62 results on '"Piening, B."'
Search Results
2. Layered van der Waals topological metals of TaTMTe4 (TM = Ir, Rh, Ru) family
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Shipunov, G., Piening, B. R., Wuttke, C., Romanova, T. A., Sadakov, A. V., Sobolevskiy, O. A., Guzovsky, E. Yu., Usoltsev, A. S., Pudalov, V. M., Efremov, D., Subakti, S., Wolf, D., Lubk, A., Büchner, B., and Aswartham, S.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Layered van~der~Waals materials of the family TaTMTe$_4$ (TM=Ir, Rh, Ru) are showing very interesting electronic properties. Here we report the synthesis, crystal growth and structural characterization of TaIrTe$_4$, TaRhTe$_4$, TaIr$_{1-x}$Rh$_{x}$Te$_4$ ($x = 0.06$; 0.14; 0.78; 0.92) and Ta$_{1+x}$Ru$_{1-x}$Te$_4$ single crystals. For Ta$_{1+x}$Ru$_{1-x}$Te$_4$ off-stoichiometry is shown. X-ray powder diffraction confirms that TaRhTe4 is isostructural to TaIrTe4. We show that all these compounds are metallic with diamagnetic behavior. Ta$_{1.26(2)}$Ru$_{0.75(2)}$Te$_{4.000(8)}$ exhibits an upturn in the resistivity at low temperatures which is strongly field dependent. Below $T \approx 4$K we observed signatures of the superconductivity in the TaIr$_{1-x}$Rh$_{x}$Te$_4$ compounds for $x = 0.92$. Magnetotransport measurements on all samples show weak magnetoresistance (MR) field dependence that is typically quadratic-in-field. However, for TaIr$_{1-x}$Rh$_{x}$Te$_4$ with $x\approx 0.78$, the MR has a linear term dominating in low fields that indicates the presence of Dirac cones in the vicinity of the Fermi energy. For TaRhTe$_4$ series the MR is almost isotropic. We have performed electronic structure calculations for isostructural TaIrTe$_4$ and TaRhTe$_4$ together with the projected total density of states. The main difference is appearance of the Rh-band close to the Fermi level.
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- 2021
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3. Switchable domains in point contacts based on transition metal tellurides
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Naidyuk, Yu. G., Bashlakov, D. L., Kvitnitskaya, O. E., Piening, B. R., Shipunov, G., Efremov, D. V., Aswartham, S., and Büchner, B.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We report resistive switching in voltage biased point contacts (PCs) based on series of van der Waals transition metals tellurides (TMTs) such as MeTe2 (Me=Mo, W) and TaMeTe4 (Me= Ru, Rh, Ir). The switching occurs between a low resistive "metallic-type" state, which is the ground state, and a high resistive "semiconducting-type" state by applying certain bias voltage (<1V), while reverse switching takes place by applying voltage of opposite polarity. The origin of the effect can be formation of domain in PC core by applying a bias voltage, when a strong electric field (about 10kV/cm) modifies the crystal structure and controls its polarization. In addition to the discovery of the switching effect in PCs, we also suggest a simple method of material testing before functionalizing them, which offers a great advantage in finding suitable novel substances. The new functionality of studied TMTs arising from switchable domains in submicron hetero-structures that are promising, e.g., for non-volatile resistive random access memory (RRAM) engineering., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figs., supplement with 8 figs. V2 some text revision
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- 2020
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4. Sixfold fermion near the Fermi level in cubic PtBi2
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Thirupathaiah, S., Kushnirenk, Y. S., Koepernik, K., Piening, B. R., Buechner, B., Aswartham, S., Brink, J. van den, Borisenko, S. V., and Fulga, I. C.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We show that the cubic compound PtBi2, is a topological semimetal hosting a sixfold band touching point in close proximity to the Fermi level. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we map the bandstructure of the system, which is in good agreement with results from density functional theory. Further, by employing a low energy effective Hamiltonian valid close to the crossing point, we study the effect of a magnetic field on the sixfold fermion. The latter splits into a total of twenty Weyl cones for a Zeeman field oriented in the diagonal, [111] direction. Our results mark cubic PtBi2, as an ideal candidate to study the transport properties of gapless topological systems beyond Dirac and Weyl semimetals., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; this is the final, published version
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- 2020
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5. Polymorphic PtBi2: Growth, structure and superconducting properties
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Shipunov, G., Kovalchuk, I., Piening, B. R., Labracherie, V., Veyrat, A., Wolf, D., Lubk, A., Subakti, S., Giraud, R., Dufouleur, J., Shokri, S., Caglieris, F., Hess, C., Efremov, D. V., Büchner, B., and Aswartham, S.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
PtBi$_2$ is a polymorphic system with interesting electronic properties. Here we report optimized crystal growth and structural characterization of pyrite-type and trigonal modification of PtBi$_2$. Selected area electron diffraction, X-ray powder diffraction and further Rietveld refinement confirms that trigonal PtBi$_2$ crystallizes in non-centrosymmetric $P31m$ space group, pyrite-type PtBi$_2$ in $Pa\bar{3}$ space group. Series of Pt$_{1-x}$Rh$_x$Bi$_2$ samples was obtained for $x=0, 0.03, 0.35$ in the trigonal PtBi$_2$ structure. These Pt$_{1-x}$Rh$_x$Bi$_2$ compounds become superconducting where critical temperature increases from $T_c=600$ mK for $x=0$ up to $T_c=2.7$ K for $x=0.35$. Furthermore we calculate the electronic band structure, using the structure parameters obtained. The calculated density of states (DOS) shows a minimum for the stochiometric compound at the Fermi level. These findings warrant further research by broader array of experimental techniques, as well as the effect of the substitution on the non-trivial band structure.
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- 2020
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6. Super-heavy fermion material as metallic refrigerant for adiabatic demagnetization cooling
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Tokiwa, Y., Piening, B., Jeevan, H. S., Bud'ko, S. L., Canfield, P. C., and Gegenwart, P.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Low-temperature refrigeration is of crucial importance in fundamental research of condensed matter physics, as the investigations of fascinating quantum phenomena, such as superconductivity, superfluidity and quantum criticality, often require refrigeration down to very low temperatures. Currently, cryogenic refrigerators with $^3$He gas are widely used for cooling below 1 Kelvin. However, usage of the gas is being increasingly difficult due to the current world-wide shortage. Therefore, it is important to consider alternative methods of refrigeration. Here, we show that a new type of refrigerant, super-heavy electron metal, YbCo$_2$Zn$_{20}$, can be used for adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration, which does not require 3He gas. A number of advantages includes much better metallic thermal conductivity compared to the conventional insulating refrigerants. We also demonstrate that the cooling performance is optimized in Yb$_{1-x}$Sc$_x$Co$_2$Zn$_{20}$ by partial Sc substitution with $x\sim$0.19. The substitution induces chemical pressure which drives the materials close to a zero-field quantum critical point. This leads to an additional enhancement of the magnetocaloric effect in low fields and low temperatures enabling final temperatures well below 100 mK. Such performance has up to now been restricted to insulators. Since nearly a century the same principle of using local magnetic moments has been applied for adiabatic demagnetization cooling. This study opens new possibilities of using itinerant magnetic moments for the cryogen-free refrigeration.
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- 2016
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7. Good handling practice of parenterally administered medicines in neonatal intensive care units - position paper of an interdisciplinary working group
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Krämer, I, Goelz, R, Gille, C, Härtel, C, Müller, R, Orlikowsky, T, Piening, B, Schubert, S, Simon, A, Wolf, K, Rösner, B, Exner, M, Krämer, I, Goelz, R, Gille, C, Härtel, C, Müller, R, Orlikowsky, T, Piening, B, Schubert, S, Simon, A, Wolf, K, Rösner, B, and Exner, M
- Abstract
This position paper, developed by an interdisciplinary expert group of neonatologists, paediatric infectious disease physicians, clinical pharmacists and specialists for the prevention and control of nosocomial infections, describes the "Good handling practice of medicines parenterally administered to patients on NICUs". It takes equal account of patient safety and the specialties of neonatal intensive care regarding feasibility and proportionality. The overall concept is perceived as a "learning system", in which open communication within the health-care team relating to medication errors and critical incidents enables continuous development and improvement to ensure patient safety. In our opinion, pharmacists, who are responsible for the supply of ready-to-administer parenteral medicinal products for neonatal intensive care patients, as well as the hygiene staff responsible on site are integral parts of the interdisciplinary treatment team. Risks of the current clinical practice of parenteral treatment of NICU patients are discussed in detail and recommendations for safety-relevant procedures are given., Das hier vorgelegte Positionspapier wurde von einer interdisziplinären Expertengruppe, bestehend aus Neonatologen, pädiatrischen Infektiologen, klinischen Pharmazeuten und Spezialisten für Prävention und Kontrolle nosokomialer Infektionen, erarbeitet und beschreibt die "Gute Praxis der parenteralen Arzneimitteltherapie". Diese trägt gleichermaßen der Sicherheit der Patienten und den besonderen Gegebenheiten einer neonatologischen Intensivstation Rechnung, wobei auch Machbarkeit und Verhältnismäßigkeit der praktischen Umsetzung berücksichtigt werden. Das Gesamtkonzept wird als ein "lernendes System" aufgefasst; das heißt Fehler (critical incidents) hinsichtlich der Patientensicherheit werden im Behandlungsteam offen kommuniziert, sodass eine stetige Weiterentwicklung und Verbesserung der Abläufe möglich wird. Apotheker, die für die Versorgung von neonatologischen Intensivpatienten mit parenteral zu verabreichenden Arzneimitteln verantwortlich sind, gelten nach unserem Verständnis (genau wie das vor Ort zuständige Hygienefachpersonal) als integraler Bestandteil des interdisziplinären Behandlungsteams. Die Risiken, die mit der etablierten klinischen Praxis der parenteralen Therapie von Früh-/Reifgeborenen auf Intensivstationen einhergehen, werden von der Expertengruppe im Einzelnen dargestellt und es werden Hinweise für sicherheitsrelevante Vorgehensweisen gegeben.
