45 results on '"Patterson CG"'
Search Results
2. Serial gait speed measurements over time and dynamic survival prediction in older adults.
- Author
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Perera S, Zhang X, Patterson CG, and Boudreau RM
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Longitudinal Studies, Aged, 80 and over, Mortality, Geriatric Assessment methods, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Factors, Aging physiology, Gait physiology, Walking Speed physiology
- Abstract
Background: A one-time gait speed measurement predicts mortality risk. A framework for updating a clinician's mortality risk perception with new information from each clinic visit is needed. We used joint modeling of longitudinal and survival data for dynamic prediction of mortality risk., Methods: We fit sex-stratified joint models to 20-meter (bi)annual longitudinal gait speed measured every 6 months and 14-year survival data from the Health, Aging and Body Composition Study allowing for non-linear fluctuations of gait speed and controlling for important covariates such as age, recent hospitalization, blood pressure, obesity, and comorbidities., Results: Participants (N = 3048) were 74 years old with gait speed 1.18 m/s. They were 42% Black, and 52% died over 14 years. Higher gait speed of 0.1 m/s was associated with 23% (95% confidence interval or CI = 20-25%) and 25% (CI = 21-28%) reductions in mortality risk in men and women; and a 0.05 m/s annualized slowing (slope) with 31% (CI = 13-51%) increase in men (all p < 0.05), with findings persisting after covariate adjustment. Distant gait speed history over a year prior contributed little for mortality risk prediction with mean change of only 1-2% in 5-year risk., Conclusion: The two most recent gait speeds appear sufficient to consider for mortality risk in the present initial analysis. More frequent gait speeds need to be considered in mortality risk prediction before definitive conclusions supporting real-world application., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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3. The Influence of Active, Passive, and Manual Therapy Interventions on Escalation of Health Care Events After Physical Therapist Care in Veterans With Low Back Pain.
- Author
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Mayer JM, Highsmith MJ, Maikos J, Patterson CG, Kakyomya J, Smith B, Shenoy N, Dearth CL, and Farrokhi S
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to examine the associations between active, passive, and manual therapy interventions with the escalation-of-care events following physical therapist care for veterans with low back pain (LBP)., Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted in 3618 veterans who received physical therapist care for LBP between January 1, 2015 and January 1, 2018. The VA Corporate Data Warehouse was utilized to identify LBP-related physical therapist visits and procedures, as well as opioid prescription and non-physical therapy clinic encounters. The association between physical therapist interventions with 1-year escalation-of-care events were assessed using adjusted odds ratios from logistic regression., Results: Nearly all veterans (98%) received active interventions but only a minority (31%) received manual therapy. In the 1-year follow-up period, the odds of receiving an opioid prescription were 30% lower for those who received manual therapy in addition to active interventions, as compared with patients who received only active interventions. Moreover, the odds of receiving primary care, specialty care, and diagnostic testing were 30-130% higher for patients who received electrical stimulation or more than 1 passive intervention in addition to active treatments, as compared with patients who received only active interventions., Conclusion: The use of manual therapy along with active interventions was associated with reduced prescription of opioids, while utilization of specific passive interventions such as electrical stimulation or multiple modalities in conjunction with active interventions resulted in increased escalation-of-care events., Impact Statement: The use of active interventions, which is supported by most Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs), was the cornerstone of physical therapist care for veterans with LBP. However, the use of CPG-recommended manual therapy interventions was low but associated with reduced opioid prescriptions. The use of 2 or more different passive interventions along with active interventions was common (34%) and associated with less-than-optimal escalation-of-care outcomes., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Physical Therapy Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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4. A Cluster Analysis of Initial Primary Care Orders for Patients with Acute Low Back Pain.
- Author
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Joyce CT, Roseen EJ, Smith CN, Patterson CG, McDonough CM, Hurstak E, Morone NE, Beneciuk J, Stevans JM, Delitto A, and Saper RB
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Cluster Analysis, Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal therapeutic use, Primary Health Care, Low Back Pain diagnosis, Low Back Pain therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Primary care physicians (PCPs) often face a complex intersection of patient expectations, evidence, and policy that influences their care recommendations for acute low back pain (aLBP). The purpose of this study was to elucidate patterns of PCP orders for patients with aLBP, identify the most common patterns, and describe patient clinical and demographic characteristics associated with patterns of aLBP care., Methods: This prospective cohort study included 9574 aLBP patients presenting to 1 of 77 primary care practices in 4 geographic locations in the United States. We performed a cluster analysis of PCP orders extracted from electronic health records within the first 21 days of an initial visit for aLBP., Results: 1401 (15%) patients did not receive a PCP order related to back pain within the first 21 days of their initial visit. These patients predominantly had aLBP without leg pain, less back-related disability, and were at low-risk for persistent disability. Of the remaining 8146 patients, we found 4 distinct order patterns: combined nonpharmacologic and first-line medication (44%); second-line medication (39%); imaging (10%); and specialty referral (7%). Among all patients, 29% received solely 1 order from their PCP. PCPs more often combined different guideline concordant and discordant orders. Patients with higher self-reported disability and psychological distress were more likely to receive guideline discordant care., Conclusion: Guideline discordant orders such as steroids and NSAIDS are often combined with guideline recommended orders such as physical therapy. Further defining patient, clinician, and health care setting characteristics associated with discordant care would inform targeted efforts for deimplementation initiatives., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (© Copyright by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
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- 2024
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5. Referral to Community-Based Rehabilitation Following Acute Stroke: Findings From the COMPASS Pragmatic Trial.
- Author
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Jones Berkeley SB, Johnson AM, Mormer ER, Ressel K, Pastva AM, Wen F, Patterson CG, Duncan PW, Bushnell CD, Zhang S, and Freburger JK
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- Adult, Humans, Female, Aged, United States, Male, Medicare, Patient Discharge, Referral and Consultation, Stroke Rehabilitation, Stroke diagnosis, Stroke therapy, Ischemic Attack, Transient therapy
- Abstract
Background: Few studies on care transitions following acute stroke have evaluated whether referral to community-based rehabilitation occurred as part of discharge planning. Our objectives were to describe the extent to which patients discharged home were referred to community-based rehabilitation and identify the patient, hospital, and community-level predictors of referral., Methods: We examined data from 40 North Carolina hospitals that participated in the COMPASS (Comprehensive Post-Acute Stroke Services) cluster-randomized trial. Participants included adults discharged home following stroke or transient ischemic attack (N=10 702). In this observational analysis, COMPASS data were supplemented with hospital-level and county-level data from various sources. The primary outcome was referral to community-based rehabilitation (physical, occupational, or speech therapy) at discharge. Predictor variables included patient (demographic, stroke-related, medical history), hospital (structure, process), and community (therapist supply) measures. We used generalized linear mixed models with a hospital random effect and hierarchical backward model selection procedures to identify predictors of therapy referral., Results: Approximately, one-third (36%) of stroke survivors (mean age, 66.8 [SD, 14.0] years; 49% female, 72% White race) were referred to community-based rehabilitation. Rates of referral to physical, occupational, and speech therapists were 31%, 18%, and 10%, respectively. Referral rates by hospital ranged from 3% to 78% with a median of 35%. Patient-level predictors included higher stroke severity, presence of medical comorbidities, and older age. Female sex (odds ratio, 1.24 [95% CI, 1.12-1.38]), non-White race (2.20 [2.01-2.44]), and having Medicare insurance (1.12 [1.02-1.23]) were also predictors of referral. Referral was higher for patients living in counties with greater physical therapist supply. Much of the variation in referral across hospitals remained unexplained., Conclusions: One-third of stroke survivors were referred to community-based rehabilitation. Patient-level factors predominated as predictors. Variation across hospitals was notable and presents an opportunity for further evaluation and possible targets for improved poststroke rehabilitative care., Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT02588664., Competing Interests: Disclosures Drs Duncan and Bushnell report ownership interest in Care Directions Inc. Dr Duncan is a research advisor for BQ Technologies. The other authors report no conflicts.
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- 2024
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6. The effect of a night shift nap on post-night shift performance, sleepiness, mood, and first recovery sleep: A randomized crossover trial.
- Author
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Patterson PD, Hilditch CJ, Weaver MD, Roach DGL, Okerman TS, Martin SE, Patterson CG, and Weiss LS
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- Humans, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Male, Cross-Over Studies, Sleep physiology, Wakefulness physiology, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Fatigue, Work Schedule Tolerance physiology, Sleepiness, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed to test the effect of a 30-minute nap versus a 2-hour nap opportunity taken during a simulated night shift on performance, fatigue, sleepiness, mood, and sleep at the end of shift and during post-night shift recovery., Methods: We conducted a randomized crossover trial of three nap conditions (30-minute, 2-hour, and no-nap) during 12-hour simulated night shifts. We tested for differences in performance, fatigue, sleepiness, mood, and sleep during in-lab and at-home recovery. Performance was measured with the Brief Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT-B). Subjective ratings were assessed with single-item surveys., Results: Twenty-eight individuals consented to participate [mean age 24.4 (standard deviation 7.2) years; 53.6% female; 85.7% Emergency Medical Services clinicians]. PVT-B false starts at the end of the 12-hour night shift (at 07:00 hours) and at the start of in-lab recovery (08:00 hours) were lower following the 2-hour nap versus other conditions (P<0.05). PVT-B response time at +0 minutes post-recovery nap was poorer compared to pre-recovery nap for the no-nap condition (P=0.003), yet not detected for other nap conditions (P>0.05). Sleepiness, fatigue, and some mood states were lower at most hourly assessments during the in-lab recovery period following the 2-hour nap condition compared to the other conditions. Sleep during recovery did not differ by duration of night shift nap., Conclusions: A 2-hour nap opportunity versus a 30-minute or no-nap opportunity is beneficial for performance, alertness, and mood post-night shift. No differences were detected in sleep during recovery.
