27 results on '"Sands V."'
Search Results
2. A prospective prostate cancer screening programme for men with pathogenic variants in mismatch repair genes (IMPACT): initial results from an international prospective study.
- Author
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Bancroft E.K., Page E.C., Brook M.N., Thomas S., Taylor N., Pope J., McHugh J., Jones A.-B., Karlsson Q., Merson S., Ong K.R., Hoffman J., Huber C., Maehle L., Grindedal E.M., Stormorken A., Evans D.G., Rothwell J., Lalloo F., Brady A.F., Bartlett M., Snape K., Hanson H., James P., McKinley J., Mascarenhas L., Syngal S., Ukaegbu C., Side L., Thomas T., Barwell J., Teixeira M.R., Izatt L., Suri M., Macrae F.A., Poplawski N., Chen-Shtoyerman R., Ahmed M., Musgrave H., Nicolai N., Greenhalgh L., Brewer C., Pachter N., Spigelman A.D., Azzabi A., Helfand B.T., Halliday D., Buys S., Ramon y Cajal T., Donaldson A., Cooney K.A., Harris M., McGrath J., Davidson R., Taylor A., Cooke P., Myhill K., Hogben M., Aaronson N.K., Ardern-Jones A., Bangma C.H., Castro E., Dearnaley D., Dias A., Dudderidge T., Eccles D.M., Green K., Eyfjord J., Falconer A., Foster C.S., Gronberg H., Hamdy F.C., Johannsson O., Khoo V., Lilja H., Lindeman G.J., Lubinski J., Axcrona K., Mikropoulos C., Mitra A.V., Moynihan C., Ni Raghallaigh H., Rennert G., Collier R., Adams L., Adlard J., Alfonso R., Ali S., Andrew A., Araujo L., Azam N., Ball D., Barker Q., Basevitch A., Benton B., Berlin C., Bermingham N., Biller L., Bloss A., Bradford M., Bradshaw N., Branson A., Brendler C., Brennan M., Bulman B., Burgess L., Cahill D., Callard A., Calvo Verges N., Cardoso M., Carter V., Catanzaro M., Chamberlain A., Chapman C., Chong M., Clark C., Clowes V., Cogley L., Cole T., Compton C., Conner T., Cookson S., Cornford P., Costello P., Coulier L., Davies M., Dechet C., DeSouza B., Devlin G., Douglas F., Douglas E., Dudakia D., Duncan A., Ellery N., Everest S., Freemantle S., Frydenberg M., Fuller D., Gabriel C., Gale M., Garcia L., Gay S., Genova E., George A., Georgiou D., Gisbert A., Gleeson M., Glover W., Gnanapragasam V., Goff S., Goldgar D., Goncalves N., Goodman S., Gorrie J., Gott H., Grant A., Gray C., Griffiths J., Gupwell K., Gurasashvili J., Hanslien E., Haraldsdottir S., Hart R., Hartigan C., Hawkes L., Heaton T., Henderson A., Henrique R., Hilario K., Hill K., Hulick P., Hunt C., Hutchings M., Ibitoye R., Inglehearn T., Ireland J., Islam F., Ismail S., Jacobs C., James D., Jenkins S., Jobson I., Johnstone A., Jones O., Josefsberg Ben-Yehoshua S., Kaemba B., Kaul K., Kemp Z., Kinsella N., Klehm M., Kockelbergh R., Kohut K., Kosicka-Slawinska M., Kulkarni A., Kumar P., Lam J., LeButt M., Leibovici D., Lim R., Limb L., Lomas C., Longmuir M., Lopez C., Magnani T., Maia S., Maiden J., Male A., Manalo M., Martin P., McBride D., McGuire M., McMahon R., McNally C., McVeigh T., Melzer E., Mencias M., Mercer C., Mitchell G., Mora J., Morton C., Moss C., Murphy M., Murphy D., Mzazi S., Nadolski M., Newlin A., Nogueira P., O'Keefe R., O'Toole K., O'Connell S., Ogden C., Okoth L., Oliveira J., Paez E., Palou J., Park L., Patel N., Paulo Souto J., Pearce A., Peixoto A., Perez K., Petelin L., Pichert G., Poile C., Potter A., Preitner N., Purnell H., Quinn E., Radice P., Rankin B., Rees K., Renton C., Richardson K., Risby P., Rogers J., Ruderman M., Ruiz A., Sajoo A., Salvatore N., Sands V., Sanguedolce F., Sattar A., Saunders K., Schofield L., Scott R., Searle A., Sehra R., Selkirk C., Shackleton K., Shanley S., Shaw A., Shevrin D., Shipman H., Sidat Z., Siguake K., Simon K., Smyth C., Snadden L., Solanky N., Solomons J., Sorrentino M., Stayner B., Stephenson R., Stoffel E., Thomas M., Thompson A., Tidey L., Tischkowitz M., Torokwa A., Townshend S., Treherne K., Tricker K., Trinh Q.