206 results on '"Bruce BB"'
Search Results
2. Clinical course of idiopathic intracranial hypertension with transverse sinus stenosis.
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Riggeal BD, Bruce BB, Saindane AM, Ridha MA, Kelly LP, Newman NJ, Biousse V, Riggeal, Bryan D, Bruce, Beau B, Saindane, Amit M, Ridha, Maysa A, Kelly, Linda P, Newman, Nancy J, and Biousse, Valérie
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- 2013
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3. Atypical idiopathic intracranial hypertension: normal BMI and older patients.
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Bruce BB, Kedar S, Van Stavern GP, Corbett JJ, Newman NJ, Biousse V, Bruce, B B, Kedar, S, Van Stavern, G P, Corbett, J J, Newman, N J, and Biousse, V
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- 2010
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4. Nonmydriatic Digital Ocular Fundus Photography on the iPhone 3G: The FOTO-ED Study.
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Lamirel C, Bruce BB, Wright DW, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- 2012
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5. Re: Practice parameter: assessing patients in a neurology practice for risk of falls (an evidence-based review): report of the Quality Standards Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology.
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Bruce BB, Biousse V, and Newman NJ
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- 2009
6. Blood pressure threshold for abnormal ocular fundus findings is lower than expected.
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Bruce BB, Lamirel C, Wright DW, Biousse V, Newman NJ, Bruce, Beau B, Lamirel, Cédric, Wright, David W, Biousse, Valérie, and Newman, Nancy J
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- 2012
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7. Factors Associated with Medical Care-Seeking and Stool Sample Submission for Diarrheal Illness, FoodNet, United States, 2018-2019.
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Scallan Walter EJ, Devine C, Payne DC, Hoekstra RM, Griffin PM, and Bruce BB
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Laboratory-based surveillance for enteric pathogens causing diarrhea is foundational for monitoring foodborne diseases in the United States. However, diarrheal illnesses are not always confirmed by laboratory testing, so estimates of the true number of illnesses must adjust for underdiagnosis, including underdiagnosis due to ill persons not seeking medical care or submitting a stool sample for laboratory testing. We assessed these factors among persons with an acute diarrheal illness who responded to the most recent Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) Population Survey (2018-2019). Multiple modes of administration (telephone, web-based) and multiple sampling frames were used to ask survey respondents in English or Spanish about diarrhea and other symptoms experienced in the 30 days before the interview and to ask if they had sought medical care or submitted a stool sample. Of 1018 respondents with an acute diarrheal illness, 22.0% had sought medical care and 4.7% submitted a stool sample. On multivariable analysis, older adults (aged 65 years and over), male respondents, and persons with a household income of ≥$40,000 per annum were significantly more likely to seek medical care, as were respondents reporting cough, fever, vomiting, recent international travel, or duration of diarrhea for ≥3 days. Older adults and persons with five or more loose stools in 24 h who sought medical care were significantly more likely to submit a stool sample. Ill respondents with a concurrent cough were less likely to submit a stool sample. Sociodemographic characteristics, symptoms, and international travel influence whether a patient with an acute diarrheal illness will seek care or submit a stool specimen. Accounting for these factors when analyzing surveillance data will likely produce more precise estimates of the true number of foodborne illnesses.
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- 2024
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8. Estimating Underdetection of Foodborne Disease Outbreaks (Response).
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Ford L, Self JL, Wong KK, Hoekstra RM, Tauxe RV, Rose EB, and Bruce BB
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- 2024
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9. Machine learning to attribute the source of Campylobacter infections in the United States: A retrospective analysis of national surveillance data.
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Pascoe B, Futcher G, Pensar J, Bayliss SC, Mourkas E, Calland JK, Hitchings MD, Joseph LA, Lane CG, Greenlee T, Arning N, Wilson DJ, Jolley KA, Corander J, Maiden MCJ, Parker CT, Cooper KK, Rose EB, Hiett K, Bruce BB, and Sheppard SK
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- Animals, United States epidemiology, Humans, Cattle, Retrospective Studies, Chickens microbiology, Epidemiological Monitoring, Swine, Poultry microbiology, Genome, Bacterial, Campylobacter Infections epidemiology, Campylobacter Infections microbiology, Campylobacter Infections veterinary, Machine Learning, Campylobacter genetics, Campylobacter classification, Campylobacter isolation & purification
- Abstract
Objectives: Integrating pathogen genomic surveillance with bioinformatics can enhance public health responses by identifying risk and guiding interventions. This study focusses on the two predominant Campylobacter species, which are commonly found in the gut of birds and mammals and often infect humans via contaminated food. Rising incidence and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) are a global concern, and there is an urgent need to quantify the main routes to human infection., Methods: During routine US national surveillance (2009-2019), 8856 Campylobacter genomes from human infections and 16,703 from possible sources were sequenced. Using machine learning and probabilistic models, we target genetic variation associated with host adaptation to attribute the source of human infections and estimate the importance of different disease reservoirs., Results: Poultry was identified as the primary source of human infections, responsible for an estimated 68% of cases, followed by cattle (28%), and only a small contribution from wild birds (3%) and pork sources (1%). There was also evidence of an increase in multidrug resistance, particularly among isolates attributed to chickens., Conclusions: National surveillance and source attribution can guide policy, and our study suggests that interventions targeting poultry will yield the greatest reductions in campylobacteriosis and spread of AMR in the US., Data Availability: All sequence reads were uploaded and shared on NCBI's Sequence Read Archive (SRA) associated with BioProjects; PRJNA239251 (CDC / PulseNet surveillance), PRJNA287430 (FSIS surveillance), PRJNA292668 & PRJNA292664 (NARMS) and PRJNA258022 (FDA surveillance). Publicly available genomes, including reference genomes and isolates sampled worldwide from wild birds are associated with BioProject accessions: PRJNA176480, PRJNA177352, PRJNA342755, PRJNA345429, PRJNA312235, PRJNA415188, PRJNA524300, PRJNA528879, PRJNA529798, PRJNA575343, PRJNA524315 and PRJNA689604. Contiguous assemblies of all genome sequences compared are available at Mendeley data (assembled C. coli genomes doi: 10.17632/gxswjvxyh3.1; assembled C. jejuni genomes doi: 10.17632/6ngsz3dtbd.1) and individual project and accession numbers can be found in Supplementary tables S1 and S2, which also includes pubMLST identifiers for assembled genomes. Figshare (10.6084/m9.figshare.20279928). Interactive phylogenies are hosted on microreact separately for C. jejuni (https://microreact.org/project/pascoe-us-cjejuni) and C. coli (https://microreact.org/project/pascoe-us-ccoli)., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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10. Factors associated with vision loss in idiopathic intracranial hypertension patients with severe papilledema.