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- 2024
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7. Hip-focused physical therapy versus spine-focused physical therapy for older adults with chronic low back pain at risk for mobility decline (MASH): a multicentre, single-masked, randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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Hicks GE, George SZ, Pugliese JM, Coyle PC, Sions JM, Piva S, Simon CB, Kakyomya J, and Patterson CG
- Subjects
- United States, Female, Humans, Male, Aged, Spine, Arthralgia, Intention, Physical Therapy Modalities, Low Back Pain therapy
- Abstract
Background: Previously, we identified a population of older adults with chronic low back pain, hip pain, and hip muscle weakness who had worse 12-month low back pain and functional outcomes than age-matched adults with only low back pain, indicating an increased risk for future mobility decline. We sought to determine whether tailored, hip-focused physical therapy reduced pain and functional limitations in this high-risk population compared with non-tailored, spine-focused physical therapy., Methods: We did a multicentre, single-masked, randomised controlled trial at three research-based sites in the USA. We recruited older adults (aged 60-85 years) with hip pain and weakness who reported moderate low back pain intensity at least half the days in the last 6 months. Patients were randomly assigned to hip-focused physical therapy or spine-focused physical therapy using permuted blocks with random block size, stratified by site and sex (ie, male or female). The primary outcomes were self-reported disability using the Quebec Back Pain Disability Scale (QBPDS) and performance-based 10-Meter Walk Test (10MWT) at 8 weeks. All analyses were done in the intention-to-treat population. Adverse events were collected by study staff via a possible adverse event reporting form and then adjudicated by site investigators. This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04009837., Findings: Between Nov 1, 2019, and April 30, 2022, 184 participants were randomly assigned to receive hip-focused (n=91) or spine-focused physical therapy (n=93) interventions. The mean age was 70·7 (SD 6·2) years. 121 (66%) of 184 participants were women, 63 (34%) were men, and 149 (81%) were White. At 8 weeks, the mean between-group difference on the QBPDS was 4·0 (95% CI 0·5 to 7·5), favouring hip-focused physical therapy. Both groups had similar, clinically meaningful gait speed improvements (10MWT) at 8 weeks (mean difference 0·004 m/s [95% CI -0·044 to 0·052]). No serious adverse events were related to study participation., Interpretation: Tailored hip-focused physical therapy demonstrated greater improvements in low back pain-related disability at 8 weeks. However, both hip-focused physical therapy and spine-focused physical therapy produced clinically meaningful improvements in disability and function for this high-risk population at 6 months. These findings warrant further investigation before clinical implementation., Funding: US National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health., Competing Interests: Declaration of interest GEH, SZG, JMP, JMS, SP, CBS, JK, and CGP report grants from the US National Institute of Health. CGP also reports grants from the US Department of Defense and the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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8. Chronotropic Incompetence During Exercise Testing as a Marker of Autonomic Dysfunction in Individuals with Early Parkinson's Disease.
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Griffith G, Lamotte G, Mehta N, Fan P, Nikolich J, Springman V, Suttman E, Joslin E, Balfany K, Dunlap M, Kohrt WM, Christiansen CL, Melanson EL, Josbeno D, Chahine LM, Patterson CG, and Corcos DM
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Exercise Test, Heart Rate physiology, Parkinson Disease complications, Heart Failure, Autonomic Nervous System Diseases diagnosis, Autonomic Nervous System Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Background: An attenuated heart rate response to exercise, termed chronotropic incompetence, has been reported in Parkinson's disease (PD). Chronotropic incompetence may be a marker of autonomic dysfunction and a cause of exercise intolerance in early stages of PD., Objective: To investigate the relationship between chronotropic incompetence, orthostatic blood pressure change (supine - standing), and exercise performance (maximal oxygen consumption, VO2peak) in individuals with early PD within 5 years of diagnosis not on dopaminergic medications., Methods: We performed secondary analyses of heart rate and blood pressure data from the Study in Parkinson's Disease of Exercise (SPARX)., Results: 128 individuals were enrolled into SPARX (63.7±9.3 years; 57.0% male, 0.4 years since diagnosis [median]). 103 individuals were not taking chronotropic medications, of which 90 had a normal maximal heart rate response to exercise testing (155.3±14.0 bpm; PDnon-chrono) and 13 showed evidence of chronotropic incompetence (121.3±11.3 bpm; PDchrono, p < 0.05). PDchrono had decreased VO2peak compared to PDnon-chrono (19.7±4.5 mL/kg/min and 24.3±5.8 mL/kg/min, respectively, p = 0.027). There was a positive correlation between peak heart rate during exercise and the change in systolic blood pressure from supine to standing (r = 0.365, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: A subgroup of individuals with early PD not on dopaminergic medication had chronotropic incompetence and decreased VO2peak, which may be related to autonomic dysfunction. Evaluation of both heart rate responses to incremental exercise and orthostatic vital signs may serve as biomarkers of early autonomic impairment and guide treatment. Further studies should investigate whether cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction affects the ability to exercise and whether exercise training improves autonomic dysfunction.
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- 2024
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9. Remote ischaemic conditioning combined with bimanual task training to enhance bimanual skill learning and corticospinal excitability in children with unilateral cerebral palsy: a study protocol of a single centre, phase II randomised controlled trial.
- Author
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Surkar SM, Willson JD, Cassidy JM, Kantak S, and Patterson CG
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- Child, Humans, Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic, Hand, Learning, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Upper Extremity, Adolescent, Cerebral Palsy
- Abstract
Introduction: Children with unilateral cerebral palsy (UCP) have difficulty in bimanual coordination that restricts the child's independence in daily activities. Although several efficacious interventions to improve bimanual coordination exist, these interventions often require higher training doses and have modest effect sizes. Thus, there is a critical need to find an effective priming agent that, when paired with task-specific training, will facilitate neurobiological processes to enhance the magnitude of training effects and subsequently improve functional capabilities of children with UCP. The aim of this study is to determine the effects of a novel priming agent, remote ischaemic conditioning (RIC), combined with bimanual training on bimanual skill learning and corticospinal excitability in children with UCP., Methods and Analyses: 46 children, aged 8-16 years, will be randomly assigned to receive RIC or sham conditioning combined with 5 days of bimanual skill (cup stacking) training (15 trials per session). RIC or sham conditioning will be performed with a standard conditioning protocol of five cycles of alternative inflation and deflation of a pressure cuff on the affected arm with the pressure of at least 20 mm Hg above systolic blood pressure for RIC and 25 mm Hg for sham conditioning. Primary outcomes will be movement time and corticospinal excitability measures determined with a single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Secondary outcomes include Assisting Hand Assessment, spatio-temporal kinematic variables and paired pulse TMS measures. All measures will be conducted before and immediately after the intervention. A mixed model analysis of variance will test the group×time interaction for all outcomes with group (RIC and sham) as between-subject and time (preintervention, postintervention) as within-subject factors., Ethics and Dissemination: The study has been approved by the University Medical Centre Institutional Review Board (UMCIRB #21-001913). We will disseminate the study findings via peer-reviewed publications and presentations at professional conferences., Trial Registration Number: NCT05777070., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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10. Bimanual Movement Characteristics and Real-World Performance Following Hand-Arm Bimanual Intensive Therapy in Children with Unilateral Cerebral Palsy.
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Gardas SS, Lysaght C, McMillan AG, Kantak S, Willson JD, Patterson CG, and Surkar SM
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to quantify characteristics of bimanual movement intensity during 30 h of hand-arm bimanual intensive therapy (HABIT) and bimanual performance (activities and participation) in real-world settings using accelerometers in children with unilateral cerebral palsy (UCP). Twenty-five children with UCP participated in a 30 h HABIT program. Data were collected from bilateral wrist-worn accelerometers during 30 h of HABIT to quantify the movement intensity and three days pre- and post-HABIT to assess real-world performance gains. Movement intensity and performance gains were measured using six standard accelerometer-derived variables. Bimanual capacity (body function and activities) was assessed using standardized hand function tests. We found that accelerometer variables increased significantly during HABIT, indicating increased bimanual symmetry and intensity. Post-HABIT, children demonstrated significant improvements in all accelerometer metrics, reflecting real-world performance gains. Children also achieved significant and clinically relevant changes in hand capacity following HABIT. Therefore, our findings suggest that accelerometers can objectively quantify bimanual movement intensity during HABIT. Moreover, HABIT enhances hand function as well as activities and participation in real-world situations in children with UCP.
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- 2023
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11. Toward the Identification of Distinct Phenotypes: Research Protocol for the Low Back Pain Biological, Biomechanical, and Behavioral (LB3P) Cohort Study and the BACPAC Mechanistic Research Center at the University of Pittsburgh.
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Vo NV, Piva SR, Patterson CG, McKernan GP, Zhou L, Bell KM, Anderst W, Greco CM, Schneider MJ, Delitto A, Dicianno BE, Darwin J, and Sowa GA
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- Humans, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Back Pain, Phenotype, Observational Studies as Topic, Low Back Pain diagnosis, Low Back Pain therapy
- Abstract
As a member of the Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC), the University of Pittsburgh Mechanistic Research Center's research goal is to phenotype chronic low back pain using biological, biomechanical, and behavioral domains using a prospective, observational cohort study. Data will be collected from 1,000 participants with chronic low back pain according to BACPAC-wide harmonized and study-specific protocols. Participation lasts 12 months with one required in person baseline visit, an optional second in person visit for advanced biomechanical assessment, and electronic follow ups at months 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, and 12 to assess low back pain status and response to prescribed treatments. Behavioral data analysis includes a battery of patient-reported outcomes, social determinants of health, quantitative sensory testing, and physical activity. Biological data analysis includes omics generated from blood, saliva, and spine tissue. Biomechanical data analysis includes a physical examination, lumbopelvic kinematics, and intervertebral kinematics. The statistical analysis includes traditional unsupervised machine learning approaches to categorize participants into groups and determine the variables that differentiate patients. Additional analysis includes the creation of a series of decision rules based on baseline measures and treatment pathways as inputs to predict clinical outcomes. The characteristics identified will contribute to future studies to assist clinicians in designing a personalized, optimal treatment approach for each patient., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine.)
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- 2023
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12. The Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) Research Program Data Harmonization: Rationale for Data Elements and Standards.
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Batorsky A, Bowden AE, Darwin J, Fields AJ, Greco CM, Harris RE, Hue TF, Kakyomya J, Mehling W, O'Neill C, Patterson CG, Piva SR, Sollmann N, Toups V, Wasan AD, Wasserman R, Williams DA, Vo NV, Psioda MA, and McCumber M
- Subjects
- Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Research Design, Low Back Pain therapy
- Abstract
Objective: One aim of the Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) Research Program is to develop an integrated model of chronic low back pain that is informed by combined data from translational research and clinical trials. We describe efforts to maximize data harmonization and accessibility to facilitate Consortium-wide analyses., Methods: Consortium-wide working groups established harmonized data elements to be collected in all studies and developed standards for tabular and nontabular data (eg, imaging and omics). The BACPAC Data Portal was developed to facilitate research collaboration across the Consortium., Results: Clinical experts developed the BACPAC Minimum Dataset with required domains and outcome measures to be collected by use of questionnaires across projects. Other nonrequired domain-specific measures are collected by multiple studies. To optimize cross-study analyses, a modified data standard was developed on the basis of the Clinical Data Interchange Standards Consortium Study Data Tabulation Model to harmonize data structures and facilitate integration of baseline characteristics, participant-reported outcomes, chronic low back pain treatments, clinical exam, functional performance, psychosocial characteristics, quantitative sensory testing, imaging, and biomechanical data. Standards to accommodate the unique features of chronic low back pain data were adopted. Research units submit standardized study data to the BACPAC Data Portal, developed as a secure cloud-based central data repository and computing infrastructure for researchers to access and conduct analyses on data collected by or acquired for BACPAC., Conclusions: BACPAC harmonization efforts and data standards serve as an innovative model for data integration that could be used as a framework for other consortia with multiple, decentralized research programs., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine.)
