1,323,692 results on '"Prospective studies"'
Search Results
202. The impact of tau-PET in a selected memory clinic cohort: rationale and design of the TAP-TAU study
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Marie R. Vermeiren, Joost Somsen, Gert Luurtsema, Fransje E. Reesink, Nicolaas A. Verwey, Liesbeth Hempenius, Nelleke Tolboom, Geert Jan Biessels, J. Matthijs Biesbroek, Meike W. Vernooij, Sophie E. M. Veldhuijzen van Zanten, Harro Seelaar, Emma M. Coomans, Charlotte E. Teunissen, Afina W. Lemstra, Argonde C. van Harten, Leonie N. C. Visser, Wiesje M. van der Flier, Elsmarieke van de Giessen, and Rik Ossenkoppele
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Alzheimer’s disease ,Dementia ,Tau ,Positron emission tomography ,Prospective studies ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Tau-PET is a diagnostic tool with high sensitivity and specificity for discriminating Alzheimer’s disease (AD) dementia from other neurodegenerative disorders in well-controlled research environments. The role of tau-PET in real-world clinical practice, however, remains to be established. The aim of the TAP-TAU study is therefore to investigate the impact of tau-PET in clinical practice. Methods TAP-TAU is a prospective, longitudinal multi-center study in 300 patients (≥ 50 years old) with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia across five Dutch memory clinics. Patients are eligible if diagnostic certainty is
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- 2024
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203. Research considerations for prospective studies of patients with coma and disorders of consciousness
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Tinti, Lorenzo, Lawson, Thomas, Molteni, Erika, Kondziella, Daniel, Rass, Verena, Sharshar, Tarek, Bodien, Yelena G, Giacino, Joseph T, Mayer, Stephan A, Amiri, Moshgan, Muehlschlegel, Susanne, Rao, Chethan P Venkatasubba, Vespa, Paul M, Menon, David K, Citerio, Giuseppe, Helbok, Raimund, McNett, Molly, Agarwal, Sachin, Aiyagari, Venkatesh, Akbari, Yama, Albertson, Asher, Alexander, Sheila, Alexandrov, Anne, Alkhachroum, Ayham, Al-Mufti, Fawaz, Amiri, Moshagan, Appavu, Brian, Gebrewold, Meron Awraris, Ayounb, Marc, Badenes, Rafael, Bader, Mary Kay, Badjiata, Neeraj, Balu, Ram, Barlow, Brooke, Barra, Megan, Beekman, Rachel, Beghi, Ettore, Beqiri, Erta, Berlin, Tracey, Bilotta, Federico, Bleck, Thomas, Bodien, Yelena, Boerwinkle, Varina, Boly, Melanie, Bonnel, Alexandra, Brazzi, Luca, Brown, Emery, Bulic, Sebina, Caceres, Eder, Caceres, Adrian, Cafiero, Tullio, Carroll, Elizabeth, Cediel, Emilio G, Chou, Sherry, Claassen, Jan, Condie, Chad, Conti, Alfredo, Cosmas, Katie, Costa, Paolo, Creutzfeldt, Claire, Dangayach, Neha, Dauri, Mario, Debicki, Derek, DeGeorgia, Michael, Der-Nigoghossian, Caroline, Desai, Masoom, Dhar, Rajat, Diringer, Michael, Durr, Emily, Edlow, Brian, Ercole, Ari, Estraneo, Anna, Falcone, Guido, Farrokh, Salia, Ferguson, Adam, Fernandez-Espejo, Davinia, Fink, Ericka, Fins, Joseph, Foreman, Brandon, Franchi, Federico, Frontera, Jennifer, Ganesan, Rishi, Gaspard, Nicolas, Ghavam, Ahmeneh, Giacino, Joseph, Gibbons, Christie, Gilmore, Emily, Glustein, Chavie, Gosseries, Olivia, Green, Theresa, Greer, David, Guanci, Mary, Gupta, Deepak, Hahn, Cecil, Hakimi, Ryan, Hammond, Flora, Hanley, Daniel F, Hartings, Jed, and Hassan, Ahmed
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Prevention ,Curing Coma Campaign Collaborators ,coma ,design ,disorders of consciousness ,outcomes ,prospective studies ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Disorders of consciousness are neurological conditions characterized by impaired arousal and awareness of self and environment. Behavioural responses are absent or are present but fluctuate. Disorders of consciousness are commonly encountered as a consequence of both acute and chronic brain injuries, yet reliable epidemiological estimates would require inclusive, operational definitions of the concept, as well as wider knowledge dissemination among involved professionals. Whereas several manifestations have been described, including coma, vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome and minimally conscious state, a comprehensive neurobiological definition for disorders of consciousness is still lacking. The scientific literature is primarily observational, and studies-specific aetiologies lead to disorders of consciousness. Despite advances in these disease-related forms, there remains uncertainty about whether disorders of consciousness are a disease-agnostic unitary entity with a common mechanism, prognosis or treatment response paradigm. Our knowledge of disorders of consciousness has also been hampered by heterogeneity of study designs, variables, and outcomes, leading to results that are not comparable for evidence synthesis. The different backgrounds of professionals caring for patients with disorders of consciousness and the different goals at different stages of care could partly explain this variability. The Prospective Studies working group of the Neurocritical Care Society Curing Coma Campaign was established to create a platform for observational studies and future clinical trials on disorders of consciousness and coma across the continuum of care. In this narrative review, the author panel presents limitations of prior observational clinical research and outlines practical considerations for future investigations. A narrative review format was selected to ensure that the full breadth of study design considerations could be addressed and to facilitate a future consensus-based statement (e.g. via a modified Delphi) and series of recommendations. The panel convened weekly online meetings from October 2021 to December 2022. Research considerations addressed the nosographic status of disorders of consciousness, case ascertainment and verification, selection of dependent variables, choice of covariates and measurement and analysis of outcomes and covariates, aiming to promote more homogeneous designs and practices in future observational studies. The goal of this review is to inform a broad community of professionals with different backgrounds and clinical interests to address the methodological challenges imposed by the transition of care from acute to chronic stages and to streamline data gathering for patients with disorders of consciousness. A coordinated effort will be a key to allow reliable observational data synthesis and epidemiological estimates and ultimately inform condition-modifying clinical trials.
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- 2023
204. Bayesian adaptive design for covariate-adaptive historical control information borrowing.
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Scheffler, Aaron, Kim, Mi-ok, Jiang, Fei, and Jin, Huaqing
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Bayesian ,covariate-adaptive ,high dimensional ,historical sample ,kernel ,Female ,Humans ,Bayes Theorem ,Computer Simulation ,Prospective Studies ,Research Design ,Sample Size ,Clinical Trials as Topic - Abstract
Interest in incorporating historical data in the clinical trial has increased with the rising cost of conducting clinical trials. The intervention arm for the current trial often requires prospective data to assess a novel treatment, and thus borrowing historical control data commensurate in distribution to current control data is motivated in order to increase the allocation ratio to the current intervention arm. Existing historical control borrowing adaptive designs adjust allocation ratios based on the commensurability assessed through study-level summary statistics of the response agnostic of the distributions of the trial subject characteristics in the current and historical trials. This can lead to distributional imbalance of the current trial subject characteristics across the treatment arms as well as between current control data and borrowed historical control data. Such covariate imbalance may threaten the internal validity of the current trial by introducing confounding factors that affect study endpoints. In this article, we propose a Bayesian design which borrows and updates the treatment allocation ratios both covariate-adaptively and commensurate to covariate dependently assessed similarity between the current and historical control data. We employ covariate-dependent discrepancy parameters which are allowed to grow with the sample size and propose a regularized local regression procedure for the estimation of the parameters. The proposed design also permits the current and the historical controls to be similar to varying degree, depending on the subject level characteristics. We evaluate the proposed design extensively under the settings derived from two placebo-controlled randomized trials on vertebral fracture risk in post-menopausal women.
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- 2023
205. Whole blood transcriptomics identifies subclasses of pediatric septic shock.
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Yang, Jamie, Zinter, Matt, Pellegrini, Matteo, Wong, Man, Gala, Kinisha, Markovic, Daniela, Nadel, Brian, Peng, Kerui, Do, Nguyen, Mangul, Serghei, Nadkarni, Vinay, Karlsberg, Aaron, Deshpande, Dhrithi, Butte, Manish, Asaro, Lisa, Agus, Michael, and Sapru, Anil
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Adaptive immunity ,Gene expression ,RNA-Seq ,Sepsis ,Subclassification ,Child ,Humans ,Shock ,Septic ,Prospective Studies ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Sepsis ,Transcriptome - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis is a highly heterogeneous syndrome, which has hindered the development of effective therapies. This has prompted investigators to develop a precision medicine approach aimed at identifying biologically homogenous subgroups of patients with septic shock and critical illnesses. Transcriptomic analysis can identify subclasses derived from differences in underlying pathophysiological processes that may provide the basis for new targeted therapies. The goal of this study was to elucidate pathophysiological pathways and identify pediatric septic shock subclasses based on whole blood RNA expression profiles. METHODS: The subjects were critically ill children with cardiopulmonary failure who were a part of a prospective randomized insulin titration trial to treat hyperglycemia. Genome-wide expression profiling was conducted using RNA sequencing from whole blood samples obtained from 46 children with septic shock and 52 mechanically ventilated noninfected controls without shock. Patients with septic shock were allocated to subclasses based on hierarchical clustering of gene expression profiles, and we then compared clinical characteristics, plasma inflammatory markers, cell compositions using GEDIT, and immune repertoires using Imrep between the two subclasses. RESULTS: Patients with septic shock depicted alterations in innate and adaptive immune pathways. Among patients with septic shock, we identified two subtypes based on gene expression patterns. Compared with Subclass 2, Subclass 1 was characterized by upregulation of innate immunity pathways and downregulation of adaptive immunity pathways. Subclass 1 had significantly worse clinical outcomes despite the two classes having similar illness severity on initial clinical presentation. Subclass 1 had elevated levels of plasma inflammatory cytokines and endothelial injury biomarkers and demonstrated decreased percentages of CD4 T cells and B cells and less diverse T cell receptor repertoires. CONCLUSIONS: Two subclasses of pediatric septic shock patients were discovered through genome-wide expression profiling based on whole blood RNA sequencing with major biological and clinical differences. Trial Registration This is a secondary analysis of data generated as part of the observational CAF-PINT ancillary of the HALF-PINT study (NCT01565941). Registered March 29, 2012.
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- 2023
206. Statin-induced mitochondrial priming sensitizes multiple myeloma cells to BCL2 and MCL1 inhibitors
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Juarez, Dennis, Buono, Roberta, Matulis, Shannon M, Gupta, Vikas A, Duong, Madeleine R, Yudiono, Jacob, Paul, Madhuri, Mallya, Sharmila, Diep, Grace, Hsin, Peter, Lu, Alexander, Suh, Sang Mi, Dong, Vy M, Roberts, Andrew W, Leverson, Joel D, Jalaluddin, Muhammad, Liu, Zhuangzhuang, Bueno, Orlando F, Boise, Lawrence H, and Fruman, David A
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Biological Sciences ,Rare Diseases ,Hematology ,Orphan Drug ,Cancer ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Myeloid Cell Leukemia Sequence 1 Protein ,Multiple Myeloma ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Retrospective Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Hematologic Neoplasms - Abstract
The BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax promotes apoptosis in blood cancer cells and is approved for treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia and acute myeloid leukemia. However, multiple myeloma cells are frequently more dependent on MCL-1 for survival, conferring resistance to venetoclax. Here we report that mevalonate pathway inhibition with statins can overcome resistance to venetoclax in multiple myeloma cell lines and primary cells. In addition, statins sensitize to apoptosis induced by MCL-1 inhibitor, S63845. In retrospective analysis of venetoclax clinical studies in multiple myeloma, background statin use was associated with a significantly enhanced rate of stringent complete response and absence of progressive disease. Statins sensitize multiple myeloma cells to venetoclax by upregulating two proapoptotic proteins: PUMA via a p53-independent mechanism and NOXA via the integrated stress response. These findings provide rationale for prospective testing of statins with venetoclax regimens in multiple myeloma.SignificanceBH3 mimetics including venetoclax hold promise for treatment of multiple myeloma but rational combinations are needed to broaden efficacy. This study presents mechanistic and clinical data to support addition of pitavastatin to venetoclax regimens in myeloma. The results open a new avenue for repurposing statins in blood cancer.
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- 2023
207. AFP-L3 and DCP strongly predict early hepatocellular carcinoma recurrence after liver transplantation
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Norman, Joshua S, Li, P Jonathan, Kotwani, Prashant, Shui, Amy M, Yao, Francis, and Mehta, Neil
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Liver Disease ,Digestive Diseases ,Liver Cancer ,Cancer ,Transplantation ,Rare Diseases ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,Organ Transplantation ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Carcinoma ,Hepatocellular ,alpha-Fetoproteins ,Prospective Studies ,Liver Neoplasms ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Liver Transplantation ,Biomarkers ,Prothrombin ,alpha fetoprotein ,AFP-L3 ,des-gamma-carboxyprothrombin ,liver transplant ,hepatocellular carcinoma ,Public Health and Health Services ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background & aimsAlpha-fetoprotein (AFP) predicts hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) recurrence after liver transplant (LT) but remains an imperfect biomarker. The role of DCP (des-gamma-carboxyprothrombin) and AFP-L3 (AFP bound to Lens culinaris agglutinin) in predicting HCC recurrence remains incompletely characterized. AFP-L3 and DCP could identify patients at high risk of post-transplant HCC recurrence and serve as liver transplant exclusion criteria to defer transplant until patients receive additional risk-reducing pre-transplant locoregional therapy.MethodsThis prospective cohort study included consecutive patients with HCC who underwent LT (within or down-staged to Milan criteria) between 2017 and 2022. Pre-transplant AFP, AFP-L3, and DCP measurements were obtained. The primary endpoint was the ability of biomarkers to predict HCC recurrence-free survival.ResultsThis cohort included 285 patients with a median age of 67 (IQR 63-71). At LT, median biomarker values were AFP 5.0 ng/ml (IQR 3.0-12.1), AFP-L3 6.7% (0.5-13.2), and DCP 1.0 ng/ml (0.3-2.8). Most (94.7%) patients received pre-LT locoregional therapy. After a median post-LT follow-up of 3.1 years, HCC recurrence was observed in 18 (6.3%) patients. AFP-L3 and DCP outperformed AFP with C-statistics of 0.81 and 0.86 respectively, compared with 0.74 for AFP. A dual-biomarker combination of AFP-L3 ≥15% and DCP ≥7.5 predicted 61.1% of HCC recurrences, whereas HCC only recurred in 7 of 265 (2.6%) patients not meeting this threshold. The Kaplan-Meier recurrence-free survival rate at 3 years post-LT was 43.7% for patients with dual-positive biomarkers compared to 97.0% for all others (p
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- 2023
208. Associations of Prenatal Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substance (PFAS) Exposures with Offspring Adiposity and Body Composition at 16-20 Years of Age: Project Viva.