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Bouthour W, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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Background/objectives: Our aim was to compare factors associated with poor versus good visual outcomes in idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) patients with severe papilledema at initial presentation., Subjects/methods: Retrospective review of consecutive IIH patients (1/1/2013-6/10/2023) with severe papilledema (Frisén grade 4-5 and/or atrophy in at least one eye); Patients were divided into "poor visual outcome" (poor visual acuity and constricted visual field in at least one eye) and "good visual outcome" (good visual acuity and only mild visual field changes in both eyes) at >6 months for medically-treated patients and >3 months follow-up for surgically-treated patients., Results: We included 134 IIH patients with severe papilledema (70 had poor and 64 had good visual outcomes). No significant differences existed for age, gender, race, hypertension, haemoglobin, or cerebrospinal fluid opening pressure. The poor-outcome group had significantly greater BMI (mean 39.2 vs 35.1 kg/m
2 , p = 0.004), and worse initial HVF-MD (-20.04 vs -5.81 dB, p < 0.0001). Poor-outcome patients saw more prior health-care providers (4.7 vs 2.4, p < 0.0001), with delayed neuro-ophthalmology encounters (58.5 vs 15.2 weeks, p = 0.001). 41.4% of poor-outcome patients were initially seen in outside emergency departments (ED) (vs 14.1% of good-outcome patients, p = 0.0005), while only 27.1% were seen by eye-care providers (vs 53.1% of good-outcome patients, p = 0.0027). No poor-outcome patients initially consulted our institution's ED vs 7.8% of good-outcome patients., Conclusions: Although patients with poor visual outcome did not seek medical care later than good outcome patients, they had delayed diagnosis/treatment because of prior outside ED visits and lack of prior eye-care provider evaluations, suggesting that early diagnosis and specialized management of papilledema is essential for patients with symptoms of intracranial hypertension., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Royal College of Ophthalmologists.)- Published
- 2024
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11. Non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy in Black patients.
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Banc A, Muntean G, Biousse V, Kupersmith MJ, Newman NJ, and Bruce BB
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Purpose: Prior studies have shown that non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION) is uncommon in persons of Black race compared to those of White race, but the reasons behind this discrepancy remain unknown. Our goal was to analyze the systemic and ocular features of Black NAION patients compared to White patients., Design: Retrospective cross-sectional study METHODS: Self-reported race was collected from all NAION patients seen between 2014-2022 from a single US neuro-ophthalmology service. All Black NAION patients and a randomly selected sample of White NAION patients were included. We collected information on hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism, obesity, ischemic heart disease, atrial fibrillation, pacemaker insertion, chronic kidney disease, dialysis, anemia, obstructive sleep apnea, deep vein thrombosis, stroke, use of phosphodiesterase inhibitors, and smoking status. We reviewed color fundus photographs and optic nerve OCT images to assess cup-to-disc ratio and document the presence of optic disc drusen. Counterfactual random forest was used to estimate associations for each characteristic of interest by race controlling for the other exposures., Results: We included 32 Black NAION patients (mean age 57 ± 11 years, 38% men) and 69 of 432 White patients (mean age 57 ± 15 years, 59% men). Time between NAION onset and neuro-ophthalmic examination was significantly longer in Black patients (1.5 to <3 months: OR 4.07, P = 0.03; 6 to <12 months: OR 6.05, P = 0.007). Chronic kidney disease (OR 7.53, P = 0.003) and hemodialysis (OR 13.69, P = 0.02) were significantly more frequent in Black patients. No significant differences in cup-to-disc ratio were present (0.15 to <0.25: OR 2.83, P = 0.09; 0.25 to <0.35: OR 0.56, P = 0.46; ≥0.35: OR 0.66, P = 0.44)., Conclusion: Referral delay occurs in Black patients with NAION, likely due to its relative rarity and concern for alternate diagnoses. Black NAION patients were substantially more likely to have chronic kidney disease and be on dialysis than White patients. Despite known racial differences in cup-to-disc ratio, we found no difference between Black and White NAION patients, suggesting that the underlying proposed compartment mechanism is the same between races., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None, (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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12. Disparities in Salmonellosis Incidence for US Counties with Different Social Determinants of Health Profiles Are Also Mediated by Extreme Weather: A Counterfactual Analysis of Laboratory Enteric Disease Surveillance (LEDS) Data From 1997 through 2019.