- Published
- 2023
8. Management der parenteralen Arzneimitteltherapie auf neonatologischen Intensivstationen - Positionspapier einer interdisziplinären Arbeitsgruppe
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Krämer, I, Goelz, R, Gille, C, Härtel, C, Müller, R, Orlikowsky, T, Piening, B, Schubert, S, Simon, A, Wolf, K, Rösner, B, and Exner, M
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preparation ,prescription ,good handling practice ,bloodstream infection ,neonatologische Intensivmedizin ,administration ,Parenteralia ,Verschreibung ,ddc: 610 ,Sepsis ,neonatal intensive care ,reconstitution ,Rekonstitution ,Zubereitung ,Gute klinische Praxis ,parenterally administered medicines - Abstract
This position paper, developed by an interdisciplinary expert group of neonatologists, paediatric infectious disease physicians, clinical pharmacists and specialists for the prevention and control of nosocomial infections, describes the "Good handling practice of medicines parenterally administered to patients on NICUs". It takes equal account of patient safety and the specialties of neonatal intensive care regarding feasibility and proportionality. The overall concept is perceived as a "learning system", in which open communication within the health-care team relating to medication errors and critical incidents enables continuous development and improvement to ensure patient safety. In our opinion, pharmacists, who are responsible for the supply of ready-to-administer parenteral medicinal products for neonatal intensive care patients, as well as the hygiene staff responsible on site are integral parts of the interdisciplinary treatment team. Risks of the current clinical practice of parenteral treatment of NICU patients are discussed in detail and recommendations for safety-relevant procedures are given. Das hier vorgelegte Positionspapier wurde von einer interdisziplinären Expertengruppe, bestehend aus Neonatologen, pädiatrischen Infektiologen, klinischen Pharmazeuten und Spezialisten für Prävention und Kontrolle nosokomialer Infektionen, erarbeitet und beschreibt die "Gute Praxis der parenteralen Arzneimitteltherapie". Diese trägt gleichermaßen der Sicherheit der Patienten und den besonderen Gegebenheiten einer neonatologischen Intensivstation Rechnung, wobei auch Machbarkeit und Verhältnismäßigkeit der praktischen Umsetzung berücksichtigt werden. Das Gesamtkonzept wird als ein "lernendes System" aufgefasst; das heißt Fehler (critical incidents) hinsichtlich der Patientensicherheit werden im Behandlungsteam offen kommuniziert, sodass eine stetige Weiterentwicklung und Verbesserung der Abläufe möglich wird. Apotheker, die für die Versorgung von neonatologischen Intensivpatienten mit parenteral zu verabreichenden Arzneimitteln verantwortlich sind, gelten nach unserem Verständnis (genau wie das vor Ort zuständige Hygienefachpersonal) als integraler Bestandteil des interdisziplinären Behandlungsteams. Die Risiken, die mit der etablierten klinischen Praxis der parenteralen Therapie von Früh-/Reifgeborenen auf Intensivstationen einhergehen, werden von der Expertengruppe im Einzelnen dargestellt und es werden Hinweise für sicherheitsrelevante Vorgehensweisen gegeben.
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- 2023
9. Sixfold fermion near the Fermi level in cubic PtBi2
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S. Thirupathaiah, Y. S. Kushnirenk, K. Koepernik, B. R. Piening, B. Buechner, S. Aswartham, J. van den Brink, S. V. Borisenko, I. C. Fulga
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We show that the cubic compound PtBi2, is a topological semimetal hosting a sixfold band touching point in close proximity to the Fermi level. Using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we map the bandstructure of the system, which is in good agreement with results from density functional theory. Further, by employing a low energy effective Hamiltonian valid close to the crossing point, we study the effect of a magnetic field on the sixfold fermion. The latter splits into a total of twenty Weyl cones for a Zeeman field oriented in the diagonal, [111] direction. Our results mark cubic PtBi2, as an ideal candidate to study the transport properties of gapless topological systems beyond Dirac and Weyl semimetals.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. To screen or not to screen mothers of preterm infants for extended-spectrum beta-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E)
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Denkel, L A, Gastmeier, P, and Piening, B
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- 2015
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11. Sixfold fermion near the Fermi level in cubic PtBi2
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Thirupathaiah, Setti, primary, Kushnirenk, Y. S., additional, Koepernik, Klaus, additional, Piening, B. R., additional, Buechner, Bernd, additional, Aswartham, S., additional, van den Brink, Jeroen, additional, Borisenko, Sergey, additional, and Fulga, Ion Cosma, additional
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- 2021
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12. Outbreak of carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii carrying the carbapenemase OXA-23 in a German university medical centre: O298
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Kohlenberg, A., Bruemmer, S., Sohr, D., Higgins, P., Piening, B., Rueden, H., and Seifert, H.
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- 2008
13. Healthcare-associated pneumonia in acute care hospitals in European union/European economic area countries: an analysis of data from a point prevalence survey, 2011 to 2012
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Walter, J., Haller, S., Quinten, C., Kärki, T., Zacher, B., Eckmanns, T., Abu Sin, M., Plachouras, D., Kinross, P., Suetens, C., Strauss, R., Mertens, K., Dobreva, E., Budimir, A., Hadjiloucas, A., Prattingerová, J., Kristensen, B., Monnet, D.L., Märtin, P., Lyytikäinen, O., Giard, M., Piening, B., Kritsotakis, E.I., Kurcz, A., Gudlaugsson, Ó., Burns, K., Moro, M.L., Dumpis, U., Ašembergienė, J., Heisbourg, E., Xuereb, D., Hopmans, T., Sorknes, N.K., Deptuła, A., Paiva, J.A., Serban, R., Litvová, S., Kolman, J., Lozano, J., Struwe, J., Hopkins, S., Doherty, L., Reilly, J.S., and Harrison, W.
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stomatognathic system - Abstract
An aim of the ECDC point prevalence survey (PPS) in European Union/European Economic Area acute care hospitals was to acquire standardised healthcare-associated infections (HAI) data. We analysed one of the most common HAIs in the ECDC PPS, healthcare-associated pneumonia (HAP). Standardised HAI case definitions were provided and countries were advised to recruit nationally representative subsets of hospitals. We calculated 95% confidence intervals (CIs) around prevalence estimates and adjusted for clustering at hospital level. Of 231,459 patients in the survey, 2,902 (1.3%; 95% CI: 1.2–1.3) fulfilled the case definition for a HAP. HAPs were most frequent in intensive care units (8.1%; 95% CI: 7.4–8.9) and among patients intubated on the day of the survey (15%; 95% CI: 14–17; n = 737 with HAP). The most frequently reported microorganism was Pseudomonas aeruginosa (17% of 1,403 isolates), followed by Staphylococcus aureus (12%) and Klebsiella spp. (12%). Antimicrobial resistance was common among isolated microorganisms. The most frequently prescribed antimicrobial group was penicillins, including combinations with beta-lactamase inhibitors. HAPs occur regularly among intubated and non-intubated patients, with marked differences between medical specialities. HAPs remain a priority for preventive interventions, including surveillance. Our data provide a reference for future prevalence of HAPs at various settings.
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- 2018
14. Surveillance of bloodstream infections in pediatric cancer centers - what have we learned and how do we move on?
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Simon, A, Furtwängler, R, Graf, N, Laws, HJ, Voigt, S, Piening, B, Geffers, C, Agyeman, P, and Ammann, RA
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Broviac ,Port ,Surveillance ,ddc: 610 ,bloodstream infection ,pediatric oncology ,Blutstrominfektion ,Kinderonkologie ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,human activities - Abstract
Pediatric patients receiving conventional chemotherapy for malignant disease face an increased risk of bloodstream infection (BSI). Since BSI may represent an acute life-threatening event in patients with profound immunosuppression, and show further negative impact on quality of life and anticancer treatment, the prevention of BSI is of paramount importance to improve and guarantee patients' safety during intensive treatment. The great majority of all pediatric cancer patients (about 85%) have a long-term central venous access catheter in use (type Broviac or Port; CVAD). Referring to the current surveillance definitions a significant proportion of all BSI in pediatric patients with febrile neutropenia is categorized as CVAD-associated BSI. This state of the art review summarizes the epidemiology and the distinct pathogen profile of BSI in pediatric cancer patients from the perspective of infection surveillance. Problems in executing the current surveillance definition in this patient population are discussed and a new concept for the surveillance of BSI in pediatric cancer patients is outlined. Pädiatrisch-onkologische Patienten unter einer konventionellen Chemotherapie sind einem erhöhten Risiko für Blutstrominfektionen (BSI) ausgesetzt. Da diese mit einer erheblichen Gefährdung und Belastung der Patienten einhergehen, ist die Prävention von BSI ein wichtiger Bestandteil des Gesamtkonzepts zur Gewährleistung der Patientensicherheit während der intensiven Behandlung. Die Mehrzahl der Patienten (ca. 85%) hat einen langfristig implantierten zentralen Venenkatheter vom Typ Broviac oder Port (CVAD); nach den gängigen Definitionen der Infektionssurveillance sind daher ein erheblicher Anteil der BSI bei Patienten mit Fieber und Granuolozytopenie "Gefäßkatheter-assoziiert" (CABSI). In dieser Übersicht zum Stand des Wissens werden die Epidemiologie und das besondere Erregerprofil von BSI bei pädiatrisch onkologischen Patienten aus der Perspektive der Infektionssurveillance beschrieben. Probleme bei der Anwendung der gängigen Definitionen werden aufgezeigt und es wird ein Vorschlag für ein neu aufgelegtes Erfassungsmodul für die Surveillance von BSI bei kinderonkologischen Patienten vorgestellt.