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- 2023
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13. Targeted multidomain intervention for complex mTBI: protocol for a multisite randomized controlled trial in military-age civilians.
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Elbin RJ, Trbovich A, Womble MN, Mucha A, Fedor S, Stephenson K, Holland C, Dollar C, Sparto P, Durfee K, Patterson CG, Smith CN, Huppert TJ, Okonkwo DO, Collins MW, and Kontos AP
- Abstract
Background: Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) affects ~18,000 military personnel each year, and although most will recover in 3-4 weeks, many experience persisting symptoms and impairment lasting months or longer. Current standard of care for U.S. military personnel with complex mTBI involves initial (<48 h) prescribed rest, followed by behavioral (e.g., physical activity, sleep regulation, stress reduction, hydration, nutrition), and symptom-guided management. There is growing agreement that mTBI involves different clinical profiles or subtypes that require a comprehensive multidomain evaluation and adjudication process, as well as a targeted approach to treatment. However, there is a lack of research examining the effectiveness of this approach to assessing and treating mTBI. This multisite randomized controlled trial (RCT) will determine the effectiveness of a targeted multidomain (T-MD) intervention (anxiety/mood, cognitive, migraine, ocular, vestibular; and sleep, autonomic) compared to usual care (behavioral management) in military-aged civilians with complex mTBI., Methods: This study employs a single-blinded, two-group repeated measures design. The RCT will enroll up to 250 military-aged civilians (18-49 yrs) with a diagnosed complex mTBI within 8 days to 6 months of injury from two concussion specialty clinics. The two study arms are a T-MD intervention and a usual care, behavioral management control group. All participants will complete a comprehensive, multidomain clinical evaluation at their first clinical visit. Information gathered from this evaluation will be used to adjudicate mTBI clinical profiles. Participants will then be randomized to either the 4-week T-MD or control arm. The T-MD group will receive targeted interventions that correspond to the patient's clinical profile (s) and the control group will receive behavioral management strategies. Primary outcomes for this study are changes from enrollment to post-intervention on the Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory (NSI), Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC), and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). Time to return to activity (RTA), and healthcare utilization costs will also be assessed., Discussion: Study findings may inform a more effective approach to treat complex mTBI in military personnel and civilians, reduce morbidity, and accelerate safe return-to-duty/activity., Ethics and Dissemination: The study is approved by the University of Pittsburgh Institutional Review board and registered at clinicaltrials.gov. Dissemination plans include peer-reviewed publications and presentations at professional meetings., Clinical Trial Registration: www.clinicaltrials.gov, identifier: NCT04549532., Competing Interests: AK and MC receive funding for research through the University of Pittsburgh from the National Football League and royalties from APA Books. MC was a co-developer and shareholder for ImPACT applications (ended December 2019). The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elbin, Trbovich, Womble, Mucha, Fedor, Stephenson, Holland, Dollar, Sparto, Durfee, Patterson, Smith, Huppert, Okonkwo, Collins and Kontos.)
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- 2023
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14. Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Incidence of High-Impact Chronic Pain Among Primary Care Patients with Acute Low Back Pain: A Cohort Study.
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Roseen EJ, Smith CN, Essien UR, Cozier YC, Joyce C, Morone NE, Phillips RS, Gergen Barnett K, Patterson CG, Wegener ST, Brennan GP, Delitto A, Saper RB, Beneciuk JM, and Stevans JM
- Subjects
- Adult, United States, Humans, Female, Male, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Incidence, Primary Health Care, Chronic Pain epidemiology, Low Back Pain epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: We assessed whether race or ethnicity was associated with the incidence of high-impact chronic low back pain (cLBP) among adults consulting a primary care provider for acute low back pain (aLBP)., Methods: In this secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study, patients with aLBP were identified through screening at seventy-seven primary care practices from four geographic regions. Incidence of high-impact cLBP was defined as the subset of patients with cLBP and at least moderate disability on Oswestry Disability Index [ODI >30]) at 6 months. General linear mixed models provided adjusted estimates of association between race/ethnicity and high-impact cLBP., Results: We identified 9,088 patients with aLBP (81.3% White; 14.3% Black; 4.4% Hispanic). Black/Hispanic patients compared to White patients, were younger and more likely to be female, obese, have Medicaid insurance, worse disability on ODI, and were at higher risk of persistent disability on STarT Back Tool (all P < .0001). At 6 months, more Black and Hispanic patients reported high-impact cLBP (30% and 25%, respectively) compared to White patients (15%, P < .0001, n = 5,035). After adjusting for measured differences in socioeconomic and back-related risk factors, compared to White patients, the increased odds of high-impact cLBP remained statistically significant for Black but not Hispanic patients (adjusted odds ration [aOR] = 1.40, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.05-1.87 and aOR = 1.25, 95%CI: 0.83-1.90, respectively)., Conclusions: We observed an increased incidence of high-impact cLBP among Black and Hispanic patients compared to White patients. This disparity was partly explained by racial/ethnic differences in socioeconomic and back-related risk factors. Interventions that target these factors to reduce pain-related disparities should be evaluated., Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT02647658., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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15. Human subthalamic nucleus neurons differentially encode speech and limb movement.
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Johari K, Kelley RM, Tjaden K, Patterson CG, Rohl AH, Berger JI, Corcos DM, and Greenlee JDW
- Abstract
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN), which consistently improves limb motor functions, shows mixed effects on speech functions in Parkinson's disease (PD). One possible explanation for this discrepancy is that STN neurons may differentially encode speech and limb movement. However, this hypothesis has not yet been tested. We examined how STN is modulated by limb movement and speech by recording 69 single- and multi-unit neuronal clusters in 12 intraoperative PD patients. Our findings indicated: (1) diverse patterns of modulation in neuronal firing rates in STN for speech and limb movement; (2) a higher number of STN neurons were modulated by speech vs. limb movement; (3) an overall increase in neuronal firing rates for speech vs. limb movement; and (4) participants with longer disease duration had higher firing rates. These data provide new insights into the role of STN neurons in speech and limb movement., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Johari, Kelley, Tjaden, Patterson, Rohl, Berger, Corcos and Greenlee.)
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- 2023
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16. The Emergency Medical Services Sleep Health Study: A cluster-randomized trial.
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Patterson PD, Martin SE, Brassil BN, Hsiao WH, Weaver MD, Okerman TS, Seitz SN, Patterson CG, and Robinson K
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- Humans, United States, Sleep, Fatigue, Emergency Medical Services, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
- Abstract
Background: Greater than half of emergency medical services (EMS) clinician shift workers report poor sleep, fatigue, and inadequate recovery between shifts. We hypothesized that EMS clinicians randomized to receive tailored sleep health education would have improved sleep quality and less fatigue compared to wait-list controls after 3 months., Methods: We used a cluster-randomized, 2-arm, wait-list control study design (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT04218279). Recruitment of EMS agencies (clusters) was nationwide. Our study was powered at 88% to detect a 0.4 standard deviation difference in sleep quality with 20 agencies per arm and a minimum of 10 individuals per agency. The primary outcome was measured using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) at 3-month follow-up. Our intervention was accessible in an online, asynchronous format and comprised of 10 brief education modules that address fatigue mitigation topics prescribed by the American College of Occupational Environmental Medicine., Results: In total, 36 EMS agencies and 678 individuals enrolled. Attrition at 3 months did not differ by study group (Intervention = 17.4% vs. Wait-list control = 18.2%; p = .37). Intention-to-treat analyses detected no differences in PSQI and fatigue scores at 3 months. Per protocol analyses showed the greater the number of education modules viewed, the greater the improvement in sleep quality and the greater the reduction in fatigue (p < .05)., Conclusions: While intention-to-treat analyses revealed no differences in sleep quality or fatigue at 3 months, per protocol findings identified select groups of EMS clinician shift workers who may benefit from sleep health education. Our findings may inform fatigue risk management programs., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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17. Effect of Short versus Long Duration Naps on Blood Pressure during Simulated Night Shift Work: A Randomized Crossover Trial.
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Patterson PD, Okerman TS, Roach DGL, Weaver MD, Patterson CG, Martin SE, Okwiya N, Nong L, Eyiba C, Huff JR, Ruzicka A, Ruggieri J, McIlvaine Q, and Weiss LS
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Male, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Blood Pressure, Cross-Over Studies, Work Schedule Tolerance physiology, Sleep, Shift Work Schedule, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Objective: Blunting of the sleep-related dip in blood pressure (BP) has been linked to numerous cardiovascular outcomes including myocardial infarction. Blunting of BP dipping occurs during night shift work and previous research suggest that a 60-min or longer on-shift nap is needed to restore normal/healthy BP dipping. We sought to determine the effect of different durations of napping on BP during and following simulated night shifts. We hypothesized that the greatest benefit in terms of restoration of normal BP dipping during night shift work would be observed during a longer duration nap versus a shorter nap opportunity., Methods: We used a randomized crossover laboratory-based study design. Participants consented to complete three separate 72-hr conditions that included a 12-hr simulated night shift. Nap conditions included a 30-min and 2-hr nap compared to a no-nap condition. Ambulatory BP monitoring was assessed hourly and every 10-30 mins during in-lab naps. Blunted BP dipping during in-lab naps was the primary outcome. Goal enrollment of 25 (35 with attrition) provided 80% power to detect a mean difference of 5 mmHg in BP between nap conditions., Results: Of the 58 screened, 28 were consented, and 26 completed all three 72-hr conditions. More than half (53.6%) were female. Mean age was 24.4 years (SD7.2). Most (85.7%) were certified as emergency medical technicians or paramedics. The mean percentage dip in systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) did not differ between the 30-min and 2-hr nap conditions ( p > 0.05), yet a greater proportion of participants experienced a 10-20% dip in SBP or DBP during the 2-hr nap versus the 30-min nap ( p < 0.05). For every additional minute of total sleep during the 30-min nap, the percentage of SBP dip improved by 0.60%, and the percentage of DBP dip improved by 0.68% ( p < 0.05). These improvements approximate to a 6% per minute relative advancement toward normal/healthy BP dipping., Conclusions: Restoration of a normal/healthy dip in BP is achievable during short and long duration nap opportunities during simulated night shift work. Our findings support the hypothesis that BP dipping is more common during longer 2-hr versus shorter 30-min naps., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04469803. Registered on 9 July 2020.