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Weller DL, Tierney R, Verlander S, Bruce BB, and Rose EB
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Understanding disparities in salmonellosis burden is critical for developing effective, equitable prevention programs. Past efforts to characterize disparities were limited in scope and by the analytical methods available when the study was conducted. We aim to address this gap by identifying disparities in salmonellosis incidence between counties with different determinants of health (DOH) profiles. Using national U.S. Laboratory-based Enteric Disease Surveillance (LEDS) data for 1997-2019, age-adjusted county-level salmonellosis incidence/100,000 persons was calculated and linked to publicly available DOH data. We used hurdle counterfactual random forest (CFRF) to quantify, for each DOH, the risk that (i) ≥1 versus no cases were reported by a county, and (ii) when ≥1 case was reported, whether a high (≥16 cases/100,000 persons) or low incidence (≥1 & <4 cases/100,000 persons) was reported. Risk in both models was significantly associated with demographic DOH, suggesting a disparity between counties with different demographic profiles. Risk was also significantly associated with food, healthcare, physical, and socioeconomic environment. The risk was generally greater for counties with more negative food resources, and for under-resourced counties (e.g., fewer healthcare and social services, fewer grocery stores). Risk was also significantly higher if any extreme weather event occurred. The study also found that underreporting and underascertainment appeared to result in underestimation of salmonellosis incidence in economically marginalized and under-resourced communities. Overall, our analyses indicated that, regardless of other county characteristics, extreme weather was associated with increased salmonellosis incidence, and that certain communities were differentially disadvantaged toward a higher incidence. This information can facilitate the development of community-specific prevention efforts., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2024
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13. Acute Respiratory Syndrome Mimicking Shipping Sickness in Theileria buffeli Infected Buffalo Calf.
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Raina V, Ajith Y, Adithya S, Anandu S, Athira N, Athira KS, Preena P, Vinodkumar K, Manju KM, Mahima CS, Akshaya J, Alby BB, Nafis A, Arshana A, Tini J, Anandu PA, Devi G, Arun G, and Ajithkumar S
- Abstract
Benign theileriosis, caused by the members of the Theileria orientalis complex, can develop fatal clinical outbreaks characterized by acute respiratory manifestation in stressful conditions. This report describes the molecular diagnosis and clinical management of a recently transported buffalo calf with severe Theileria buffeli infection and associated acute pneumonia. A five-month-old male buffalo calf having an inter-state travel history three days back was presented with pyrexia, anorexia, weakness, mucoid rhinorrhoea, dyspnoea and diarrhoea from the day of procurement. The history and physical examination revealed a clinical presentation similar to shipping fever. Whereas, severe parasitemia of Theileria spp. with anaemia, thrombocytopenia and granulopenia were evident on laboratory investigation. The Theileria spp. infection was confirmed by PCR method using specific primers and the authentication was made by detailed sequence analysis. The small subunit rRNA was amplified using universal apicomplexan primers and the phylogenetic analysis was carried out for further characterisation. The animal was stabilized by steroid nebulization therapy and the specific chemotherapy was instigated using buparvaquone and sulphamethoxazole-trimethoprim combination. Supportive medications like non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antihistamines, antidiarrhoeals and vitamins were provided symptomatically. The animal showed a good response to therapy and recovered from parasitemia by day 10 and the molecular clearance was later confirmed on day 70 of therapy. The present case of Theileria buffeli infected buffalo calf with acute respiratory signs points towards the possible hemoparasitic outbreaks in transport-stressed animals with the signs of shipping fever-associated syndrome., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2024
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14. An Approach to Describe Salmonella Serotypes of Concern for Outbreaks: Using Burden and Trajectory of Outbreak-related Illnesses Associated with Meat and Poultry.
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Marshall KE, Cui Z, Gleason BL, Hartley C, Wise ME, Bruce BB, and Griffin PM
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- Animals, Humans, Food Microbiology, Chickens, Salmonella Food Poisoning epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Salmonella, Poultry, Serogroup, Meat microbiology
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Over 40% of all U.S. Salmonella illnesses are attributed to consumption of contaminated meat and poultry products each year. Determining which serotypes cause the most outbreak illnesses associated with specific meat and poultry types can inform prevention measures. We developed an approach to categorize serotypes using outbreak illness burden (high, moderate, low) and trajectory (increased, stable, decreased). We used data from 192 foodborne Salmonella outbreaks resulting in 7,077 illnesses, 1,330 hospitalizations, and 9 deaths associated with chicken, turkey, beef, or pork during 2012-2021. We linked each meat and poultry type to 1-3 serotypes that we categorized as high outbreak illness burden and increased trajectory during 2021. Calculation and public display of outbreak illness burden and trajectory annually could facilitate the prioritization of serotypes for prevention by federal and state health and regulatory agencies and by the meat and poultry industry., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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15. Estimates of SARS-CoV-2 Hospitalization and Fatality Rates in the Prevaccination Period, United States.
