of CQD photodetectors operating at >1400 nm that rely on metal oxides as ETLs. It is shown that stable CQD photodetectors rely on well-passivated CQDs: for ETL CQDs, a strongly bound organic ligand trans-4-(trifluoromethyl)cinnamic acid (TFCA) provides improved passivation compared to the weakly bound inorganic ligand tetrabutylammonium iodide (TBAI). TFCA suppresses bias-induced ion migration inside the ETL and improves the operating stability of photodetectors by 50× compared to TBAI., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2022
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30. Cathepsin S Levels and Survival Among Patients With Non-ST-Segment Elevation Acute Coronary Syndromes.
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Stamatelopoulos K, Mueller-Hennessen M, Georgiopoulos G, Lopez-Ayala P, Sachse M, Vlachogiannis NI, Sopova K, Delialis D, Bonini F, Patras R, Ciliberti G, Vafaie M, Biener M, Boeddinghaus J, Nestelberger T, Koechlin L, Tual-Chalot S, Kanakakis I, Gatsiou A, Katus H, Spyridopoulos I, Mueller C, Giannitsis E, and Stellos K
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Humans, Prognosis, Risk Assessment, Stroke Volume, Troponin T, Ventricular Function, Left, Acute Coronary Syndrome diagnosis, Cathepsins blood, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Patients with non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndromes (NSTE-ACS) are at high residual risk for long-term cardiovascular (CV) mortality. Cathepsin S (CTSS) is a lysosomal cysteine protease with elastolytic and collagenolytic activity that has been involved in atherosclerotic plaque rupture., Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine the following: 1) the prognostic value of circulating CTSS measured at patient admission for long-term mortality in NSTE-ACS; and 2) its additive value over the GRACE (Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events) risk score., Methods: This was a single-center cohort study, consecutively recruiting patients with adjudicated NSTE-ACS (n = 1,112) from the emergency department of an academic hospital. CTSS was measured in serum using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. All-cause mortality at 8 years was the primary endpoint. CV death was the secondary endpoint., Results: In total, 367 (33.0%) deaths were recorded. CTSS was associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality (HR for highest vs lowest quarter of CTSS: 1.89; 95% CI: 1.34-2.66; P < 0.001) and CV death (HR: 2.58; 95% CI: 1.15-5.77; P = 0.021) after adjusting for traditional CV risk factors, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, left ventricular ejection fraction, high-sensitivity troponin-T, revascularization and index diagnosis (unstable angina/ non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction). When CTSS was added to the GRACE score, it conferred significant discrimination and reclassification value for all-cause mortality (Delta Harrell's C: 0.03; 95% CI: 0.012-0.047; P = 0.001; and net reclassification improvement = 0.202; P = 0.003) and CV death (AUC: 0.056; 95% CI: 0.017-0.095; P = 0.005; and net reclassification improvement = 0.390; P = 0.001) even after additionally considering high-sensitivity troponin-T and left ventricular ejection fraction., Conclusions: Circulating CTSS is a predictor of long-term mortality and improves risk stratification of patients with NSTE-ACS over the GRACE score., Competing Interests: Funding Support and Author Disclosures This research was funded by the German Research Foundation DFG (SFB834 project number 75732319) and the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (grant agreement No 759248) (to Dr Stellos). Dr Sopova was supported with a scholarship from the German Heart Foundation (Deutsche Herzstiftung). The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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31. Quantum-Size-Effect Tuning Enables Narrowband IR Photodetection with Low Sunlight Interference.
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Pina JM, Vafaie M, Parmar DH, Atan O, Xia P, Zhang Y, Najarian AM, de Arquer FPG, Hoogland S, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Infrared photodetection enables depth imaging techniques such as structured light and time-of-flight. Traditional photodetectors rely on silicon (Si); however, the bandgap of Si limits photodetection to wavelengths shorter than 1100 nm. Photodetector operation centered at 1370 nm benefits from lower sunlight interference due to atmospheric absorption. Here, we report 1370 nm-operating colloidal quantum dot (CQD) photodetectors and evaluate their outdoor performance. We develop a surface-ligand engineering strategy to tune the electronic properties of each CQD layer and fabricate photodetectors in an inverted (PIN) architecture. The strategy enables photodetectors with an external quantum efficiency of 75% and a low dark current (1 μA/cm
2 ). Outdoor testing demonstrates that CQD-based photodetectors combined with a 10 nm-line width bandpass filter centered at 1370 nm achieve over 2 orders of magnitude (140× at incident intensity 1 μW/cm2 ) higher signal-to-background ratio than do Si-based photodetectors that use an analogous bandpass filter centered at 905 nm.- Published
- 2022
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32. Fast Near-Infrared Photodetection Using III-V Colloidal Quantum Dots.