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- 2016
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15. Erkennung von Ausbrüchen in mikrobiologischen Daten – ein Vergleich verschiedener Methoden
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Schröder, C, Peña Diaz, LA, Piening, B, Pilarski, G, Gastmeier, P, and Behnke, M
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Ausbruchsmanagement ,ddc: 610 ,610 Medical sciences ,Medicine - Abstract
Einleitung: Ein Ausbruch ist definiert als ein gehäuftes Auftreten von nosokomialen Infektionserregern zwischen denen ein epidemiologischer Zusammenhang besteht. Das frühzeitige Entdecken von Ausbrüchen ist Voraussetzung um zeitnah Interventionen durchzuführen und so die Reichweite[zum vollständigen Text gelangen Sie über die oben angegebene URL], GMDS 2015; 60. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Medizinische Informatik, Biometrie und Epidemiologie e.V. (GMDS)
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- 2015
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16. Implementation of an electronic hospital outbreak detection system
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Behnke, M, primary, Diaz, LA Peña, additional, Piening, B, additional, Pilarski, G, additional, Gastmeier, P, additional, and Schröder, C, additional
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- 2015
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17. Probiotics prevent necrotizing enterocolitis, sepsis and mortality in preterm infants: a multicenter analysis of more than 10,000 VLBW infants in German NICUs
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Denkel, LA, primary, Schwab, F, additional, Geffers, C, additional, Gastmeier, P, additional, Garten, L, additional, and Piening, B, additional
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- 2015
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18. Stereochemistry of 2,6-Dipyridine Substituted N-Benzyl-4-piperidone Mono- and Dicarboxylates and of the Corresponding Reduction Products
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Holzgrabe, U., primary, Piening, B., additional, Hesse, K.-F., additional, Höltje, H.-D., additional, and Worch, M., additional
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- 1989
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19. A whole-slide foundation model for digital pathology from real-world data.
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Xu H, Usuyama N, Bagga J, Zhang S, Rao R, Naumann T, Wong C, Gero Z, González J, Gu Y, Xu Y, Wei M, Wang W, Ma S, Wei F, Yang J, Li C, Gao J, Rosemon J, Bower T, Lee S, Weerasinghe R, Wright BJ, Robicsek A, Piening B, Bifulco C, Wang S, and Poon H
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- Humans, Benchmarking, Neoplasms classification, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms pathology, Male, Female, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Pathology, Clinical methods, Datasets as Topic, Machine Learning
- Abstract
Digital pathology poses unique computational challenges, as a standard gigapixel slide may comprise tens of thousands of image tiles
1-3 . Prior models have often resorted to subsampling a small portion of tiles for each slide, thus missing the important slide-level context4 . Here we present Prov-GigaPath, a whole-slide pathology foundation model pretrained on 1.3 billion 256 × 256 pathology image tiles in 171,189 whole slides from Providence, a large US health network comprising 28 cancer centres. The slides originated from more than 30,000 patients covering 31 major tissue types. To pretrain Prov-GigaPath, we propose GigaPath, a novel vision transformer architecture for pretraining gigapixel pathology slides. To scale GigaPath for slide-level learning with tens of thousands of image tiles, GigaPath adapts the newly developed LongNet5 method to digital pathology. To evaluate Prov-GigaPath, we construct a digital pathology benchmark comprising 9 cancer subtyping tasks and 17 pathomics tasks, using both Providence and TCGA data6 . With large-scale pretraining and ultra-large-context modelling, Prov-GigaPath attains state-of-the-art performance on 25 out of 26 tasks, with significant improvement over the second-best method on 18 tasks. We further demonstrate the potential of Prov-GigaPath on vision-language pretraining for pathology7,8 by incorporating the pathology reports. In sum, Prov-GigaPath is an open-weight foundation model that achieves state-of-the-art performance on various digital pathology tasks, demonstrating the importance of real-world data and whole-slide modelling., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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20. Healthcare-Associated Infections and the Use of Antibiotics in German Hospitals.
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Aghdassi SJS, Hansen S, Peña Diaz LA, Gropmann A, Saydan S, Geffers C, Gastmeier P, Piening B, and Behnke M
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- Humans, Germany epidemiology, Female, Male, Prevalence, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Adolescent, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Child, Young Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Preschool, Cross Infection epidemiology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: A national point prevalence survey (PPS) of healthcare-associated infections (HAI) and antibiotic use (AU) was carried out in Germany in 2022 in the framework of the European PPS conducted by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). The objective was to determine the prevalence of HAI and AU in German hospitals and to compare the obtained values with those of the most recent previous PPS, which was carried out in 2016., Methods: The German National Reference Center for the Surveillance of Nosocomial Infections was entrusted with the organization of the PPS of 2022. As recommended by the ECDC, each hospital in a representative sample of 50 hospitals was invited to participate, and all other interested hospitals in Germany were also able to participate if desired. The data were collected by specially trained hospital staff in May, June, and July 2022. The definitions and methods put forth by the ECDC were used., Results: Data from 66 586 patients in 252 hospitals were included. The prevalence of HAI in all participating hospitals was 4.9%, and that of AU was 26.9%. The HAI and AU prevalences were essentially unchanged in comparison to 2016. The most common types of HAI were surgical site infection (23.5%), lower respiratory tract infection (21.6%), and urinary tract infection (19.0%)., Conclusion: HAI were just as frequent in 2022 as in 2016, affecting approximately one in twenty hospitalized patients on any given day.
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- 2024
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21. Integrative multi-omics profiling in human decedents receiving pig heart xenografts.
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Schmauch E, Piening B, Mohebnasab M, Xia B, Zhu C, Stern J, Zhang W, Dowdell AK, Kim JI, Andrijevic D, Khalil K, Jaffe IS, Loza BL, Gragert L, Camellato BR, Oliveira MF, O'Brien DP, Chen HM, Weldon E, Gao H, Gandla D, Chang A, Bhatt R, Gao S, Lin X, Reddy KP, Kagermazova L, Habara AH, Widawsky S, Liang FX, Sall J, Loupy A, Heguy A, Taylor SEB, Zhu Y, Michael B, Jiang L, Jian R, Chong AS, Fairchild RL, Linna-Kuosmanen S, Kaikkonen MU, Tatapudi V, Lorber M, Ayares D, Mangiola M, Narula N, Moazami N, Pass H, Herati RS, Griesemer A, Kellis M, Snyder MP, Montgomery RA, Boeke JD, and Keating BJ
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- Humans, Animals, Swine, Male, Female, Graft Rejection immunology, Graft Rejection genetics, Proteomics, Metabolomics, Leukocytes, Mononuclear metabolism, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Transcriptome, Gene Expression Profiling, T-Lymphocytes immunology, T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Lipidomics, Reperfusion Injury immunology, Reperfusion Injury genetics, Reperfusion Injury metabolism, Multiomics, Heart Transplantation, Transplantation, Heterologous, Heterografts
- Abstract
In a previous study, heart xenografts from 10-gene-edited pigs transplanted into two human decedents did not show evidence of acute-onset cellular- or antibody-mediated rejection. Here, to better understand the detailed molecular landscape following xenotransplantation, we carried out bulk and single-cell transcriptomics, lipidomics, proteomics and metabolomics on blood samples obtained from the transplanted decedents every 6 h, as well as histological and transcriptomic tissue profiling. We observed substantial early immune responses in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and xenograft tissue obtained from decedent 1 (male), associated with downstream T cell and natural killer cell activity. Longitudinal analyses indicated the presence of ischemia reperfusion injury, exacerbated by inadequate immunosuppression of T cells, consistent with previous findings of perioperative cardiac xenograft dysfunction in pig-to-nonhuman primate studies. Moreover, at 42 h after transplantation, substantial alterations in cellular metabolism and liver-damage pathways occurred, correlating with profound organ-wide physiological dysfunction. By contrast, relatively minor changes in RNA, protein, lipid and metabolism profiles were observed in decedent 2 (female) as compared to decedent 1. Overall, these multi-omics analyses delineate distinct responses to cardiac xenotransplantation in the two human decedents and reveal new insights into early molecular and immune responses after xenotransplantation. These findings may aid in the development of targeted therapeutic approaches to limit ischemia reperfusion injury-related phenotypes and improve outcomes., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.)
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- 2024
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22. Oral microbiota analyses of paediatric Saudi population reveals signatures of dental caries.
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Alyousef YM, Piotrowski S, Alonaizan FA, Alsulaiman A, Alali AA, Almasood NN, Vatte C, Hamilton L, Gandla D, Lad H, Robinson FL, Cyrus C, Meng RC, Dowdell A, Piening B, Keating BJ, and Al-Ali AK
- Subjects
- Male, Child, Female, Humans, Saudi Arabia, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Saliva, Dental Caries genetics, Microbiota genetics
- Abstract
Background: Oral microbiome sequencing has revealed key links between microbiome dysfunction and dental caries. However, these efforts have largely focused on Western populations, with few studies on the Middle Eastern communities. The current study aimed to identify the composition and abundance of the oral microbiota in saliva samples of children with different caries levels using machine learning approaches., Methods: Oral microbiota composition and abundance were identified in 250 Saudi participants with high dental caries and 150 with low dental caries using 16 S rRNA sequencing on a NextSeq 2000 SP flow cell (Illumina, CA) using 250 bp paired-end reads, and attempted to build a classifier using random forest models to assist in the early detection of caries., Results: The ADONIS test results indicate that there was no significant association between sex and Bray-Curtis dissimilarity (p ~ 0.93), but there was a significant association with dental caries status (p ~ 0.001). Using an alpha level of 0.05, five differentially abundant operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified between males and females as the main effect along with four differentially abundant OTUs between high and low dental caries. The mean metrics for the optimal hyperparameter combination using the model with only differentially abundant OTUs were: Accuracy (0.701); Matthew's correlation coefficient (0.0509); AUC (0.517) and F1 score (0.821) while the mean metrics for random forest model using all OTUs were:0.675; 0.054; 0.611 and 0.796 respectively., Conclusion: The assessment of oral microbiota samples in a representative Saudi Arabian population for high and low metrics of dental caries yields signatures of abundances and diversity., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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23. Gut microbiota analyses of inflammatory bowel diseases from a representative Saudi population.