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Griffin I, King J, Lyons BC, Singleton AL, Deng X, Bruce BB, and Griffin PM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adolescent, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Middle Aged, Adult, Infant, United States epidemiology, Aged, 80 and over, Young Adult, Infant, Newborn, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 mortality, COVID-19 epidemiology, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, SARS-CoV-2
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Few precise estimates of hospitalization and fatality rates from COVID-19 exist for naive populations, especially within demographic subgroups. We estimated rates among persons with SARS-CoV-2 infection in the United States during May 1-December 1, 2020, before vaccines became available. Both rates generally increased with age; fatality rates were highest for persons >85 years of age (24%) and lowest for children 1-14 years of age (0.01%). Age-adjusted case hospitalization rates were highest for African American or Black, not Hispanic persons (14%), and case-fatality rates were highest for Asian or Pacific Islander, not Hispanic persons (4.4%). Eighteen percent of hospitalized patients and 44.2% of those admitted to an intensive care unit died. Male patients had higher hospitalization (6.2% vs. 5.2%) and fatality rates (1.9% vs. 1.5%) than female patients. These findings highlight the importance of collecting surveillance data to devise appropriate control measures for persons in underserved racial/ethnic groups and older adults.
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- 2024
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16. Glaucoma as a cause of optic nerve abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging.
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Mosleh R, Labella Álvarez F, Bouthour W, Saindane AM, Dattilo M, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Adult, Intraocular Pressure physiology, Optic Atrophy diagnosis, Visual Acuity physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Glaucoma diagnosis, Optic Nerve pathology, Optic Nerve diagnostic imaging, Optic Nerve abnormalities, Optic Nerve Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background/objectives: To report a series of patients with glaucoma and optic nerve abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in at least one-eye, and to determine whether these findings correlate with the severity of glaucoma., Patients and Methods: Retrospective study of all patients who underwent a brain/orbits MRI without and with contrast at our institution between 07/1/2019-6/30/2022. Patients with optic nerve T2-hyperintensity and/or MRI optic nerve atrophy in at least one-eye and a diagnosis of isolated glaucoma in at least one-eye were included. Demographic information, glaucoma clinical characteristics, glaucoma severity parameters, and MRI indication were collected., Results: Fifty-six patients (112 eyes) (age 65 years-old [range 26-88]; 70% male) had isolated bilateral glaucoma with at least one-eye MRI optic nerve abnormality. The indication for MRI was atypical/asymmetric glaucoma in 91% of patients. Of the 112 eyes, 23 had optic nerve T2-hyperintensity alone; 33 had both optic nerve T2-hyperintensity and MRI optic nerve atrophy; 34 had MRI optic nerve atrophy alone; and 22 did not have abnormal optic nerve MRI-findings. None had optic nerve enhancement. A statistically significant association between optic nerve T2-hyperintensity or MRI optic nerve atrophy and glaucoma severity parameters was found., Conclusions: Glaucoma is a clinical diagnosis and MRI brain is usually not required, except in atypical or asymmetric cases. Optic nerve T2-hyperintensity and MRI optic nerve atrophy are nonspecific MRI-findings that can be found in severe glaucomatous optic nerves and should not systematically prompt investigations for another cause of optic neuropathy., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Royal College of Ophthalmologists.)
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- 2024
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17. Real-Time Use of a Dynamic Model To Measure the Impact of Public Health Interventions on Measles Outbreak Size and Duration - Chicago, Illinois, 2024.
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Masters NB, Holmdahl I, Miller PB, Kumar CK, Herzog CM, DeJonge PM, Gretsch S, Oliver SE, Patel M, Sugerman DE, Bruce BB, Borah BF, and Olesen SW
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- Humans, Chicago epidemiology, Epidemiological Models, Public Health, Time Factors, Forecasting, Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Mass Vaccination, Adult, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Measles epidemiology, Measles prevention & control
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Measles is a highly infectious, vaccine-preventable disease that can cause severe illness, hospitalization, and death. A measles outbreak associated with a migrant shelter in Chicago occurred during February-April 2024, in which a total of 57 confirmed cases were identified, including 52 among shelter residents, three among staff members, and two among community members with a known link to the shelter. CDC simulated a measles outbreak among shelter residents using a dynamic disease model, updated in real time as additional cases were identified, to produce outbreak forecasts and assess the impact of public health interventions. As of April 8, the model forecasted a median final outbreak size of 58 cases (IQR = 56-60 cases); model fit and prediction range improved as more case data became available. Counterfactual analysis of different intervention scenarios demonstrated the importance of early deployment of public health interventions in Chicago, with a 69% chance of an outbreak of 100 or more cases had there been no mass vaccination or active case-finding compared with only a 1% chance when those interventions were deployed. This analysis highlights the value of using real-time, dynamic models to aid public health response, set expectations about outbreak size and duration, and quantify the impact of interventions. The model shows that prompt mass vaccination and active case-finding likely substantially reduced the chance of a large (100 or more cases) outbreak in Chicago., Competing Interests: All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.