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Sun B, Najarian AM, Sagar LK, Biondi M, Choi MJ, Li X, Levina L, Baek SW, Zheng C, Lee S, Kirmani AR, Sabatini R, Abed J, Liu M, Vafaie M, Li P, Richter LJ, Voznyy O, Chekini M, Lu ZH, García de Arquer FP, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising materials for infrared (IR) light detection due to their tunable bandgap and their solution processing; however, to date, the time response of CQD IR photodiodes is inferior to that provided by Si and InGaAs. It is reasoned that the high permittivity of II-VI CQDs leads to slow charge extraction due to screening and capacitance, whereas III-Vs-if their surface chemistry can be mastered-offer a low permittivity and thus increase potential for high-speed operation. In initial studies, it is found that the covalent character in indium arsenide (InAs) leads to imbalanced charge transport, the result of unpassivated surfaces, and uncontrolled heavy doping. Surface management using amphoteric ligand coordination is reported, and it is found that the approach addresses simultaneously the In and As surface dangling bonds. The new InAs CQD solids combine high mobility (0.04 cm
2 V-1 s-1 ) with a 4× reduction in permittivity compared to PbS CQDs. The resulting photodiodes achieve a response time faster than 2 ns-the fastest photodiode among previously reported CQD photodiodes-combined with an external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 30% at 940 nm., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2022
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33. Controlled Crystal Plane Orientations in the ZnO Transport Layer Enable High-Responsivity, Low-Dark-Current Infrared Photodetectors.
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Parmar DH, M Pina J, Zhu T, Vafaie M, Atan O, Biondi M, Najjariyan AM, Hoogland S, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Colloidal quantum dots (CQD) have emerged as attractive materials for infrared (IR) photodetector (PD) applications because of their tunable bandgaps and facile processing. Presently, zinc oxide is the electron-transport layer (ETL) of choice in CQD PDs; however, ZnO relies on continuous ultraviolet (UV) illumination to remove adsorbed oxygen and maintain high external quantum efficiency (EQE), speed, and photocurrent. Here, it is shown that ZnO is dominated by electropositive crystal planes which favor excessive oxygen adsorption, and that this leads to a high density of trap states, an undesired shift in band alignment, and consequent poor performance. Over prolonged operation without UV exposure, oxygen accumulates at the electropositive planes, trapping holes and degrading performance. This problem is addressed by developing an electroneutral plane composition at the ZnO surface, aided by atomic layer deposition (ALD) as the means of materials processing. It is found that ALD ZnO has 10× lower binding energy for oxygen than does conventionally deposited ZnO. IR CQD PDs made with this ETL do not require UV activation to maintain low dark current and high EQE., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
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- 2022
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34. Passivation of the Buried Interface via Preferential Crystallization of 2D Perovskite on Metal Oxide Transport Layers.
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Chen B, Chen H, Hou Y, Xu J, Teale S, Bertens K, Chen H, Proppe A, Zhou Q, Yu D, Xu K, Vafaie M, Liu Y, Dong Y, Jung EH, Zheng C, Zhu T, Ning Z, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
The open-circuit voltage (V
oc ) of perovskite solar cells is limited by non-radiative recombination at perovskite/carrier transport layer (CTL) interfaces. 2D perovskite post-treatments offer a means to passivate the top interface; whereas, accessing and passivating the buried interface underneath the perovskite film requires new material synthesis strategies. It is posited that perovskite ink containing species that bind strongly to substrates can spontaneously form a passivating layer with the bottom CTL. The concept using organic spacer cations with rich NH2 groups is implemented, where readily available hydrogens have large binding affinity to under-coordinated oxygens on the metal oxide substrate surface, inducing preferential crystallization of a thin 2D layer at the buried interface. The passivation effect of this 2D layer is examined using steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy: the 2D interlayer suppresses non-radiative recombination at the buried perovskite/CTL interface, leading to a 72% reduction in surface recombination velocity. This strategy enables a 65 mV increase in Voc for NiOx based p-i-n devices, and a 100 mV increase in Voc for SnO2 -based n-i-p devices. Inverted solar cells with 20.1% power conversion efficiency (PCE) for 1.70 eV and 22.9% PCE for 1.55 eV bandgap perovskites are demonstrated., (© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2021
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35. Facet-Oriented Coupling Enables Fast and Sensitive Colloidal Quantum Dot Photodetectors.
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Biondi M, Choi MJ, Wang Z, Wei M, Lee S, Choubisa H, Sagar LK, Sun B, Baek SW, Chen B, Todorović P, Najarian AM, Sedighian Rasouli A, Nam DH, Vafaie M, Li YC, Bertens K, Hoogland S, Voznyy O, García de Arquer FP, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Charge carrier transport in colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solids is strongly influenced by coupling among CQDs. The shape of as-synthesized CQDs results in random orientational relationships among facets in CQD solids, and this limits the CQD coupling strength and the resultant performance of optoelectronic devices. Here, colloidal-phase reconstruction of CQD surfaces, which improves facet alignment in CQD solids, is reported. This strategy enables control over CQD faceting and allows demonstration of enhanced coupling in CQD solids. The approach utilizes post-synthetic resurfacing and unites surface passivation and colloidal stability with a propensity for dots to couple via (100):(100) facets, enabling increased hole mobility. Experimentally, the CQD solids exhibit a 10× increase in measured hole mobility compared to control CQD solids, and enable photodiodes (PDs) exhibiting 70% external quantum efficiency (vs 45% for control devices) and specific detectivity, D* > 10
12 Jones, each at 1550 nm. The photodetectors feature a 7 ns response time for a 0.01 mm2 area-the fastest reported for solution-processed short-wavelength infrared PDs., (© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2021
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36. Diagnostic performance of D-dimer in predicting venous thromboembolism and acute aortic dissection.