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- 2023
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18. Treatment effect modifiers for individuals with acute low back pain: secondary analysis of the TARGET trial.
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Beneciuk JM, George SZ, Patterson CG, Smith CN, Brennan GP, Wegener ST, Roseen EJ, Saper RB, and Delitto A
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- Humans, Physical Therapy Modalities, Pain Measurement, Physical Examination, Disability Evaluation, Low Back Pain drug therapy, Acute Pain drug therapy
- Abstract
Abstract: Treatment effect modifiers identify patient characteristics associated with treatment responses. The purpose of this secondary analysis was to identify potential treatment effect modifiers for disability from the TARGET trial that compared usual care (control) with usual care + psychologically informed physical therapy (PIPT). The sample consisted of a STarT Back tool identified high-risk patients with acute low back pain that completed Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) data at index visit and 6 months later (n = 1250). Candidate treatment effect modifiers were identified a priori and informed by the literature. Linear mixed models tested for treatment effect modification through tests of statistical interaction. All statistical interactions ( P ≤ 0.20) were stratified by modifier to inspect for specific effects ( P ≤ 0.05). Smoking was identified as a potential effect modifier (treatment * smoking interaction, P = 0.08). In participants who were smokers, the effect of PIPT was (ODI = 5.5; 95% CI: 0.6-10.4; P = 0.03) compared with usual care. In participants who were nonsmokers, the effect of PIPT was (ODI = 1.5; 95% CI: -1.4 to 4.4; P = 0.31) compared with usual care. Pain medication was also identified as a potential effect modifier (treatment × pain medication interaction, P = 0.10). In participants prescribed ≥3 pain medications, the effect of PIPT was (ODI = 7.1; 95% CI: -0.1 to 14.2; P = 0.05) compared with usual care. The PIPT effect for participants prescribed no pain medication was (ODI = 3.5; 95% CI: -0.4 to 7.4; P = 0.08) and for participants prescribed 1 to 2 pain medications was (ODI = 0.6; 95% CI: -2.5 to 3.7; P = 0.70) when compared with usual care. These findings may be used for generating hypotheses and planning future clinical trials investigating the effectiveness of tailored application of PIPT., (Copyright © 2022 International Association for the Study of Pain.)
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- 2023
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19. Are Short Duration Naps Better than Long Duration Naps for Mitigating Sleep Inertia? Brief Report of a Randomized Crossover Trial of Simulated Night Shift Work.
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Patterson PD, Okerman TS, Roach DGL, Hilditch CJ, Weaver MD, Patterson CG, Sheffield MA, Di Salvatore JS, Bernstein H, Georges G, Andreozzi A, Willson CM, Jain D, Martin SE, and Weiss LS
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- Humans, Female, Cross-Over Studies, Sleep, Wakefulness, Work Schedule Tolerance, Shift Work Schedule, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Objective: We sought to test the effects of different duration naps on post-nap cognitive performance during simulated night shifts., Methods: We used a randomized laboratory-based crossover trial design with simulated 12-hr night shifts and each participant completing three conditions of 72 hrs each (Clinicaltrials.gov; registration # NCT04469803). The three conditions tested included no-nap, a 30-min nap opportunity, and a 2-hr nap opportunity. Naps occurred at 02:00 hrs. Cognitive performance was assessed with the Brief 3-min Psychomotor Vigilance Test (PVT-B). Four PVT-B measures include: reaction time (RT in milliseconds (ms)), lapses (RT > 355 ms), false starts (reactions before stimulus or RT <100 ms), and speed (1,000/RT). The PVT-B was performed at the start of the simulated night shift (19:00), end of shift (07:00), pre-nap (02:00), and at 0 mins, 10 mins, 20 mins, and 30 mins following the 30-min and 2-hr nap conditions. Simultaneously, participants reported subjective ratings of fatigue and other constructs., Results: Twenty-eight (15 female), mostly certified emergency medical technicians or paramedics, consented to participate. For all three conditions, looking within condition, PVT-B lapse performance at the end of the 12-hr simulated night shift (at 07:00) was poorer compared to shift start ( p < 0.05). Performance on PVT-B speed, RT, and false starts were poorer at shift end than shift start for the no-nap and 30-min nap conditions ( p < 0.05), but not for the 2-hr nap condition ( p > 0.05). Compared to pre-nap measures, performance on the PVT-B assessed at 0 mins post-nap showed significant performance declines for lapses and speed for both the 30-min and 2-hr nap conditions ( p < 0.05), but not at 10, 20, or 30 mins post-nap. After waking from the 2-hr on-shift nap opportunity (at 0 mins), participants rated sleepiness, difficulty with concentration, and alertness poorer than pre-nap ( p < 0.05). Participants in the 30-min nap condition rated alertness poorer immediately after the nap (at 0 mins) compared to pre-nap ( p < 0.05)., Conclusions: While sleep inertia was detectable immediately following short 30-min and long 2-hr nap opportunities during simulated night shift work, deficits in cognitive performance and subjective ratings quickly dissipated and were not detectable at 10-30 mins post-nap.
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- 2023
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20. Implementation of active injury management (AIM) in youth with acute concussion: A randomized controlled trial.
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Thomas DG, Erpenbach H, Hickey RW, Waltzman D, Haarbauer-Krupa J, Nelson LD, Patterson CG, McCrea MA, Collins MW, and Kontos AP
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- Young Adult, Humans, Adolescent, Child, Adult, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Exercise, Post-Concussion Syndrome therapy, Post-Concussion Syndrome diagnosis, Post-Concussion Syndrome etiology, Brain Concussion therapy
- Abstract
Background: Nearly 2 million youth seek acute medical care following concussion in the U.S. each year. Current standard of care recommends rest for the first 48 h after a concussion. However, research suggests that prolonged rest may lengthen recovery time especially for patients with certain risk profiles. Research indicates that physical activity and behavioral management interventions (sleep, stress management) may enhance recovery. To date, there is limited empirical evidence to inform acute (<72 h) concussion recommendations for physical activity and behavioral management in adolescents., Objective: To determine the effectiveness of physical activity and behavioral management for acute concussion in adolescents and young adults, and to evaluate the role of patient characteristics on treatment response., Methods: This multicenter prospective randomized controlled trial will determine which combination of physical activity and behavioral management is most effective for patients 11-24 years old who present to the emergency department or concussion clinic within 72 h of injury. Participants are randomized into: 1) rest, 2) physical activity, 3) mobile health application (mHealth) behavioral management, or 4) physical activity and mHealth app conditions. Assessments at enrollment, 3-5 days, 14 days, 1 month, and 2 months include: concussion symptoms, balance, vestibular-ocular and cognitive assessments, quality of life, and recovery time. Somatic symptoms and other risk factors are evaluated at enrollment. Compliance with treatment and symptoms are assessed daily using actigraph and daily self-report. The primary study outcome is symptoms at 14 days., Conclusion: Prescribed physical activity and behavioral management may improve outcomes in youth following acute concussion., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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21. Implementation of Coach McLungs SM into primary care using a cluster randomized stepped wedge trial design.
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Ludden T, O'Hare K, Shade L, Reeves K, Patterson CG, and Tapp H
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- Humans, Child, Chronic Disease, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Primary Health Care, Decision Making, Shared, Asthma therapy
- Abstract
Background: Asthma is a prevalent chronic disease that is difficult to manage and associated with marked disparities in outcomes. One promising approach to addressing disparities is shared decision making (SDM), a method by which the patient and provider cooperatively make a decision about asthma care. SDM is associated with improved outcomes for patients; however, time constraints and staff availability are noted implementation barriers. Use of health information technology (IT) solutions may facilitate the utilization of SDM. Coach McLungs
SM is a collaborative web-based application that involves pediatric patients, their caregivers, and providers in a personalized experience while gathering patient-reported data. Background logic provides decision support so both audiences can develop a well-informed treatment plan together. The goal of this study is to evaluate the implementation of the Coach McLungsSM intervention into primary care., Methods: Implementation will be evaluated using a stepped wedge randomized control study design at 21 pediatric and family medicine practices within a large, integrated, nonprofit healthcare system. We will measure changes in emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and oral steroid use, which serve as surrogate measures for patient-centered asthma outcomes. We will use a generalized linear mixed models with logit link to test the hypothesis for the reduction in exacerbation rates specifying the fixed effects of intervention and time and random effects for practice and practice*time. This design achieves 84% power to detect the hypothesized effect size difference of 10% in overall exacerbation between control (40%) and intervention (30%) periods (two-sided, p = 0.05). Implementation will be guided using the Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change (ERIC), a compilation of implementation strategies, and evaluated using the CFIR (Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research) and RE-AIM (Reach Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance)., Discussion: We anticipate that a tailored implementation of Coach McLungsSM across diverse primary care practices will lead to a decrease in emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and oral steroid use for patients in the intervention group as compared to the control condition., Trial Registration: Clincaltrials.gov, NCT05059210. Registered 28 September 2021, https://www., Clinicaltrials: gov/ct2/show/NCT05059210., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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22. Primary Care Evaluation of a Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) Screening Education Intervention.