-D., Tripathi V., Turnbull C., Valdagni R., Van As N., Venne V., Verdon L., Vitellaro M., Vogel K., Walker L., Watford A., Watt C., Weintroub I., Weiss S., Weissman S., Weston M., Wiggins J., Wise G., Woodhouse C., Yesildag P., Youngs A., Yurgelun M., Zollo F., Offman J., Kote-Jarai Z., Eeles R.A., Bancroft E.K., Page E.C., Brook M.N., Thomas S., Taylor N., Pope J., McHugh J., Jones A.-B., Karlsson Q., Merson S., Ong K.R., Hoffman J., Huber C., Maehle L., Grindedal E.M., Stormorken A., Evans D.G., Rothwell J., Lalloo F., Brady A.F., Bartlett M., Snape K., Hanson H., James P., McKinley J., Mascarenhas L., Syngal S., Ukaegbu C., Side L., Thomas T., Barwell J., Teixeira M.R., Izatt L., Suri M., Macrae F.A., Poplawski N., Chen-Shtoyerman R., Ahmed M., Musgrave H., Nicolai N., Greenhalgh L., Brewer C., Pachter N., Spigelman A.D., Azzabi A., Helfand B.T., Halliday D., Buys S., Ramon y Cajal T., Donaldson A., Cooney K.A., Harris M., McGrath J., Davidson R., Taylor A., Cooke P., Myhill K., Hogben M., Aaronson N.K., Ardern-Jones A., Bangma C.H., Castro E., Dearnaley D., Dias A., Dudderidge T., Eccles D.M., Green K., Eyfjord J., Falconer A., Foster C.S., Gronberg H., Hamdy F.C., Johannsson O., Khoo V., Lilja H., Lindeman G.J., Lubinski J., Axcrona K., Mikropoulos C., Mitra A.V., Moynihan C., Ni Raghallaigh H., Rennert G., Collier R., Adams L., Adlard J., Alfonso R., Ali S., Andrew A., Araujo L., Azam N., Ball D., Barker Q., Basevitch A., Benton B., Berlin C., Bermingham N., Biller L., Bloss A., Bradford M., Bradshaw N., Branson A., Brendler C., Brennan M., Bulman B., Burgess L., Cahill D., Callard A., Calvo Verges N., Cardoso M., Carter V., Catanzaro M., Chamberlain A., Chapman C., Chong M., Clark C., Clowes V., Cogley L., Cole T., Compton C., Conner T., Cookson S., Cornford P., Costello P., Coulier L., Davies M., Dechet C., DeSouza B., Devlin G., Douglas F., Douglas E., Dudakia D., Duncan A., Ellery N., Everest S., Freemantle S., Frydenberg M., Fuller D., Gabriel C., Gale M., Garcia L., Gay S., Genova E., George A., Georgiou D., Gisbert A., Gleeson M., Glover W., Gnanapragasam V., Goff S., Goldgar D., Goncalves N., Goodman S., Gorrie J., Gott H., Grant A., Gray C., Griffiths J., Gupwell K., Gurasashvili J., Hanslien E., Haraldsdottir S., Hart R., Hartigan C., Hawkes L., Heaton T., Henderson A., Henrique R., Hilario K., Hill K., Hulick P., Hunt C., Hutchings M., Ibitoye R., Inglehearn T., Ireland J., Islam F., Ismail S., Jacobs C., James D., Jenkins S., Jobson I., Johnstone A., Jones O., Josefsberg Ben-Yehoshua S., Kaemba B., Kaul K., Kemp Z., Kinsella N., Klehm M., Kockelbergh R., Kohut K., Kosicka-Slawinska M., Kulkarni A., Kumar P., Lam J., LeButt M., Leibovici D., Lim R., Limb L., Lomas C., Longmuir M., Lopez C., Magnani T., Maia S., Maiden J., Male A., Manalo M., Martin P., McBride D., McGuire M., McMahon R., McNally C., McVeigh T., Melzer E., Mencias M., Mercer C., Mitchell G., Mora J., Morton C., Moss C., Murphy M., Murphy D., Mzazi S., Nadolski M., Newlin A., Nogueira P., O'Keefe R., O'Toole K., O'Connell S., Ogden C., Okoth L., Oliveira J., Paez E., Palou J., Park L., Patel N., Paulo Souto J., Pearce A., Peixoto A., Perez K., Petelin L., Pichert G., Poile C., Potter A., Preitner N., Purnell H., Quinn E., Radice P., Rankin B., Rees K., Renton C., Richardson K., Risby P., Rogers J., Ruderman M., Ruiz A., Sajoo A., Salvatore N., Sands V., Sanguedolce F., Sattar A., Saunders K., Schofield L., Scott R., Searle A., Sehra R., Selkirk C., Shackleton K., Shanley S., Shaw A., Shevrin D., Shipman H., Sidat Z., Siguake K., Simon K., Smyth C., Snadden L., Solanky N., Solomons J., Sorrentino M., Stayner B., Stephenson R., Stoffel E., Thomas M., Thompson A., Tidey L., Tischkowitz M., Torokwa A., Townshend S., Treherne K., Tricker K., Trinh Q.