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Koch V, Biener M, Müller-Hennessen M, Vafaie M, Staudacher I, Katus HA, and Giannitsis E
- Abstract
Background: D-dimer is elevated in a variety of conditions. The purpose of this study was to assess the positive predictive value of D-dimer to rule in patients with confirmed pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, acute aortic dissection or thrombosis of the upper extremity in comparison to patients with elevated D-dimer for other reasons., Methods and Results: We studied 1334 patients presenting to the emergency department with pulmonary embolism ( n =193), deep vein thrombosis ( n =73), acute aortic dissection ( n =22), thrombosis of the upper extremity ( n =8) and 1038 controls. The positive predictive value was increased with higher D-dimer concentrations improving the ability to identify diseases with high thrombus burden. Patients with venous thromboembolism, acute aortic dissection and thrombosis of the upper extremity showed a maximum positive predictive value of 85.2% at a D-dimer level of 7.8 mg/L (95% confidence interval (CI) 78.1 to 90.4). The maximum positive predictive value was lower in cancer patients with venous thromboembolism, acute aortic dissection and thrombosis of the upper extremity, reaching 68.9% at a D-dimer level of 7.5 mg/L (95% CI 57.4 to 78.4). The positive likelihood ratio was very consistent with the positive predictive value. Using a cut-off level of 0.5 mg/L, D-dimer showed a high sensitivity of at least 93%, but a very low specificity of nearly 0%. Conversely, an optimised cut-off value of 4.6 mg/L increased specificity to 95% for the detection of life-threatening venous thromboembolism, acute aortic dissection or thrombosis of the upper extremity at the costs of moderate sensitivities (58% for pulmonary embolism, 41% for deep vein thrombosis, 65% for pulmonary embolism with co-existent deep vein thrombosis, 50% for acute aortic dissection and 13% for thrombosis of the upper extremity). Using the same cut-off in cancer patients, higher values were observed for sensitivity at a specificity level of more than 95%. The area under the curve for the discrimination of venous thromboembolism/acute aortic dissection/thrombosis of the upper extremity from controls was significantly higher in cancer versus non-cancer patients (area under the curve 0.905 in cancer patients, 95% CI 0.89 to 0.92, vs. area under the curve 0.857 in non-cancer patients, 95% CI 0.84 to 0.88; P =0.0349)., Conclusion: D-dimers are useful not only to rule out but also to rule in venous thromboembolism and acute aortic dissection with an at least moderate discriminatory ability, both in patients with and without cancer., (© The European Society of Cardiology 2020.)
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- 2021
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37. Validation of two severity scores as predictors for outcome in Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).
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Salbach C, Mueller-Hennessen M, Biener M, Stoyanov KM, Vafaie M, Preusch MR, Kihm LP, Merle U, Schnitzler P, Katus HA, and Giannitsis E
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, COVID-19 mortality, SARS-CoV-2, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background: An established objective and standardized reporting of clinical severity and disease progression in COVID-19 is still not established. We validated and compared the usefulness of two classification systems reported earlier-a severity grading proposed by Siddiqi and a system from the National Australian COVID-19 guideline. Both had not been validated externally and were now tested for their ability to predict complications., Methods: In this retrospective, single-centre observational study, patients hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19 across all severity stages were enrolled. The clinical severity was graded at admission and during hospitalization. Multivariate Cox regression was used to identify independent risk factors for mortality, a composite primary (mortality, incident acute respiratory distress syndrome, incident mechanical ventilation), a secondary endpoint (mortality, incident acute myocardial injury, incident venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism or stroke) and progression of severity grades., Results: Of 109 patients 17 died, 31 and 48 developed the primary and secondary endpoint, respectively. Worsening of the severity grade by at least one stage occurred in 27 and 28 patients, respectively. Siddiqi and Australian classification were identified as independent predictors for the primary endpoint (adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) 2.30, p<0.001 and aHR 2.08, p<0.001), for the secondary endpoint (aHR 2.12, p<0.001 and aHR 1.79, p<0.001) and mortality (aHR 2.30, p = 0.071 and aHR 1.98, p = 0.017). Both classification systems showed very good agreement regarding initial grading and good agreement regarding progression of severity stages., Conclusions: Standardized and objective severity grading is useful to unequivocally stratify patients presenting with COVID-19 for their individual risk of complications., Competing Interests: All authors have no conflicts of interest in direct relation to this manuscript. Dr. Mueller-Hennessen reports grants and personal fees from Roche Diagnostics, grants from Thermo Scientific, outside the submitted work. Dr. Biener reports grants and non-financial support from AstraZeneca, non-financial support from Brahms Theramo Fisher, outside the submitted work. Prof. Dr. Katus reports personal fees from AstraZeneca, personal fees from BayerVital, personal fees from Boehringer Ingelheim, personal fees from NovoNordisk, personal fees from Roche Diagnostics, outside the submitted work. Prof. Dr. Giannitsis reports personal fees from Roche Diagnostics, personal fees from Astra Zeneca, personal fees from Bayer Vital, personal fees from Boeringer Ingelheim, personal fees from Brahms Deutschland, personal fees from Daiichi Sankyo, grants from Deutsche Herzstiftung, outside the submitted work. All other authors have no conflicts of interest. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Deep-Blue Perovskite Single-Mode Lasing through Efficient Vapor-Assisted Chlorination.