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Zhang, Mingyu, Rifas-Shiman, Sheryl, Aris, Izzuddin, Fleisch, Abby, Lin, Pi-I, Nichols, Amy, Oken, Emily, and Hivert, Marie-France
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Humans ,Obesity ,Alkanesulfonic Acids ,Fluorocarbons ,Environmental Pollutants ,Bayes Theorem ,Prospective Studies ,Body Composition ,Pregnancy ,Adolescent ,Female ,Male ,Adiposity - Abstract
BackgroundFindings on the associations between prenatal PFAS exposures and offspring adiposity are inconsistent. Whether such associations may extend to adolescence is especially understudied.ObjectivesWe investigated associations of prenatal PFAS exposures with offspring adiposity and body composition at 16-20 years of age.MethodsWe studied 545 mother-child pairs in the prospective prebirth cohort Project Viva (Boston, Massachusetts). We measured six PFAS (PFOA, PFOS, PFNA, PFHxS, EtFOSAA, and MeFOSAA) in maternal early pregnancy (median age=9.6wk, range: 5.7-19.6 wk) plasma samples. At the late adolescence visit (median age=17.4 y, range: 15.9-20.0 y), we obtained anthropometric measures and assessed body composition using bioelectrical impedance analysis and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. We examined associations of individual PFAS with obesity [i.e., age- and sex-specific body mass index (BMI) ≥95th percentile] and adiposity and body composition using multivariable Poisson and linear regression models, respectively. We assessed PFAS mixture effects using Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) and quantile g-computation. We used fractional-polynomial models to assess BMI trajectories (at 3-20 years of age) by prenatal PFAS levels.ResultsThirteen percent (n=73) of the children had obesity in late adolescence. After multivariable adjustment, higher prenatal PFAS concentrations were associated with higher obesity risk [e.g., 1.59 (95% CI: 1.19, 2.12), 1.24 (95% CI: 0.98, 1.57), and 1.49 (95% CI: 1.11, 1.99) times the obesity risk per doubling of PFOS, PFOA, and PFNA, respectively]. BKMR showed an interaction between PFOA and PFOS, where the positive association between PFOS and obesity was stronger when PFOA levels were lower. Each quartile increment of the PFAS mixture was associated with 1.52 (95% CI: 1.03, 2.25) times the obesity risk and 0.52 (95% CI: -0.02, 1.06) kg/m2 higher BMI. Children with higher prenatal PFOS, EtFOSAA, and MeFOSAA concentrations had higher rates of BMI increase starting from 9-11 years of age.DiscussionPrenatal PFAS exposures may have obesogenic effects into late adolescence. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP12597.
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- 2023
209. Hypothetical Interventions on Diet Quality and Lifestyle Factors to Improve Breast Cancer Survival: The Pathways Study.
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Ergas, Isaac, Bradshaw, Patrick, Cespedes Feliciano, Elizabeth, Roh, Janise, Kwan, Marilyn, Yao, Song, Thomsen, Catherine, Kushi, Lawrence, Laraia, Barbara, and Madsen, Kristine
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Humans ,Female ,Breast Neoplasms ,Prospective Studies ,Diet ,Life Style ,Diet ,Healthy - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of breast cancer survivors is increasing, yet evidence to inform dietary and lifestyle guidelines is limited. METHODS: This analysis included 3,658 participants from the Pathways Study, a prospective cohort of women diagnosed with invasive breast cancer. A healthy plant-based dietary index score (hPDI), an American Cancer Society (ACS) nutrition guidelines score, a 2015 Healthy Eating Index score (HEI), hours per week of moderate to vigorous physical activity (PA), and lifetime cumulative pack-years of cigarette smoking (SM) were each measured at diagnosis, 6, 24, and 72 months. Using g-computation, 5- and 10-year risk ratios (RR), risk differences, and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for all-cause mortality under hypothetical interventions on diet quality, PA, and SM, compared with the natural course (no intervention) were calculated. RESULTS: Hypothetical moderate to extreme interventions on hPDI, ACS, and HEI, each in combination with PA and SM, showed 11% to 56%, 9% to 38%, and 9% to 49% decreases in 5-year risks of all-cause mortality compared with no intervention, respectively [(hPDI: RRmoderate = 0.89, 95% CI: 0.82-0.94; RRextreme = 0.44, 95% CI: 0.26-0.67), (ACS: RRmoderate = 0.91, 95% CI: 0.85-0.96; RRextreme = 0.62, 95% CI: 0.43-0.82), (HEI: RRmoderate = 0.91, 95% CI: 0.84-0.95; RRextreme = 0.51, 95% CI: 0.33-0.72)]. While 10-year relative risks were slightly attenuated, absolute risk reductions were more pronounced. CONCLUSIONS: Interventions to improve diet quality, increase PA, or reduce SM at the time of diagnosis may improve survival among breast cancer survivors. IMPACT: We estimate that over 10% of deaths could be delayed by even moderate adoption of these behaviors.
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- 2023
210. Targeted gene expression profiling predicts meningioma outcomes and radiotherapy responses
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Chen, William C, Choudhury, Abrar, Youngblood, Mark W, Polley, Mei-Yin C, Lucas, Calixto-Hope G, Mirchia, Kanish, Maas, Sybren LN, Suwala, Abigail K, Won, Minhee, Bayley, James C, Harmanci, Akdes S, Harmanci, Arif O, Klisch, Tiemo J, Nguyen, Minh P, Vasudevan, Harish N, McCortney, Kathleen, Yu, Theresa J, Bhave, Varun, Lam, Tai-Chung, Pu, Jenny Kan-Suen, Li, Lai-Fung, Leung, Gilberto Ka-Kit, Chan, Jason W, Perlow, Haley K, Palmer, Joshua D, Haberler, Christine, Berghoff, Anna S, Preusser, Matthias, Nicolaides, Theodore P, Mawrin, Christian, Agnihotri, Sameer, Resnick, Adam, Rood, Brian R, Chew, Jessica, Young, Jacob S, Boreta, Lauren, Braunstein, Steve E, Schulte, Jessica, Butowski, Nicholas, Santagata, Sandro, Spetzler, David, Bush, Nancy Ann Oberheim, Villanueva-Meyer, Javier E, Chandler, James P, Solomon, David A, Rogers, C Leland, Pugh, Stephanie L, Mehta, Minesh P, Sneed, Penny K, Berger, Mitchel S, Horbinski, Craig M, McDermott, Michael W, Perry, Arie, Bi, Wenya Linda, Patel, Akash J, Sahm, Felix, Magill, Stephen T, and Raleigh, David R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Brain Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Humans ,Biomarkers ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Meningioma ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Prospective Studies ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Immunology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for meningioma, the most common primary intracranial tumor, but improvements in meningioma risk stratification are needed and indications for postoperative radiotherapy are controversial. Here we develop a targeted gene expression biomarker that predicts meningioma outcomes and radiotherapy responses. Using a discovery cohort of 173 meningiomas, we developed a 34-gene expression risk score and performed clinical and analytical validation of this biomarker on independent meningiomas from 12 institutions across 3 continents (N = 1,856), including 103 meningiomas from a prospective clinical trial. The gene expression biomarker improved discrimination of outcomes compared with all other systems tested (N = 9) in the clinical validation cohort for local recurrence (5-year area under the curve (AUC) 0.81) and overall survival (5-year AUC 0.80). The increase in AUC compared with the standard of care, World Health Organization 2021 grade, was 0.11 for local recurrence (95% confidence interval 0.07 to 0.17, P
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- 2023
211. Treatment Landscape of Renal Cell Carcinoma
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Chen, Yu-Wei, Wang, Luke, Panian, Justine, Dhanji, Sohail, Derweesh, Ithaar, Rose, Brent, Bagrodia, Aditya, and McKay, Rana R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Kidney Disease ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Carcinoma ,Renal Cell ,Prospective Studies ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Adjuvants ,Immunologic ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Renal cell carcinoma ,Immunotherapy ,Immune checkpoint inhibitor ,Kidney cancer ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Opinion statementThe treatment landscape of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) has evolved significantly over the past three decades. Active surveillance and tumor ablation are alternatives to extirpative therapy in appropriately selected patients. Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is an emerging noninvasive alternative to treat primary RCC tumors. The advent of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) has greatly improved the overall survival of advanced RCC, and now the ICI-based doublet (dual ICI-ICI doublet; or ICI in combination with a vascular endothelial growth factor tyrosine kinase inhibitor, ICI-TKI doublet) has become the standard frontline therapy. Based on unprecedented outcomes in the metastatic with ICIs, they are also being explored in the neoadjuvant and adjuvant setting for patients with high-risk disease. Adjuvant pembrolizumab has proven efficacy to reduce the risk of RCC recurrence after nephrectomy. Historically considered a radioresistant tumor, SBRT occupies an expanding role to treat RCC with oligometastasis or oligoprogression in combination with systemic therapy. Furthermore, SBRT is being investigated in combination with ICI-doublet in the advanced disease setting. Lastly, given the treatment paradigm is shifting to adopt ICIs at earlier disease course, the prospective studies guiding treatment sequencing in the post-ICI setting is maturing. The effort is ongoing in search of predictive biomarkers to guide optimal treatment option in RCC.
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- 2023
212. Achieving diagnostic excellence through prevention and teamwork (ADEPT) study protocol: A multicenter, prospective quality and safety program to improve diagnostic processes in medical inpatients.
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Schnipper, Jeffrey, Raffel, Katie, Keniston, Angela, Burden, Marisha, Glasheen, Jeffrey, Ranji, Sumant, Hubbard, Colin, Kantor, Molly, Adler-Milstein, Julia, John Boscardin, W, Harrison, James, Dalal, Anuj, Lee, Tiffany, Auerbach, Andrew, and Barish, Peter
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Humans ,Inpatients ,Prospective Studies ,Hospitals ,Hospitalization ,Diagnostic Errors ,Multicenter Studies as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Few hospitals have built surveillance for diagnostic errors into usual care or used comparative quantitative and qualitative data to understand their diagnostic processes and implement interventions designed to reduce these errors. OBJECTIVES: To build surveillance for diagnostic errors into usual care, benchmark diagnostic performance across sites, pilot test interventions, and evaluate the programs impact on diagnostic error rates. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Achieving diagnostic excellence through prevention and teamwork (ADEPT) is a multicenter, real-world quality and safety program utilizing interrupted time-series techniques to evaluate outcomes. Study subjects will be a randomly sampled population of medical patients hospitalized at 16 US hospitals who died, were transferred to intensive care, or had a rapid response during the hospitalization. Surveillance for diagnostic errors will occur on 10 events per month per site using a previously established two-person adjudication process. Concurrent reviews of patients who had a qualifying event in the previous week will allow for surveys of clinicians to better understand contributors to diagnostic error, or conversely, examples of diagnostic excellence, which cannot be gleaned from medical record review alone. With guidance from national experts in quality and safety, sites will report and benchmark diagnostic error rates, share lessons regarding underlying causes, and design, implement, and pilot test interventions using both Safety I and Safety II approaches aimed at patients, providers, and health systems. Safety II approaches will focus on cases where diagnostic error did not occur, applying theories of how people and systems are able to succeed under varying conditions. The primary outcome will be the number of diagnostic errors per patient, using segmented multivariable regression to evaluate change in y-intercept and change in slope after initiation of the program. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has been approved by the University of California, San Francisco Institutional Review Board (IRB), which is serving as the single IRB. Intervention toolkits and study findings will be disseminated through partners including Vizient, The Joint Commission, and Press-Ganey, and through national meetings, scientific journals, and publications aimed at the general public.
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- 2023
213. Maternal stress and early childhood BMI among US children from the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program
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Alshawabkeh, AN, Teitelbaum, SL, Stroustrup, A, Deoni, S, Gern, J, Bacharier, L, O’Connor, G, Kattan, M, Wood, R, Rivera-Spoljaric, K, Weiss, S, Permanente, Kaiser, Zeiger, R, Schmidt, R, Simhan, H, Schantz, S, Woodruff, T, and Bosquet-Enlow, M
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Infant ,Humans ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,United States ,Body Mass Index ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Birth Weight ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,program collaborators for Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Pediatrics - Abstract
BackgroundWe aimed to understand the association between maternal stress in the first year of life and childhood body mass index (BMI) from 2 to 4 years of age in a large, prospective United States-based consortium of cohorts.MethodsWe used data from the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes program. The main exposure was maternal stress in the first year of life measured with the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). The main outcome was the first childhood BMI percentile after age 2 until age 4 years. We used an adjusted linear mixed effects model to examine associations between BMI and PSS quartile.ResultsThe mean BMI percentile in children was 59.8 (SD 30) measured at 3.0 years (SD 1) on average. In both crude models and models adjusted for maternal BMI, age, race, ethnicity, infant birthweight, and health insurance status, no linear associations were observed between maternal stress and child BMI.ConclusionsAmong 1694 maternal-infant dyads, we found no statistically significant relationships between maternal perceived stress in the first year of life and child BMI after 2 through 4 years.ImpactAlthough existing literature suggests relationships between parental stress and childhood BMI, we found no linear associations between maternal stress in the first year of life and childhood BMI at 2-4 years of age among participants in ECHO cohorts. Higher maternal stress was significantly associated with Hispanic ethnicity, Black race, and public health insurance. Our analysis of a large, nationally representative sample challenges assumptions that maternal stress in the first year of life, as measured by a widely used scale, is associated with offspring BMI.