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Ludden T, Shade L, Thomas J, Russo MW, Leonard M, Zamor PJ, Patterson CG, and Tapp H
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- Male, Adult, Female, Humans, Mass Screening methods, Primary Health Care methods, Antiviral Agents, Hepacivirus, Hepatitis C diagnosis, Hepatitis C prevention & control
- Abstract
Introduction: Increased screening efforts and the development of effective antiviral treatments have led to marked improvement in Hepatitis C (HCV) patient outcomes. However, many people in the US are believed to have undiagnosed HCV. Successful screening strategies and access to a coordinated system of care are critical for HCV affected adults. The objective of this study was to evaluate a primary care HCV screening education intervention that took place 2018 to 2019 to improve primary care training and management of patients after the implementation of the electronic medical record (EMR) screening alert., Methods: Using 15 primary care practices located in vicinity of neighborhoods at-risk for higher rates of HCV infections, a stepped wedge randomized control study design was utilized to deliver an educational screening intervention. The education intervention was implemented sequentially with 5 practices being presented to every 3 months. Number of patients within the Baby Boomer cohort (birth years 1945-1965) were collected 3 months before the first practice receiving the intervention to 3 months after the last practice receiving the education intervention. The main outcome collected was the HCV screening. Generalized linear mixed models were used to test the hypothesis of improved screening rates after intervention implementation., Results: There were a total of 85,697 patients within the Baby Boomer cohort seen at the 15 practices. Practices receiving the intervention had patients who were more likely to be screened for HCV ( β = 0.259, P < .001 ; Odds Ratio [OR] [95%CI] 1.296 [1.098-1.529]).In terms of demographics, results showed that females are less likely to be screened than males ( β = -0.141, P < .001 ; OR [95%CI] 0.868[0.813 to 0.927]), Baby Boomer patients aged less than 65 were more likely to be screened than Baby Boomer patients aged 65 and older ( β = 0.293, P < .001 ; OR [95%CI] 1.340[1.251 to 1.436])., Discussion: This study looked at screening rates before and after an educational intervention which happened subsequent to the activation of an EMR alert. Whereas HCV EMR alerts showed an increase in HCV screenings before the education intervention, the addition of the education showed a modest increase in HCV screening rates for Baby Boomer patients., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: None., (© Copyright by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
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- 2022
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23. Study in Parkinson's disease of exercise phase 3 (SPARX3): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Patterson CG, Joslin E, Gil AB, Spigle W, Nemet T, Chahine L, Christiansen CL, Melanson E, Kohrt WM, Mancini M, Josbeno D, Balfany K, Griffith G, Dunlap MK, Lamotte G, Suttman E, Larson D, Branson C, McKee KE, Goelz L, Poon C, Tilley B, Kang UJ, Tansey MG, Luthra N, Tanner CM, Haus JM, Fantuzzi G, McFarland NR, Gonzalez-Latapi P, Foroud T, Motl R, Schwarzschild MA, Simuni T, Marek K, Naito A, Lungu C, and Corcos DM
- Subjects
- Antiparkinson Agents therapeutic use, Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor, C-Reactive Protein, Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic, Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins therapeutic use, Exercise, Exercise Therapy methods, Humans, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Treatment Outcome, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: To date, no medication has slowed the progression of Parkinson's disease (PD). Preclinical, epidemiological, and experimental data on humans all support many benefits of endurance exercise among persons with PD. The key question is whether there is a definitive additional benefit of exercising at high intensity, in terms of slowing disease progression, beyond the well-documented benefit of endurance training on a treadmill for fitness, gait, and functional mobility. This study will determine the efficacy of high-intensity endurance exercise as first-line therapy for persons diagnosed with PD within 3 years, and untreated with symptomatic therapy at baseline., Methods: This is a multicenter, randomized, evaluator-blinded study of endurance exercise training. The exercise intervention will be delivered by treadmill at 2 doses over 18 months: moderate intensity (4 days/week for 30 min per session at 60-65% maximum heart rate) and high intensity (4 days/week for 30 min per session at 80-85% maximum heart rate). We will randomize 370 participants and follow them at multiple time points for 24 months. The primary outcome is the Movement Disorders Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) motor score (Part III) with the primary analysis assessing the change in MDS-UPDRS motor score (Part III) over 12 months, or until initiation of symptomatic antiparkinsonian treatment if before 12 months. Secondary outcomes are striatal dopamine transporter binding, 6-min walk distance, number of daily steps, cognitive function, physical fitness, quality of life, time to initiate dopaminergic medication, circulating levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Tertiary outcomes are walking stride length and turning velocity., Discussion: SPARX3 is a Phase 3 clinical trial designed to determine the efficacy of high-intensity, endurance treadmill exercise to slow the progression of PD as measured by the MDS-UPDRS motor score. Establishing whether high-intensity endurance treadmill exercise can slow the progression of PD would mark a significant breakthrough in treating PD. It would have a meaningful impact on the quality of life of people with PD, their caregivers and public health., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04284436 . Registered on February 25, 2020., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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24. Alternative Designs for Testing Speech, Language, and Hearing Interventions: Cluster-Randomized Trials and Stepped-Wedge Designs.
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Patterson CG, Leland NE, Mormer E, and Palmer CV
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- Cluster Analysis, Hearing, Humans, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Speech, Language, Research Design
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Purpose: Individual-randomized trials are the gold standard for testing the efficacy and effectiveness of drugs, devices, and behavioral interventions. Health care delivery, educational, and programmatic interventions are often complex, involving multiple levels of change and measurement precluding individual randomization for testing. Cluster-randomized trials and cluster-randomized stepped-wedge trials are alternatives where the intervention is allocated at the group level, such as a clinic or a school, and the outcomes are measured at the person level. These designs are introduced along with the statistical implications of similarities among individuals within the same cluster. We also illustrate the parameters that have the most impact on the likelihood of detecting intervention effects, which must be considered when planning these trials., Conclusion: Cluster-randomized and stepped-wedge designs should be considered by researchers as experimental alternatives to individual-randomized trials when testing speech, language, and hearing care interventions in real-world settings.
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- 2022
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25. Individual participant data (IPD)-level meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials to estimate the vitamin D dietary requirements in dark-skinned individuals resident at high latitude.
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Cashman KD, Kiely ME, Andersen R, Grønborg IM, Tetens I, Tripkovic L, Lanham-New SA, Lamberg-Allardt C, Adebayo FA, Gallagher JC, Smith LM, Sacheck JM, Huang Q, Ng K, Yuan C, Giovannucci EL, Rajakumar K, Patterson CG, Öhlund I, Lind T, Åkeson PK, and Ritz C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Dietary Supplements, Humans, Middle Aged, Nutritional Requirements, Seasons, Vitamins, Young Adult, Vitamin D, Vitamin D Deficiency epidemiology, Vitamin D Deficiency prevention & control
- Abstract
Context and Purpose: There is an urgent need to develop vitamin D dietary recommendations for dark-skinned populations resident at high latitude. Using data from randomised controlled trials (RCTs) with vitamin D
3 -supplements/fortified foods, we undertook an individual participant data-level meta-regression (IPD) analysis of the response of wintertime serum 25-hydroxyvitamin (25(OH)D) to total vitamin D intake among dark-skinned children and adults residing at ≥ 40° N and derived dietary requirement values for vitamin D., Methods: IPD analysis using data from 677 dark-skinned participants (of Black or South Asian descent; ages 5-86 years) in 10 RCTs with vitamin D supplements/fortified foods identified via a systematic review and predefined eligibility criteria. Outcome measures were vitamin D intake estimates across a range of 25(OH)D thresholds., Results: To maintain serum 25(OH)D concentrations ≥ 25 and 30 nmol/L in 97.5% of individuals, 23.9 and 27.3 µg/day of vitamin D, respectively, were required among South Asian and 24.1 and 33.2 µg/day, respectively, among Black participants. Overall, our age-stratified intake estimates did not exceed age-specific Tolerable Upper Intake Levels for vitamin D. The vitamin D intake required by dark-skinned individuals to maintain 97.5% of winter 25(OH)D concentrations ≥ 50 nmol/L was 66.8 µg/day. This intake predicted that the upper 2.5% of individuals could potentially achieve serum 25(OH)D concentrations ≥ 158 nmol/L, which has been linked to potential adverse effects in older adults in supplementation studies., Conclusions: Our IPD-derived vitamin D intakes required to maintain 97.5% of winter 25(OH)D concentrations ≥ 25, 30 and 50 nmol/L are substantially higher than the equivalent estimates for White individuals. These requirement estimates are also higher than those currently recommended internationally by several agencies, which are based predominantly on data from Whites and derived from standard meta-regression based on aggregate data. Much more work is needed in dark-skinned populations both in the dose-response relationship and risk characterisation for health outcomes., Trail Registration: PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (Registration Number: CRD42018097260)., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.)- Published
- 2022
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26. The Manual Therapy and Strengthening for the Hip (MASH) Trial: Protocol for a Multisite Randomized Trial of a Subgroup of Older Adults With Chronic Back and Hip Pain.
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Pugliese JM, Coyle PC, Knox PJ, Sions JM, Patterson CG, Pohlig RT, Simon CB, Weiner DK, George SZ, Piva S, and Hicks GE
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Arthralgia physiopathology, Chronic Pain, Disability Evaluation, Humans, Low Back Pain physiopathology, Middle Aged, Muscle Weakness physiopathology, Single-Blind Method, Walk Test, Arthralgia therapy, Exercise Therapy methods, Hip Joint physiopathology, Low Back Pain therapy, Muscle Weakness therapy, Musculoskeletal Manipulations methods
- Abstract
Objective: Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a disabling and costly condition for older adults that is difficult to properly classify and treat. In a cohort study, a subgroup of older adults with CLBP who had elevated hip pain and hip muscle weakness was identified; this subgroup differentiated itself by being at higher risk for future mobility decline. The primary purpose of this clinical trial is to evaluate whether a hip-focused low back pain (LBP) treatment provides better disability and physical performance outcomes for this at-risk group compared with a spine-focused LBP treatment., Methods: This study is a multisite, single-blinded, randomized controlled, parallel arm, Phase II trial conducted across 3 clinical research sites. A total of 180 people aged between 60 and 85 years with CLBP and hip pain are being recruited. Participants undergo a comprehensive baseline assessment and are randomized into 1 of 2 intervention arms: hip-focused or spine-focused. They are treated twice weekly by a licensed physical therapist for 8 weeks and undergo follow-up assessments at 8 weeks and 6 months after randomization. Primary outcome measures include the Quebec Low Back Disability Scale and the 10-Meter Walk Test, which are measures of self-report and performance-based physical function, respectively., Impact: This multicenter, randomized clinical trial will determine whether a hip-focused or spine-focused physical therapist intervention results in improved disability and physical performance for a subgroup of older adults with CLBP and hip pain who are at increased risk of mobility decline. This trial will help further the development of effective interventions for this subgroup of older adults with CLBP., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Physical Therapy Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2022
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27. Does MDS-UPDRS Provide Greater Sensitivity to Mild Disease than UPDRS in De Novo Parkinson's Disease?