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Pina JM, Parmar DH, Bappi G, Zhou C, Choubisa H, Vafaie M, Najarian AM, Bertens K, Sagar LK, Dong Y, Gao Y, Hoogland S, Saidaminov MI, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Metal halide perovskites have emerged as promising candidates for solution-processed laser gain materials, with impressive performance in the green and red spectral regions. Despite exciting progress, deep-blue-an important wavelength for laser applications-remains underexplored; indeed, cavity integration and single-mode lasing from large-bandgap perovskites have yet to be achieved. Here, a vapor-assisted chlorination strategy that enables synthesis of low-dimensional CsPbCl
3 thin films exhibiting deep-blue emission is reported. Using this approach, high-quality perovskite thin films having a low surface roughness (RMS ≈ 1.3 nm) and efficient charge transfer properties are achieved. These enable us to document low-threshold amplified spontaneous emission. Levering the high quality of the gain medium, vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers with a low lasing threshold of 6.5 µJ cm-2 are fabricated. This report of deep-blue perovskite single-mode lasing showcases the prospect of increasing the range of deep-blue laser sources., (© 2020 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2021
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39. Thymolipoma associated with lymphocytosis in a 6-year-old girl: A case report.
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Alizadeh M, Vafaie M, Tarlan S, Moeini H, Chelkassri FM, Khoeiniha MH, Fathi SM, Didban A, and Chegini V
- Abstract
Thymolipoma is a benign and rare tumor that could be found at any age. Thymolipoma associated with the myasthenia gravis, Graves disease, aplastic anemia, and hypogammaglobulinemia was reported previously, but in this case, thymolipoma is associated with lymphocytosis. A 6-year-old girl was brought to the hospital because of a chronic cough. Her evaluation revealed a 130 × 160× 160 mm fat-containing soft tissue mass arising from anterior mediastinum with complete left lung collapse and contralateral mediastinal shift. Her past medical history showed that she had been evaluated and treated unsuccessfully due to severe lymphocytosis two years earlier. Her peripheral blood and bone marrow cell morphology were normal; in contrast, blood cell count and CD flow cytometry showed severe lymphocytosis. The patient's tumor was excised entirely without any complications, and lymphocytosis resolved during the follow-up period. Because the T lymphocytes are developed in the thymus, and more than 80% of cells in CD flow cytometry were T lymphocytes, and the lymphocytosis resolved with tumor removal; therefore, the authors suggested that Thymolipoma could be associated with lymphocytosis., Competing Interests: The authors whose names are listed immediately below certify that they have NO affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial interest (such as honoraria; educational grants; participation in speakers’ bureaus; membership, employment, consultancies, stock ownership, or other equity interest; and expert testimony or patent-licensing arrangements), or non-financial interest (such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, knowledge or beliefs) in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript., (© 2020 The Author(s).)
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- 2020
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40. Prognostic Value of Elevated Copeptin and High-Sensitivity Cardiac Troponin T in Patients with and without Acute Coronary Syndrome: The ConTrACS Study.
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Waldsperger H, Biener M, Stoyanov KM, Vafaie M, Katus HA, Giannitsis E, and Mueller-Hennessen M
- Abstract
Aims: We aimed to assess the prognostic role of copeptin in patients presenting to the emergency department with acute symptoms and increased high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T., Methods: A total of 3890 patients presenting with acute symptoms to the emergency department of Heidelberg University Hospital were assessed for increased hs-cTnT (>14 ng/L) from three cohorts: the Heidelberg Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) Registry ( n = 2477), the BIOPS Registry ( n = 320), and the ACS OMICS Registry ( n = 1093). In a pooled analysis, 1956 patients remained, comprising of 1600 patients with ACS and 356 patients with non-ACS., Results: Median follow-up was 1468 days in the ACS cohort and 709 days in the non-ACS cohort. Elevated copeptin levels (>10 pmol/L) were found in 1174 patients (60.0%) in the entire cohort (58.1% in ACS and 68.5% in non-ACS, respectively) and mortality rates were significantly higher than in patients with normal copeptin levels (29.0% vs. 10.7%, p < 0.001). In a multivariate Cox regression, elevated copeptin was independently associated with all-cause death in the ACS (HR = 1.7, 1.3-2.3, p = 0.002) and non-ACS cohort (HR = 2.7, 1.4-5.0, p = 0.0018)., Conclusion: Copeptin may aid in identifying patients at risk for adverse outcomes in patients with increased levels of hs-cTnT in ACS patients and in non-ACS conditions.
- Published
- 2020
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41. Effects of crowding in the emergency department on the diagnosis and management of suspected acute coronary syndrome using rapid algorithms: an observational study.