-D., Tripathi V., Turnbull C., Valdagni R., Van As N., Venne V., Verdon L., Vitellaro M., Vogel K., Walker L., Watford A., Watt C., Weintroub I., Weiss S., Weissman S., Weston M., Wiggins J., Wise G., Woodhouse C., Yesildag P., Youngs A., Yurgelun M., Zollo F., Offman J., Kote-Jarai Z., and Eeles R.A.
- Abstract
Background: Lynch syndrome is a rare familial cancer syndrome caused by pathogenic variants in the mismatch repair genes MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, or PMS2, that cause predisposition to various cancers, predominantly colorectal and endometrial cancer. Data are emerging that pathogenic variants in mismatch repair genes increase the risk of early-onset aggressive prostate cancer. The IMPACT study is prospectively assessing prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening in men with germline mismatch repair pathogenic variants. Here, we report the usefulness of PSA screening, prostate cancer incidence, and tumour characteristics after the first screening round in men with and without these germline pathogenic variants. Method(s): The IMPACT study is an international, prospective study. Men aged 40-69 years without a previous prostate cancer diagnosis and with a known germline pathogenic variant in the MLH1, MSH2, or MSH6 gene, and age-matched male controls who tested negative for a familial pathogenic variant in these genes were recruited from 34 genetic and urology clinics in eight countries, and underwent a baseline PSA screening. Men who had a PSA level higher than 3.0 ng/mL were offered a transrectal, ultrasound-guided, prostate biopsy and a histopathological analysis was done. All participants are undergoing a minimum of 5 years' annual screening. The primary endpoint was to determine the incidence, stage, and pathology of screening-detected prostate cancer in carriers of pathogenic variants compared with non-carrier controls. We used Fisher's exact test to compare the number of cases, cancer incidence, and positive predictive values of the PSA cutoff and biopsy between carriers and non-carriers and the differences between disease types (ie, cancer vs no cancer, clinically significant cancer vs no cancer). We assessed screening outcomes and tumour characteristics by pathogenic variant status. Here we present results from the first round of PSA screening in the IMPACT study. This
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- 2022
3. The cytoevolution of the Australian Papilionaceae
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Sands, V E and BioStor
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- 1975
4. Kansas City's future comes into focus
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Menninger, Bonar and Sands, V. Craig
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Kansas City Metropolitan Area -- Economic policy ,Economic development -- Kansas ,City planning -- Kansas ,Business ,Business, general - Published
- 1998
5. Reproductive patterns of selected understorey trees in the Malaysian rain forest: the sexual species.
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HA, C. O., SANDS, V. E., SOEPADMO, E., and JONG, K.
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- 1988
- Full Text
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6. Reproductive patterns of selected understorey trees in the Malaysian rain forest: the apomictic species.