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- 2024
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18. Application of a Deep Learning System to Detect Papilledema on Nonmydriatic Ocular Fundus Photographs in an Emergency Department.
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Biousse V, Najjar RP, Tang Z, Lin MY, Wright DW, Keadey MT, Wong TY, Bruce BB, Milea D, and Newman NJ
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- Humans, Fundus Oculi, Retrospective Studies, Artificial Intelligence, Emergency Service, Hospital, Photography, Papilledema diagnosis, Deep Learning, Eye Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Purpose: The Fundus photography vs Ophthalmoscopy Trial Outcomes in the Emergency Department (FOTO-ED) studies showed that ED providers poorly recognized funduscopic findings in patients in the ED. We tested a modified version of the Brain and Optic Nerve Study Artificial Intelligence (BONSAI) deep learning system on nonmydriatic fundus photographs from the FOTO-ED studies to determine if the deep learning system could have improved the detection of papilledema had it been available to ED providers as a real-time diagnostic aid., Design: Retrospective secondary analysis of a cohort of patients included in the FOTO-ED studies., Methods: The testing data set included 1608 photographs obtained from 828 patients in the FOTO-ED studies. Photographs were reclassified according to the optic disc classification system used by the deep learning system ("normal optic discs," "papilledema," and "other optic disc abnormalities"). The system's performance was evaluated by calculating the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), sensitivity, and specificity using a 1-vs-rest strategy, with reference to expert neuro-ophthalmologists., Results: The BONSAI deep learning system successfully distinguished normal from abnormal optic discs (AUC 0.92 [95% confidence interval {CI} 0.90-0.93]; sensitivity 75.6% [73.7%-77.5%] and specificity 89.6% [86.3%-92.8%]), and papilledema from normal and others (AUC 0.97 [0.95-0.99]; sensitivity 84.0% [75.0%-92.6%] and specificity 98.9% [98.5%-99.4%]). Six patients with missed papilledema in 1 eye were correctly identified by the deep learning system as having papilledema in the other eye., Conclusions: The BONSAI deep learning system was able to reliably identify papilledema and normal optic discs on nonmydriatic photographs obtained in the FOTO-ED studies. Our deep learning system has excellent potential as a diagnostic aid in EDs and non-ophthalmology clinics equipped with nonmydriatic fundus cameras. NOTE: Publication of this article is sponsored by the American Ophthalmological Society., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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19. Syndromic Gastrointestinal Panel Diagnostic Tests Have Changed our Understanding of the Epidemiology of Yersiniosis -Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 2010-2021.
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Ray LC, Payne DC, Rounds J, Trevejo RT, Wilson E, Burzlaff K, Garman KN, Lathrop S, Rissman T, Wymore K, Wozny S, Wilson S, Francois Watkins LK, Bruce BB, and Weller DL
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Background: In the US, yersinosis was understood to predominantly occur in winter and among Black or African American infants and Asian children. Increased use of culture-independent diagnostic tests (CIDTs) has led to marked increases in yersinosis diagnoses., Methods: We describe differences in the epidemiology of yersiniosis diagnosed by CIDT versus culture in 10 US sites, and identify determinants of health associated with diagnostic method., Results: Annual reported incidence increased from 0.3/100 000 in 2010 to 1.3/100 000 in 2021, particularly among adults ≥18 years, regardless of race and ethnicity, and during summer months. The proportion of CIDT-diagnosed infections increased from 3% in 2012 to 89% in 2021. An ill person's demographic characteristics and location of residence had a significant impact on their odds of being diagnosed by CIDT., Conclusions: Improved detection due to increased CIDT use has altered our understanding of yersinosis epidemiology, however differential access to CIDTs may still affect our understanding of yersinosis., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America 2024.)
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- 2024
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20. Clinical Outcomes of Patients With Nontyphoidal Salmonella Infections by Isolate Resistance-Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 10 US Sites, 2004-2018.
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Francois Watkins LK, Luna S, Bruce BB, Medalla F, Reynolds JL, Ray LC, Wilson EL, Caidi H, and Griffin PM
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- Humans, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Watchful Waiting, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Salmonella Infections drug therapy, Salmonella Infections epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Anti-Infective Agents
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Background: Nontyphoidal Salmonella causes an estimated 1.35 million US infections annually. Antimicrobial-resistant strains are a serious public health threat. We examined the association between resistance and the clinical outcomes of hospitalization, length-of-stay ≥3 days, and death., Methods: We linked epidemiologic data from the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network with antimicrobial resistance data from the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System (NARMS) for nontyphoidal Salmonella infections from 2004 to 2018. We defined any resistance as resistance to ≥1 antimicrobial and clinical resistance as resistance to ampicillin, azithromycin, ceftriaxone, ciprofloxacin, or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (for the subset of isolates tested for all 5 agents). We compared outcomes before and after adjusting for age, state, race/ethnicity, international travel, outbreak association, and isolate serotype and source., Results: Twenty percent of isolates (1105/5549) had any resistance, and 16% (469/2969) had clinical resistance. Persons whose isolates had any resistance were more likely to be hospitalized (31% vs 28%, P = .01) or have length-of-stay ≥3 days (20% vs 16%, P = .01). Deaths were rare but more common among those with any than no resistance (1.0% vs 0.4%, P = .01). Outcomes for patients whose isolates had clinical resistance did not differ significantly from those with no resistance. After adjustment, any resistance (adjusted odds ratio 1.23, 95% confidence interval 1.04-1.46) remained significantly associated with hospitalization., Conclusions: We observed a significant association between nontyphoidal Salmonella infections caused by resistant pathogens and likelihood of hospitalization. Clinical resistance was not associated with poorer outcomes, suggesting that factors other than treatment failure (eg, strain virulence, strain source, host factors) may be important., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. The authors: No reported conflicts of interest. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America 2023.)