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Stoyanov KM, Biener M, Hund H, Mueller-Hennessen M, Vafaie M, Katus HA, and Giannitsis E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, Crowding, Female, Germany, Humans, Length of Stay, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Left, Young Adult, Acute Coronary Syndrome diagnosis, Acute Coronary Syndrome therapy, Emergency Service, Hospital
- Abstract
Objectives: Fast diagnostic algorithms using high-sensitivity troponin (hsTn) in suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS) are regarded as beneficial to expedite diagnosis and safe discharge of patients in crowded emergency departments (ED). This study investigates the effects of crowding on process times related to the diagnostic protocol itself or other time delays, and outcomes., Design: Prospective single-centre observational study., Setting: ED (Germany)., Participants: Final study population of 2525 consecutive patients with suspected ACS within 12 months, after exclusion of patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction, missing blood samples, referral from other hospitals or repeated visits., Interventions: Use of fast algorithms as per 2015 European Society of Cardiology guidelines., Main Outcome Measures: Crowding was defined as mismatch between patient numbers and monitoring capacities, or mean physician time per case, categorised as normal, high and very high crowding. Outcome measures were length of ED stay, direct discharge from ED, laboratory turn around times (TAT), utilisation of fast algorithms, absolute and relative non-laboratory time, as well as mortality., Results: Crowding was associated with increased length of ED stay (3.75-4.89 hours, p<0.001). While median TAT of the first hsTnT increased (53-57 min, p<0.001), total TAT of serial hsTnT did not increase significantly with higher crowding (p=0.170). Lower utilisation of fast algorithms (p=0.009) and increase of additional hsTnT measurements after diagnosis (p=0.001) were observed in higher crowding. Most importantly, crowding was significantly associated with prolonged absolute (p<0.001), and particularly relative non-laboratory time (63.3%-71.3%, p<0.001). However, there was no significant effect of crowding on mortality, even after adjustment for relevant clinical variables., Conclusions: Process times, and particularly non-laboratory times, are prolonged in a crowded ED diminishing some positive effects of fast diagnostic algorithms in suspected ACS. Higher crowding levels were not significantly associated with higher all-cause mortality rates., Trial Registration Number: NCT03111862., Competing Interests: Competing interests: MB reports grants and non-financial support from AstraZeneca, non-financial support from Thermo Fisher. MM-H reports grants and speaker honoraria from Roche Diagnostics; grants and non-financial support from BRAHMS Thermo Scientific. HAK received honoraria for lecturers from Roche Diagnostics, AstraZeneca, Bayer Vital, Daiichi-Sankyo, and held a patent on cTnT that has expired. EG received honoraria for lectures from Roche Diagnostics, AstraZeneca, Bayer Vital, Daiichi-Sankyo, Eli Lilly Deutschland. He serves as a consultant for Roche Diagnostics, BRAHMS Thermo Fisher, Boehringer Ingelheim, and has received research funding from BRAHMS Thermo Fisher, Roche Diagnostics, Bayer Vital and Daiichi Sankyo., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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42. Orthogonal colloidal quantum dot inks enable efficient multilayer optoelectronic devices.
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Lee S, Choi MJ, Sharma G, Biondi M, Chen B, Baek SW, Najarian AM, Vafaie M, Wicks J, Sagar LK, Hoogland S, de Arquer FPG, Voznyy O, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Surface ligands enable control over the dispersibility of colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) via steric and electrostatic stabilization. Today's device-grade CQD inks have consistently relied on highly polar solvents: this enables facile single-step deposition of multi-hundred-nanometer-thick CQD films; but it prevents the realization of CQD film stacks made up of CQDs having different compositions, since polar solvents redisperse underlying films. Here we introduce aromatic ligands to achieve process-orthogonal CQD inks, and enable thereby multifunctional multilayer CQD solids. We explore the effect of the anchoring group of the aromatic ligand on the solubility of CQD inks in weakly-polar solvents, and find that a judicious selection of the anchoring group induces a dipole that provides additional CQD-solvent interactions. This enables colloidal stability without relying on bulky insulating ligands. We showcase the benefit of this ink as the hole transport layer in CQD optoelectronics, achieving an external quantum efficiency of 84% at 1210 nm.
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- 2020
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43. Identification of patients at higher risk for myocardial injury following elective coronary artery intervention.
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Abu Sharar H, Helfert S, Vafaie M, Pleger ST, Chorianopoulos E, Bekeredjian R, Katus HA, and Giannitsis E
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biomarkers blood, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, Predictive Value of Tests, Prospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Troponin T blood, Coronary Artery Disease therapy, Myocardial Infarction etiology, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention adverse effects
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate myocardial injury and infarction (MI) following elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)., Background: The substantially higher analytical power of high-sensitivity troponin (hsTn) assays allows detection of minor cardiac troponin (cTn) levels, which may be useful in monitoring myocardial injury and guiding therapies., Methods: Serial hsTnT measurements were conducted in patients undergoing elective PCI and were related to the extent of coronary artery disease (CAD) as reflected by the SYNTAX score risk categories and American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association classification of coronary lesions. Myocardial injury and MI were diagnosed according to the second and third versions of universal MI definition., Results: The study population consisted of 530 patients, who were grouped into low (41.3%), intermediate (35.4%), and high (23.3%) SYNTAX risk categories. The treated coronary lesions were classified into A 7.8%, B1 24.1%, B2 21.1%, C1 24.6%, and C2 22.4%. Postprocedural hsTnT increases correlated significantly with the complexity of treated coronary lesions (p < .05) and CAD magnitude (p < .05). Rates of MI type 4a according to the second and third MI definition criteria were 98 (27.5%) and 15 (4.2%) cases in patients with normal baseline hsTnT values (N = 357, 67.4%), as well as 137 (79.2%) and 27 (15.6%) cases in those with elevated baseline hsTnT values (N = 173, 32.6%), respectively., Conclusions: After elective PCI, cTn releases correlate significantly with lesion complexity and CAD extent. Use of hsTnT assay enables precise monitoring of PCI-related myocardial injury and may identify patients at higher risk for ischemic events, who may benefit from potent platelet inhibition, which needs to be investigated in randomized trials., (© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2020
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44. Micron Thick Colloidal Quantum Dot Solids.