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- 2023
214. Risk and Protective Factors Associated with Self-Cutting Behavior Among Adolescents at First Contact with the Juvenile Court.
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Meza, Jocelyn, Folk, Johanna, Hoskins, David, Kemp, Kathleen, and Tolou-Shams, Marina
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Adolescence ,Juvenile legal system ,Self-cutting behavior ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Female ,Infant ,Child ,Preschool ,Male ,Protective Factors ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Anxiety ,Stress Disorders ,Post-Traumatic - Abstract
Adolescents involved in juvenile legal system are at increased risk for self-cutting behavior, however, correlates associated with elevated risk remain underresearched, particularly among youth with first involvement with the court. This study utilized an epidemiological two-year longitudinal study involving 401 adolescents at first contact with the court (Mage = 14.47; SDage = 1.94 years; 43% female; 42% Latinx/Hispanic) and an involved caregiver. Study aims examined key prospective psychosocial correlates of self-cutting behavior. Baseline assessments captured individual and family level risk and protective factors; self-cutting behavior was assessed longitudinally every four months post-baseline for 24 months. Psychosocial correlates of self-cutting behavior included adolescent affect dysregulation, post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, impulsive decision making, anxiety and depression symptoms. Significant protective factors included positive communication with caregiver and family, higher self-esteem, and having a caring and supportive family. These findings suggest that internalizing symptoms as well as difficulties with emotion regulation and impulsive decision making are correlated with heightened risk for self-cutting behavior among adolescents involved in the juvenile legal system. The findings also suggest that individual and family level protective factors, like positive communication and a supportive family, are associated with decreased risk for self-cutting behavior among adolescents at first contact with the court.
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- 2023
215. The Association Between Age at Diagnosis and Disease Characteristics and Damage in Patients With ANCA-Associated Vasculitis.
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Corbridge, Thomas, Khalidi, Nader, Koening, Curry, Langford, Carol, McAlear, Carol, Monach, Paul, Moreland, Larry, Pagnoux, Christian, Rhee, Rennie, Seo, Philip, Silver, Jared, Specks, Ulrich, Warrington, Kenneth, Wechsler, Michael, Merkel, Peter, Bloom, Jessica, Pickett-Nairn, Kaci, Silveira, Lori, Fuhlbrigge, Robert, Cuthbertson, David, and Akuthota, Praveen
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Child ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,Male ,Antibodies ,Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic ,Prospective Studies ,Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibody-Associated Vasculitis ,Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis ,Microscopic Polyangiitis ,Hemorrhage ,Churg-Strauss Syndrome - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the relationship between age at diagnosis and disease characteristics and damage in patients with antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis (AAV). METHODS: Analysis of a prospective longitudinal cohort of patients with granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA), microscopic polyangiitis (MPA), and eosinophilic GPA (EGPA) in the Vasculitis Clinical Research Consortium (2013-2021). Disease cohorts were divided by age at diagnosis (years): children (65). Data included demographics, ANCA type, clinical characteristics, Vasculitis Damage Index (VDI) scores, ANCA Vasculitis Index of Damage (AVID) scores, and novel disease-specific and non-disease-specific damage scores built from VDI and AVID items. RESULTS: Analysis included data from 1020 patients with GPA/MPA and 357 with EGPA. Female predominance in GPA/MPA decreased with age at diagnosis. AAV in childhood was more often GPA and proteinase 3-ANCA positive. Children with GPA/MPA experienced more subglottic stenosis and alveolar hemorrhage; children and young adults with EGPA experienced more alveolar hemorrhage, need for intubation, and gastrointestinal involvement. Older adults (GPA/MPA) had more neurologic manifestations. After adjusting for disease duration, medications, tobacco, and ANCA, all damage scores increased with age at diagnosis for GPA/MPA (P
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- 2023
216. Association between Noise and Cardiovascular Disease in a Nationwide U.S. Prospective Cohort Study of Women Followed from 1988 to 2018.
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Roscoe, Charlotte, Grady, Stephanie, Hart, Jaime, Iyer, Hari, Manson, JoAnn, Rexrode, Kathryn, Rimm, Eric, Laden, Francine, and James, Peter
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Adult ,Humans ,Female ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Myocardial Infarction ,Stroke - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Long-term noise exposure is associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD), including acute cardiovascular events such as myocardial infarction and stroke. However, longitudinal cohort studies in the U.S. of long-term noise and CVD are almost exclusively from Europe and few modeled nighttime noise, when an individual is likely at home or asleep, separately from daytime noise. We aimed to examine the prospective association of outdoor long-term nighttime and daytime noise from anthropogenic sources with incident CVD using a U.S.-based, nationwide cohort of women. METHODS: We linked L50 nighttime and L50 daytime anthropogenic modeled noise estimates from a U.S. National Parks Service model (L50: sound pressure levels exceeded 50 percent of the time) to geocoded residential addresses of 114,116 participants in the Nurses Health Study. We used time-varying Cox proportional hazards models to estimate risk of incident CVD, coronary heart disease (CHD), and stroke associated with long-term average (14-y measurement period) noise exposure, adjusted for potential individual- and area-level confounders and CVD risk factors (1988-2018; biennial residential address updates; monthly CVD updates). We assessed effect modification by population density, region, air pollution, vegetation cover, and neighborhood socioeconomic status, and explored mediation by self-reported average nightly sleep duration. RESULTS: Over 2,548,927 person-years, there were 10,331 incident CVD events. In fully adjusted models, the hazard ratios for each interquartile range increase in L50 nighttime noise (3.67 dBA) and L50 daytime noise (4.35 dBA), respectively, were 1.04 (95% CI: 1.02, 1.06) and 1.04 (95% CI: 1.02, 1.07). Associations for total energy-equivalent noise level (Leq) measures were stronger than for the anthropogenic statistical L50 noise measures. Similar associations were observed for CHD and stroke. Interaction analyses suggested that associations of L50 nighttime and L50 daytime noise with CVD did not differ by prespecified effect modifiers. We found no evidence that inadequate sleep (
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- 2023
217. Structured training program on confocal laser endomicroscopy for pancreatic cystic lesions: a multicenter prospective study among early-career endosonographers (with video).
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Machicado, Jorge, Napoleon, Bertrand, Akshintala, Venkata, Bazarbashi, Ahmad, Bilal, Mohammad, Corral, Juan, Dugum, Mohannad, Han, Samuel, Hussain, Farah, Johnson, Alyson, Jovani, Manol, Leonor, Paul, Lee, Peter, Mulki, Ramzi, Shah, Hamza, Singh, Harkirat, Sánchez-Luna, Sergio, Shah, Shawn, Singla, Anand, Vargas, Eric, Tielleman, Thomas, Nikahd, Melica, Fry, Megan, Culp, Stacey, Krishna, Somashekar, and Kolb, Jennifer
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Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Fine Needle Aspiration ,Microscopy ,Confocal ,Pancreatic Cyst ,Lasers - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Data on how to teach endosonographers needle-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (nCLE)-guided histologic diagnosis of pancreatic cystic lesions (PCLs) are limited. Hence, we developed and tested a structured educational program to train early-career endosonographers in nCLE-guided diagnosis of PCLs. METHODS: Twenty-one early-career nCLE-naïve endosonographers watched a teaching module outlining nCLE criteria for diagnosing PCLs. Participants then reviewed 80 high-yield nCLE videos, recorded diagnoses, and received expert feedback (phase 1). Observers were then randomized to a refresher feedback session or self-learning at 4 weeks. Eight weeks after training, participants independently assessed the same 80 nCLE videos without feedback and provided histologic predictions (phase 2). Diagnostic performance of nCLE to differentiate mucinous versus nonmucinous PCLs and to diagnose specific subtypes were analyzed using histopathology as the criterion standard. Learning curves were determined using cumulative sum analysis. RESULTS: Accuracy and diagnostic confidence for differentiating mucinous versus nonmucinous PCLs improved as endosonographers progressed through nCLE videos in phase 1 (P < .001). Similar trends were observed with the diagnosis of PCL subtypes. Most participants achieved competency interpreting nCLE, requiring a median of 38 assessments (range, 9-67). During phase 2, participants independently differentiated PCLs with high accuracy (89%), high confidence (83%), and substantial interobserver agreement (κ = .63). Accuracy for nCLE-guided PCL subtype diagnoses ranged from 82% to 96%. The learned nCLE skills did not deteriorate at 8 weeks and were not impacted by a refresher session. CONCLUSIONS: We developed a practical, effective, and durable educational intervention to train early-career endosonographers in nCLE-guided diagnosis of PCLs.
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- 2023
218. Evaluating the accuracy of a cataract surgery simulation video in depicting patient experiences under conscious anesthesia.
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Sella, Ruti, Lian, Rebecca, Abbas, Anser, Fuller, Spencer, Bentley, Sean, Fukuoka, Hideki, and Afshari, Natalie
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Anxiety ,Cataract surgery ,Pain ,Patient experience ,Simulation video ,Visual experience ,Humans ,Phacoemulsification ,Prospective Studies ,Cataract Extraction ,Anesthesia ,Local ,Cataract ,Patient Outcome Assessment - Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the accuracy of a point-of-view cataract surgery simulation video in representing different subjective experiences of patients undergoing the procedure. METHODS: One hundred consecutive post-cataract-surgery patients were shown a short simulation video of the surgery obtained through a porcine eye model during the first postoperative week. Patients then answered a multiple-choice questionnaire regarding their visual and tactile intraoperative experiences and how those experiences matched the simulation. RESULTS: Of the patients surveyed (n = 100), 78% (n = 78) recalled visual experiences during surgery, 11% recalled pain (n = 11), and 6.4% (n = 5) recalled frightening experiences. Thirty-six percent of patients (n = 36) were interviewed after their second cataract surgery; there was no statistically significant difference between anxiety scores reported before the first eye surgery and second eye surgery (p = 0.147). Among all patients who recalled visual experiences (n = 78), nearly half (47.4%) reported that the video was the same/similar to their experience. Forty-eight percent of the patients recommended future patients to watch the video before their procedures, and more than a third (36%) agreed that watching the video before surgery would have helped them to relax. CONCLUSIONS: Our model reflects the wide range of subjective patient experiences during and after surgery. The high percentage of patients who found the video accurate in different ways suggests that, with more development, point-of-view cataract simulation videos could prove useful for educational or clinical use. Further research may be done to confirm the simulations utility, by screening the video for subjects before operations.
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- 2023
219. The Association Between Expanded ACEs and Behavioral Health Outcomes Among Youth at First Time Legal System Contact
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Folk, Johanna B, Ramaiya, Megan, Holloway, Evan, Ramos, Lili, Marshall, Brandon DL, Kemp, Kathleen, Li, Yu, Bath, Eraka, Mitchell, Daphne Koinis, and Tolou-Shams, Marina
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Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Substance Misuse ,Youth Violence Prevention ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Youth Violence ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Violence Research ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Child ,Adverse Childhood Experiences ,Prospective Studies ,Violence ,Bullying ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Adverse childhood experiences ,Juvenile justice ,Child welfare ,Substance misuse ,Psychopathology - Abstract
A growing body of literature has documented high rates of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and their effects on behavioral health among adolescents impacted by the juvenile legal system. Most research with justice-impacted youth assesses the ten standard ACEs, encompassing abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction. This body of work has largely ignored the five expanded ACEs which assess social and community level adversity. Justice-impacted youth commonly experience expanded ACEs (racial discrimination, placement in foster care, living in a disadvantaged neighborhood, witnessing violence, bullying), and inclusion of these adversities may enhance predictive utility of the commonly used ACEs score. The current study examined the prospective impact of total ACEs (standard and expanded) on alcohol and cannabis use, substance-related consequences, and psychiatric symptoms during the year following first ever contact with the juvenile court. Results indicate justice-impacted youth experience multiple expanded ACEs prior to first court contact. The expanded ACEs did not predict any of the behavioral health outcomes assessed, over and above the standard ACEs. Inclusion of expanded ACEs in the standard ACEs score may not increase utility in identifying prospective behavioral health outcomes among youth in first time contact with the juvenile legal system.