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- 2024
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21. The Increasing Burden of Emergency Department and Inpatient Consultations for "Papilledema".
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Ray HJ, Okrent Smolar AL, Dattilo M, Bouthour W, Berman G, Peragallo JH, Kedar S, Pendley AM, Greene JG, Keadey MT, Wright DW, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
- Abstract
Background: Increasing incidence of idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH), overreported radiologic signs of intracranial hypertension, difficult access to outpatient neuro-ophthalmology services, poor insurance coverage, and medicolegal concerns have lowered the threshold for emergency department (ED) visits for "papilledema." Our objective was to examine referral patterns and outcomes of neuro-ophthalmology ED and inpatient consultations for concern for papilledema., Methods: At one university-based quaternary care center, all adults referred for "papilledema" over one year underwent a standardized ED "papilledema protocol." We collected patient demographics, final diagnoses, and referral patterns., Results: Over 1 year, 153 consecutive patients were referred for concern for papilledema. After papilledema protocol, 89 of 153 patients (58%) had bilateral optic disc edema, among whom 89% (79/89) had papilledema (intracranial hypertension). Of the 38 of 153 (25%) consultations for suspected disorder of intracranial pressure without previous fundus examination (Group 1), 74% (28/38) did not have optic disc edema, 21% (8/38) had papilledema, and 5% (2/38) had other causes of bilateral disc edema. Of the 89 of 153 (58%) consultations for presumed papilledema seen on fundus examination (Group 2), 58% (66/89) had confirmed papilledema, 17% (15/89) had pseudopapilledema, and 9% (8/89) had other causes of bilateral optic disc edema. Of the 26 of 153 (17%) patients with known IIH (Group 3), 5 had papilledema and 4 required urgent intervention. The most common diagnosis was IIH (58/79). Compared with IIH, patients with secondary causes of intracranial hypertension were older (P = 0.002), men (P < 0.001), not obese (P < 0.001), and more likely to have neurologic symptoms (P = 0.002)., Conclusion: Inpatient and ED consultations for "papilledema" are increasing. Of the 153 ED and inpatient neuro-ophthalmology consultations seen for "papilledema" over 1 year, one-third of patients with optic disc edema of unknown cause before presentation to our ED had new vision- or life-threatening disease, supporting the need for prompt identification and evaluation of optic disc edema in the ED. In the face of limited access to neuro-ophthalmologists, this study supports the need for emergency department access to expert eye-care evaluation or ocular fundus camera for prompt identification of optic disc edema and standardized evaluation for neurologic emergencies., Competing Interests: V. Biousse is a consultant for GenSight Biologics and Neurophoenix and receives research support from GenSight Biologics. N. J. Newman is a consultant for GenSight Biologics, Chiesi, Stoke, Neurophth, Avidity and Neurophoenix; receives research support from GenSight Biologics and Santhera/Chiesi; is a participant in educational webinars sponsored by WebMD-Global Medscape and First Class. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2024
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22. Optic Nerve MRI T2-Hyperintensity: A Nonspecific Marker of Optic Nerve Damage.
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Labella Álvarez F, Mosleh R, Bouthour W, Saindane AM, Bruce BB, Dattilo M, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Retrospective Studies, Optic Nerve diagnostic imaging, Optic Nerve pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Atrophy complications, Atrophy pathology, Optic Nerve Diseases pathology, Optic Neuritis etiology, Optic Atrophy diagnosis, Optic Atrophy complications, Optic Nerve Injuries complications, Glaucoma complications, Glaucoma pathology, Retinal Diseases complications
- Abstract
Background: MRI abnormalities are common in optic neuropathies, especially on dedicated orbital imaging. In acute optic neuritis, optic nerve T2-hyperintensity associated with optic nerve contrast enhancement is the typical imaging finding. In chronic optic neuropathies, optic nerve T2-hyperintensity and atrophy are regularly seen. Isolated optic nerve T2-hyperintensity is often erroneously presumed to reflect optic neuritis, frequently prompting unnecessary investigations and neuro-ophthalmology consultations. Our goal was to determine the significance of optic nerve/chiasm T2-hyperintensity and/or atrophy on MRI., Methods: Retrospective study of consecutive patients who underwent brain/orbital MRI with/without contrast at our institution between July 1, 2019, and June 6, 2022. Patients with optic nerve/chiasm T2-hyperintensity and/or atrophy were included. Medical records were reviewed to determine the etiology of the T2-hyperintensity and/or atrophy., Results: Four hundred seventy-seven patients (698 eyes) were included [mean age 52 years (SD ±18 years); 57% women]. Of the 364 of 698 eyes with optic nerve/chiasm T2-hyperintensity without atrophy, the causes were compressive (104), inflammatory (103), multifactorial (49), glaucoma (21), normal (19), and other (68); of the 219 of 698 eyes with optic nerve/chiasm T2-hyperintensity and atrophy, the causes were compressive (57), multifactorial (40), inflammatory (38), glaucoma (33), normal (7), and other (44); of the 115 of 698 eyes with optic nerve/chiasm atrophy without T2-hyperintensity, the causes were glaucoma (34), multifactorial (21), inflammatory (13), compressive (11), normal (10), and other (26). Thirty-six eyes with optic nerve/chiasm T2-hyperintensity or atrophy did not have evidence of optic neuropathy or retinopathy on ophthalmologic examination, and 17 eyes had clinical evidence of severe retinopathy without primary optic neuropathy., Conclusions: Optic nerve T2-hyperintensity or atrophy can be found with any cause of optic neuropathy and with severe chronic retinopathy. These MRI findings should not automatically prompt optic neuritis diagnosis, workup, and treatment, and caution is advised regarding their use in the diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis. Cases of incidentally found MRI optic nerve T2-hyperintensity and/or atrophy without a known underlying optic neuropathy or severe retinopathy are rare. Such patients should receive an ophthalmologic examination before further investigations., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2024
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23. Modelling counterfactual incidence during the transition towards culture-independent diagnostic testing.