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Fan JZ, Vafaie M, Bertens K, Sytnyk M, Pina JM, Sagar LK, Ouellette O, Proppe AH, Rasouli AS, Gao Y, Baek SW, Chen B, Laquai F, Hoogland S, Arquer FPG, Heiss W, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Shortwave infrared colloidal quantum dots (SWIR-CQDs) are semiconductors capable of harvesting across the AM1.5G solar spectrum. Today's SWIR-CQD solar cells rely on spin-coating; however, these films exhibit cracking once thickness exceeds ∼500 nm. We posited that a blade-coating strategy could enable thick QD films. We developed a ligand exchange with an additional resolvation step that enabled the dispersion of SWIR-CQDs. We then engineered a quaternary ink that combined high-viscosity solvents with short QD stabilizing ligands. This ink, blade-coated over a mild heating bed, formed micron-thick SWIR-CQD films. These SWIR-CQD solar cells achieved short-circuit current densities (Jsc) that reach 39 mA cm
-2 , corresponding to the harvest of 60% of total photons incident under AM1.5G illumination. External quantum efficiency measurements reveal both the first exciton peak and the closest Fabry-Perot resonance peak reaching approximately 80%-this is the highest unbiased EQE reported beyond 1400 nm in a solution-processed semiconductor.- Published
- 2020
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45. Ligand-Assisted Reconstruction of Colloidal Quantum Dots Decreases Trap State Density.
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Sun B, Vafaie M, Levina L, Wei M, Dong Y, Gao Y, Kung HT, Biondi M, Proppe AH, Chen B, Choi MJ, Sagar LK, Voznyy O, Kelley SO, Laquai F, Lu ZH, Hoogland S, García de Arquer FP, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
Increasing the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cells has relied on improving the passivation of CQD surfaces, enhancing CQD coupling and charge transport, and advancing device architecture. The presence of hydroxyl groups on the nanoparticle surface, as well as dimers-fusion between CQDs-has been found to be the major source of trap states, detrimental to optoelectronic properties and device performance. Here, we introduce a CQD reconstruction step that decreases surface hydroxyl groups and dimers simultaneously. We explored the dynamic interaction of charge carriers between band-edge states and trap states in CQDs using time-resolved spectroscopy, showing that trap to ground-state recombination occurs mainly from surface defects in coupled CQD solids passivated using simple metal halides. Using CQD reconstruction, we demonstrate a 60% reduction in trap density and a 25% improvement in charge diffusion length. These translate into a PCE of 12.5% compared to 10.9% for control CQDs.
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- 2020
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46. Management and outcomes of patients with unstable angina with undetectable, normal, or intermediate hsTnT levels.
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Giannitsis E, Biener M, Hund H, Mueller-Hennessen M, Vafaie M, Gandowitz J, Riedle C, Löhr J, Katus HA, and Stoyanov KM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Angina, Unstable diagnosis, Angina, Unstable mortality, Angina, Unstable therapy, Biomarkers blood, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction mortality, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction therapy, Predictive Value of Tests, Prevalence, Prognosis, Registries, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Angina, Unstable blood, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction blood, Troponin T blood
- Abstract
Background: Patients with unstable angina (UA) are regarded to be at low risk for future coronary events. Guidelines discourage routine coronary angiography and recommend early discharge after individualized risk stratification. The relative value of clinical risk indicators as compared to cardiac troponin (cTn) alone is unsettled in the era of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin (hsTn) assays. We aimed to investigate the clinical characteristics, therapies, and outcomes of UA patients with different hsTnT concentrations., Methods: During 12 months, 2525 patients were enrolled. UA was defined as unstable symptoms and either undetectable (< 5 ng/L), normal (5-14 ng/L) or stable elevated hsTnT (15-51 ng/L). Follow-up for 1-year mortality was available in 98.7%., Results: A total of 280 patients (11.1%) received a diagnosis of UA. Mortality rates at 12 months were 0%, 1.9% and 6.9% in presence of undetectable, normal and stable elevated hsTnT. Elevated hsTnT > 99th percentile but not unstable symptoms carried an independent 3.25-fold (1.78-5.93) higher risk for all-cause death after adjustment for other clinical risk indicators or the GRACE score. Utilization of guideline-recommended therapies was high albeit lower than for non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI). Significantly fewer patients with UA received dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT, odds ratio (OR) 0.51 [95% CI 0.44-0.59], P < 0.0001), coronary angiography (CA, OR 0.79, [95% CI 0.74-0.87], P < 0.0001), and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI, OR 0.50, [95% CI 0.40-0.61], P < 0.0001), compared to NSTEMI. However, prevalence of significant obstructive coronary artery disease requiring PCI was 31.8%, even in patients with undetectable hsTnT, indicating the need for stress testing., Conclusions: The current dichotomization of patients into UA and NSTEMI is no longer appropriate. Additional risk stratification seems warranted including the presence and magnitude of hsTn concentration and additional risk indicators. Clinical Trials Identifier: NCT03111862.
- Published
- 2020
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47. Gender-specific reference values for high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T and I in well-phenotyped healthy individuals and validity of high-sensitivity assay designation.