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- 2023
220. Predictive Algorithm for Hepatic Steatosis Detection Using Elastography Data in the Veterans Affairs Electronic Health Records
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Bangaru, Saroja, Sundaresh, Ram, Lee, Anna, Prause, Nicole, Hao, Frank, Dong, Tien S, Tincopa, Monica, Cholankeril, George, Rich, Nicole E, Kawamoto, Jenna, Bhattacharya, Debika, Han, Steven B, Patel, Arpan A, Shaheen, Magda, and Benhammou, Jihane N
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Digestive Diseases ,Liver Disease ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Liver ,Veterans ,Electronic Health Records ,Prospective Studies ,ROC Curve ,Liver Diseases ,Alcoholic ,Biopsy ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease ,Prediction ,Model ,Elastography ,Gastroenterology & Hepatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background and aimsNonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has reached pandemic proportions. Early detection can identify at-risk patients who can be linked to hepatology care. The vibration-controlled transient elastography (VCTE) controlled attenuation parameter (CAP) is biopsy validated to diagnose hepatic steatosis (HS). We aimed to develop a novel clinical predictive algorithm for HS using the CAP score at a Veterans' Affairs hospital.MethodsWe identified 403 patients in the Greater Los Angeles VA Healthcare System with valid VCTEs during 1/2018-6/2020. Patients with alcohol-associated liver disease, genotype 3 hepatitis C, any malignancies, or liver transplantation were excluded. Linear regression was used to identify predictors of NAFLD. To identify a CAP threshold for HS detection, receiver operating characteristic analysis was applied using liver biopsy, MRI, and ultrasound as the gold standards.ResultsThe cohort was racially/ethnically diverse (26% Black/African American; 20% Hispanic). Significant positive predictors of elevated CAP score included diabetes, cholesterol, triglycerides, BMI, and self-identifying as Hispanic. Our predictions of CAP scores using this model strongly correlated (r = 0.61, p
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- 2023
221. The Association Between Heterosexual anal Intercourse and HIV Acquisition in Three Prospective Cohorts of Women
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Silhol, Romain, Nordsletten, Ashley, Maheu-Giroux, Mathieu, Elmes, Jocelyn, Staunton, Roisin, Owen, Branwen, Shacklett, Barbara, McGowan, Ian, Feliciano, Kailazarid Gomez, van der Straten, Ariane, Eller, Leigh Anne, Robb, Merlin, Marrazzo, Jeanne, Dimitrov, Dobromir, and Boily, Marie-Claude
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Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Heterosexuality ,HIV Infections ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Sexual Behavior ,Anal intercourse ,Sexual behavior ,Heterosexual ,HIV incidence ,Women ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social Work ,Public Health ,Public health - Abstract
The extent to which receptive anal intercourse (RAI) increases the HIV acquisition risk of women compared to receptive vaginal intercourse (RVI) is poorly understood. We evaluated RAI practice over time and its association with HIV incidence during three prospective HIV cohorts of women: RV217, MTN-003 (VOICE), and HVTN 907. At baseline, 16% (RV 217), 18% (VOICE) of women reported RAI in the past 3 months and 27% (HVTN 907) in the past 6 months, with RAI declining during follow-up by around 3-fold. HIV incidence in the three cohorts was positively associated with reporting RAI at baseline, albeit not always significantly. The adjusted hazard rate ratios for potential confounders (aHR) were 1.1 (95% Confidence interval: 0.8-1.5) for VOICE and 3.3 (1.6-6.8) for RV 217, whereas the ratio of cumulative HIV incidence by RAI practice was 1.9 (0.6-6.0) for HVTN 907. For VOICE, the estimated magnitude of association increased slightly when using a time-varying RAI exposure definition (aHR = 1.2; 0.9-1.6), and for women reporting RAI at every follow-up survey (aHR = 2.0 (1.3-3.1)), though not for women reporting higher RAI frequency (> 30% acts being RAI vs. no RAI in the past 3 months; aHR = 0.7 (0.4-1.1)). Findings indicated precise estimation of the RAI/HIV association, following multiple RVI/RAI exposures, is sensitive to RAI exposure definition, which remain imperfectly measured. Information on RAI practices, RAI/RVI frequency, and condom use should be more systematically and precisely recorded and reported in studies looking at sexual behaviors and HIV seroconversions; standardized measures would aid comparability across geographies and over time.
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- 2023
222. The effect of changing pregnancy intentions on preconception health behaviors: a prospective cohort study.
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Din, Hena, Singh-Carlson, Savitri, Corliss, Heather, Hartman, Sheri, Madanat, Hala, Su, H, and Strong, David
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Adolescent and young adult cancer ,Physical activity ,Preconception health ,Pregnancy intention ,Smoking ,Survivorship care ,Pregnancy ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Female ,Humans ,Preconception Care ,Intention ,Prospective Studies ,Cancer Survivors ,Health Behavior - Abstract
PURPOSE: Pregnancy intentions are associated with preconception health behaviors but are understudied among female adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer survivors. Preconception health is critical for survivors because they face unique risks to fertility and pregnancy from late effects of cancer treatments. This study prospectively assessed the effect of pregnancy intention on physical activity (PA) and smoking behaviors among female AYA survivors. METHODS: A cohort of 1049 female AYA survivors were recruited between 2013 and 2017. Participants were 18-39 years and had completed primary cancer treatment. Longitudinal mixed effects analysis was conducted on participants who completed at least 2 of 4 questionnaires over 1.5 years. Two measures were used to capture multiple dimensions of pregnancy intention. The pregnancy intention score (PIS) captured wanting and planning dimensions and represented a scaled response of low to high intention. The trying dimension captured urgent intention and ranged from not trying, ambivalent (neither attempting nor avoiding pregnancy), and trying now. Intention change was assessed between each consecutive time points. Final analysis was conducted with multiple imputations. RESULTS: Survivors with increased intention measured by trying was associated with increased PA over time (adjusted B [95%CI]: 0.3 [0.01, 0.5]) compared to survivors with no changes or decreased trying intention. PIS was not significantly associated with preconception behaviors. No measure of intention was associated with smoking behavior. CONCLUSIONS: Increasingly urgent pregnancy intention (trying dimension) was associated with higher preconception PA. IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS: Screening for immediate intentions can identify AYA survivors in need of early preconception health promotion.
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- 2023
223. Quantifiable features of a tidal breathing phenotype in dogs with severe bronchomalacia diagnosed by bronchoscopy.
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Chang, Wei-Tao, Lo, Pei-Ying, Chen, Hui-Wen, Wu, Huey-Dong, Lin, Chung-Hui, and Johnson, Lynelle
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Bronchomalacia ,bronchoscopy ,dogs ,functional phenotype ,lower airway obstruction ,pulmonary function test ,spirometry ,tidal breathing ,Dogs ,Animals ,Bronchomalacia ,Bronchoscopy ,Prospective Studies ,Respiration ,Airway Obstruction ,Phenotype ,Dog Diseases - Abstract
Dynamic lower airway obstruction is the primary component of canine bronchomalacia, but the ventilatory function remains underinvestigated. This prospective study analyzed tidal breathing characteristics in 28 dogs, comprising 14 with severe bronchomalacia diagnosed by bronchoscopy versus 14 without respiratory disease. Spirometry was conducted in all dogs. Bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage or brush under anesthesia was performed in 14 dogs with cough and expiratory effort. Severe bronchomalacia was defined by the severity of collapse and total number of bronchi affected. Ventilatory characteristics were compared between groups. Results revealed that dogs with severe bronchomalacia had lower minute volume (218 vs 338 mL/kg, p = .039) and greater expiratory-to-inspiratory time ratio (1.55 vs 1.35, p = .01) compared to control dogs. The tidal breathing pattern of dogs with bronchomalacia was different from that of normal dogs, and the pattern differed from the concave or flat expiratory curves typical of lower airway obstruction. Compared to control dogs, dogs with severe bronchomalacia had a significantly prolonged low-flow expiratory phase (p < .001) on the flow-time plot and a more exponential shape of the expiratory curve (p < .001) on the volume-time plot. Flow-time index ExpLF/Te (>0.14) and volume-time index Vt-AUCexp (≤31%) had a high ROC-AUC (1.00, 95% confidence interval 0.88 to 1.00) in predicting severe bronchomalacia. In conclusion, the tidal breathing pattern identified here indicates abnormal and complicated ventilatory mechanics in dogs with severe bronchomalacia. The role of this pulmonary functional phenotype should be investigated for disease progression and therapeutic monitoring in canine bronchomalacia.
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- 2023
224. Stratification of risk for emergent intracranial abnormalities in children with headaches: a Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) study protocol.
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Tsze, Daniel, Kuppermann, Nathan, Casper, T, Barney, Bradley, Richer, Lawrence, Liberman, Danica, Okada, Pamela, Morris, Claudia, Myers, Sage, Soung, Jane, Mistry, Rakesh, Babcock, Lynn, Spencer, Sandra, Johnson, Michael, Klein, Eileen, Quayle, Kimberly, Steele, Dale, Cruz, Andrea, Rogers, Alexander, Thomas, Danny, Grupp-Phelan, Jacqueline, Johnson, Tiffani, and Dayan, Peter
- Subjects
accident & emergency medicine ,migraine ,paediatric A&E and ambulatory care ,Female ,Pregnancy ,Child ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Craniocerebral Trauma ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Emergency Treatment ,Headache - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Headache is a common chief complaint of children presenting to emergency departments (EDs). Approximately 0.5%-1% will have emergent intracranial abnormalities (EIAs) such as brain tumours or strokes. However, more than one-third undergo emergent neuroimaging in the ED, resulting in a large number of children unnecessarily exposed to radiation. The overuse of neuroimaging in children with headaches in the ED is driven by clinician concern for life-threatening EIAs and lack of clarity regarding which clinical characteristics accurately identify children with EIAs. The study objective is to derive and internally validate a stratification model that accurately identifies the risk of EIA in children with headaches based on clinically sensible and reliable variables. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Prospective cohort study of 28 000 children with headaches presenting to any of 18 EDs in the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). We include children aged 2-17 years with a chief complaint of headache. We exclude children with a clear non-intracranial alternative diagnosis, fever, neuroimaging within previous year, neurological or developmental condition such that patient history or physical examination may be unreliable, Glasgow Coma Scale score
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- 2023
225. Protocol of the Comparison of Intravesical Therapy and Surgery as Treatment Options (CISTO) study: a pragmatic, prospective multicenter observational cohort study of recurrent high-grade non-muscle invasive bladder cancer.
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Gore, John, Wolff, Erika, Comstock, Bryan, Follmer, Kristin, Nash, Michael, Basu, Anirban, Chisolm, Stephanie, MacLean, Douglas, Lee, Jenney, Lotan, Yair, Porten, Sima, Steinberg, Gary, Chang, Sam, Gilbert, Scott, Kessler, Larry, and Smith, Angela
- Subjects
Administration ,intravesical ,Non-muscle invasive bladder cancer ,Observational study ,Patient-centered care ,Pragmatic trial ,Quality of life ,Radical cystectomy ,Humans ,Adjuvants ,Immunologic ,Administration ,Intravesical ,BCG Vaccine ,Cystectomy ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Neoplasms ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Prospective Studies ,Quality of Life ,Urinary Bladder Neoplasms ,Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bladder cancer poses a significant public health burden, with high recurrence and progression rates in patients with non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). Current treatment options include bladder-sparing therapies (BST) and radical cystectomy, both with associated risks and benefits. However, evidence supporting optimal management decisions for patients with recurrent high-grade NMIBC remains limited, leading to uncertainty for patients and clinicians. The CISTO (Comparison of Intravesical Therapy and Surgery as Treatment Options) Study aims to address this critical knowledge gap by comparing outcomes between patients undergoing BST and radical cystectomy. METHODS: The CISTO Study is a pragmatic, prospective observational cohort trial across 36 academic and community urology practices in the US. The study will enroll 572 patients with a diagnosis of recurrent high-grade NMIBC who select management with either BST or radical cystectomy. The primary outcome is health-related quality of life (QOL) at 12 months as measured with the EORTC-QLQ-C30. Secondary outcomes include bladder cancer-specific QOL, progression-free survival, cancer-specific survival, and financial toxicity. The study will also assess patient preferences for treatment outcomes. Statistical analyses will employ targeted maximum likelihood estimation (TMLE) to address treatment selection bias and confounding by indication. DISCUSSION: The CISTO Study is powered to detect clinically important differences in QOL and cancer-specific survival between the two treatment approaches. By including a diverse patient population, the study also aims to assess outcomes across the following patient characteristics: age, gender, race, burden of comorbid health conditions, cancer severity, caregiver status, social determinants of health, and rurality. Treatment outcomes may also vary by patient preferences, health literacy, and baseline QOL. The CISTO Study will fill a crucial evidence gap in the management of recurrent high-grade NMIBC, providing evidence-based guidance for patients and clinicians in choosing between BST and radical cystectomy. The CISTO study will provide an evidence-based approach to identifying the right treatment for the right patient at the right time in the challenging clinical setting of recurrent high-grade NMIBC. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03933826. Registered on May 1, 2019.
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- 2023
226. Neurodevelopmental status and adaptive behavior of pediatric patients with mucopolysaccharidosis II: a longitudinal observational study.
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Gutiérrez-Solana, Luis, Ruiz-Garcia, Matilde, Wu, Yuna, Merberg, David, Alexanderian, David, Jones, Simon, Muenzer, Joseph, Burton, Barbara, Amartino, Hernan, and Harmatz, Paul
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Adaptive ,Behavior ,Cognitive ,Decline ,Function ,Impairment ,Mucopolysaccharidosis II ,Neurodevelopment ,Observational ,Pediatric ,Male ,Child ,Humans ,Mucopolysaccharidosis II ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Adaptation ,Psychological - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) II is a rare, X-linked lysosomal storage disease. Approximately two-thirds of patients have central nervous system involvement with some demonstrating progressive cognitive impairment (neuronopathic disease). The natural history of cognitive and adaptive function in patients with MPS II is not well-defined. This 2-year, prospective, observational study evaluated the neurodevelopmental trajectories of boys with MPS II aged ≥ 2 years and 70); between-group differences were nonsignificant. No clear subgroups or patterns were identified for individual changes in VABS-II ABC scores. In total, 49 patients (89.1%) reported ≥ 1 adverse event (AE) and nine patients (16.4%) reported serious AEs. CONCLUSIONS: Some patients with MPS II had rapid declines in cognitive ability, whereas others remained relatively stable after an initial decline. These insights provide a basis for more detailed analyses of different patient subgroups, which may enhance the definition and understanding of factors that influence cognitive and adaptive function in MPS II. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01822184. Registered retrospectively: April 2, 2013.
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- 2023
227. Minute level smartphone derived exposure to greenness and consumer wearable derived physical activity in a cohort of US women.