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Alsulaiman RM, Al-Quorain AA, Al-Muhanna FA, Piotrowski S, Kurdi EA, Vatte C, Alquorain AA, Alfaraj NH, Alrezuk AM, Robinson F, Dowdell AK, Alamri TA, Hamilton L, Lad H, Gao H, Gandla D, Keating BJ, Meng R, Piening B, and Al-Ali AK
- Subjects
- Humans, Saudi Arabia, Gastrointestinal Microbiome genetics, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases microbiology, Colitis, Ulcerative microbiology, Crohn Disease microbiology
- Abstract
Background: Crohn's diseases and ulcerative colitis, both of which are chronic immune-mediated disorders of the gastrointestinal tract are major contributors to the overarching Inflammatory bowel diseases. It has become increasingly evident that the pathological processes of IBDs results from interactions between genetic and environmental factors, which can skew immune responses against normal intestinal flora., Methods: The aim of this study is to assess and analyze the taxa diversity and relative abundances in CD and UC in the Saudi population. We utilized a sequencing strategy that targets all variable regions in the 16 S rRNA gene using the Swift Amplicon 16 S rRNA Panel on Illumina NovaSeq 6000., Results: The composition of stool 16 S rRNA was analyzed from 219 patients with inflammatory bowel disease and from 124 healthy controls. We quantified the abundance of microbial communities to examine any significant differences between subpopulations of samples. At the genus level, two genera in particular, Veillonella and Lachnoclostridium showed significant association with CD versus controls. There were significant differences between subjects with CD versus UC, with the top differential genera spanning Akkermansia, Harryflintia, Maegamonas and Phascolarctobacterium. Furthermore, statistically significant taxa diversity in microbiome composition was observed within the UC and CD groups., Conclusions: In conclusion we have shown that there are significant differences in gut microbiota between UC, CD and controls in a Saudi Arabian inflammatory bowel disease cohort. This reinforces the need for further studies in large populations that are ethnically and geographically diverse. In addition, our results show the potential to develop classifiers that may have add additional richness of context to clinical diagnosis of UC and CD with larger inflammatory bowel disease cohorts., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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24. Surgical site infection surveillance in German hospitals: a national survey to determine the status quo of digitalization.
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Aghdassi SJS, Goodarzi H, Gropmann A, Clausmeyer J, Geffers C, Piening B, Gastmeier P, and Behnke M
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- Humans, Germany epidemiology, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Epidemiological Monitoring, Surgical Wound Infection epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Surveillance of surgical site infections (SSI) relies on access to data from various sources. Insights into the practices of German hospitals conducting SSI surveillance and their information technology (IT) infrastructures are scarce. The aim of this study was to evaluate current SSI surveillance practices in German hospitals with a focus on employed IT infrastructures., Methods: German surgical departments actively participating in the national SSI surveillance module "OP-KISS" were invited in August 2020 to participate in a questionnaire-based online survey. Depending on whether departments entered all data manually or used an existing feature to import denominator data into the national surveillance database, departments were separated into different groups. Selected survey questions differed between groups., Results: Of 1,346 invited departments, 821 participated in the survey (response rate: 61%). Local IT deficits (n = 236), incompatibility of import specifications and hospital information system (n = 153) and lack of technical expertise (n = 145) were cited as the most frequent reasons for not using the denominator data import feature. Conversely, reduction of workload (n = 160) was named as the main motivation to import data. Questions on data availability and accessibility in the electronic hospital information system (HIS) and options to export data from the HIS for the purpose of surveillance, yielded diverse results. Departments utilizing the import feature tended to be from larger hospitals with a higher level of care., Conclusions: The degree to which digital solutions were employed for SSI surveillance differed considerably between surgical departments in Germany. Improving availability and accessibility of information in HIS and meeting interoperability standards will be prerequisites for increasing the amount of data exported directly from HIS to national databases and laying the foundation for automated SSI surveillance on a broad scale., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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25. Good handling practice of parenterally administered medicines in neonatal intensive care units - position paper of an interdisciplinary working group.
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Krämer I, Goelz R, Gille C, Härtel C, Müller R, Orlikowsky T, Piening B, Schubert S, Simon A, Wolf K, Rösner B, and Exner M
- Abstract
This position paper, developed by an interdisciplinary expert group of neonatologists, paediatric infectious disease physicians, clinical pharmacists and specialists for the prevention and control of nosocomial infections, describes the "Good handling practice of medicines parenterally administered to patients on NICUs". It takes equal account of patient safety and the specialties of neonatal intensive care regarding feasibility and proportionality. The overall concept is perceived as a "learning system", in which open communication within the health-care team relating to medication errors and critical incidents enables continuous development and improvement to ensure patient safety. In our opinion, pharmacists, who are responsible for the supply of ready-to-administer parenteral medicinal products for neonatal intensive care patients, as well as the hygiene staff responsible on site are integral parts of the interdisciplinary treatment team. Risks of the current clinical practice of parenteral treatment of NICU patients are discussed in detail and recommendations for safety-relevant procedures are given., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 Krämer et al.)
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- 2023
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26. Toward structuring real-world data: Deep learning for extracting oncology information from clinical text with patient-level supervision.
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Preston S, Wei M, Rao R, Tinn R, Usuyama N, Lucas M, Gu Y, Weerasinghe R, Lee S, Piening B, Tittel P, Valluri N, Naumann T, Bifulco C, and Poon H
- Abstract
Most detailed patient information in real-world data (RWD) is only consistently available in free-text clinical documents. Manual curation is expensive and time consuming. Developing natural language processing (NLP) methods for structuring RWD is thus essential for scaling real-world evidence generation. We propose leveraging patient-level supervision from medical registries, which are often readily available and capture key patient information, for general RWD applications. We conduct an extensive study on 135,107 patients from the cancer registry of a large integrated delivery network (IDN) comprising healthcare systems in five western US states. Our deep-learning methods attain test area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) values of 94%-99% for key tumor attributes and comparable performance on held-out data from separate health systems and states. Ablation results demonstrate the superiority of these advanced deep-learning methods. Error analysis shows that our NLP system sometimes even corrects errors in registrar labels., Competing Interests: The scope of this work is strictly within research exploration and does not involve any Microsoft product or commercial sponsorship. However, by way of disclosure, S.P., M.W., R.R., R.T., N.U., M.L., Y.G., N.V., T.N., and H.P. are employees of Microsoft, as denoted in the authorship., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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27. Systematic review of transcriptome and microRNAome associations with gestational diabetes mellitus.
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Lewis KA, Chang L, Cheung J, Aouizerat BE, Jelliffe-Pawlowski LL, McLemore MR, Piening B, Rand L, Ryckman KK, and Flowers E
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Signal Transduction, Transcriptome, Diabetes, Gestational genetics, MicroRNAs metabolism, Premature Birth
- Abstract
Purpose: Gestational diabetes (GDM) is associated with increased risk for preterm birth and related complications for both the pregnant person and newborn. Changes in gene expression have the potential to characterize complex interactions between genetic and behavioral/environmental risk factors for GDM. Our goal was to summarize the state of the science about changes in gene expression and GDM., Design: The systematic review was conducted using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines., Methods: PubMed articles about humans, in English, from any date were included if they described mRNA transcriptome or microRNA findings from blood samples in adults with GDM compared with adults without GDM., Results: Sixteen articles were found representing 1355 adults (n=674 with GDM, n=681 controls) from 12 countries. Three studies reported transcriptome results and thirteen reported microRNA findings. Identified pathways described various aspects of diabetes pathogenesis, including glucose and insulin signaling, regulation, and transport; natural killer cell mediated cytotoxicity; and fatty acid biosynthesis and metabolism. Studies described 135 unique miRNAs that were associated with GDM, of which eight (miR-16-5p, miR-17-5p, miR-20a-5p, miR-29a-3p, miR-195-5p, miR-222-3p, miR-210-3p, and miR-342-3p) were described in 2 or more studies. Findings suggest that miRNA levels vary based on the time in pregnancy when GDM develops, the time point at which they were measured, sex assigned at birth of the offspring, and both the pre-pregnancy and gestational body mass index of the pregnant person., Conclusions: The mRNA, miRNA, gene targets, and pathways identified in this review contribute to our understanding of GDM pathogenesis; however, further research is warranted to validate previous findings. In particular, longitudinal repeated-measures designs are needed that control for participant characteristics (e.g., weight), use standardized data collection methods and analysis tools, and are sufficiently powered to detect differences between subgroups. Findings may be used to improve early diagnosis, prevention, medication choice and/or clinical treatment of patients with GDM., 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 Lewis, Chang, Cheung, Aouizerat, Jelliffe-Pawlowski, McLemore, Piening, Rand, Ryckman and Flowers.)
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- 2023
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28. A Random Forest Genomic Classifier for Tumor Agnostic Prediction of Response to Anti-PD1 Immunotherapy.
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Bigelow E, Saria S, Piening B, Curti B, Dowdell A, Weerasinghe R, Bifulco C, Urba W, Finkelstein N, Fertig EJ, Baras A, Zaidi N, Jaffee E, and Yarchoan M
- Abstract
Tumor mutational burden (TMB), a surrogate for tumor neoepitope burden, is used as a pan-tumor biomarker to identify patients who may benefit from anti-program cell death 1 (PD1) immunotherapy, but it is an imperfect biomarker. Multiple additional genomic characteristics are associated with anti-PD1 responses, but the combined predictive value of these features and the added informativeness of each respective feature remains unknown. We evaluated whether machine learning (ML) approaches using proposed determinants of anti-PD1 response derived from whole exome sequencing (WES) could improve prediction of anti-PD1 responders over TMB alone. Random forest classifiers were trained on publicly available anti-PD1 data (n = 104), and subsequently tested on an independent anti-PD1 cohort (n = 69). Both the training and test datasets included a range of cancer types such as non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), melanoma, and smaller numbers of patients from other tumor types. Features used include summaries such as TMB and number of frameshift mutations, as well as more gene-level features such as counts of mutations associated with immune checkpoint response and resistance. Both ML algorithms demonstrated area under the receiver-operator curves (AUC) that exceeded TMB alone (AUC 0.63 "human-guided," 0.64 "cluster," and 0.58 TMB alone). Mutations within oncogenes disproportionately modulate anti-PD1 responses relative to their overall contribution to tumor neoepitope burden. The use of a ML algorithm evaluating multiple proposed genomic determinants of anti-PD1 responses modestly improves performance over TMB alone, highlighting the need to integrate other biomarkers to further improve model performance., Competing Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2022
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29. Tolerance of biofilm of a carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae involved in a duodenoscopy-associated outbreak to the disinfectant used in reprocessing.