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Giannitsis E, Mueller-Hennessen M, Zeller T, Schuebler A, Aurich M, Biener M, Vafaie M, Stoyanov KM, Ochs M, Riffel J, Mereles D, Blankenberg S, and Katus HA
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Biomarkers blood, Female, Humans, Limit of Detection, Male, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Reference Values, Sensitivity and Specificity, Sex Factors, Troponin I standards, Troponin T standards, Blood Chemical Analysis standards, Troponin I blood, Troponin T blood
- Abstract
Objective: To determine gender-specific reference limits of high-sensitivity (hs) cardiac troponins (cTn) and validity of hs assay designation for both genders., Methods: After screening with a questionnaire, 827 presumably healthy individuals were further selected based on clinical criteria (n = 740), clinical criteria plus cardiac imaging including stress magnetic resonance imaging or stress echocardiography (n = 726), and extended cardio-pulmonary parameters (n = 626). Blood samples were measured with hs-cTnT (Roche Diagnostics) on a cobas e602 analyzer as well as hs-cTnI (Abbott Diagnostics) on an ARCHITECT
i 2000SR . The impact of health definition, statistical methods, instrument selection and limit of detection (LoD) on overall and gender-specific 99th percentiles was assessed., Results: Median age was 56 years (50.9% female) for the total study cohort. 99th percentiles for females and males ranged between 13.1 and 13.3 ng/L and 16.8-19.9 ng/L for hs-cTnT as well as 10.3-12.5 ng/L and 27.4-29.7 ng/L for hs-cTnI depending on health definition. Utilization of stricter health definition criteria reduced the difference of the gender-specific 99th percentiles between males and females for hs-cTnT to 3.7 ng/L (males 16.8 ng/L, females 13.1 ng/L), whereas the difference rather increased for hs-cTnI to 19.4 ng/L (males 29.7 ng/L, females 10.3 ng/L). Values > LoD could be measured in the majority of males and females using hs-TnT (81.4-83.3% and 96.5-96.9%, respectively). In contrast, values > LoD could not be observed in the majority of females using hs-cTnI (38.4-41.1%)., Conclusions: In a well-phenotyped healthy cohort, reference values for hs-cTnT were slightly higher, whereas hs-cTnI cut-offs were considerably lower than previously observed. Gender differences were more pronounced in hs-cTnI than in hs-cTnT and were further reduced for hs-cTnT by application of stricter health definition criteria. Contrary to hs-cTnI, hs-cTnT fulfilled criteria for hs designation for both genders., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest E.G., honoraria for lecturers from Roche Diagnostics, BRAHMS Thermo Scientific, Bayer Vital GmbH and Mitsubishi Chemical Europe, institutional research grant from Roche Diagnostics and Daiichi Sankyo, consultant for Roche Diagnostics and BRAHMS Thermo Scientific, outside the submitted work; M.M.-H., research support by the Medical Faculty of Heidelberg University, during conduct of the study, research support from Roche Diagnostics and BRAHMS Thermo Scientific, speaker honoraria from Roche Diagnostics, non-financial support by BRAHMS Thermo Scientific, Bayer Vital GmbH, Daiichi-Sankyo, Metanomics Health GmbH and Philips Electronics, outside the submitted work; M.B., research support from AstraZeneca and travel support from BRAHMS Thermo Scientific, outside the submitted work; M.V., financial support from Bayer Vital GmbH and Daiichi Sankyo, reimbursement for travel expenses and fees associated with attending seminars and conferences by Bayer Vital GmbH, Lilly Germany, GlaxoSmithKline, Roche Diagnostics and Brahms, outside the submitted work; K.M.S., research supported by Bayer Vital GmbH, outside the submitted work; S.B., non-financial support from Abbott Diagnostics, grants and personal fees from Abbott Diagnostics, Siemens, Thermo Fisher and Roche Diagnostics, outside the submitted work; H.K., honoraria from AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, GlaxoSmithKline, Roche Diagnostics, and Bayer, holds a Troponin T Test Invention patent jointly with Roche and receives royalties for this patent, outside the submitted work. All other authors have nothing to disclose., (Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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48. Multi-cation perovskites prevent carrier reflection from grain surfaces.
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Saidaminov MI, Williams K, Wei M, Johnston A, Quintero-Bermudez R, Vafaie M, Pina JM, Proppe AH, Hou Y, Walters G, Kelley SO, Tisdale WA, and Sargent EH
- Abstract
The composition of perovskite has been optimized combinatorially such that it often contains six components (A
x By C1-x-y PbXz Y3-z ) in state-of-art perovskite solar cells. Questions remain regarding the precise role of each component, and the lack of a mechanistic explanation limits the practical exploration of the large and growing chemical space. Here, aided by transient photoluminescence microscopy, we find that, in perovskite single crystals, carrier diffusivity is in fact independent of composition. In polycrystalline thin films, the different compositions play a crucial role in carrier diffusion. We report that methylammonium (MA)-based films show a high carrier diffusivity of 0.047 cm2 s-1 , while MA-free mixed caesium-formamidinium (CsFA) films exhibit an order of magnitude lower diffusivity. Elemental composition studies show that CsFA grains display a graded composition. This curtails electron diffusion in these films, as seen in both vertical carrier transport and surface potential studies. Incorporation of MA leads to a uniform grain core-to-edge composition, giving rise to a diffusivity of 0.034 cm2 s-1 in CsMAFA films. A model that invokes competing crystallization processes allows us to account for this finding, and suggests further strategies to achieve homogeneous crystallization for the benefit of perovskite optoelectronics.- Published
- 2020
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49. Guideline-adherence regarding critical time intervals in the German Chest Pain Unit registry.