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Wilt, Grete, Roscoe, Charlotte, Hu, Cindy, Mehta, Unnati, Coull, Brent, Hart, Jaime, Gortmaker, Steven, Laden, Francine, and James, Peter
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Humans ,Female ,Smartphone ,Adult ,Exercise ,Wearable Electronic Devices ,Cohort Studies ,Accelerometry ,United States ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inconsistent results have been found in the literature on associations of greenness, or vegetation quantity, and physical activity. However, few studies have assessed associations between mobility-based greenness and physical activity from mobile health data from smartphone and wearable devices with fine spatial and temporal resolution. METHODS: We assessed mobility-based greenness exposure and wearable accelerometer data from participants in the US-based prospective Nurses Health Study 3 cohort Mobile Health (mHealth) Substudy (2018-2020). We recruited 500 female participants with instructions to wear devices over four 7-day sampling periods equally spaced throughout the year. After restriction criteria there were 337 participants (mean age 36 years) with n = 639,364 unique observations. Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) data were derived from 30 m x 30 m Landsat-8 imagery and spatially joined to GPS points recorded every 10 min. Fitbit proprietary algorithms provided physical activity summarized as mean number of steps per minute, which we averaged during the 10-min period following a GPS-based greenness exposure assessment. We utilized Generalized Additive Mixed Models to examine associations (every 10 min) between greenness and physical activity adjusting for neighborhood and individual socioeconomic status, Census region, season, neighborhood walkability, daily mean temperature and precipitation. We assessed effect modification through stratification and interaction models and conducted sensitivity analyses. RESULTS: Mean 10-min step count averaged 7.0 steps (SD 14.9) and greenness (NDVI) averaged 0.3 (SD 0.2). Contrary to our hypotheses, higher greenness exposure was associated non-linearly with lower mean steps per minute after adjusting for confounders. We observed statistically significant effect modification by Census region and season. DISCUSSION: We utilized objective physical activity data at fine temporal and spatial scales to present novel estimates of the association between mobility-based greenness and step count. We found higher levels of greenness were inversely associated with steps per minute.
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- 2023
228. Patient-reported outcomes before treatment for localized prostate cancer: are there differences among countries? Data from the True North Global Registry.
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Garin, O, Kowalski, C, Zamora, V, Roth, R, Ferrer, M, Breidenbach, C, Pont, A, Belin, T, Elashoff, D, Wilhalme, H, Nguyen, A, Kwan, L, Pearman, E, Bolagani, A, Sampurno, F, Papa, N, Moore, C, Millar, J, Connor, S, Villanti, P, and Litwin, M
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Health-related quality of life ,Patient-reported outcomes ,Prostate cancer ,Registry ,Humans ,Male ,Brachytherapy ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prospective Studies ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Quality of Life ,Registries ,Urinary Incontinence ,Multicenter Studies as Topic - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Similar Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs) at diagnosis for localized prostate cancer among countries may indicate that different treatments are recommended to the same profile of patients, regardless the context characteristics (health systems, medical schools, culture, preferences…). The aim of this study was to assess such comparison. METHODS: We analyzed the EPIC-26 results before the primary treatment of men diagnosed of localized prostate cancer from January 2017 onwards (revised data available up to September 2019), from a multicenter prospective international cohort including seven regions: Australia/New Zealand, Canada, Central Europe (Austria / Czech Republic / Germany), United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, and the United States. The EPIC-26 domain scores and pattern of three selected items were compared across regions (with Central Europe as reference). All comparisons were made stratifying by treatment: radical prostatectomy, external radiotherapy, brachytherapy, and active surveillance. RESULTS: The sample included a total of 13,483 men with clinically localized or locally advanced prostate cancer. PROs showed different domain patterns before treatment across countries. The sexual domain was the most impaired, and the one with the highest dispersion within countries and with the greatest medians differences across countries. The urinary incontinence domain, together with the bowel and hormonal domains, presented the highest scores (better outcomes) for all treatment groups, and homogeneity across regions. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with localized or locally advanced prostate cancer undergoing radical prostatectomy, EBRT, brachytherapy, or active surveillance presented mainly negligible or small differences in the EPIC-26 domains before treatment across countries. The results on urinary incontinence or bowel domains, in which almost all patients presented the best possible score, may downplay the baseline data role for evaluating treatments effects. However, the heterogeneity within countries and the magnitude of the differences found across countries in other domains, especially sexual, support the need of implementing the PRO measurement from diagnosis.
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- 2023
229. Clonal Hematopoiesis of Indeterminate Potential (CHIP) and Incident Type 2 Diabetes Risk.
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Tobias, Deirdre K, Manning, Alisa K, Wessel, Jennifer, Raghavan, Sridharan, Westerman, Kenneth E, Bick, Alexander G, Dicorpo, Daniel, Whitsel, Eric A, Collins, Jason, Correa, Adolfo, Cupples, L Adrienne, Dupuis, Josée, Goodarzi, Mark O, Guo, Xiuqing, Howard, Barbara, Lange, Leslie A, Liu, Simin, Raffield, Laura M, Reiner, Alex P, Rich, Stephen S, Taylor, Kent D, Tinker, Lesley, Wilson, James G, Wu, Peitao, Carson, April P, Vasan, Ramachandran S, Fornage, Myriam, Psaty, Bruce M, Kooperberg, Charles, Rotter, Jerome I, Meigs, James, and Manson, JoAnn E
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Epidemiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Precision Medicine ,Stem Cell Research ,Diabetes ,Heart Disease ,Hematology ,Aging ,Obesity ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Cancer ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Clonal Hematopoiesis ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Prospective Studies ,Hematopoiesis ,Clonal Evolution ,Coronary Disease ,Mutation ,TOPMed Diabetes Working Group and National Heart ,Lung ,and Blood Institute TOPMed Consortium - Abstract
ObjectiveClonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) is an aging-related accumulation of somatic mutations in hematopoietic stem cells, leading to clonal expansion. CHIP presence has been implicated in atherosclerotic coronary heart disease (CHD) and all-cause mortality, but its association with incident type 2 diabetes (T2D) is unknown. We hypothesized that CHIP is associated with elevated risk of T2D.Research design and methodsCHIP was derived from whole-genome sequencing of blood DNA in the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) prospective cohorts. We performed analysis for 17,637 participants from six cohorts, without prior T2D, cardiovascular disease, or cancer. We evaluated baseline CHIP versus no CHIP prevalence with incident T2D, including associations with DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, JAK2, and TP53 variants. We estimated multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CIs with adjustment for age, sex, BMI, smoking, alcohol, education, self-reported race/ethnicity, and combined cohorts' estimates via fixed-effects meta-analysis.ResultsMean (SD) age was 63.4 (11.5) years, 76% were female, and CHIP prevalence was 6.0% (n = 1,055) at baseline. T2D was diagnosed in n = 2,467 over mean follow-up of 9.8 years. Participants with CHIP had 23% (CI 1.04, 1.45) higher risk of T2D than those with no CHIP. Specifically, higher risk was for TET2 (HR 1.48; CI 1.05, 2.08) and ASXL1 (HR 1.76; CI 1.03, 2.99) mutations; DNMT3A was nonsignificant (HR 1.15; CI 0.93, 1.43). Statistical power was limited for JAK2 and TP53 analyses.ConclusionsCHIP was associated with higher incidence of T2D. CHIP mutations located on genes implicated in CHD and mortality were also related to T2D, suggesting shared aging-related pathology.
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- 2023
230. Loneliness and depression: bidirectional mendelian randomization analyses using data from three large genome-wide association studies.
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Sbarra, David, Ramadan, Ferris, Choi, Karmel, Treur, Jorien, Levey, Daniel, Wootton, Robyn, Stein, Murray, Gelernter, Joel, and Klimentidis, Yann
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Humans ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Depression ,Loneliness ,Mendelian Randomization Analysis ,Prospective Studies ,Depressive Disorder ,Major - Abstract
Major depression (MD) is a serious psychiatric illness afflicting nearly 5% of the worlds population. A large correlational literature suggests that loneliness is a prospective risk factor for MD; correlational assocations of this nature may be confounded for a variety of reasons. This report uses Mendelian Randomization (MR) to examine potentially causal associations between loneliness and MD. We report on analyses using summary statistics from three large genome wide association studies (GWAS). MR analyses were conducted using three independent sources of GWAS summary statistics. In the first set of analyses, we used available summary statistics from an extant GWAS of loneliness to predict MD risk. We used two sources of outcome data: the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC) meta-analysis of MD (PGC-MD; N = 142,646) and the Million Veteran Program (MVP-MD; N = 250,215). Finally, we reversed analyses using data from the MVP and PGC samples to identify risk variants for MD and used loneliness outcome data from UK Biobank. We find robust evidence for a bidirectional causal relationship between loneliness and MD, including between loneliness, depression cases status, and a continuous measure of depressive symptoms. The estimates remained significant across several sensitivity analyses, including models that account for horizontal pleiotropy. This paper provides the first genetically-informed evidence that reducing loneliness may play a causal role in decreasing risk for depressive illness, and these findings support efforts to reduce loneliness in order to prevent or ameliorate MD. Discussion focuses on the public health significance of these findings, especially in light of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
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- 2023
231. Biphasic change in retinal nerve fibre layer thickness from 30 to 60 weeks postmenstrual age in preterm infants.
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Shen, Liangbo, Mangalesh, Shwetha, McGeehan, Brendan, Seely, Kai, Tai, Vincent, Sarin, Neeru, Finkle, Joanne, Winter, Katrina, Tran-Viet, Du, Freedman, Sharon, El-Dairi, Mays, Ying, Gui-Shuang, and Toth, Cynthia
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child health (paediatrics) ,imaging ,optic nerve ,retina ,Humans ,Tomography ,Optical Coherence ,Nerve Fibers ,Retinal Ganglion Cells ,Gestational Age ,Male ,Female ,Infant ,Premature ,Infant ,Newborn ,Retinopathy of Prematurity ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIMS: The optic nerve development during the critical postnatal weeks of preterm infants is unclear. We aimed to investigate the change of retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) in preterm infants. METHODS: We used an investigational handheld optical coherence tomography (OCT) system to serially image awake preterm infants between 30 and 60 weeks postmenstrual age (PMA) at the bedside. We assessed RNFL thickness in the papillomacular bundle and nasal macular ganglion cell layer+inner plexiform layer (GCL+IPL) thickness. We applied a segmented mixed model to analyse the change in the thickness of RNFL and GCL+IPL as a function of PMA. RESULTS: From 631 OCT imaging sessions of 101 infants (201 eyes), RNFL thickness followed a biphasic model between 30 and 60 weeks, with an estimated transition at 37.8 weeks PMA (95% CI: 37.0 to 38.6). RNFL thickness increased at 1.8 μm/week (95% CI: 1.6 to 2.1) before 37.8 weeks and decreased at -0.3 μm/week (95% CI: -0.5 to -0.2) afterwards. GCL+IPL thickness followed a similar biphasic model, in which the thickness increased at 2.9 μm/week (95% CI: 2.5 to 3.2) before 39.5 weeks PMA (95% CI: 38.8 to 40.1) and then decreased at -0.8 μm/week (95% CI: -0.9 to -0.6). CONCLUSION: We demonstrate the feasibility of monitoring RNFL and GCL+IPL thickness from OCT during the postnatal weeks of preterm infants. Thicknesses follow a biphasic model with a transition age at 37.8 and 39.5 weeks PMA, respectively. These findings may shed light on optic nerve development in preterm infants and assist future study designs.
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- 2023
232. Ramipril for the Treatment of COVID-19: RAMIC, a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial
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Huang, Daniel Q, Ajmera, Veeral, Tomaszewski, Christian, LaFree, Andrew, Bettencourt, Ricki, Thompson, Wesley K, Smith, Davey M, Malhotra, Atul, Mehta, Ravindra L, Tolia, Vaishal, Yin, Jeffrey, Insel, Paul A, Leachman, Stone, Jung, Jinho, Collier, Summer, Richards, Lisa, Woods, Kristin, Amangurbanova, Maral, Bhatt, Archana, Zhang, Xinlian, Penciu, Oana M, Zarich, Stuart, Retta, Tamrat, Harkins, Michelle S, Teixeira, J Pedro, Chinnock, Brian, Utay, Netanya S, Lake, Jordan E, and Loomba, Rohit
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,COVID-19 ,Ramipril ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Retrospective Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors ,Double-Blind Method ,Treatment Outcome ,Coronavirus ,Therapy ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,General Clinical Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
IntroductionRetrospective studies report that angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) may reduce the severity of COVID-19, but prospective data on de novo treatment with ACEIs are limited. The RAMIC trial was a randomized, multicenter, placebo-controlled, double-blind, allocation-concealed clinical trial to examine the efficacy of de novo ramipril versus placebo for the treatment of COVID-19.MethodsEligible participants were aged 18 years and older with a confirmed diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 infection, recruited from urgent care clinics, emergency departments, and hospital inpatient wards at eight sites in the USA. Participants were randomly assigned to daily ramipril 2.5 mg or placebo orally in a 2:1 ratio, using permuted block randomization. Analyses were conducted on an intention-to-treat basis. The primary outcome was a composite of mortality, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, or invasive mechanical ventilation by day 14.ResultsBetween 27 May 2020 and 19 April 2021, a total of 114 participants (51% female) were randomized to ramipril (n = 79) or placebo (n = 35). The overall mean (± SD) age and BMI were 45 (± 15) years and 33 (± 8) kg/m2. Two participants in the ramipril group required ICU admission and one died, compared with none in the placebo group. There were no significant differences between ramipril and placebo in the primary endpoint (ICU admission, mechanical ventilation, or death) (3% versus 0%, p = 1.00) or adverse events (27% versus 29%, p = 0.82). The study was terminated early because of a low event rate and subsequent Emergency Use Authorization of therapies for COVID-19.ConclusionDe novo ramipril was not different compared with placebo in improving or worsening clinical outcomes from COVID-19 but appeared safe in non-critically ill patients with COVID-19.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov NCT04366050.
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- 2023
233. Prevalence of Undiagnosed Monkeypox Virus Infections during Global Mpox Outbreak, United States, June-September 2022.