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HA, C. O., SANDS, V. E., SOEPADMO, E., and JONG, K.
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- 1988
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7. Cytoembryology of some Malaysian dipterocarps, with some evidence of apomixis.
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KAUR, A., JONG, K., SANDS, V. E., and SOEPADMO, E.
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- 1986
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8. Kansas City sets course record.
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Hoskins, Alan and Sands, V. Craig
- Abstract
Asserts that golf courses in Kansas City, Missouri are among the best in the United States. Construction of golf courses in the city's metropolitan areas by renowned players Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson; Holding of the US Senior Golf Classic, US Golf Association competition and American Junior Golf Association competition. INSETS: The pro shop.;Rough beginnings..
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- 1999
9. Planning is Key to Financial Freedom
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Sands, V.
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Personal finance -- Planning ,Planning -- Finance ,Business ,Insurance - Published
- 1982
10. Where Financial Planners Learn Their Trade
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Sands, V.
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Investments -- Education ,Personal finance -- Planning ,Business ,Insurance - Published
- 1982
11. Future Bright for Variable Life
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Sands, V.
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Life insurance ,Business ,Insurance - Published
- 1982
12. Monarch Life Unveils New 'Prime Plan'
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Sands, V.
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Life insurance -- Innovations ,Business ,Insurance - Published
- 1982
13. 'Wall-Streeters' on Product Plans
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Sands, V.
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New products -- Standards ,Products -- Research ,Business ,Insurance - Published
- 1982
14. Wall Street Planners Urge Management Input
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Sands, V.
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Insurance industry -- Planning ,Products -- Research ,Business ,Insurance - Published
- 1982
15. The business of education.
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Warbington, Rachel and Sands, V. Craig
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Discusses issues relevant to education in the United States. Description of problems associated with the management of public educational institutions; How administrators can prepare for the challenges which they may encounter; Importance of funding and investments; Identification of strategies used by community colleges and other institutions. INSET: Retraining workers.
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- 1998
16. Kansas city's comes into focus.
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Menninger, Bonar and Sands, V. Craig
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Focuses on Kansas City in Missouri. Reference made to the city's FOCUS plan; Indepth look at FOCUS; Contributions which this plan has made; Comments from Vicki Noteis, FOCUS director. INSET: Kansas city's to-do list.
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- 1998
17. Top 100 corporate report.
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Brown, Russell and Sands, V. Craig
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Presents a list of the top 100 growing companies in the Kansas City Area. Facts about the growth of some companies; Earnings of the companies,
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- 1997
18. Rollin' on the river.
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Sands, V. Craig
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Reports on legal controversies regarding the existence of river boat casinos in Kansas City, Missouri. Revenues contributed by casinos into the national economy; Provision of employment for many workers; Threat posed to other businesses like restaurants.
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- 1997
19. Apomixis may be widespread among trees of the climax rain forest.
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KAUR, A., HA, C. O., JONG, K., SANDS, V. E., CHAN, H. T., SOEPADMO, E., and ASHTON, P. S.
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- 1978
- Full Text
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20. Making A Statement of Ownership.
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Lowry, Patrick E. and Sands, V. Craig
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Focuses on the increase in number of women-owned businesses in Kansas City, Missouri. Multi-million dollar gross revenues of knit goods importer Peruvian Connection Ltd. in 1998; Increase in number of women-owned firms since 1992; Increase in employment and revenues; Support from direct marketing, banking, accounting and graphics industry.
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- 1999
21. Relo CEO.
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Belt, Mike and Sands, V. Craig
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Profiles various business executives, highlighting their reasons for relocating to Kansas City, Kansas during 1998. Reason for the selection of Kansas City; Viability of the location; Comments from Frank L. Salizonni of H and R Block Inc. and Bill Scott of Transamerica Occidental Life Insurance Co.
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- 1998
22. Kansas City's trucking hub.
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Lowry, Patrick E. and Sands, V. Craig
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Focuses on the effects of the North American Free Trade Agreement on the trucking industry in Kansas City, Missouri. Efforts to get the I-35 corridor designated as a federal superhighway making it available for federal funding; Creation of the international processing center.
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- 1998
23. WINSLOW'S BARBECUE.
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Becicka, Chris and Sands, V. Craig
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Presents the Winslow's City Market Barbecue in Kansas City, Missouri, known as the City Market Barbecue when it was founded by John and Mary Margaret Mulvihill in 1971. Entertainment; Rates; Celebrations planned for May and June.