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Healy JM, Ray L, Tack DM, Eikmeier D, Tobin-D'Angelo M, Wilson E, Hurd S, Lathrop S, McGuire SM, and Bruce BB
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- Humans, Incidence, Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures, Hospitalization, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Campylobacter
- Abstract
Background: Culture-independent diagnostic testing (CIDT) provides rapid results to clinicians and is quickly displacing traditional detection methods. Increased CIDT use and sensitivity likely result in higher case detection but might also obscure infection trends. Severe illness outcomes, such as hospitalization and death, are likely less affected by changes in testing practices and can be used as indicators of the expected case incidence trend had testing methods not changed., Methods: Using US Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network data during 1996-2019 and mixed effects quasi-Poisson regression, we estimated the expected yearly incidence for nine enteric pathogens., Results: Removing the effect of CIDT use, CIDT panel testing and culture-confirmation of CIDT testing, the modelled incidence in all but three pathogens (Salmonella, Shigella, STEC O157) was significantly lower than the observed and the upward trend in Campylobacter was reversed from an observed 2.8% yearly increase to a modelled -2.8% yearly decrease (95% credible interval: -4.0, -1.4)., Conclusions: Severe outcomes may be useful indicators in evaluating trends in surveillance systems that have undergone a marked change., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association 2023.)
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- 2024
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24. A Prediction Tool to Identify the Causative Agent of Enteric Disease Outbreaks Using Outbreak Surveillance Data.
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Kisselburgh H, White A, Bruce BB, Rose EB, and Scallan Walter E
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- Animals, Humans, United States, Disease Outbreaks, Bacteria, Population Surveillance, Cryptosporidiosis, Cryptosporidium, Viruses, Norovirus, Foodborne Diseases microbiology
- Abstract
Information on the causative agent in an enteric disease outbreak can be used to generate hypotheses about the route of transmission and possible vehicles, to guide environmental assessments, and to target outbreak control measures. However, only about 40% of outbreaks reported in the United States include a confirmed etiology. The goal of this project was to identify clinical and demographic characteristics that can be used to predict the causative agent in an enteric disease outbreak and to use these data to develop an online tool for investigators to use during an outbreak when hypothesizing about the causative agent. Using data on enteric disease outbreaks from all transmission routes (animal contact, environmental contamination, foodborne, person-to-person, waterborne, unknown) reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, we developed random forest models to predict the etiology of an outbreak based on aggregated clinical and demographic characteristics at both the etiology category (i.e., bacteria, parasites, toxins, viruses) and individual etiology ( Clostridium perfringens , Campylobacter , Cryptosporidium , norovirus, Salmonella , Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli , and Shigella ) levels. The etiology category model had a kappa of 0.85 and an accuracy of 0.92, whereas the etiology-specific model had a kappa of 0.75 and an accuracy of 0.86. The highest sensitivities in the etiology category model were for bacteria and viruses; all categories had high specificities (>0.90). For the etiology-specific model, norovirus and Salmonella had the highest sensitivity and all etiologies had high specificities. When laboratory confirmation is unavailable, information on the clinical signs and symptoms reported by people associated with the outbreak, with other characteristics including case demographics and illness severity, can be used to predict the etiology or etiology category. An online publicly available tool was developed to assist investigators in their enteric disease outbreak investigations.
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- 2024
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25. A preclinical model of THC edibles that produces high-dose cannabimimetic responses.