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Minhaj, Faisal, Singh, Vijay, Cohen, Stephanie, Townsend, Michael, Scott, Hyman, Szumowski, John, Hare, C, Upadhyay, Pallavi, Reddy, Jairus, Alexander, Barbara, Baird, Nicolle, Navarra, Terese, Priyamvada, Lalita, Wynn, Nhien, Carson, William, Odafe, Solomon, Guagliardo, Sarah, Sims, Emily, Rao, Agam, Satheshkumar, Panayampalli, Weidle, Paul, and Hutson, Christina
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IgM ,Monkeypox virus ,Mpox ,PCR ,United States ,orthopoxvirus ,undiagnosed ,viruses ,Humans ,Male ,United States ,Adult ,Female ,Monkeypox virus ,Mpox (monkeypox) ,Prevalence ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Disease Outbreaks ,Orthopoxvirus - Abstract
Since May 2022, mpox has been identified in 108 countries without endemic disease; most cases have been in gay, bisexual, or other men who have sex with men. To determine number of missed cases, we conducted 2 studies during June-September 2022: a prospective serologic survey detecting orthopoxvirus antibodies among men who have sex with men in San Francisco, California, and a retrospective monkeypox virus PCR testing of swab specimens submitted for other infectious disease testing among all patients across the United States. The serosurvey of 225 participants (median age 34 years) detected 18 (8.0%) who were orthopoxvirus IgG positive and 3 (1.3%) who were also orthopoxvirus IgM positive. The retrospective PCR study of 1,196 patients (median age 30 years; 54.8% male) detected 67 (5.6%) specimens positive for monkeypox virus. There are likely few undiagnosed cases of mpox in regions where sexual healthcare is accessible and patient and clinician awareness about mpox is increased.
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- 2023
234. A framework for standardised tissue sampling and processing during resection of diffuse intracranial glioma: joint recommendations from four RANO groups
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Karschnia, Philipp, Smits, Marion, Reifenberger, Guido, Le Rhun, Emilie, Ellingson, Benjamin M, Galldiks, Norbert, Kim, Michelle M, Huse, Jason T, Schnell, Oliver, Harter, Patrick N, Mohme, Malte, Panel, Rater, Aldape, Kenneth, Baehring, Joachim M, Bello, Lorenzo, Brat, Daniel J, Cahill, Daniel P, Chung, Caroline, Colman, Howard, Dietrich, Jorg, Drummond, Katharine, Esquenazi, Yoshua, Gerstner, Elizabeth R, Furtner, Julia, Garibotto, Valentina, Kaufmann, Timothy J, Komori, Takashi, Kotecha, Rupesh, Liau, Linda M, Lupo, Janine M, Minniti, Giuseppe, Narita, Yoshitaka, Niyazi, Maximilian, Perry, Arie, Preusser, Matthias, Rudà, Roberta, Sanai, Nader, Schmidt, Nils-Ole, Steinbach, Joachim P, Thust, Stefanie C, Tolboom, Nelleke, van der Hoorn, Anouk, van der Vaart, Thijs, Verger, Antoine, Vik-Mo, Einar Osland, Watts, Colin, Westphal, Manfred, Wesseling, Pieter, Young, Jacob S, von Baumgarten, Louisa, Albert, Nathalie L, Huang, Raymond Y, Mehta, Minesh P, van den Bent, Martin, Weller, Michael, Vogelbaum, Michael A, Chang, Susan M, Berger, Mitchel S, and Tonn, Joerg-Christian
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Brain Cancer ,Brain Disorders ,Rare Diseases ,Neurosciences ,Cancer ,Humans ,Brain Neoplasms ,Prospective Studies ,Biological Specimen Banks ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Glioma ,Expert Rater Panel ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Surgical resection represents the standard of care for people with newly diagnosed diffuse gliomas, and the neuropathological and molecular profile of the resected tissue guides clinical management and forms the basis for research. The Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology (RANO) consortium is an international, multidisciplinary effort that aims to standardise research practice in neuro-oncology. These recommendations represent a multidisciplinary consensus from the four RANO groups: RANO resect, RANO recurrent glioblastoma, RANO radiotherapy, and RANO/PET for a standardised workflow to achieve a representative tumour evaluation in a disease characterised by intratumoural heterogeneity, including recommendations on which tumour regions should be surgically sampled, how to define those regions on the basis of preoperative imaging, and the optimal sample volume. Practical recommendations for tissue sampling are given for people with low-grade and high-grade gliomas, as well as for people with newly diagnosed and recurrent disease. Sampling of liquid biopsies is also addressed. A standardised workflow for subsequent handling of the resected tissue is proposed to avoid information loss due to decreasing tissue quality or insufficient clinical information. The recommendations offer a framework for prospective biobanking studies.
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- 2023
235. Associations between acute and chronic lifetime stressors and psychosis-risk symptoms in individuals with 22q11.2 copy number variants.
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Modasi, Jasmine, Khachadourian, Vahe, OHora, Kathleen, Kushan, Leila, Slavich, George, Shields, Grant, Velthorst, Eva, and Bearden, Carrie
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22q11.2 ,Acute stress ,chronic stress ,copy number variant ,environmental risk factors ,psychosis ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Prospective Studies ,Psychotic Disorders ,DiGeorge Syndrome - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The 22q11.2 deletion (22q11Del) is among the strongest known genetic risk factors for psychosis. Stress, a known risk factor for psychosis in the general population, has seldom been studied in 22q11Del. We investigated how lifetime stressors related to symptomatic outcomes in patients with 22q11Del. We also explored this association in individuals with 22q11.2 duplications (22q11Dup), which may be potentially protective against psychosis. METHOD: One hundred individuals (46 with 22q11Del, 30 with 22q11Dup, and 24 healthy controls; Mage = 17.30 years±10.15) were included. Logistic models were used to examine cross-sectional associations between lifetime acute and chronic stressors (severity and count) and the presence (score ⩾3) of positive, negative, and general symptoms, assessed via the Structured Interview for Psychosis-risk Syndromes (SIPS). RESULTS: The 22q11Dup group reported the greatest number and severity of acute lifetime stressors, but did not differ from 22q11Del in chronic stressor count or severity. Lifetime chronic and acute stressors were uniquely associated with positive symptoms in 22q11Del (chronic count: odds ratio [OR] = 2.35, p = 0.02; chronic severity: OR = 1.88, p = 0.03; acute count: OR = 1.78, p = 0.03), but not with negative or general symptoms (ps > 0.05). CONCLUSION: Findings suggest that stress may play a role in psychotic symptoms in 22q1Del, while the 22q11Dup CNV appears protective against psychotic symptoms despite higher rates of stressors. Interventions that mitigate effects of stressors in 22qDel may reduce the odds of psychosis in this group. Prospective longitudinal research is needed to replicate these findings.
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- 2023
236. Prospective randomized controlled trial comparing the effect of Monocryl versus nylon sutures on patient- and observer-assessed outcomes following carpal tunnel surgery.
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Wu, Edward, Allen, Robert, Bayne, Christopher, and Szabo, Robert
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Carpal tunnel ,Monocryl ,POSAS ,randomized controlled trial ,scar ,suture ,Adult ,Humans ,Cicatrix ,Nylons ,Treatment Outcome ,Prospective Studies ,Carpal Tunnel Syndrome ,Sutures ,Suture Techniques - Abstract
Controversy remains regarding the optimal technique and suture type for wound closure after carpal tunnel surgery. Adult patients undergoing open carpal tunnel release were prospectively randomized to receive either interrupted, buried Monocryl sutures or traditional nylon horizontal mattress sutures for their wound closures. At the 2-week and 6-week postoperative visits, Patient and Observer Scar Assessment Scale questionnaires were completed. At 2 weeks, patients and observers had a significantly better opinion of incisions closed with Monocryl. By 6 weeks, neither patients nor observers found a difference between suture types in any category. Scars of wounds closed with Monocryl did not change appreciably in appearance between 2 and 6 weeks. However, patients and observers noted significant improvement in scar appearance in the nylon group over time. Monocryl suture represents an effective method for carpal tunnel closure that leads to improved patient- and observer-reported outcome scores in the early postoperative period compared with nylon.Level of evidence: II.
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- 2023
237. Social epidemiology of Fitbit daily steps in early adolescence
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Nagata, Jason M, Alsamman, Sana, Smith, Natalia, Yu, Jiayue, Ganson, Kyle T, Dooley, Erin E, Wing, David, Baker, Fiona C, and Pettee Gabriel, Kelley
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Ethnicity ,Minority Groups ,Prospective Studies ,Exercise ,Fitness Trackers ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Pediatrics - Abstract
BackgroundSociodemographic disparities in adolescent physical activity have been documented but mostly rely on self-reported data. Our objective was to examine differences in device-based step metrics, including daily step count (steps d-1), by sociodemographic factors among a diverse sample of 10-to-14-year-old adolescents in the US.MethodsWe analyzed prospective cohort data from Year 2 (2018-2020) of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (N = 6460). Mixed-effects models were conducted to estimate associations of sociodemographic factors (sex, sexual orientation, race/ethnicity, household income, parental education, and parental marital status) with repeated measures of steps d-1 over the course of 21 days.ResultsParticipants (49.6% female, 39.0% racial/ethnic minority) accumulated an average of 9095.8 steps d-1. In mixed-effects models, 1543.6 more steps d-1 were recorded for male versus female sex, Black versus White race (328.8 more steps d-1), heterosexual versus sexual minority sexual orientation (676.4 more steps d-1), >$200,000 versus $100,000 versus
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- 2023
238. Circulating metabolites may illustrate relationship of alcohol consumption with cardiovascular disease
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Li, Yi, Wang, Mengyao, Liu, Xue, Rong, Jian, Miller, Patricia Emogene, Joehanes, Roby, Huan, Tianxiao, Guo, Xiuqing, Rotter, Jerome I, Smith, Jennifer A, Yu, Bing, Nayor, Matthew, Levy, Daniel, Liu, Chunyu, and Ma, Jiantao
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Substance Misuse ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Aging ,Heart Disease ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Cancer ,Stroke ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Prospective Studies ,Alcohol Drinking ,Coronary Disease ,Diet ,Risk Factors ,Alcohol consumption ,Cardiovascular disease ,Metabolites ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundMetabolite signatures of long-term alcohol consumption are lacking. To better understand the molecular basis linking alcohol drinking and cardiovascular disease (CVD), we investigated circulating metabolites associated with long-term alcohol consumption and examined whether these metabolites were associated with incident CVD.MethodsCumulative average alcohol consumption (g/day) was derived from the total consumption of beer, wine, and liquor on average of 19 years in 2428 Framingham Heart Study Offspring participants (mean age 56 years, 52% women). We used linear mixed models to investigate the associations of alcohol consumption with 211 log-transformed plasma metabolites, adjusting for age, sex, batch, smoking, diet, physical activity, BMI, and familial relationship. Cox models were used to test the association of alcohol-related metabolite scores with fatal and nonfatal incident CVD (myocardial infarction, coronary heart disease, stroke, and heart failure).ResultsWe identified 60 metabolites associated with cumulative average alcohol consumption (p
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- 2023
239. Normative spatiotemporal fetal brain maturation with satisfactory development at 2 years.
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Namburete, Ana, Papież, Bartłomiej, Fernandes, Michelle, Wyburd, Madeleine, Hesse, Linde, Moser, Felipe, Ismail, Leila, Squier, Waney, Ohuma, Eric, Carvalho, Maria, Jaffer, Yasmin, Gravett, Michael, Wu, Qingqing, Lambert, Ann, Winsey, Adele, Restrepo-Méndez, María, Bertino, Enrico, Purwar, Manorama, Barros, Fernando, Stein, Alan, Noble, J, Molnár, Zoltán, Jenkinson, Mark, Bhutta, Zulfiqar, Papageorghiou, Aris, Villar, José, Kennedy, Stephen, and Gunier, Robert
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Pregnancy ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Fetal Development ,Brain ,Fetus ,Gestational Age - Abstract
Maturation of the human fetal brain should follow precisely scheduled structural growth and folding of the cerebral cortex for optimal postnatal function1. We present a normative digital atlas of fetal brain maturation based on a prospective international cohort of healthy pregnant women2, selected using World Health Organization recommendations for growth standards3. Their fetuses were accurately dated in the first trimester, with satisfactory growth and neurodevelopment from early pregnancy to 2 years of age4,5. The atlas was produced using 1,059 optimal quality, three-dimensional ultrasound brain volumes from 899 of the fetuses and an automated analysis pipeline6-8. The atlas corresponds structurally to published magnetic resonance images9, but with finer anatomical details in deep grey matter. The between-study site variability represented less than 8.0% of the total variance of all brain measures, supporting pooling data from the eight study sites to produce patterns of normative maturation. We have thereby generated an average representation of each cerebral hemisphere between 14 and 31 weeks gestation with quantification of intracranial volume variability and growth patterns. Emergent asymmetries were detectable from as early as 14 weeks, with peak asymmetries in regions associated with language development and functional lateralization between 20 and 26 weeks gestation. These patterns were validated in 1,487 three-dimensional brain volumes from 1,295 different fetuses in the same cohort. We provide a unique spatiotemporal benchmark of fetal brain maturation from a large cohort with normative postnatal growth and neurodevelopment.
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- 2023
240. Evaluation of Associations of Growth Differentiation Factor-11, Growth Differentiation Factor-8, and Their Binding Proteins, Follistatin and Follistatin-Like Protein-3, With Measures of Skeletal Muscle Mass, Muscle Strength, and Physical Function in Older Adults.