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Brunke MS, Konrat K, Schaudinn C, Piening B, Pfeifer Y, Becker L, Schwebke I, and Arvand M
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- Bacteria, Biofilms, Carbapenems pharmacology, Disease Outbreaks, Duodenoscopy, Humans, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Peracetic Acid pharmacology, Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection prevention & control, Disinfectants pharmacology
- Abstract
Background: One possible transmission route for nosocomial pathogens is contaminated medical devices. Formation of biofilms can exacerbate the problem. We report on a carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae that had caused an outbreak linked to contaminated duodenoscopes. To determine whether increased tolerance to disinfectants may have contributed to the outbreak, we investigated the susceptibility of the outbreak strain to disinfectants commonly used for duodenoscope reprocessing. Disinfection efficacy was tested on planktonic bacteria and on biofilm., Methods: Disinfectant efficacy testing was performed for planktonic bacteria according to EN standards 13727 and 14561 and for biofilm using the Bead Assay for Biofilms. Disinfection was defined as ≥ 5log
10 reduction in recoverable colony forming units (CFU)., Results: The outbreak strain was an OXA-48 carbapenemase-producing K. pneumoniae of sequence type 101. We found a slightly increased tolerance of the outbreak strain in planktonic form to peracetic acid (PAA), but not to other disinfectants tested. Since PAA was the disinfectant used for duodenoscope reprocessing, we investigated the effect of PAA on biofilm of the outbreak strain. Remarkably, disinfection of biofilm of the outbreak strain could not be achieved by the standard PAA concentration used for duodenoscope reprocessing at the time of outbreak. An increased tolerance to PAA was not observed in a K. pneumoniae type strain tested in parallel., Conclusions: Biofilm of the K. pneumoniae outbreak strain was tolerant to standard disinfection during duodenoscope reprocessing. This study establishes for the first time a direct link between biofilm formation, increased tolerance to disinfectants, reprocessing failure of duodenoscopes and nosocomial transmission of carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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30. A web-based app to provide personalized recommendations for COVID-19.
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Thieme AH, Gertler M, Mittermaier M, Gröschel MI, Chen JH, Piening B, Benzler J, Habenicht D, Budach V, and Gevaert O
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- Health Promotion, Humans, Internet, COVID-19, Mobile Applications
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- 2022
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31. Transcriptomic profiles of neoantigen-reactive T cells in human gastrointestinal cancers.
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Zheng C, Fass JN, Shih YP, Gunderson AJ, Sanjuan Silva N, Huang H, Bernard BM, Rajamanickam V, Slagel J, Bifulco CB, Piening B, Newell PHA, Hansen PD, and Tran E
- Subjects
- Antigens, Neoplasm, Humans, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating, Transcriptome, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Gastrointestinal Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Tumor-infiltrating neoantigen-reactive T cells can mediate regression of metastatic gastrointestinal cancers yet remain poorly characterized. We performed immunological screening against personalized neoantigens in combination with single-cell RNA sequencing on tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes from bile duct and pancreatic cancer patients to characterize the transcriptomic landscape of neoantigen-reactive T cells. We found that most neoantigen-reactive CD8
+ T cells displayed an exhausted state with significant CXCL13 and GZMA co-expression compared with non-neoantigen-reactive bystander cells. Most neoantigen-reactive CD4+ T cells from a patient with bile duct cancer also exhibited an exhausted phenotype but with overexpression of HOPX or ADGRG1 while lacking IL7R expression. Thus, neoantigen-reactive T cells infiltrating gastrointestinal cancers harbor distinct transcriptomic signatures, which may provide new opportunities for harnessing these cells for therapy., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests E.T. is on the scientific advisory board of PACT Pharma, Genocea Biosciences, and Turnstone Biologics. C.B.B. reports a consultant/advisory relationship with BMS, has stock ownership in and is on the scientific board of PrimeVax, and is on the scientific board of BioAI and LunaPhore. Other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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32. Risk factors for nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infections in patients: results from a retrospective matched case-control study in a tertiary care university center.
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Aghdassi SJS, Schwab F, Peña Diaz LA, Brodzinski A, Fucini GB, Hansen S, Kohlmorgen B, Piening B, Schlosser B, Schneider S, Weikert B, Wiese-Posselt M, Wolff S, Behnke M, Gastmeier P, and Geffers C
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Pandemics, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Tertiary Care Centers, COVID-19 epidemiology, Cross Infection epidemiology, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Background: Factors contributing to the spread of SARS-CoV-2 outside the acute care hospital setting have been described in detail. However, data concerning risk factors for nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infections in hospitalized patients remain scarce. To close this research gap and inform targeted measures for the prevention of nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infections, we analyzed nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 cases in our hospital during a defined time period., Methods: Data on nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infections in hospitalized patients that occurred between May 2020 and January 2021 at Charité university hospital in Berlin, Germany, were retrospectively gathered. A SARS-CoV-2 infection was considered nosocomial if the patient was admitted with a negative SARS-CoV-2 reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction test and subsequently tested positive on day five or later. As the incubation period of SARS-CoV-2 can be longer than five days, we defined a subgroup of "definite" nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 cases, with a negative test on admission and a positive test after day 10, for which we conducted a matched case-control study with a one to one ratio of cases and controls. We employed a multivariable logistic regression model to identify factors significantly increasing the likelihood of nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infections., Results: A total of 170 patients with a nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infection were identified. The majority of nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 patients (n = 157, 92%) had been treated at wards that reported an outbreak of nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 cases during their stay or up to 14 days later. For 76 patients with definite nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infections, controls for the case-control study were matched. For this subgroup, the multivariable logistic regression analysis revealed documented contact to SARS-CoV-2 cases (odds ratio: 23.4 (95% confidence interval: 4.6-117.7)) and presence at a ward that experienced a SARS-CoV-2 outbreak (odds ratio: 15.9 (95% confidence interval: 2.5-100.8)) to be the principal risk factors for nosocomial SARS-CoV-2 infection., Conclusions: With known contact to SARS-CoV-2 cases and outbreak association revealed as the primary risk factors, our findings confirm known causes of SARS-CoV-2 infections and demonstrate that these also apply to the acute care hospital setting. This underscores the importance of rapidly identifying exposed patients and taking adequate preventive measures., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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33. Implementation of an automated cluster alert system into the routine work of infection control and hospital epidemiology: experiences from a tertiary care university hospital.
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Aghdassi SJS, Kohlmorgen B, Schröder C, Peña Diaz LA, Thoma N, Rohde AM, Piening B, Gastmeier P, and Behnke M
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- Hospitals, University, Humans, Infection Control, Tertiary Healthcare, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection prevention & control, Enterococcus faecium
- Abstract
Background: Early detection of clusters of pathogens is crucial for infection prevention and control (IPC) in hospitals. Conventional manual cluster detection is usually restricted to certain areas of the hospital and multidrug resistant organisms. Automation can increase the comprehensiveness of cluster surveillance without depleting human resources. We aimed to describe the application of an automated cluster alert system (CLAR) in the routine IPC work in a hospital. Additionally, we aimed to provide information on the clusters detected and their properties., Methods: CLAR was continuously utilized during the year 2019 at Charité university hospital. CLAR analyzed microbiological and patient-related data to calculate a pathogen-baseline for every ward. Daily, this baseline was compared to data of the previous 14 days. If the baseline was exceeded, a cluster alert was generated and sent to the IPC team. From July 2019 onwards, alerts were systematically categorized as relevant or non-relevant at the discretion of the IPC physician in charge., Results: In one year, CLAR detected 1,714 clusters. The median number of isolates per cluster was two. The most common cluster pathogens were Enterococcus faecium (n = 326, 19 %), Escherichia coli (n = 274, 16 %) and Enterococcus faecalis (n = 250, 15 %). The majority of clusters (n = 1,360, 79 %) comprised of susceptible organisms. For 906 alerts relevance assessment was performed, with 317 (35 %) alerts being classified as relevant., Conclusions: CLAR demonstrated the capability of detecting small clusters and clusters of susceptible organisms. Future improvements must aim to reduce the number of non-relevant alerts without impeding detection of relevant clusters. Digital solutions to IPC represent a considerable potential for improved patient care. Systems such as CLAR could be adapted to other hospitals and healthcare settings, and thereby serve as a means to fulfill these potentials., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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34. iNetModels 2.0: an interactive visualization and database of multi-omics data.
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Arif M, Zhang C, Li X, Güngör C, Çakmak B, Arslantürk M, Tebani A, Özcan B, Subaş O, Zhou W, Piening B, Turkez H, Fagerberg L, Price N, Hood L, Snyder M, Nielsen J, Uhlen M, and Mardinoglu A
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Gene Regulatory Networks, Humans, Middle Aged, Neoplasms genetics, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease blood, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease microbiology, Software, Databases, Factual, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Metabolomics, Metagenomics, Mouth microbiology, Proteomics
- Abstract
It is essential to reveal the associations between various omics data for a comprehensive understanding of the altered biological process in human wellness and disease. To date, very few studies have focused on collecting and exhibiting multi-omics associations in a single database. Here, we present iNetModels, an interactive database and visualization platform of Multi-Omics Biological Networks (MOBNs). This platform describes the associations between the clinical chemistry, anthropometric parameters, plasma proteomics, plasma metabolomics, as well as metagenomics for oral and gut microbiome obtained from the same individuals. Moreover, iNetModels includes tissue- and cancer-specific Gene Co-expression Networks (GCNs) for exploring the connections between the specific genes. This platform allows the user to interactively explore a single feature's association with other omics data and customize its particular context (e.g. male/female specific). The users can also register their data for sharing and visualization of the MOBNs and GCNs. Moreover, iNetModels allows users who do not have a bioinformatics background to facilitate human wellness and disease research. iNetModels can be accessed freely at https://inetmodels.com without any limitation., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2021
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35. Germinal center reactions in tertiary lymphoid structures associate with neoantigen burden, humoral immunity and long-term survivorship in pancreatic cancer.