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Tosin MHS, Stebbins GT, Comella C, Patterson CG, and Hall DA
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Background: The Movement Disorder Society revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) was designed to be more sensitive to mild motor severity than the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS)., Objective: To test whether MDS-UPDRS Part III items provide increased sensitivity to mild motor severity when compared to the same items of the UPDRS in de novo PD patients., Method: Using a sample of 129 de novo PD patients assessed at one time point simultaneously with both scales, we compared the scale's scores on the 17 items measuring the same motor function. The scaling anchors for the MDS-UPDRS were Slight, Mild, Moderate and Severe, and for the UPDRS were Mild, Moderate, Severe and Marked. Using Classical Test Theory (CTT) we compared the distributions of the scaling anchors from the individual items. Using Item Response Theory (IRT), we examined the sensitivity of the scaling anchors from each scale to the latent-trait measurement of overall parkinsonian motor severity., Results: There was 2193 observations of individual scaling anchors from the 17 items in both scales. The CTT approach revealed frequent floor effects with only the item assessing Gait demonstrating a significance difference in the scaling distribution between the scales ( P = 0.005). The IRT analyses revealed similar levels of sensitivity to the latent trait of PD motor function., Conclusion: These results do not support increased sensitivity of MDS-UPDRS over the UPDRS for assessing mild motor severity in de novo PD patients, with significant difference in the scaling only for the item assessing gait., Competing Interests: No specific funding was received for this work. and the authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest relevant to this work., (© 2021 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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28. Anatomic single vs. double-bundle ACL reconstruction: a randomized clinical trial-Part 1: clinical outcomes.
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Irrgang JJ, Tashman S, Patterson CG, Musahl V, West R, Oostdyk A, Galvin B, Poploski K, and Fu FH
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- Humans, Infant, Knee Joint surgery, Prospective Studies, Range of Motion, Articular, Treatment Outcome, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries surgery, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, Knee Injuries surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: Compare clinical outcomes of anatomic single-bundle (SB) to anatomic double-bundle (DB) anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). It was hypothesized that anatomic DB ACLR would result in better International Knee Documentation Committee Subjective Knee Form (IKDC-SKF) scores and reduced anterior and rotatory laxity compared to SB ACLR., Methods: Active individuals between 14 and 50 years of age that presented within 12 months of injury were eligible to participate. Individuals with prior injury or surgery of either knee, greater than a grade 1 concomitant knee ligament injury, or ACL insertion sites less than 14 mm or greater than 18 mm were excluded. Subjects were randomized to undergo SB or DB ACLR with a 10 mm-wide quadriceps tendon autograft harvested with a patellar bone block and were followed for 24 months. The primary outcome measures included the IKDC-SKF and KT-1000 (side to side difference) and pivot shift tests. Other secondary outcomes included measures of sports activity and participation, range of motion (ROM) and re-injury., Results: Enrollment in the study was suspended due to patellar fractures related to harvest of the patellar bone plug. At that time, 57 subjects had been randomized (29 DB) and two-year follow-up was attained from 51 (89.5%). At 24-month follow-up there were no between-group differences detected for the primary outcomes. Twenty-one (77.8%) DB's and 20 (83.3%) SB's reported returning to pre-injury sports 2 years after surgery (n.s) Three subjects (2 DB's, 5.3% of total) sustained a graft rupture and 5 individuals (4 SB's, 8.8% of total) had a subsequent meniscus injury., Conclusions: Due to the early termination of the study, there were no detectable differences in clinical outcome between anatomic SB and DB ACLR when performed with a quadriceps tendon autograft with a bone block in individuals with ACL insertion sites that range from 14 to 18 mm., Level of Evidence: Level 2., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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29. Assessing the biofidelity of in vitro biomechanical testing of the human cervical spine.
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Wawrose RA, Howington FE, LeVasseur CM, Smith CN, Couch BK, Shaw JD, Donaldson WF, Lee JY, Patterson CG, Anderst WJ, and Bell KM
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- Adult, Biomechanical Phenomena, Female, Humans, Intervertebral Disc physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Range of Motion, Articular, Rotation, Cervical Vertebrae physiology
- Abstract
In vitro biomechanical studies of the osteoligamentous spine are widely used to characterize normal biomechanics, identify injury mechanisms, and assess the effects of degeneration and surgical instrumentation on spine mechanics. The objective of this study was to determine how well four standards in vitro loading paradigms replicate in vivo kinematics with regards to the instantaneous center of rotation and arthrokinematics in relation to disc deformation. In vivo data were previously collected from 20 asymptomatic participants (45.5 ± 5.8 years) who performed full range of motion neck flexion-extension (FE) within a biplane x-ray system. Intervertebral kinematics were determined with sub-millimeter precision using a validated model-based tracking process. Ten cadaveric spines (51.8 ± 7.3 years) were tested in FE within a robotic testing system. Each specimen was tested under four loading conditions: pure moment, axial loading, follower loading, and combined loading. The in vivo and in vitro bone motion data were directly compared. The average in vitro instant center of rotation was significantly more anterior in all four loading paradigms for all levels. In general, the anterior and posterior disc heights were larger in the in vitro models than in vivo. However, after adjusting for gender, the observed differences in disc height were not statistically significant. This data suggests that in vitro biomechanical testing alone may fail to replicate in vivo conditions, with significant implications for novel motion preservation devices such as cervical disc arthroplasty implants., (© 2020 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2021
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30. Stratified care to prevent chronic low back pain in high-risk patients: The TARGET trial. A multi-site pragmatic cluster randomized trial.
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Delitto A, Patterson CG, Stevans JM, Freburger JK, Khoja SS, Schneider MJ, Greco CM, Freel JA, Sowa GA, Wasan AD, Brennan GP, Hunter SJ, Minick KI, Wegener ST, Ephraim PL, Beneciuk JM, George SZ, and Saper RB
- Abstract
Background: Many patients with acute low back pain (LBP) first seek care from primary care physicians. Evidence is lacking for interventions to prevent transition to chronic LBP in this setting. We aimed to test if implementation of a risk-stratified approach to care would result in lower rates of chronic LBP and improved self-reported disability., Methods: We conducted a pragmatic, cluster randomized trial using 77 primary care clinics in four health care systems across the United States. Practices were randomly assigned to a stratified approach to care (intervention) or usual care (control). Using the STarTBack screening tool, adults with acute LBP were screened low, medium, and high-risk. Patients screened as high-risk were eligible. The intervention included electronic best practice alerts triggering referrals for psychologically informed physical therapy (PIPT). PIPT education was targeted to community clinics geographically close to intervention primary care clinics. Primary outcomes were transition to chronic LBP and self-reported disability at six months. Trial Registry: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02647658., Findings: Between May 2016 and June 2018, 1207 patients from 38 intervention and 1093 from 37 control practices were followed. In the intervention arm, around 50% of patients were referred for physical therapy (36% for PIPT) compared to 30% in the control. At 6 months, 47% of patients reported transition to chronic LBP in the intervention arm (38 practices, n = 658) versus 51% of patients in the control arm (35 practices, n = 635; OR=0.83 95% CI 0.64, 1.09; p = 0.18). No differences in disability were detected (difference -2·1, 95% CI -4.9-0.6; p = 0.12). Opioids and imaging were prescribed in 22%-25% and 23%-26% of initial visits, for intervention and control, respectively. Twelve-month LBP utilization was similar in the two groups., Interpretation: There were no differences detected in transition to chronic LBP among patients presenting with acute LBP using a stratified approach to care. Opioid and imaging prescribing rates were non-concordant with clinical guidelines., Funding: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) contract # PCS-1402-10867., Competing Interests: Dr. Delitto reports grants from PCORI, grants from NIH, grants from DOD, outside the submitted work; Dr. Patterson reports grants from Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute, during the conduct of the study; Dr. Stevans reports grants from PCORI, during the conduct of the study; Dr. Khoja reports grants from PCORI, during the conduct of the study; Dr. Freel has nothing to disclose; Dr. Schneider reports grants from Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute, during the conduct of the study; Dr. Greco reports grants from Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, during the conduct of the study; Dr. Sowa reports grants from PCORI, during the conduct of the study; grants from NIH, USAMRMC, VA, The Pittsburgh Foundation, outside the submitted work; Dr. Brennan reports other institutional support from Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), during the conduct of the study; other institutional support from Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), outside the submitted work; Stephen J. Hunter has nothing to disclose; Dr. Minick has nothing to disclose; Dr. Wasan has nothing to disclose; Dr. Wegener reports grants from PCORI, during the conduct of the study; Ms. Ephraim has nothing to disclose; Dr. Freburger reports other from American Physical Therapy Association, outside the submitted work; Dr. Beneciuk reports grants from Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, during the conduct of the study; Dr. George reports personal fees from Rehab Essentials, Inc, personal fees from Med Risk, LLC, grants from NIH, other from Duke University, all outside the submitted work; Dr. Saper has nothing to disclose., (© 2021 The Authors.)
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- 2021
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31. Risk Factors Associated With Transition From Acute to Chronic Low Back Pain in US Patients Seeking Primary Care.
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Stevans JM, Delitto A, Khoja SS, Patterson CG, Smith CN, Schneider MJ, Freburger JK, Greco CM, Freel JA, Sowa GA, Wasan AD, Brennan GP, Hunter SJ, Minick KI, Wegener ST, Ephraim PL, Friedman M, Beneciuk JM, George SZ, and Saper RB
- Subjects
- Acute Pain diagnostic imaging, Acute Pain epidemiology, Acute Pain therapy, Adult, Aged, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Chronic Pain epidemiology, Depressive Disorder epidemiology, Diagnostic Imaging statistics & numerical data, Disease Progression, Female, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Humans, Low Back Pain diagnostic imaging, Low Back Pain epidemiology, Low Back Pain therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity epidemiology, Odds Ratio, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Prognosis, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Smoking epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Acute Pain physiopathology, Chronic Pain physiopathology, Low Back Pain physiopathology, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Importance: Acute low back pain (LBP) is highly prevalent, with a presumed favorable prognosis; however, once chronic, LBP becomes a disabling and expensive condition. Acute to chronic LBP transition rates vary widely owing to absence of standardized operational definitions, and it is unknown whether a standardized prognostic tool (ie, Subgroups for Targeted Treatment Back tool [SBT]) can estimate this transition or whether early non-guideline concordant treatment is associated with the transition to chronic LBP., Objective: To assess the associations between the transition from acute to chronic LBP with SBT risk strata; demographic, clinical, and practice characteristics; and guideline nonconcordant processes of care., Design, Setting, and Participants: This inception cohort study was conducted alongside a multisite, pragmatic cluster randomized trial. Adult patients with acute LBP stratified by SBT risk were enrolled in 77 primary care practices in 4 regions across the United States between May 2016 and June 2018 and followed up for 6 months, with final follow-up completed by March 2019. Data analysis was conducted from January to March 2020., Exposures: SBT risk strata and early LBP guideline nonconcordant processes of care (eg, receipt of opioids, imaging, and subspecialty referral)., Main Outcomes and Measures: Transition from acute to chronic LBP at 6 months using the National Institutes of Health Task Force on Research Standards consensus definition of chronic LBP. Patient demographic characteristics, clinical factors, and LBP process of care were obtained via electronic medical records., Results: Overall, 5233 patients with acute LBP (3029 [58%] women; 4353 [83%] White individuals; mean [SD] age 50.6 [16.9] years; 1788 [34%] low risk; 2152 [41%] medium risk; and 1293 [25%] high risk) were included. Overall transition rate to chronic LBP at six months was 32% (1666 patients). In a multivariable model, SBT risk stratum was positively associated with transition to chronic LBP (eg, high-risk vs low-risk groups: adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 2.45; 95% CI, 2.00-2.98; P < .001). Patient and clinical characteristics associated with transition to chronic LBP included obesity (aOR, 1.52; 95% CI, 1.28-1.80; P < .001); smoking (aOR, 1.56; 95% CI, 1.29-1.89; P < .001); severe and very severe baseline disability (aOR, 1.82; 95% CI, 1.48-2.24; P < .001 and aOR, 2.08; 95% CI, 1.60-2.68; P < .001, respectively) and diagnosed depression/anxiety (aOR, 1.66; 95% CI, 1.28-2.15; P < .001). After controlling for all other variables, patients exposed to 1, 2, or 3 nonconcordant processes of care within the first 21 days were 1.39 (95% CI, 1.21-2.32), 1.88 (95% CI, 1.53-2.32), and 2.16 (95% CI, 1.10-4.25) times more likely to develop chronic LBP compared with those with no exposure (P < .001)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study, the transition rate to chronic LBP was substantial and increased correspondingly with SBT stratum and early exposure to guideline nonconcordant care.