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Cawthon, Peggy, Patel, Sheena, Newman, Anne, Bhasin, Shalender, Peng, Liming, Tracy, Russell, Kizer, Jorge, Lee, Se-Jin, Ferrucci, Luigi, LeBrasseur, Nathan, Cummings, Steven, and Ganz, Peter
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Geriatric assessment ,Physical function ,Sarcopenia ,Animals ,Humans ,Aged ,Myostatin ,Carrier Proteins ,Follistatin ,Prospective Studies ,Growth Differentiation Factors ,Muscle Strength ,Proteins ,Muscle ,Skeletal - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Based on studies from animal models, growth differentiation factor-11 (GDF-11) may have rejuvenating effects in humans. GDF-11 has high sequence homology with GDF-8 (also known as myostatin); follistatin and follistatin-like protein-3 (FSTL-3) are inhibitory proteins of both GDF-8 and GDF-11. METHODS: Using highly specific liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry assays for GDF-11 and GDF-8 and immunoassays for follistatin and FSTL-3, we quantified the association of these factors with muscle size, strength, and physical performance in 2 prospective cohort studies of community-dwelling older adults (Health, Aging, and Body Composition study [Health ABC] and Cardiovascular Health Study [CHS]). RESULTS: GDF-8 levels were positively associated with thigh muscle cross-sectional area and density in Health ABC (data not available in CHS). GDF-8 levels were positively associated with lean mass (a surrogate of muscle mass) in Health ABC but not CHS, and grip strength in CHS but not Health ABC. FSTL-3 (and perhaps follistatin) was negatively associated with lean mass and had variable associations with other variables. In contrast, GDF-11 was not significantly associated with strength or performance. CONCLUSIONS: GDF-8 and its binding proteins, follistatin and FSTL-3, may constitute a counterregulatory system (chalones) to restrain age-related loss of muscle mass and strength.
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- 2023
241. Discordant pathologic diagnoses of myelodysplastic neoplasms and their implications for registries and therapies.
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Gore, Steven, Kroft, Steven, Harrington, Alexandra, Saber, Wael, Starczynowski, Daniel, Rollison, Dana, Zhang, Ling, Moscinski, Lynn, Wilson, Steffanie, Thompson, Jason, Borchert, Christine, Sherman, Seth, Hebert, Donnie, Walker, Mary, Padron, Eric, DeZern, Amy, Sekeres, Mikkael, Gorak, Edward, Otterstatter, Michael, Al Baghdadi, Tareq, Gillis, Nancy, Foran, James, Liu, Jane, and Bejar, Rafael
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Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Myelodysplastic Syndromes ,Myeloproliferative Disorders ,Leukemia ,Myeloid ,Acute ,Registries - Abstract
Myelodysplastic neoplasms (MDS) are a collection of hematopoietic disorders with widely variable prognoses and treatment options. Accurate pathologic diagnoses present challenges because of interobserver variability in interpreting morphology and quantifying dysplasia. We compared local clinical site diagnoses with central, adjudicated review from 918 participants enrolled in the ongoing National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute National MDS Natural History Study, a prospective observational cohort study of participants with suspected MDS or MDS/myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs). Locally, 264 (29%) were diagnosed as having MDS, 15 (2%) MDS/MPN overlap, 62 (7%) idiopathic cytopenia of undetermined significance (ICUS), 0 (0%) acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with
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- 2023
242. Prospective Correlation of Magnetic Resonance Tumor Regression Grade With Pathologic Outcomes in Total Neoadjuvant Therapy for Rectal Adenocarcinoma.
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Hall, William, Li, Jiahe, You, Y, Gollub, Marc, Grajo, Joseph, Rosen, Mark, dePrisco, Greg, Yothers, Greg, Dorth, Jennifer, Rahma, Osama, Russell, Marcia, Gross, Howard, Jacobs, Samuel, Faller, Bryan, George, Sagila, Al Baghdadi, Tareq, Haddock, Michael, Valicenti, Richard, Hong, Theodore, and George, Thomas
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Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Adenocarcinoma ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Neoadjuvant Therapy ,Neoplasm Staging ,Rectal Neoplasms ,Treatment Outcome ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
PURPOSE: Total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) is a newly established standard treatment for rectal adenocarcinoma. Current methods to communicate magnitudes of regression during TNT are subjective and imprecise. Magnetic resonance tumor regression grade (MR-TRG) is an existing, but rarely used, regression grading system. Prospective validation of MR-TRG correlation with pathologic response in patients undergoing TNT is lacking. Utility of adding diffusion-weighted imaging to MR-TRG is also unknown. METHODS: We conducted a multi-institutional prospective imaging substudy within NRG-GI002 (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02921256) examining the ability of MR-based imaging to predict pathologic complete response (pCR) and correlate MR-TRG with the pathologic neoadjuvant response score (NAR). Serial MRIs were needed from 110 patients. Three radiologists independently, then collectively, reviewed each MRI for complete response (mriCR), which was tested for positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), sensitivity, and specificity with pCR. MR-TRG was examined for association with the pathologic NAR score. All team members were blinded to pathologic data. RESULTS: A total of 121 patients from 71 institutions met criteria: 28% were female (n = 34), 84% White (n = 101), and median age was 55 (24-78 years). Kappa scores for T- and N-stage after TNT were 0.38 and 0.88, reflecting fair agreement and near-perfect agreement, respectively. Calling an mriCR resulted in a kappa score of 0.82 after chemotherapy and 0.56 after TNT reflected near-perfect agreement and moderate agreement, respectively. MR-TRG scores were associated with pCR (P < .01) and NAR (P < .0001), PPV for pCR was 40% (95% CI, 26 to 53), and NPV was 84% (95% CI, 75 to 94). CONCLUSION: MRI alone is a poor tool to distinguish pCR in rectal adenocarcinoma undergoing TNT. However, the MR-TRG score presents a now validated method, correlated with pathologic NAR, which can objectively measure regression magnitude during TNT.
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- 2023
243. Correlation between progression-free survival and overall survival in patients with ovarian cancer after cytoreductive surgery: a systematic literature review.
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Mahajan, Anadi, Scott, David, Hawkins, Neil, Kalilani, Linda, and Chase, Dana
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Ovarian Cancer ,Adult ,Humans ,Female ,Adolescent ,Progression-Free Survival ,Cytoreduction Surgical Procedures ,Retrospective Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Ovarian Neoplasms - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This analysis aimed to better define the relationship between progression-free survival and overall survival in adult patients with ovarian cancer (including fallopian tube or primary peritoneal cancer) following primary cytoreductive surgery or interval cytoreductive surgery. METHODS: A systematic literature review was carried out across the Medline, Embase, and Cochrane Central databases on 7 July 2020 (date limits 1 January 2011 to 7 July 2020) to identify studies with the following eligibility criteria: clinical trials/observational studies including >200 patients with ovarian cancer aged ≥18 years, evaluating overall survival/progression-free survival following cytoreductive surgery by residual disease status in the United States, Europe, Japan, or China. Weighted linear regression models were used to assess any correlation between median progression-free survival and overall survival, and between logHR for progression-free survival and logHR for overall survival. Risk of bias was assessed for all included studies. RESULTS: Of the 50 studies reported, 43 were observational studies (41 retrospective and two prospective cohort studies), and seven were reporting for randomized clinical trials-of which four were retrospective data analyses. For analyses of the relationship between overall survival and progression-free survival, 21 studies were eligible. The weighted linear regression model showed a strong positive association between the two survival endpoints. Goodness-of-fit analysis measured the adjusted R2 as 0.84 (p
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- 2023
244. AFP-L3 and DCP are superior to AFP in predicting waitlist dropout in HCC patients: Results of a prospective study
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Mehta, Neil, Kotwani, Prashant, Norman, Joshua, Shui, Amy, Li, P Jonathan, Saxena, Varun, Chan, Wesley, and Yao, Francis Y
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cancer ,Liver Disease ,Clinical Research ,Digestive Diseases ,Humans ,Carcinoma ,Hepatocellular ,Liver Neoplasms ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Prospective Studies ,alpha-Fetoproteins ,Liver Transplantation ,Biomarkers ,Prothrombin ,Surgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
In patients with HCC awaiting liver transplantation (LT), there is a need to identify biomarkers that are superior to AFP in predicting prognosis. AFP-L3 and des-gamma-carboxyprothrombin (DCP) play a role in HCC detection, but their ability to predict waitlist dropout is unknown. In this prospective single-center study commenced in July 2017, 267 HCC patients had all 3 biomarkers obtained at LT listing. Among them, 96.2% received local-regional therapy, and 18.8% had an initial tumor stage beyond Milan criteria requiring tumor downstaging. At listing, median AFP was 7.0 ng/mL (IQR 3.4-21.5), median AFP-L3 was 7.1% (IQR 0.5-12.5), and median DCP was 1.0 ng/mL (IQR 0.2-3.8). After a median follow-up of 19.3 months, 63 (23.6%) experienced waitlist dropout, while 145 (54.3%) received LT, and 59 (22.1%) were still awaiting LT. Using Cox proportional hazards analysis, AFP-L3≥35% and DCP≥7.5 ng/mL were associated with increased waitlist dropout, whereas AFP at all tested cutoffs, including ≥20,≥ 100, and≥250 ng/mL was not. In a multivariable model, AFP-L3≥35% (HR 2.25, p =0.04) and DCP≥7.5 ng/mL (HR 2.20, p =0.02) remained associated with waitlist dropout as did time from HCC diagnosis to listing ≥ 1 year and increasing MELD-Na score. Kaplan-Meier probability of waitlist dropout within 2 years was 21.8% in those with AFP-L3
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- 2023
245. Repeatability of MRI Biomarkers in Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: The NIMBLE Consortium.
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Fowler, Kathryn J, Venkatesh, Sudhakar K, Obuchowski, Nancy, Middleton, Michael S, Chen, Jun, Pepin, Kay, Magnuson, Jessica, Brown, Kathy J, Batakis, Danielle, Henderson, Walter C, Shankar, Sudha S, Kamphaus, Tania N, Pasek, Alex, Calle, Roberto A, Sanyal, Arun J, Loomba, Rohit, Ehman, Richard, Samir, Anthony E, Sirlin, Claude B, and Sherlock, Sarah P
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Hepatitis ,Liver Disease ,Digestive Diseases ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Adult ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Biomarkers ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Fibrosis ,Liver ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease ,Prospective Studies ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background There is a need for reliable noninvasive methods for diagnosing and monitoring nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Thus, the multidisciplinary Non-invasive Biomarkers of Metabolic Liver disease (NIMBLE) consortium was formed to identify and advance the regulatory qualification of NAFLD imaging biomarkers. Purpose To determine the different-day same-scanner repeatability coefficient of liver MRI biomarkers in patients with NAFLD at risk for steatohepatitis. Materials and Methods NIMBLE 1.2 is a prospective, observational, single-center short-term cross-sectional study (October 2021 to June 2022) in adults with NAFLD across a spectrum of low, intermediate, and high likelihood of advanced fibrosis as determined according to the fibrosis based on four factors (FIB-4) index. Participants underwent up to seven MRI examinations across two visits less than or equal to 7 days apart. Standardized imaging protocols were implemented with six MRI scanners from three vendors at both 1.5 T and 3 T, with central analysis of the data performed by an independent reading center (University of California, San Diego). Trained analysts, who were blinded to clinical data, measured the MRI proton density fat fraction (PDFF), liver stiffness at MR elastography (MRE), and visceral adipose tissue (VAT) for each participant. Point estimates and CIs were calculated using χ2 distribution and statistical modeling for pooled repeatability measures. Results A total of 17 participants (mean age, 58 years ± 8.5 [SD]; 10 female) were included, of which seven (41.2%), six (35.3%), and four (23.5%) participants had a low, intermediate, or high likelihood of advanced fibrosis, respectively. The different-day same-scanner mean measurements were 13%-14% for PDFF, 6.6 L for VAT, and 3.15 kPa for two-dimensional MRE stiffness. The different-day same-scanner repeatability coefficients were 0.22 L (95% CI: 0.17, 0.29) for VAT, 0.75 kPa (95% CI: 0.6, 0.99) for MRE stiffness, 1.19% (95% CI: 0.96, 1.61) for MRI PDFF using magnitude reconstruction, 1.56% (95% CI: 1.26, 2.07) for MRI PDFF using complex reconstruction, and 19.7% (95% CI: 15.8, 26.2) for three-dimensional MRE shear modulus. Conclusion This preliminary study suggests that thresholds of 1.2%-1.6%, 0.22 L, and 0.75 kPa for MRI PDFF, VAT, and MRE, respectively, should be used to discern measurement error from real change in patients with NAFLD. ClinicalTrials.gov registration no. NCT05081427 © RSNA, 2023 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Kozaka and Matsui in this issue.
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- 2023
246. The optimal healthy ranges of thyroid function defined by the risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality: systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis.