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- 2001
24. Association of individual surgeon volume and postoperative outcome in esophagomyotomy for achalasia.
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DeSantis AJ, Janjua HM, Moiño D, Davis G, Sands V, Weche M, Kuo PC, Sujka J, and DuCoin C
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- Humans, Length of Stay, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Esophageal Achalasia surgery, Surgeons
- Abstract
Background: Many surgical disciplines have demonstrated superior outcomes when procedures are performed at "high-volume". Esophagomyotomy is commonly performed for achalasia, however it's unclear what constitutes "high-volume" for this procedure, and if individual procedure volume and outcome are related. We identified physicians performing esophagomyotomy, stratified them by individual case volume, and examined their outcomes with the hypothesis that high-volume surgeons will be associated with improved outcomes as compared to low-volume surgeons., Methods: The 2015-2019 Florida Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) inpatient dataset was queried for esophagomyotomy. Surgeons who performed ≥ 10 procedures during the study period were placed into the high-volume cohort, and those performing < 10 into the low-volume cohort. Groups were compared by length of stay, discharge disposition, and postoperative complications. Patient demographics were evaluated using student's t test and chi square test, p < 0.05 considered significant., Results: Six hundred and sixty-two procedures performed by 135 surgeons were identified. The mean number of esophagomyotomies per surgeon was 4.9 (Range 1-147). The high-volume group (n = 12) performed 362 of the 662 procedures (55%), while the low-volume group (n = 123) performed the remaining 300 (45%). Patients of high-volume physicians had decreased length of stay (1.4 ± 0.8 days vs 4.9 ± 6.7 days, p = 0.01) and were more likely to be discharged to home following surgery (92.8% vs 86.0, p = 0.04). High volume physicians also had statistically significant differences in rates of urinary tract infection (1.4% vs 4.0%, p = 0.034), postoperative malnutrition (5.8% vs 11.0%, p = 0.015), and postoperative fluid and electrolyte disorders (5.5% vs 13.3%, p < 0.0001)., Conclusion: Surgeons who perform higher volumes of esophagomyotomies are associated with decreased length of stay, higher likelihood of patient discharge to home, and decreased rates of some postoperative complications. This research should prompt further inquiry into defining what constitutes a high-volume center in foregut surgery and their role in improving patient outcomes., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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25. Eloquence-based reperfusion scoring and its ability to predict post-thrombectomy disability and functional status.
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Pressman E, Sands V, Flores G, Chen L, Mhaskar R, Guerrero WR, Ren Z, and Mokin M
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- Functional Status, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Thrombectomy methods, Treatment Outcome, Angiography methods, Cerebral Infarction, Ischemic Stroke, Reperfusion, Stroke diagnostic imaging, Stroke surgery
- Abstract
Background: Angiographic reperfusion after endovascular thrombectomy in acute ischemic stroke is commonly graded using volume-based reperfusion scores such as the modified thrombolysis in cerebral infarct score. The location of non-reperfused regions is not included in modified thrombolysis in cerebral infarct score. We studied the predictive ability of an eloquence-based reperfusion score., Methods: Consecutive cases of endovascular thrombectomy for anterior circulation strokes performed between January 2018 and April 2020 were included. Digital subtraction angiograms were reviewed by two blinded neurointerventionalist operators. Incomplete reperfusion was further classified by lobar regions lacking reperfusion to create various cohorts. Outcomes were graded four to seven days post-procedure with the National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) and 90 days post-procedure with the modified Rankin Scale., Results: One hundred patients were identified. Via multivariate analysis, we found that frontal lobe non-reperfusion (mean difference (MD) = -1.60, p = 0.002) and occipital lobe non-reperfusion (MD = -1.68, p = 0.001) were associated with worse mental status improvement while left-sided stroke (MD = 2.02, p < 0.001) featured better improvement post-thrombectomy. Occipital lobe non-reperfusion (MD = -0.734, p = 0.009) was associated with the worse improvement of visual fields. The non-reperfusion of the frontal lobe was associated with a 1.732-worse NIHSS hemibody strength score (95% confidence interval (95%CI) = -3.39 to -0.072, p = 0.041). Worse improvement in NIHSS scores was found to be associated with frontal lobe non-reperfusion (MD = -5.34, 95%CI = -9.52 to -1.18, p = 0.013) and occipital lobe non-reperfusion (MD = -6.35, 95%CI = -10.4 to -2.31, p = 0.002). Odds of achieving modified Rankin Scale of 0-2 at 90 days were decreased with frontal lobe non-reperfusion (odds ratio (OR) = 0.279, 95%CI = 0.090-0.869, p = 0.028) and left laterality (OR = 0.376, 95%CI = 0.153-0.922, p = 0.033)., Conclusions: Eloquence-based reperfusion assessment is an important predictor for functional outcomes after thrombectomy.