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J Gunderson A, Rajamanickam V, Bui C, Bernard B, Pucilowska J, Ballesteros-Merino C, Schmidt M, McCarty K, Philips M, Piening B, Dubay C, Medler T, Newell P, Hansen P, Tran E, Tang E, Bifulco C, Crittenden M, Gough M, and Young KH
- Subjects
- Germinal Center, Humans, Immunity, Humoral, Survivorship, Tumor Microenvironment, Adenocarcinoma, Pancreatic Neoplasms genetics, Tertiary Lymphoid Structures
- Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has traditionally been thought of as an immunologically quiescent tumor type presumably because of a relatively low tumor mutational burden (TMB) and poor responses to checkpoint blockade therapy. However, many PDAC tumors exhibit T cell inflamed phenotypes. The presence of tertiary lymphoid structures (TLS) has recently been shown to be predictive of checkpoint blockade response in melanomas and sarcomas, and are prognostic for survival in PDAC. In order to more comprehensively understand tumor immunity in PDAC patients with TLS, we performed RNA-seq, single and multiplex IHC, flow cytometry and predictive genomic analysis on treatment naïve, PDAC surgical specimens. Forty-six percent of tumors contained distinct T and B cell aggregates reflective of "early-stage TLS" (ES-TLS), which correlated with longer overall and progression-free survival. These tumors had greater CD8
+ T cell infiltration but were not defined by previously published TLS gene-expression signatures. ES-TLS+ tumors were enriched for IgG1 class-switched memory B cells and memory CD4+ T cells, suggesting durable immunological memory persisted in these patients. We also observed the presence of active germinal centers (mature-TLS) in 31% of tumors with lymphocyte clusters, whose patients had long-term survival (median 56 months). M-TLS-positive tumors had equivalent overall T cell infiltration to ES-TLS, but were enriched for activated CD4+ memory cells, naive B cells and NK cells. Finally, using a TCGA-PDAC dataset, ES-TLS+ tumors harbored a decreased TMB, but M-TLS with germinal centers expressed significantly more MHCI-restricted neoantigens as determined by an in silico neoantigen prediction method. Interestingly, M-TLS+ tumors also had evidence of increased rates of B cell somatic hypermutation, suggesting that germinal centers form in the presence of high-quality tumor neoantigens leading to increased humoral immunity that confers improved survival for PDAC patients. Abbreviations TLS: tertiary lymphoid structures; GC: germinal center(s); PDAC: pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma; RNA-seq: RNA sequencing; BCRseq: B cell receptor sequencing; HEV: high endothelial venule; PNAd: peripheral node addressin; TMB: tumor mutational burden; TCGA: the cancer genome atlas; PAAD: pancreatic adenocarcinoma; FFPE: formalin fixed paraffin embedded; TIME: tumor immune microenvironment., (© 2021 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.)- Published
- 2021
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36. SARS-Coronavirus-2 cases in healthcare workers may not regularly originate from patient care: lessons from a university hospital on the underestimated risk of healthcare worker to healthcare worker transmission.
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Schneider S, Piening B, Nouri-Pasovsky PA, Krüger AC, Gastmeier P, and Aghdassi SJS
- Subjects
- COVID-19 prevention & control, Disease Outbreaks, Hospitals, University, Humans, Personal Protective Equipment, COVID-19 transmission, Health Personnel, Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional prevention & control, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Background: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) represents an unprecedented healthcare challenge. Various SARS-CoV-2 outbreaks in healthcare facilities have been reported. Healthcare workers (HCWs) may play a critical role in the spread of the virus, particularly when asymptomatic. We examined four healthcare-associated outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 infections that occurred at a university hospital in Berlin, Germany. We aimed to describe and analyze the spread of the virus in order to draw conclusions for effective containment of SARS-CoV-2 in healthcare facilities., Methods: Healthcare-associated outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 infections were defined as two or more laboratory confirmed infections with SARS-CoV-2 where an epidemiological link within the healthcare setting appeared likely. We focused our analysis on one of three sites of the Charité-University Medicine hospital within a 2 month period (March and April 2020)., Results: We observed four healthcare-associated outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 infections, with a total of 24 infected persons (23 HCWs and one patient). The outbreaks were detected in the departments of nephrology and dialysis (n = 9), anesthesiology (n = 8), surgical pediatrics (n = 4), and neurology (n = 3). Each outbreak showed multiple unprotected contacts between infected HCWs. A combination of contact tracing, testing, physical distancing and mandatory continuous wearing of face masks by all HCWs was able to contain all four outbreaks., Conclusions: HCW to HCW transmission represented the likely source of the four outbreaks. Ensuring proper physical distancing measures and wearing of protective equipment, also when interacting with colleagues, must be a key aspect of fighting COVID-19 in healthcare facilities.
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- 2020
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37. Epidemiological and clinical characteristics of SARS-CoV-2 infections at a testing site in Berlin, Germany, March and April 2020-a cross-sectional study.
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Maechler F, Gertler M, Hermes J, van Loon W, Schwab F, Piening B, Rojansky S, Hommes F, Kausch F, Lindner AK, Burock S, Rössig H, Hartmann C, Kirchberger V, Thieme A, Behnke M, Gastmeier P, Mockenhaupt FP, and Seybold J
- Subjects
- Adult, Berlin epidemiology, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 physiopathology, COVID-19 Testing methods, Carrier State diagnosis, Carrier State virology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Mass Screening statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Olfaction Disorders epidemiology, Olfaction Disorders virology, Pandemics statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Taste Disorders epidemiology, Taste Disorders virology, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 Testing statistics & numerical data, Carrier State epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: In Berlin, the first public severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) testing site started 1 day after the first case in the city occurred. We describe epidemiological and clinical characteristics and aim at identifying risk factors for SARS-CoV-2 detection during the first 6 weeks of operation., Methods: Testing followed national recommendations, but was also based on the physician's discretion. We related patient characteristics to SARS-CoV-2 test positivity for exploratory analyses using a cross-sectional, observational study design., Results: Between 3 March and 13 April 2020, 5179 individuals attended the site (median age 34 years; interquartile range 26-47 years). The median time since disease onset was 4 days (interquartile range 2-7 days). Among 4333 persons tested, 333 (7.7%) were positive. Test positivity increased up to 10.3% (96/929) during the first 3 weeks and then declined, paralleling Germany's lock-down and the course of the epidemic in Berlin. Strict adherence to testing guidelines resulted in 10.4% (262/2530) test positivity, compared with 3.9% (71/1803) among individuals tested for other indications. A nightclub was a transmission hotspot; 27.7% (26/94) of one night's visitors were found positive. Smell and/or taste dysfunction indicated coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) with 85.6% specificity (95% CI 82.1%-88.1%). Four per cent (14/333) of those infected were asymptomatic. Risk factors for detection of SARS-CoV-2 infection were recent contact with a positive case (second week after contact, OR 3.42; 95% CI 2.48-4.71), travel to regions of high pandemic activity (e.g. Austria, OR 4.16; 95% CI 2.48-6.99), recent onset of symptoms (second week, OR 3.61; 95% CI 1.87-6.98) and an impaired sense of smell/taste (4.08; 95% CI 2.36-7.03)., Conclusions: In this young population, early-onset presentation of COVID-19 resembled flu-like symptoms, except for smell and/or taste dysfunction. Risk factors for SARS-CoV-2 detection were return from regions with high incidence and contact with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 cases, particularly when tests were administered within the first 2 weeks after contact and/or onset of symptoms., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2020
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38. Transcriptional and immunohistological assessment of immune infiltration in pancreatic cancer.
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Bernard B, Rajamanickam V, Dubay C, Piening B, Alonso E, Jutric Z, Tang E, Newell P, Hansen P, Medler T, Gunderson A, Young K, Bifulco C, Pucliowska J, Crittenden MR, and Gough MJ
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma genetics, Adenocarcinoma immunology, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Gene Expression Profiling methods, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic immunology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, T-Lymphocytes immunology, Tumor Microenvironment genetics, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Lymphocytes, Tumor-Infiltrating immunology, Pancreatic Neoplasms genetics, Pancreatic Neoplasms immunology
- Abstract
Pancreatic adenocarcinoma is characterized by a complex tumor environment with a wide diversity of infiltrating stromal and immune cell types that impact the tumor response to conventional treatments. However, even in this poorly responsive tumor the extent of T cell infiltration as determined by quantitative immunohistology is a candidate prognostic factor for patient outcome. As such, even more comprehensive immunophenotyping of the tumor environment, such as immune cell type deconvolution via inference models based on gene expression profiling, holds significant promise. We hypothesized that RNA-Seq can provide a comprehensive alternative to quantitative immunohistology for immunophenotyping pancreatic cancer. We performed RNA-Seq on a prospective cohort of pancreatic tumor specimens and compared multiple approaches for gene expression-based immunophenotyping analysis compared to quantitative immunohistology. Our analyses demonstrated that while gene expression analyses provide additional information on the complexity of the tumor immune environment, they are limited in sensitivity by the low overall immune infiltrate in pancreatic cancer. As an alternative approach, we identified a set of genes that were enriched in highly T cell infiltrated pancreatic tumors, and demonstrate that these can identify patients with improved outcome in a reference population. These data demonstrate that the poor immune infiltrate in pancreatic cancer can present problems for analyses that use gene expression-based tools; however, there remains enormous potential in using these approaches to understand the relationships between diverse patterns of infiltrating cells and their impact on patient treatment outcomes., Competing Interests: I have read the journal’s policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: MJG and MRC have research support from Bristol Myers Squibb, Mavupharma, and Jounce that is not relevant to the subject of this manuscript. Funding for this manuscript was provided by NIH R01CA182311 (MJG), NIH R01CA244142 (MJG), NIH R01CA208644 (MRC), and the Providence Opportunity Fund. The authors declare that these do not represent competing interests relevant to the subject of this manuscript.
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- 2020
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39. Metabolic Dynamics and Prediction of Gestational Age and Time to Delivery in Pregnant Women.