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- 2021
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32. Resolving the Burden of Low Back Pain in Military Service Members and Veterans (RESOLVE): Protocol for a Multisite Pragmatic Clinical Trial.
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Farrokhi S, Russell Esposito E, McPherson D, Mazzone B, Condon R, Patterson CG, Schneider M, Greco CM, Delitto A, Highsmith MJ, Hendershot BD, Maikos J, and Dearth CL
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- Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Pain Measurement, Physical Therapy Modalities, Low Back Pain therapy, Veterans
- Abstract
Background: Physical therapy (PT) is frequently used for the management of low back pain (LBP) within the US Departments of Defense (DOD) and Veterans Affairs (VA). However, variations in PT practice patterns and use of ineffective interventions lower the quality and increase the cost of care. Although adherence to the clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) can improve the outcomes and cost-effectiveness of LBP care, PT CPG adherence remains below 50%. The Resolving the Burden of Low Back Pain in Military Service Members and Veterans (RESOLVE) trial will evaluate the effectiveness of an active PT CPG implementation strategy using an education, audit, and feedback model for reducing pain, disability, medication use, and cost of LBP care within the DOD and VA health care systems., Design: The RESOLVE trial will include 3,300 to 7,260 patients with LBP across three DOD and two VA medical facilities using a stepped-wedge study design. An education, audit, and feedback model will be used to encourage physical therapists to better adhere to the PT CPG recommendations. The Oswestry Disability Index and the Defense and Veterans Pain Rating Scale will be used as primary outcomes. Secondary outcomes will include the LBP-related medication use, medical resource utilization, and biopsychosocial predictors of outcomes. Statistical analyses will be based on the intention-to-treat principle and will use linear mixed models to compare treatment conditions and examine the interactions between treatment and subgrouping status (e.g., limb loss)., Summary: The RESOLVE trial will provide a pragmatic approach to evaluate whether better adherence to PT CPGs can reduce pain, disability, medication use, and LBP care cost within the DOD and VA health care systems., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine 2020.This work is written by US Government employees and is in the public domain in the US.)
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- 2020
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33. Validity and Responsiveness of Floor Sitting-Rising Test in Post-Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Cohort Study.
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Alomar JA, Catelani MBC, Smith CN, Patterson CG, Artman TM, and Piva SR
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- Aged, Area Under Curve, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Muscle Strength, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Physical Functional Performance, Postoperative Period, ROC Curve, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Range of Motion, Articular, Self Efficacy, Sitting Position, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee rehabilitation, Exercise Test methods, Knee Joint physiopathology
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Objectives: To assess the construct validity and responsiveness of the floor sitting-rising test (SRT) in individuals with total knee arthroplasty (TKA)., Design: Cohort study with 6-month follow-up. Secondary analysis using data from a randomized controlled trial., Setting: An outpatient rehabilitation research center., Participants: Participants (N=240) enrolled in the parent study who had unilateral primary TKA., Intervention: Participants in the parent study underwent 12 weeks of exercise programs., Main Outcome Measures: Validity analysis correlated baseline data of participants who completed the SRT and measures of knee motion, muscle strength, performance-based tests, and patient-reported outcomes of physical and psychosocial function. Responsiveness analysis used the 3- and 6-month follow-up data. Effect sizes were calculated using changes from baseline. Areas under the receiving operating characteristics curve were calculated using a global rating of change as the external anchor., Results: Of the 240 participants (148 women; age, 70±7y), 180 (75%) were able to perform the SRT at baseline. Performers scored significantly better in all physical function tests (P<.0001) than nonperformers. SRT scores generally converged with measures of knee impairment and performance-based tests (associations ranged from small [r=0.15; P=.0516] to moderate [r=0.52; P<.0001]). SRT scores associated with self-efficacy for function (r=0.34; P<.0001) and fear of falls (r=-0.25; P=.001). At 3 (n=174) and 6 months (n=160), SRT effect sizes were 0.38 (95% confidence interval, 0.25-0.52) and 0.42 (95% confidence interval, 0.25-0.60), and areas under the curve were 0.59 (95% confidence interval, 0.49-0.69) and 0.62 (95% confidence interval, 0.52-0.73), respectively., Conclusions: The results add evidence to the validity of the SRT in patients after TKA. The strength of the associations suggests that the SRT measures a physical function construct not captured by the other tests. The magnitude of indices of responsiveness for the SRT were similar to other performance-based tests, indicating comparable responsiveness to more widespread tests of functional performance., (Copyright © 2020 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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34. Novel Models to Identify Census Tracts for Hepatitis C Screening Interventions.
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Ludden T, Shade L, Thomas J, de Hernandez BU, Mohanan S, Russo MW, Leonard M, Zamor PJ, Patterson CG, and Tapp H
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- Hepatitis C diagnosis, Hepatitis C drug therapy, Hepatitis C transmission, Humans, Prevalence, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Censuses, Hepatitis C epidemiology, Mass Screening, Social Determinants of Health
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Background: Increased screening efforts and the development of effective antiviral treatments have led to marked improvement in hepatitis C (HCV) patient outcomes. However, many people in the United States are still believed to have undiagnosed HCV. Geospatial modeling using variables representing at-risk populations in need of screening for HCV and social determinants of health (SDOH) provide opportunities to identify populations at risk of HCV., Methods: A literature review was conducted to identify variables associated with patients at risk for HCV infection. Two sets of variables were collected: HCV Transmission Risk and SDOH Level of Need. The variables were combined into indices for each group and then mapped at the census tract level (n = 233). Multiple linear regression analysis and the Pearson correlation coefficient were used to validate the models., Results: A total of 4 HCV Transmission Risk variables and 12 SDOH Level of Need variables were identified. Between the 2 indexes, 21 high-risk census tracts were identified that scored at least 2 standard deviations above the mean. The regression analysis showed a significant relationship with HCV infection rate and prevalence of drug use (B = 0.78, P < .001). A significant relationship also existed with the HCV infection rate for households with no/limited English use (B = -0.24, P = .001), no car use (B = 0.036, P < .001), living below the poverty line (B = 0.014, P = .009), and median household income (B = -0.00, P = .009)., Conclusions: Geospatial models identified high-priority census tracts that can be used to map high-risk HCV populations that may otherwise be unrecognized. This will allow future targeted screening and linkage-to-care interventions for patients at high risk of HCV., Competing Interests: Conflicting and Competing Interests: None, (© Copyright 2020 by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
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- 2020
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35. Skeletal muscle fat in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis compared to healthy adults.
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Khoja SS, Patterson CG, Goodpaster BH, Delitto A, and Piva SR
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- Adipose Tissue physiopathology, Age Factors, Aged, Body Composition physiology, Body Mass Index, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity physiopathology, Subcutaneous Fat physiopathology, Thigh, Arthritis, Rheumatoid physiopathology, Muscle, Skeletal physiopathology
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Objective: To compare skeletal muscle fat (SMF), intermuscular adipose tissue (IMAT) and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) between individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), and healthy individuals of the same age, and healthy individuals at least 10 years older than those with RA., Methods: Two cross-sectional studies. In the first study, RA subjects were matched by age, sex, and BMI with healthy adults. In the second, RA subjects were matched by sex and BMI to adults 10-20 years older. SMF, IMAT and SAT were measured with Computed Tomography images of the mid-thigh region. We used parametric or non-parametric related-sample tests to compare fat accumulation between RA subjects and healthy adults., Results: In the first study SMF was significantly higher in the RA cohort compared to their age-matched healthy counterparts (mean difference = -3.5 HU (95% -6.2, -0.9), p = 0.011), but IMAT and SAT were similar between cohorts. In the second study, SMF, IMAT and SAT were not significantly different between the RA and matched older healthy cohorts. In both studies, there were no significant differences in mid-thigh muscle area between RA subjects and healthy adults., Conclusion: SMF accumulation in RA was higher than in healthy individuals of similar age, sex, BMI. Accumulation of fat within and around the muscles in RA was not different compared to the matched healthy older individuals, indicating that muscle fat accumulation in RA might mimic a pattern not different from healthy aging., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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36. Study protocol for targeted interventions to prevent chronic low back pain in high-risk patients: A multi-site pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial (TARGET Trial).