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- 2022
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26. Factors Associated With Decreased Accuracy of Modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarct Scoring Among Neurointerventionalists During Thrombectomy.
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Pressman E, Waqas M, Sands V, Siddiqui A, Snyder K, Davies J, Levy E, Ionita C, Guerrero W, Ren Z, and Mokin M
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- Aged, Angiography, Digital Subtraction, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Cerebral Infarction diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Infarction surgery, Endovascular Procedures methods, Thrombectomy methods, Treatment Outcome
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The modified Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarct (mTICI) score is used to grade angiographic outcome after endovascular thrombectomy. We sought to identify factors that decrease the accuracy of intraprocedural mTICI., Methods: We performed a 2-center retrospective cohort study comparing operator (n=6) mTICI scores to consensus scores from blinded adjudicators. Groups were also assessed by dichotomizing mTICI scores to 0–2a versus 2b–3., Results: One hundred thirty endovascular thrombectomy procedures were included. Operators and adjudicators had a pairwise agreement in 96 cases (73.8%). Krippendorff α was 0.712. Multivariate analysis showed endovascular thrombectomy overnight (odds ratio [OR]=3.84 [95% CI, 1.22–12.1]), lacking frontal (OR, 5.66 [95 CI, 1.36–23.6]), or occipital (OR, 7.18 [95 CI, 2.12–24.3]) region reperfusion, and higher operator mTICI scores (OR, 2.16 [95 CI, 1.16–4.01]) were predictive of incorrectly scoring mTICI intraprocedurally. With dichotomized mTICI scores, increasing number of passes was associated with increased risk of operator error (OR, 1.93 [95 CI, 1.22–3.05])., Conclusions: In our study, mTICI disagreement between operator and adjudicators was observed in 26.2% of cases. Interventions that took place between 22:30 and 4:00, featured frontal or occipital region nonperfusion, higher operator mTICI scores, and increased number of passes had higher odds of intraprocedural mTICI inaccuracy.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Evaluation of a portable clinical blood analyzer in the emergency department.
- Author
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Sands VM, Auerbach PS, Birnbaum J, and Green M
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Hematologic Tests statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Time Factors, Emergency Service, Hospital trends, Hematologic Tests instrumentation
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the potential effects of rapid bedside blood analysis on patient management in the ED., Methods: A prospective, nonrandomized clinical study was conducted over a consecutive ten-month period (August 1992 to May 1993). Blood samples drawn from a convenience sample of 960 patients for analysis of Na+, K+, Cl-, BUN, glucose, and/or hematocrit (Hct) were simultaneously analyzed by portable clinical analyzer (PCA) and by routine methods in the central laboratory. Caregivers were blinded to the PCA values; patient care was based solely on central laboratory results. Physicians were surveyed after the completion of patient care., Results: The PCA results were available 31 minutes (mean) sooner than were the central laboratory results for Hct, 43 minutes faster for Na+, K+, and Cl-, and 44 minutes faster for BUN and glucose. Except for Hct and glucose, the values obtained from the PCA were not significantly different from the central clinical blood analyzer laboratory values. When surveyed, the physicians caring for the patients reported that had the PCA results been available, a different or an earlier therapeutic approach would have resulted in 9.5% of the cases. The decision to release or admit the patient was based on one or more of the laboratory values for 10.7% of patients sampled. In no case in this series did a physician report that final ED clinical outcome would have been affected., Conclusions: In our ED, the PCA yielded faster reporting of laboratory values. These earlier results might have reduced the length of stay in the ED for 17.3% of patients studied. Selective use of a handheld portable analyzer might decrease time to therapeutic interventions and time to disposition.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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