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Vafaie M, Hochadel M, Münzel T, Hailer B, Schumacher B, Heusch G, Voigtländer T, Mudra H, Haude M, Barth S, Schmitt C, Darius H, Maier LS, Katus HA, Senges J, and Giannitsis E
- Subjects
- Acute Coronary Syndrome diagnosis, Acute Coronary Syndrome surgery, Aged, Angina, Unstable diagnosis, Angina, Unstable surgery, Electrocardiography statistics & numerical data, Exercise Test statistics & numerical data, Female, Germany epidemiology, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Hospital Units organization & administration, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction surgery, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention statistics & numerical data, Prospective Studies, Registries, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction surgery, Time Factors, Tomography, X-Ray Computed statistics & numerical data, Chest Pain diagnosis, Guideline Adherence ethics, Non-ST Elevated Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Since 2008, the German Cardiac Society certified 256 Chest Pain Units (CPUs). Little is known about adherence to recommended performance measures in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS) presenting to CPUs. We investigated guideline-adherence regarding critical time intervals and selected performance measures in German Chest Pain Units., Methods: From 2008 to 2014, 23,804 consecutive patients with suspected ACS were prospectively enrolled in the Chest Pain Unit registry of the German Cardiac Society., Results: Median time from symptom onset to first medical contact was 2 h in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and 4 h in patients with unstable angina and non-STEMI (NSTEMI). In patients with STEMI, median time from hospital admission to percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) was 40 min and median time from first medical contact to PCI was 1 h 35 min. Primary PCI was performed in 94.7% of patients with STEMI, 70.0% of patients with NSTEMI and 37.4% of patients with unstable angina. PCI was performed during the first 24 h in 79.5% of patients with NSTEMI and the first 72 h in 89.0% of patients with unstable angina. Electrocardiograms were performed in 99.5% after a median of 6 min after admission and obtained within 10 min in 71%. Interestingly, 56.1% of patients were found to have non-ACS diagnoses, underlining the importance of access to additional diagnostic modalities including echocardiography, stress testing or computed tomography., Conclusions: Guideline-adherence regarding critical time intervals and primary PCI rates is good in German Chest Pain Units. More than half of patients admitted with suspected ACS had non-ACS diagnoses. Improvements in pre-hospital time delays through public awareness programmes are warranted.
- Published
- 2020
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50. RAPID-CPU: a prospective study on implementation of the ESC 0/1-hour algorithm and safety of discharge after rule-out of myocardial infarction.
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Stoyanov KM, Hund H, Biener M, Gandowitz J, Riedle C, Löhr J, Mueller-Hennessen M, Vafaie M, Katus HA, and Giannitsis E
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- Acute Coronary Syndrome blood, Acute Coronary Syndrome physiopathology, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, Cardiology organization & administration, Clinical Protocols standards, Comorbidity, Efficiency, Organizational, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Europe epidemiology, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction blood, Myocardial Infarction mortality, Patient Discharge trends, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Safety, Societies, Medical, Time Factors, Acute Coronary Syndrome diagnosis, Myocardial Infarction diagnosis, Patient Discharge statistics & numerical data, Troponin T blood
- Abstract
Background: Although the value of fast diagnostic protocols in suspected acute coronary syndrome has been validated, there is insufficient real world evidence including patients with lower pre-test probability, atypical symptoms and confounding comorbidities. The feasibility, efficacy and safety of European Society of Cardiology (ESC) 0/1 and 0/3-hour algorithms using high-sensitivity troponin T were evaluated in a consecutive cohort with suspected acute coronary syndrome., Methods: During 12 months, 2525 eligible patients were enrolled. In a pre-implementation period of 6 months, the prevalence of protocols, disposition, lengths of emergency department stay and treatments were registered. Implementation of the 0/1-hour protocol was monitored for another 6 months. Primary endpoints comprised the change of diagnostic protocols and 30-day mortality after direct discharge from the emergency department., Results: Use of the ESC 0/1-hour algorithm increased by 270% at the cost of the standard 0/3-hour protocol. After rule-out (1588 patients), 1309 patients (76.1%) were discharged directly from the emergency department, with an all-cause mortality of 0.08% at 30 days (one death due to lung cancer). Median lengths of stay were 2.9 (1.9-3.8) and 3.2 (2.7-4.4) hours using a single high-sensitivity troponin T below the limit of detection (5 ng/L) at presentation and the ESC 0/1-hour algorithm, respectively, as compared to 5.3 (4.7-6.5) hours using the ESC 0/3-hour rule-out protocol ( P <0.001). Discharge rates increased from 53.9% to 62.8% ( P <0.001), without excessive use of diagnostic resources within 30 days., Conclusion: Implementation of the ESC 0/1-hour algorithm is feasible and safe, is associated with shorter emergency department stay than the ESC 0/3-hour protocol, and an increase in discharge rates., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov , Unique identifier: NCT03111862.
- Published
- 2020
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