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Liang L, Rasmussen MH, Piening B, Shen X, Chen S, Röst H, Snyder JK, Tibshirani R, Skotte L, Lee NC, Contrepois K, Feenstra B, Zackriah H, Snyder M, and Melbye M
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers blood, Female, Fetus metabolism, Humans, Metabolic Networks and Pathways physiology, Metabolome physiology, Pregnant Women, Gestational Age, Metabolomics methods, Pregnancy metabolism
- Abstract
Metabolism during pregnancy is a dynamic and precisely programmed process, the failure of which can bring devastating consequences to the mother and fetus. To define a high-resolution temporal profile of metabolites during healthy pregnancy, we analyzed the untargeted metabolome of 784 weekly blood samples from 30 pregnant women. Broad changes and a highly choreographed profile were revealed: 4,995 metabolic features (of 9,651 total), 460 annotated compounds (of 687 total), and 34 human metabolic pathways (of 48 total) were significantly changed during pregnancy. Using linear models, we built a metabolic clock with five metabolites that time gestational age in high accordance with ultrasound (R = 0.92). Furthermore, two to three metabolites can identify when labor occurs (time to delivery within two, four, and eight weeks, AUROC ≥ 0.85). Our study represents a weekly characterization of the human pregnancy metabolome, providing a high-resolution landscape for understanding pregnancy with potential clinical utilities., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests M.S. is a co-founder and member of the scientific advisory boards of the following: Personalis, SensOmics, Filtricine, Qbio, January, Mirvie, and Oralome. He is a member of the scientific advisory board of Jungla. M.M. is a co-founder of Mirvie. L.L., M.S., and M.M. are inventors on the patent application PCT/US2019/052515 related to this work., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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40. Lean back and wait for the alarm? Testing an automated alarm system for nosocomial outbreaks to provide support for infection control professionals.
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Schröder C, Peña Diaz LA, Rohde AM, Piening B, Aghdassi SJS, Pilarski G, Thoma N, Gastmeier P, Leistner R, and Behnke M
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- Algorithms, Bacteria classification, Bacteria drug effects, Bacteria pathogenicity, Cross Infection epidemiology, Hospitals, Humans, Infection Control Practitioners, Bacteria isolation & purification, Cross Infection diagnosis, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Infection Control methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Outbreaks of communicable diseases in hospitals need to be quickly detected in order to enable immediate control. The increasing digitalization of hospital data processing offers potential solutions for automated outbreak detection systems (AODS). Our goal was to assess a newly developed AODS., Methods: Our AODS was based on the diagnostic results of routine clinical microbiological examinations. The system prospectively counted detections per bacterial pathogen over time for the years 2016 and 2017. The baseline data covers data from 2013-2015. The comparative analysis was based on six different mathematical algorithms (normal/Poisson and score prediction intervals, the early aberration reporting system, negative binomial CUSUMs, and the Farrington algorithm). The clusters automatically detected were then compared with the results of our manual outbreak detection system., Results: During the analysis period, 14 different hospital outbreaks were detected as a result of conventional manual outbreak detection. Based on the pathogens' overall incidence, outbreaks were divided into two categories: outbreaks with rarely detected pathogens (sporadic) and outbreaks with often detected pathogens (endemic). For outbreaks with sporadic pathogens, the detection rate of our AODS ranged from 83% to 100%. Every algorithm detected 6 of 7 outbreaks with a sporadic pathogen. The AODS identified outbreaks with an endemic pathogen were at a detection rate of 33% to 100%. For endemic pathogens, the results varied based on the epidemiological characteristics of each outbreak and pathogen., Conclusion: AODS for hospitals based on routine microbiological data is feasible and can provide relevant benefits for infection control teams. It offers in-time automated notification of suspected pathogen clusters especially for sporadically occurring pathogens. However, outbreaks of endemically detected pathogens need further individual pathogen-specific and setting-specific adjustments., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2020
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41. [Implementation of NeoKissEs in Spain: A validated surveillance system for nosocomial sepsis in very low birth weight infants].
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Madrid-Aguilar M, López-Herrera MC, Pérez-López J, Escudero-Argaluza J, Santesteban-Otazu E, Piening B, Villate-Navarro JI, and Pijoán-Zubizarreta JI
- Subjects
- Epidemiological Monitoring, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Very Low Birth Weight, Male, Pilot Projects, Risk Factors, Spain epidemiology, Cross Infection epidemiology, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal statistics & numerical data, Population Surveillance methods, Sepsis epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Bloodstream infections (BSIs) are the most frequent nosocomial infections in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), especially in very low birth weight (VLBW) infants (birth weight ≤ 1500g). An epidemiologic surveillance system may contribute to the prevention of infection by continuous monitoring of its frequency and associated risk factors. The aim of this article was to describe the implementation of the NeoKissEs surveillance system for BSIs in VLBW newborns in a group of Spanish NICUs., Methods: We assessed the clinical cohort consisting of all VLBW newborns aged less than 28 days admitted to the participating units. In the pilot phase, 2NICUs translated and adapted materials from the original German NEO-KISS system. During implementation, 210 health care professionals attended one of 8 educational workshops. A web-based system was created that allows entering data regarding patients and BSI episodes, data monitoring, benchmarking and providing feedback to the units. At each NICU, one neonatologist was responsible for the implementation of the system and reporting the difficulties perceived throughout the process., Results: Out of the 50 units that agreed to participate, 45 successfully started using the surveillance platform during the implementation phase, recording 1108 episodes of catheter-associated BSI (CABSI) in 3638 newborns, and finding an overall rate of CABSI of 18.4 (95% CI, 17.8-19.1) per 1000 catheter days., Conclusions: The NeoKissEs surveillance system constitutes a helpful source of information for the purpose of benchmarking the performance of neonatal units, assessing factors associated with BSI in VLBW infants and measuring the impact of future preventive interventions in NICUs., (Copyright © 2018 Asociación Española de Pediatría. Publicado por Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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42. Longitudinal multi-omics of host-microbe dynamics in prediabetes.
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Zhou W, Sailani MR, Contrepois K, Zhou Y, Ahadi S, Leopold SR, Zhang MJ, Rao V, Avina M, Mishra T, Johnson J, Lee-McMullen B, Chen S, Metwally AA, Tran TDB, Nguyen H, Zhou X, Albright B, Hong BY, Petersen L, Bautista E, Hanson B, Chen L, Spakowicz D, Bahmani A, Salins D, Leopold B, Ashland M, Dagan-Rosenfeld O, Rego S, Limcaoco P, Colbert E, Allister C, Perelman D, Craig C, Wei E, Chaib H, Hornburg D, Dunn J, Liang L, Rose SMS, Kukurba K, Piening B, Rost H, Tse D, McLaughlin T, Sodergren E, Weinstock GM, and Snyder M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents administration & dosage, Biomarkers analysis, Cohort Studies, Datasets as Topic, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 genetics, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism, Female, Glucose metabolism, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Inflammation metabolism, Influenza Vaccines immunology, Insulin metabolism, Insulin Resistance, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Microbiota physiology, Middle Aged, Prediabetic State genetics, Prediabetic State metabolism, Respiratory Tract Infections genetics, Respiratory Tract Infections metabolism, Respiratory Tract Infections microbiology, Respiratory Tract Infections virology, Stress, Physiological, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, Biomarkers metabolism, Computational Biology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 microbiology, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Host Microbial Interactions genetics, Prediabetic State microbiology, Proteome metabolism, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) is a growing health problem, but little is known about its early disease stages, its effects on biological processes or the transition to clinical T2D. To understand the earliest stages of T2D better, we obtained samples from 106 healthy individuals and individuals with prediabetes over approximately four years and performed deep profiling of transcriptomes, metabolomes, cytokines, and proteomes, as well as changes in the microbiome. This rich longitudinal data set revealed many insights: first, healthy profiles are distinct among individuals while displaying diverse patterns of intra- and/or inter-personal variability. Second, extensive host and microbial changes occur during respiratory viral infections and immunization, and immunization triggers potentially protective responses that are distinct from responses to respiratory viral infections. Moreover, during respiratory viral infections, insulin-resistant participants respond differently than insulin-sensitive participants. Third, global co-association analyses among the thousands of profiled molecules reveal specific host-microbe interactions that differ between insulin-resistant and insulin-sensitive individuals. Last, we identified early personal molecular signatures in one individual that preceded the onset of T2D, including the inflammation markers interleukin-1 receptor agonist (IL-1RA) and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (CRP) paired with xenobiotic-induced immune signalling. Our study reveals insights into pathways and responses that differ between glucose-dysregulated and healthy individuals during health and disease and provides an open-access data resource to enable further research into healthy, prediabetic and T2D states.
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- 2019
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43. The Prevalence of Nosocomial Infection and Antibiotic Use in German Hospitals.
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Behnke M, Aghdassi SJ, Hansen S, Diaz LAP, Gastmeier P, and Piening B
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- Cross Infection drug therapy, Germany epidemiology, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Humans, Prevalence, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Cross Infection epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: In 2011 and again in 2016, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) asked all European countries to carry out nationwide studies on the prevalence of nosocomial infection (NI) and antibiotic use (AU). Data on NI and AU constitute an essential basis for the development of measures to prevent infection and lessen antibiotic resistance., Methods: The German prevalence study of 2016 was carried out according to the ECDC protocol. Alongside a sample of 49 acute-care hospitals requested by the ECDC that was representative in terms of size (number of beds), further hospitals were invited to participate as well. Analyses were made of the overall group (218 hospitals, 64 412 patients), the representative group (49 hospitals), and the core group (46 hospitals). The core group consisted of the hospitals that had participated in the study of 2011., Results: The prevalence of patients with NI was 4.6% in the overall group in 2016; it had been 5.1% in 2011 (p <0.01). In the representative group, the prevalence was 3.6% (compared to 5.1% in 2011, p <0.01). In the core group, the prevalence of NI was the same in 2016 as it had been in 2011. The prevalence of patients with ABU in the overall group remained the same, but a fall was seen in the representative group (21.5% versus 23.3%; p <0.01) and a rise in the core group (27.3% versus 26.2%; p = 0.02). The staff-patient ratio among the infection prevention and control professionals improved in all three groups., Conclusion: A decrease in NI and AU prevalence was seen in the representative group, while mixed results were seen in the other analyzed groups. Further efforts to reduce NI and ABA are clearly necessary.
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- 2017
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44. Responses of metastatic basal cell and cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas to anti-PD1 monoclonal antibody REGN2810.