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Xu, Yanning, Derakhshan, Arash, Hysaj, Ola, Wildisen, Lea, Ittermann, Till, Pingitore, Alessandro, Abolhassani, Nazanin, Medici, Marco, Kiemeney, Lambertus, Riksen, Niels, Dullaart, Robin, Trompet, Stella, Dörr, Marcus, Brown, Suzanne, Schmidt, Börge, Führer-Sakel, Dagmar, Vanderpump, Mark, Muendlein, Axel, Drexel, Heinz, Fink, Howard, Ikram, M, Kavousi, Maryam, Rhee, Connie, Bensenor, Isabela, Azizi, Fereidoun, Hankey, Graeme, Iacoviello, Massimo, Imaizumi, Misa, Ceresini, Graziano, Ferrucci, Luigi, Sgarbi, José, Bauer, Douglas, Wareham, Nick, Boelaert, Kristien, Bakker, Stephan, Jukema, J, Vaes, Bert, Iervasi, Giorgio, Yeap, Bu, Westendorp, Rudi, Korevaar, Tim, Völzke, Henry, Razvi, Salman, Gussekloo, Jacobijn, Walsh, John, Cappola, Anne, Rodondi, Nicolas, Peeters, Robin, and Chaker, Layal
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Male ,Adult ,Humans ,Female ,Pregnancy ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Adolescent ,Young Adult ,Middle Aged ,Thyroid Gland ,Thyroid Function Tests ,Thyroxine ,Prospective Studies ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Thyrotropin - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reference intervals of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and free thyroxine (FT4) are statistically defined by the 2·5-97·5th percentiles, without accounting for potential risk of clinical outcomes. We aimed to define the optimal healthy ranges of TSH and FT4 based on the risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality. METHODS: This systematic review and individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis identified eligible prospective cohorts through the Thyroid Studies Collaboration, supplemented with a systematic search via Embase, MEDLINE (Ovid), Web of science, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Google Scholar from Jan 1, 2011, to Feb 12, 2017 with an updated search to Oct 13, 2022 (cohorts found in the second search were not included in the IPD). We included cohorts that collected TSH or FT4, and cardiovascular outcomes or mortality for adults (aged ≥18 years). We excluded cohorts that included solely pregnant women, individuals with overt thyroid diseases, and individuals with cardiovascular disease. We contacted the study investigators of eligible cohorts to provide IPD on demographics, TSH, FT4, thyroid peroxidase antibodies, history of cardiovascular disease and risk factors, medication use, cardiovascular disease events, cardiovascular disease mortality, and all-cause mortality. The primary outcome was a composite outcome including cardiovascular disease events (coronary heart disease, stroke, and heart failure) and all-cause mortality. Secondary outcomes were the separate assessment of cardiovascular disease events, all-cause mortality, and cardiovascular disease mortality. We performed one-step (cohort-stratified Cox models) and two-step (random-effects models) meta-analyses adjusting for age, sex, smoking, systolic blood pressure, diabetes, and total cholesterol. The study was registered with PROSPERO, CRD42017057576. FINDINGS: We identified 3935 studies, of which 53 cohorts fulfilled the inclusion criteria and 26 cohorts agreed to participate. We included IPD on 134 346 participants with a median age of 59 years (range 18-106) at baseline. There was a J-shaped association of FT4 with the composite outcome and secondary outcomes, with the 20th (median 13·5 pmol/L [IQR 11·2-13·9]) to 40th percentiles (median 14·8 pmol/L [12·3-15·0]) conveying the lowest risk. Compared with the 20-40th percentiles, the age-adjusted and sex-adjusted hazard ratio (HR) for FT4 in the 80-100th percentiles was 1·20 (95% CI 1·11-1·31) for the composite outcome, 1·34 (1·20-1·49) for all-cause mortality, 1·57 (1·31-1·89) for cardiovascular disease mortality, and 1·22 (1·11-1·33) for cardiovascular disease events. In individuals aged 70 years and older, the 10-year absolute risk of composite outcome increased over 5% for women with FT4 greater than the 85th percentile (median 17·6 pmol/L [IQR 15·0-18·3]), and men with FT4 greater than the 75th percentile (16·7 pmol/L [14·0-17·4]). Non-linear associations were identified for TSH, with the 60th (median 1·90 mIU/L [IQR 1·68-2·25]) to 80th percentiles (2·90 mIU/L [2·41-3·32]) associated with the lowest risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality. Compared with the 60-80th percentiles, the age-adjusted and sex-adjusted HR of TSH in the 0-20th percentiles was 1·07 (95% CI 1·02-1·12) for the composite outcome, 1·09 (1·05-1·14) for all-cause mortality, and 1·07 (0·99-1·16) for cardiovascular disease mortality. INTERPRETATION: There was a J-shaped association of FT4 with cardiovascular disease and mortality. Low concentrations of TSH were associated with a higher risk of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular disease mortality. The 20-40th percentiles of FT4 and the 60-80th percentiles of TSH could represent the optimal healthy ranges of thyroid function based on the risk of cardiovascular disease and mortality, with more than 5% increase of 10-year composite risk identified for FT4 greater than the 85th percentile in women and men older than 70 years. We propose a feasible approach to establish the optimal healthy ranges of thyroid function, allowing for better identification of individuals with a higher risk of thyroid-related outcomes. FUNDING: None.
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- 2023
247. Blood Pressure, Incident Cognitive Impairment, and Severity of CKD: Findings From the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) Study.
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Babroudi, Seda, Tighiouart, Hocine, Schrauben, Sarah, Cohen, Jordana, Fischer, Michael, Rahman, Mahboob, Hsu, Chi-Yuan, Sozio, Stephen, Weir, Matthew, Sarnak, Mark, Yaffe, Kristine, Tamura, Manjula, and Drew, David
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Chronic kidney disease ,cognitive impairment ,diastolic blood pressure ,hypertension ,systolic blood pressure ,Adult ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,Blood Pressure ,Longitudinal Studies ,Disease Progression ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Hypertension ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Risk Factors ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Dementia - Abstract
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Hypertension is a known risk factor for dementia and cognitive impairment. There are limited data on the relation of systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) with incident cognitive impairment in adults with chronic kidney disease. We sought to identify and characterize the relationship among blood pressure, cognitive impairment, and severity of decreased kidney function in adults with chronic kidney disease. STUDY DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort study. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 3,768 participants in the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) Study. EXPOSURE: Baseline SBP and DBP were examined as exposure variables, using continuous (linear, per 10-mm Hg higher), categorical (SBP140mm Hg; DBP 80mm Hg) and nonlinear terms (splines). OUTCOME: Incident cognitive impairment defined as a decline in Modified Mini-Mental State Examination (3MS) score to greater than 1 standard deviation below the cohort mean. ANALYTICAL APPROACH: Cox proportional hazard models adjusted for demographics as well as kidney disease and cardiovascular disease risk factors. RESULTS: The mean age of participants was 58±11 (SD) years, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was 44mL/min/1.73m2 ± 15 (SD), and the median follow-up time was 11 (IQR, 7-13) years. In 3,048 participants without cognitive impairment at baseline and with at least 1 follow-up 3MS test, a higher baseline SBP was significantly associated with incident cognitive impairment only in the eGFR>45mL/min/1.73m2 subgroup (adjusted hazard ratio [AHR], 1.13 [95% CI, 1.05-1.22] per 10mm Hg higher SBP]. Spline analyses, aimed at exploring nonlinearity, showed that the relationship between baseline SBP and incident cognitive impairment was J-shaped and significant only in the eGFR>45mL/min/1.73m2 subgroup (P=0.02). Baseline DBP was not associated with incident cognitive impairment in any analyses. LIMITATIONS: 3MS test as the primary measure of cognitive function. CONCLUSIONS: Among patients with chronic kidney disease, higher baseline SBP was associated with higher risk of incident cognitive impairment specifically in those individuals with eGFR>45mL/min/1.73m2. PLAIN-LANGUAGE SUMMARY: High blood pressure is a strong risk factor for dementia and cognitive impairment in studies of adults without kidney disease. High blood pressure and cognitive impairment are common in adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The impact of blood pressure on the development of future cognitive impairment in patients with CKD remains unclear. We identified the relationship between blood pressure and cognitive impairment in 3,076 adults with CKD. Baseline blood pressure was measured, after which serial cognitive testing was performed over 11 years. Fourteen percent of participants developed cognitive impairment. We found that a higher baseline systolic blood pressure was associated with an increased risk of cognitive impairment. We found that this association was stronger in adults with mild-to-moderate CKD compared with those with advanced CKD.
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- 2023
248. Association of CPR simulation program characteristics with simulated and actual performance during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest.
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Cashen, Katherine, Sutton, Robert, Reeder, Ron, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael, Berg, Robert, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph, Carpenter, Todd, Wesley Diddle, J, Federman, Myke, Fink, Ericka, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha, Friess, Stuart, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David, Horvat, Christopher, Huard, Leanna, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick, Morgan, Ryan, Mourani, Peter, Nadkarni, Vinay, Naim, Maryam, Notterman, Daniel, Palmer, Chella, Pollack, Murray, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew, Srivastava, Neeraj, Viteri, Shirley, Wolfe, Heather, Yates, Andrew, Zuppa, Athena, and Meert, Kathleen
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Cardiac arrest ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Child ,Infant ,Neonate ,Simulation ,Child ,Humans ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Prospective Studies ,Heart Arrest ,Clinical Competence ,Hospitals ,Pediatric - Abstract
AIM: To evaluate associations between characteristics of simulated point-of-care cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training with simulated and actual intensive care unit (ICU) CPR performance, and with outcomes of children after in-hospital cardiac arrest. METHODS: This is a pre-specified secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation Project; a prospective, multicentre cluster randomized interventional trial conducted in 18 ICUs from October 2016-March 2021. Point-of-care bedside simulations with real-time feedback to allow multidisciplinary ICU staff to practice CPR on a portable manikin were performed and quality metrics (rate, depth, release velocity, chest compression fraction) were recorded. Actual CPR performance was recorded for children 37 weeks post-conceptual age to 18 years who received chest compressions of any duration, and included intra-arrest haemodynamics and CPR mechanics. Outcomes included survival to hospital discharge with favourable neurologic status. RESULTS: Overall, 18,912 point-of-care simulations were included. Simulation characteristics associated with both simulation and actual performance included site, participant discipline, and timing of simulation training. Simulation characteristics were not associated with survival with favourable neurologic outcome. However, participants in the top 3 sites for improvement in survival with favourable neurologic outcome were more likely to have participated in a simulation in the past month, on a weekday day, to be nurses, and to achieve targeted depth of compression and chest compression fraction goals during simulations than the bottom 3 sites. CONCLUSIONS: Point-of-care simulation characteristics were associated with both simulated and actual CPR performance. More recent simulation, increased nursing participation, and simulation training during daytime hours may improve CPR performance.
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- 2023
249. Coronary Atherosclerosis Across the Glycemic Spectrum Among Asymptomatic Adults: The Miami Heart Study at Baptist Health South Florida.
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Patel, Kershaw, Budoff, Matthew, Valero-Elizondo, Javier, Lahan, Shubham, Ali, Shozab, Taha, Mohamad, Blaha, Michael, Blankstein, Ron, Shapiro, Michael, Pandey, Ambarish, Arias, Lara, Feldman, Theodore, Cury, Ricardo, Cainzos-Achirica, Miguel, Shah, Svati, Ziffer, Jack, Fialkow, Jonathan, and Nasir, Khurram
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atherosclerosis ,diabetes ,glucose ,prediabetic state ,prevalence ,Adult ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Prediabetic State ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Florida ,Constriction ,Pathologic ,Protestantism ,Coronary Angiography ,Prospective Studies ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Atherosclerosis ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Risk Factors - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The contemporary burden and characteristics of coronary atherosclerosis, assessed using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), is unknown among asymptomatic adults with diabetes and prediabetes in the United States. The pooled cohort equations and coronary artery calcium (CAC) score stratify atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk, but their association with CCTA findings across glycemic categories is not well established. METHODS: Asymptomatic adults without atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease enrolled in the Miami Heart Study were included. Participants underwent CAC and CCTA testing and were classified into glycemic categories. Prevalence of coronary atherosclerosis (any plaque, noncalcified plaque, plaque with ≥1 high-risk feature, maximal stenosis ≥50%) assessed by CCTA was described across glycemic categories and further stratified by pooled cohort equations-estimated atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk and CAC score. Adjusted logistic regression was used to evaluate the associations between glycemic categories and coronary outcomes. RESULTS: Among 2352 participants (49.5% women), the prevalence of euglycemia, prediabetes, and diabetes was 63%, 30%, and 7%, respectively. Coronary plaque was more commonly present across worsening glycemic categories (euglycemia, 43%; prediabetes, 58%; diabetes, 69%), and similar pattern was observed for other coronary outcomes. In adjusted analyses, compared with euglycemia, prediabetes and diabetes were each associated with higher odds of any coronary plaque (OR, 1.30 [95% CI, 1.05-1.60] and 1.75 [1.17-2.61], respectively), noncalcified plaque (OR, 1.47 [1.19-1.81] and 1.99 [1.38-2.87], respectively), and plaque with ≥1 high-risk feature (OR, 1.65 [1.14-2.39] and 2.53 [1.48-4.33], respectively). Diabetes was associated with stenosis ≥50% (OR, 3.01 [1.79-5.08]; reference=euglycemia). Among participants with diabetes and estimated atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk
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- 2023
250. Association of post-stroke fatigue with physical activity and physical fitness: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Larsson, Petra, Bidonde, Julia, Olsen, Unni, Gay, Caryl, Lerdal, Anners, Ursin, Marie, Mead, Gillian, and Edvardsen, Elisabeth
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Associations ,meta-analysis ,physical activity ,physical fitness ,post-stroke fatigue ,systematic review ,Adult ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Stroke ,Exercise ,Physical Fitness ,Fatigue ,Quality of Life ,Observational Studies as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: It has been hypothesized that post-stroke fatigue (PSF) is associated with reduced physical activity (PA) and impaired physical fitness (fitness). Understanding associations between PSF and PA, and/or fitness could help guide the development of targeted exercise interventions to treat PSF. AIMS: Our systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to investigate PSFs associations with PA and fitness. SUMMARY OF REVIEW: Following a registered protocol, we included studies with cross-sectional or prospective observational designs, published in English or a Scandinavian language, which reported an association of PSF with PA and/or fitness in adult stroke survivors. We searched MEDLINE, Embase, AMED, CINAHL, PsycINFO, ClinicalTrials.gov, and World Health Organizations International Clinical Trials Registry Platform from inception to November 30, 2022. Risk of bias was assessed using Quality in Prognosis Studies. Thirty-two unique studies (total n = 4721 participants, 55% male), and three study protocols were included. We used random-effects meta-analysis to pool data for PA and fitness outcomes, and vote-counting of direction of association to synthesize data that could not be meta-analyzed. We found moderate-certainty evidence of a weak association between higher PSF and impaired fitness (meta r = -0.24; 95% confidence interval (CI) = -0.33, -0.15; n = 905, 7 studies), and very low-certainty evidence of no association between PSF and PA (meta r = -0.09; 95% CI = -0.34, 0.161; n = 430, 3 studies). Vote-counting showed a higher proportion of studies with associations between higher PSF and impaired fitness (pˆ = 0.83; 95% CI = 0.44, 0.97; p = 0.22, n = 298, 6 studies), and with associations between higher PSF and lower PA (pˆ = 0.75; 95% CI = 0.51, 0.90; p = 0.08, n = 2566, 16 studies). Very low- to moderate-certainty evidence reflects small study sample sizes, high risk of bias, and inconsistent results. CONCLUSIONS: The meta-analysis showed moderate-certainty evidence of an association between higher PSF and impaired fitness. These results indicate that fitness might protect against PSF. Larger prospective studies and randomized controlled trials evaluating the effect of exercise on PSF are needed to confirm these findings.
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- 2023
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