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Delitto A, Patterson CG, Stevans JM, Brennan GP, Wegener ST, Morrisette DC, Beneciuk JM, Freel JA, Minick KI, Hunter SJ, Ephraim PL, Friedman M, Simpson KN, George SZ, Daley KN, Albert MC, Tamasy M, Cash J, Lake DS, Freburger JK, Greco CM, Hough LJ, Jeong JH, Khoja SS, Schneider MJ, Sowa GA, Spigle WA, Wasan AD, Adams WG, Lemaster CM, Mishuris RG, Plumb DL, Williams CT, and Saper RB
- Subjects
- Adult, Chronic Pain prevention & control, Female, Humans, Low Back Pain therapy, Male, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Factors, Low Back Pain prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Low back pain (LBP) is one of the most prevalent and potentially disabling conditions for which people seek health care. Patients, providers, and payers agree that greater effort is needed to prevent acute LBP from transitioning to chronic LBP., Methods and Study Design: The TARGET (Targeted Interventions to Prevent Chronic Low Back Pain in High-Risk Patients) Trial is a primary care-based, multisite, cluster randomized, pragmatic trial comparing guideline-based care (GBC) to GBC + referral to Psychologically Informed Physical Therapy (PIPT) for patients presenting with acute LBP and identified as high risk for persistent disabling symptoms. Study sites include primary care clinics within each of five geographical regions in the United States, with clinics randomized to either GBC or GBC + PIPT. Acute LBP patients at all clinics are risk stratified (high, medium, low) using the STarT Back Tool. The primary outcomes are the presence of chronic LBP and LBP-related functional disability determined by the Oswestry Disability Index at 6 months. Secondary outcomes are LBP-related processes of health care and utilization of services over 12 months, determined through electronic medical records. Study enrollment began in May 2016 and concluded in June 2018. The trial was powered to include at least 1860 high-risk patients in the randomized controlled trial cohort. A prospective observational cohort of approximately 6900 low and medium-risk acute LBP patients was enrolled concurrently., Discussion: The TARGET pragmatic trial aims to establish the effectiveness of the stratified approach to acute LBP intervention targeting high-risk patients with GBC and PIPT., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.govNCT02647658 Registered Jan. 6, 2016., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2019
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37. Comparative Clinical Effectiveness of Nonsurgical Treatment Methods in Patients With Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Schneider MJ, Ammendolia C, Murphy DR, Glick RM, Hile E, Tudorascu DL, Morton SC, Smith C, Patterson CG, and Piva SR
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- Aged, Ambulatory Care Facilities statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Conservative Treatment methods, Exercise Therapy methods, Injections, Epidural methods, Lumbar Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Medication Therapy Management statistics & numerical data, Musculoskeletal Manipulations methods, Spinal Stenosis diagnosis, Spinal Stenosis therapy
- Abstract
Importance: Lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) is the most common reason for spine surgery in older US adults. There is an evidence gap about nonsurgical LSS treatment options., Objective: To explore the comparative clinical effectiveness of 3 nonsurgical interventions for patients with LSS., Design, Setting, and Participants: Three-arm randomized clinical trial of 3 years' duration (November 2013 to June 2016). Analysis began in August 2016. All interventions were delivered during 6 weeks with follow-up at 2 months and 6 months at an outpatient research clinic. Patients older than 60 years with LSS were recruited from the general public. Eligibility required anatomical evidence of central canal and/or lateral recess stenosis (magnetic resonance imaging/computed tomography) and clinical symptoms associated with LSS (neurogenic claudication; less symptoms with flexion). Analysis was intention to treat., Interventions: Medical care, group exercise, and manual therapy/individualized exercise. Medical care consisted of medications and/or epidural injections provided by a physiatrist. Group exercise classes were supervised by fitness instructors in senior community centers. Manual therapy/individualized exercise consisted of spinal mobilization, stretches, and strength training provided by chiropractors and physical therapists., Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcomes were between-group differences at 2 months in self-reported symptoms and physical function measured by the Swiss Spinal Stenosis questionnaire (score range, 12-55) and a measure of walking capacity using the self-paced walking test (meters walked for 0 to 30 minutes)., Results: A total of 259 participants (mean [SD] age, 72.4 [7.8] years; 137 women [52.9%]) were allocated to medical care (88 [34.0%]), group exercise (84 [32.4%]), or manual therapy/individualized exercise (87 [33.6%]). Adjusted between-group analyses at 2 months showed manual therapy/individualized exercise had greater improvement of symptoms and physical function compared with medical care (-2.0; 95% CI, -3.6 to -0.4) or group exercise (-2.4; 95% CI, -4.1 to -0.8). Manual therapy/individualized exercise had a greater proportion of responders (≥30% improvement) in symptoms and physical function (20%) and walking capacity (65.3%) at 2 months compared with medical care (7.6% and 48.7%, respectively) or group exercise (3.0% and 46.2%, respectively). At 6 months, there were no between-group differences in mean outcome scores or responder rates., Conclusions and Relevance: A combination of manual therapy/individualized exercise provides greater short-term improvement in symptoms and physical function and walking capacity than medical care or group exercises, although all 3 interventions were associated with improvements in long-term walking capacity., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01943435.
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- 2019
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38. ADPKD Progression in Patients With No Apparent Family History and No Mutation Detected by Sanger Sequencing.
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Braun WE, Abebe KZ, Brosnahan G, Patterson CG, Chapman AB, Harris PC, Hogan MC, Perrone RD, Torres VE, Miskulin DC, Steinman TI, Winklhofer FT, Rahbari-Oskoui FF, Czarnecki PG, Bae KT, Grantham JJ, Flessner MF, and Schrier RW
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Disease Progression, Medical History Taking, Mutation genetics, Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant diagnostic imaging, Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant genetics
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- 2018
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39. Effect of Statin Therapy on the Progression of Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease. A Secondary Analysis of the HALT PKD Trials.
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Brosnahan GM, Abebe KZ, Rahbari-Oskoui FF, Patterson CG, Bae KT, Schrier RW, Braun WE, Chapman AB, Flessner MF, Harris PC, Perrone RD, Steinman TI, and Torres VE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Antihypertensive Agents therapeutic use, Disease Progression, Female, Glomerular Filtration Rate drug effects, Humans, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors adverse effects, Kidney pathology, Kidney physiopathology, Kidney Failure, Chronic diagnosis, Kidney Failure, Chronic etiology, Kidney Failure, Chronic mortality, Male, Middle Aged, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant complications, Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant diagnosis, Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant mortality, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Kidney drug effects, Kidney Failure, Chronic prevention & control, Polycystic Kidney, Autosomal Dominant drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) commonly results in end-stage renal disease (ESRD), yet a long-term treatment that is well tolerated is still lacking. In a small randomized trial in children and adolescents pravastatin administration for 3 years was associated with reduced renal cyst growth, but no large trial has tested the effect of statins in adults., Methods: We performed a post-hoc analysis of the HALT PKD trials to compare outcomes of participants who never used statins with those who used statin for at least 3 years. Because statins were not randomly allocated, we used propensity score models with inverse probability of treatment weighting to account for imbalances between the groups. For subjects in Study A (preserved renal function, n=438) relevant outcomes were percent change in total kidney and liver volume and the rate of decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR); for those in Study B (reduced renal function, n=352) we compared time to the composite endpoint of death, ESRD or 50% decline in eGFR. Follow-up was 5-8 years., Results: There was no difference in any outcome between the 2 groups. However, limitations of this analysis are the small number of statin users in Study A, different statin drugs and doses used, non-randomized allocation and advanced disease stage in Study B., Conclusion: Although this post-hoc analysis of the HALT PKD trials does not demonstrate a benefit of statin therapy, conclusions remain preliminary. A larger randomized trial in young people with ADPKD is necessary to answer the question whether statins can slow renal cyst growth and preserve kidney function., (Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.org.)
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- 2017
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40. Expanding a professional dental care system: experiences of Task Force 261 Multifunctional Medical Battalion during Operation Iraqi Freedom 07-09.
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Christopher FL, Smith GM, Cobb JW, Patterson CG, Smith MA, and Pollard JA
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- Health Promotion, Humans, International Cooperation, Iraq, Preventive Dentistry, Dental Clinics organization & administration, Dental Health Services organization & administration, Iraq War, 2003-2011, Military Personnel
- Abstract
During Operation Iraqi Freedom 07-09, Task Force 261 Multifunctional Medical Battalion managed an extensive dental care system stretching throughout the Iraq theater of operations. We illustrate several of the unique challenges faced by Task Force 261's headquarters and its dental and area support companies, and describe the remedies emplaced by the Task Force. Personnel structure, the evacuation chain, supply and facility management, dental civil-military operations, detainee care, information technology applications, and public health initiatives are discussed in detail.
- Published
- 2008
41. Facilitating best practice: transferring the lessons of the Clinical Support Systems Program.
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Long PW, Larkins RG, Patterson CG, and Hyde J
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- Australia, Diffusion of Innovation, Humans, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Societies, Medical, Benchmarking, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Evidence-Based Medicine
- Abstract
The Clinical Support Systems Program (CSSP) includes the management of clinical practice using clinical and consumer pathways, outcome and performance indicators, clinical measurement and review in a continuous improvement cycle using the best available extant evidence. The Royal Australasian College of Physicians is testing the CSSP model through four consortia around Australia. There are 17 project sites in three States. The funded projects address major clinical problems including congestive heart failure and acute coronary syndromes, acute stroke management, and colorectal cancer care. There is some early evidence of the CSSP influencing change in areas beyond the bounds of the project settings and the College has developed a plan to promote wider adoption of best practice. This approach recognises the College's role in providing Fellows with the practical tools of quality improvement, the means to collect data and compare their practice to other clinicians, while traversing the appropriate educational framework.
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- 2001
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42. The Clinical Support Systems Program concept: what is it and where did it come from?
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Larkins RG, Long P, and Patterson CG
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- Australia, Humans, Program Development, Delivery of Health Care, Quality of Health Care
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- 2001
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43. Managed care--managed ethics?
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Komesaroff PA and Patterson CG
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- Australia, Cost Control, Humans, Quality of Health Care, United States, Ethics, Medical, Health Services Accessibility economics, Managed Care Programs
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- 2000
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44. Health policy--taking physicians' views to Canberra.
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Patterson CG
- Subjects
- Australia, Ethics, Medical, Humans, Politics, Health Policy
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- 2000
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45. Strawberry foliage headspace vapor components at periods of susceptibility and resistance toTetranychus urticae Koch.
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Hamilton-Kemp TR, Andersen RA, Rodriguez JG, Loughrin JH, and Patterson CG
- Abstract
Headspace components from strawberry foliage have been isolated by nitrogen entrainment and Tenax trapping. Traps were eluted with hexane, and components were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Fifteen compounds were identified by comparison with authentic standards,trans-2-hexenal, 1-hexanol,trans-2-hexen-1-ol,cis-3-hexen-1-ol, hexyl acetate,cis-3-hexenyl acetate, 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-ol, 1-octanol, 1-octen-3-ol, linalool, α-terpineol, methyl salicylate, ethyl saiicylate, benzyl alcohol, and 2-phenylethanol. The relative amounts of these components were compared at flowering and after fruit harvest when plants were more resistant to the two-spotted spider mite,Tetranychus urticae Koch. The predominant components,cis-3-hexen-1-ol and its acetate, did not change markedly between the sampling periods, but methyl salicylate increased approximately 10-fold after fruit harvest. Methyl salicylate at low concentrations under bioassay conditions did not affect mite behavior. The biosynthetic relationship of this compound to other phenols which have been implicated in plant resistance is discussed.
- Published
- 1988
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