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Falchook GS, Leidner R, Stankevich E, Piening B, Bifulco C, Lowy I, and Fury MG
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- Aged, Antibodies, Monoclonal pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological pharmacology, Carcinoma, Basal Cell diagnosis, Carcinoma, Basal Cell metabolism, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell diagnosis, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell metabolism, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Metastasis, Neoplasm Staging, Skin Neoplasms diagnosis, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Treatment Outcome, Antibodies, Monoclonal therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological therapeutic use, Carcinoma, Basal Cell drug therapy, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell drug therapy, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor antagonists & inhibitors, Skin Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) share exposure to UV light as the dominant risk factor, and these tumors therefore harbor high mutation burdens. In other malignancies, high mutation burden has been associated with clinical benefit from therapy with antibodies directed against the Programmed Death 1 (PD-1) immune checkpoint receptor. Highly mutated tumors are more likely to express immunogenic tumor neoantigens that attract effector T cells, which can be unleashed by blockade of the PD-1 immune checkpoint., Case Presentations: This report describes a patient with metastatic BCC and a patient with metastatic CSCC who were treated with REGN2810, a fully human anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody, in an ongoing phase 1 trial (NCT02383212). The CSCC patient has experienced an ongoing complete response (16+ months), and the BCC patient has experienced an ongoing partial response (12+ months)., Conclusions: These case reports suggest that UV-associated skin cancers, beyond melanoma, are sensitive to PD-1 blockade., Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT02383212. Registered 2 February 2015.
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- 2016
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45. Underestimated and Modifiable? From Intraoperative Drug Application to Postoperative Infections.
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Tafelski S, Piening B, Spies C, and Nachtigall I
- Subjects
- Humans, Intraoperative Care, Postoperative Complications
- Published
- 2016
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46. Protective Effect of Dual-Strain Probiotics in Preterm Infants: A Multi-Center Time Series Analysis.
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Denkel LA, Schwab F, Garten L, Geffers C, Gastmeier P, and Piening B
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- Cross Infection drug therapy, Enterocolitis, Necrotizing drug therapy, Female, Humans, Infant, Extremely Low Birth Weight physiology, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Very Low Birth Weight physiology, Male, Proportional Hazards Models, Protective Agents pharmacology, Infant, Premature physiology, Interrupted Time Series Analysis, Probiotics therapeutic use, Protective Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: To determine the effect of dual-strain probiotics on the development of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), mortality and nosocomial bloodstream infections (BSI) in preterm infants in German neonatal intensive care units (NICUs)., Design: A multi-center interrupted time series analysis., Setting: 44 German NICUs with routine use of dual-strain probiotics on neonatal ward level., Patients: Preterm infants documented by NEO-KISS, the German surveillance system for nosocomial infections in preterm infants with birth weights below 1,500 g, between 2004 and 2014., Intervention: Routine use of dual-strain probiotics containing Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacterium spp. (Infloran) on the neonatal ward level., Main Outcome Measures: Incidences of NEC, overall mortality, mortality following NEC and nosocomial BSI., Results: Data from 10,890 preterm infants in 44 neonatal wards was included in this study. Incidences of NEC and BSI were 2.5% (n = 274) and 15.0%, (n = 1631), respectively. Mortality rate was 6.1% (n = 665). The use of dual-strain probiotics significantly reduced the risk of NEC (HR = 0.48; 95% CI = 0.38-0.62), overall mortality (HR = 0.60, 95% CI = 0.44-0.83), mortality after NEC (HR = 0.51, 95% CI = 0.26-0.999) and nosocomial BSI (HR = 0.89, 95% CI = 0.81-0.98). These effects were even more pronounced in the subgroup analysis of preterm infants with birth weights below 1,000 g., Conclusion: In order to reduce NEC and mortality in preterm infants, it is advisable to add routine prophylaxis with dual-strain probiotics to clinical practice in neonatal wards.
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- 2016
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47. An outbreak of carbapenem-resistant OXA-48 - producing Klebsiella pneumonia associated to duodenoscopy.
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Kola A, Piening B, Pape UF, Veltzke-Schlieker W, Kaase M, Geffers C, Wiedenmann B, and Gastmeier P
- Abstract
Background: Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) have become a major problem for healthcare systems worldwide. While the first reports from European hospitals described the introduction of CPE from endemic countries, there is now a growing number of reports describing outbreaks of CPE in European hospitals. Here we report an outbreak of Carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae in a German University hospital which was in part associated to duodenoscopy., Findings: Between December 6, 2012 and January 10, 2013, carbapenem-resistant K. pneumoniae (CRKP) was cultured from 12 patients staying on 4 different wards. The amplification of carbapenemase genes by multiplex PCR showed presence of the bla OXA-48 gene. Molecular typing confirmed the identity of all 12 isolates. Reviewing the medical records of CRKP cases revealed that there was a spatial relationship between 6 of the cases which were located on the same wards. The remaining 6 cases were all related to endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) which was performed with the same duodenoscope. The outbreak ended after the endoscope was sent to the manufacturer for maintenance., Conclusions: Though the outbreak strain was also disseminated to patients who did not undergo ERCP and environmental sources or medical personnel also contributed to the outbreak, the gut of colonized patients is the main source for CPE. Therefore, accurate and stringent reprocessing of endoscopic instruments is extremely important, which is especially true for more complex instruments like the duodenoscope (TJF Q180V series) involved in the outbreak described here.
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- 2015
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48. Nosocomial infection and antibiotic use: a second national prevalence study in Germany.
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Behnke M, Hansen S, Leistner R, Diaz LA, Gropmann A, Sohr D, Gastmeier P, and Piening B
- Subjects
- Drug Utilization Review, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Bacterial Infections epidemiology, Bacterial Infections prevention & control, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection prevention & control, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Prescriptions statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: In 2011, seventeen years after the first national study on the prevalence of nosocomial infections and antibiotic use in German hospitals, a second national prevalence study was carried out according to the specifications of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC)., Methods: The ECDC protocol, containing uniform surveillance definitions and ascertainment methods, was implemented. The only infections counted were those that were active or under treatment with antibiotics on the day of the study. In addition to the representative sample required by the ECDC, which consisted of 46 hospitals, further hospitals participated on a voluntary basis., Results: Data on 41 539 patients in 132 hospitals were analyzed. The prevalence of infections that had arisen during the current hospital stay was 3.8% in the overall group and 3.4% in the representative sample of 9626 patients in 46 hospitals. The prevalence of all nosocomial infections, including those acquired before the current hospital stay and still present upon admission, was 5.1% in both the overall group and the representative sample. The prevalence of antibiotic use on the day of the study was 25.5% and 23.3% in the two groups, respectively., Conclusion: The prevalence of nosocomial infection has not changed since 1994, but the prevalence of antibiotic use has increased. In interpreting these findings, one should bear in mind that confounders may have influenced them in different directions: The mean length of hospital stay is now shorter than in 1994, but the mean age of hospitalized patients is higher.
- Published
- 2013
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49. The impact of staffing on central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections in preterm neonates - results of nation-wide cohort study in Germany.
- Author
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Leistner R, Thürnagel S, Schwab F, Piening B, Gastmeier P, and Geffers C
- Abstract
Background: Very low birthweight (VLBW) newborns on neonatal intensive care units (NICU) are at increased risk for developing central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections (CVC BSI). In addition to the established intrinsic risk factors of VLBW newborns, it is still not clear which process and structure parameters within NICUs influence the prevalence of CVC BSI., Methods: The study population consisted of VLBW newborns from NICUs that participated in the German nosocomial infection surveillance system for preterm infants (NEO-KISS) from January 2008 to June 2009. Structure and process parameters of NICUs were obtained by a questionnaire-based enquiry. Patient based date and the occurrence of BSI derived from the NEO-KISS database. The association between the requested parameters and the occurrance of CVC BSI and laboratory-confirmed BSI was analyzed by generalized estimating equations., Results: We analyzed data on 5,586 VLBW infants from 108 NICUs and found 954 BSI cases in 847 infants. Of all BSI cases, 414 (43%) were CVC-associated. The pooled incidence density of CVC BSI was 8.3 per 1,000 CVC days. The pooled CVC utilization ratio was 24.3 CVC-days per 100 patient days. A low realized staffing rate lead to an increased risk of CVC BSI (OR 1.47; p=0.008) and also of laboratory-confirmed CVC BSI (OR 1.78; p=0.028)., Conclusions: Our findings show that low levels of realized staffing are associated with increased rates of CVC BSI on NICUs. Further studies are necessary to determine a threshold that should not be undercut.
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- 2013
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50. MRSA transmission on a neonatal intensive care unit: epidemiological and genome-based phylogenetic analyses.
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Nübel U, Nachtnebel M, Falkenhorst G, Benzler J, Hecht J, Kube M, Bröcker F, Moelling K, Bührer C, Gastmeier P, Piening B, Behnke M, Dehnert M, Layer F, Witte W, and Eckmanns T
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Female, Genetic Variation, Genome, Bacterial genetics, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus classification, Risk Factors, Staphylococcal Infections microbiology, Genomics, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus genetics, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus physiology, Phylogeny, Staphylococcal Infections epidemiology, Staphylococcal Infections transmission
- Abstract
Background: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) may cause prolonged outbreaks of infections in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). While the specific factors favouring MRSA spread on neonatal wards are not well understood, colonized infants, their relatives, or health-care workers may all be sources for MRSA transmission. Whole-genome sequencing may provide a new tool for elucidating transmission pathways of MRSA at a local scale., Methods and Findings: We applied whole-genome sequencing to trace MRSA spread in a NICU and performed a case-control study to identify risk factors for MRSA transmission. MRSA genomes had accumulated sequence variation sufficiently fast to reflect epidemiological linkage among individual patients, between infants and their mothers, and between infants and staff members, such that the relevance of individual nurses' nasal MRSA colonization for prolonged transmission could be evaluated. In addition to confirming previously reported risk factors, we identified an increased risk of transmission from infants with as yet unknown MRSA colonisation, in contrast to known MRSA-positive infants., Conclusions: The integration of epidemiological (temporal, spatial) and genomic data enabled the phylogenetic testing of several hypotheses on specific MRSA transmission routes within a neonatal intensive-care unit. The pronounced risk of transmission emanating from undetected MRSA carriers suggested that increasing the frequency or speed of microbiological diagnostics could help to reduce transmission of MRSA.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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