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English A, Uittenbogaard F, Torrens A, Sarroza D, Slaven AVE, Piomelli D, Bruchas MR, Stella N, and Land BB
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- Mice, Male, Female, Animals, Reflex, Startle, Gelatin pharmacology, Behavior, Animal, Dronabinol, Hypothermia
- Abstract
No preclinical experimental approach enables the study of voluntary oral consumption of high-concentration Δ
9 -tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and its intoxicating effects, mainly owing to the aversive response of rodents to THC that limits intake. Here, we developed a palatable THC formulation and an optimized access paradigm in mice to drive voluntary consumption. THC was formulated in chocolate gelatin (THC-E-gel). Adult male and female mice were allowed ad libitum access for 1 and 2 hr. Cannabimimetic responses (hypolocomotion, analgesia, and hypothermia) were measured following access. Levels of THC and its metabolites were measured in blood and brain tissue. Acute acoustic startle responses were measured to investigate THC-induced psychotomimetic behavior. When allowed access for 2 hr to THC-E-gel on the second day of a 3-day exposure paradigm, adult mice consumed up to ≈30 mg/kg over 2 hr, which resulted in robust cannabimimetic behavioral responses (hypolocomotion, analgesia, and hypothermia). Consumption of the same gelatin decreased on the following third day of exposure. Pharmacokinetic analysis shows that THC-E-gel consumption led to parallel accumulation of THC and its psychoactive metabolite, 11-OH-THC, in the brain, a profile that contrasts with the known rapid decline in brain 11-OH-THC levels following THC intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections. THC-E-gel consumption increased the acoustic startle response in males but not in females, demonstrating a sex-dependent effect of consumption. Thus, while voluntary consumption of THC-E-gel triggered equivalent cannabimimetic responses in male and female mice, it potentiated acoustic startle responses preferentially in males. We built a dose-prediction model that included cannabimimetic behavioral responses elicited by i.p. versus THC-E-gel to test the accuracy and generalizability of this experimental approach and found that it closely predicted the measured acoustic startle results in males and females. In summary, THC-E-gel offers a robust preclinical experimental approach to study cannabimimetic responses triggered by voluntary consumption in mice, including sex-dependent psychotomimetic responses., Competing Interests: AE, FU, AT, DS, AS, DP, MB, NS, BL No competing interests declared, (© 2023, English et al.)- Published
- 2024
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26. Predicting Food Sources of Listeria monocytogenes Based on Genomic Profiling Using Random Forest Model.
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Gu W, Cui Z, Stroika S, Carleton HA, Conrad A, Katz LS, Richardson LC, Hunter J, Click ES, and Bruce BB
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- Infant, Infant, Newborn, Humans, United States epidemiology, Random Forest, Food Microbiology, Multilocus Sequence Typing, Disease Outbreaks, Vegetables, Genomics, Listeria monocytogenes, Listeriosis epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Listeria monocytogenes can cause severe foodborne illness, including miscarriage during pregnancy or death in newborn infants. When outbreaks of L. monocytogenes illness occur, it may be possible to determine the food source of the outbreak. However, most reported L. monocytogenes illnesses do not occur as part of a recognized outbreak and most of the time the food source of sporadic L. monocytogenes illness in people cannot be determined. In the United States, L. monocytogenes isolates from patients, foods, and environments are routinely sequenced and analyzed by whole genome multilocus sequence typing (wgMLST) for outbreak detection by PulseNet, the national molecular surveillance system for foodborne illnesses. We investigated whether machine learning approaches applied to wgMLST allele call data could assist in attribution analysis of food source of L. monocytogenes isolates. We compiled isolates with a known source from five food categories (dairy, fruit, meat, seafood, and vegetable) using the metadata of L. monocytogenes isolates in PulseNet, deduplicated closely genetically related isolates, and developed random forest models to predict the food sources of isolates. Prediction accuracy of the final model varied across the food categories; it was highest for meat (65%), followed by fruit (45%), vegetable (45%), dairy (44%), and seafood (37%); overall accuracy was 49%, compared with the naive prediction accuracy of 28%. Our results show that random forest can be used to capture genetically complex features of high-resolution wgMLST for attribution of isolates to their sources.
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- 2023
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27. Neuro-ophthalmology Emergency Department and Inpatient Consultations at a Large Academic Referral Center.
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Okrent Smolar AL, Ray HJ, Dattilo M, Bouthour W, Berman G, Peragallo JH, Kedar S, Pendley AM, Greene JG, Keadey MT, Wright DW, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Inpatients, Emergency Service, Hospital, Referral and Consultation, Ophthalmology, Neurology
- Abstract
Purpose: Prompt neuro-ophthalmology consultation prevents diagnostic errors and improves patient outcomes. The scarcity of neuro-ophthalmologists means that the increasing outpatient demand cannot be met, prompting many emergency department (ED) referrals by non-neuro-ophthalmologists. We describe our quaternary care institution's ED and inpatient neuro-ophthalmology consultation patterns and patient outcomes., Design: Prospective observational study., Participants: Consecutive neuro-ophthalmology ED and inpatient consultation requests over 1 year., Methods: We collected patient demographics, distance traveled, insurance status, referring provider details, consultation question, final diagnosis, complexity of consultation, time of consultation, and need for outpatient follow-up., Main Outcome Measures: Consultation patterns and diagnoses, complexity, and follow-up., Results: Of 494 consecutive adult ED and inpatient neuro-ophthalmology consultations requested over 1 year, 241 of 494 consultations (49%) occurred at night or during weekends. Of ED consultations (322 of 494 [65%]), 127 of 322 consultations (39%) occurred during weekdays, 126 of 322 consultations (39%) occurred on weeknights, and 69 of 322 consultations (22%) occurred on weekends or holidays. Of 322 ED consultations, 225 of 322 consultations (70%) were patients who initially sought treatment in the ED with a neuro-ophthalmic chief symptom. Of the 196 patients sent to the ED by a health care professional, 148 patients (148/196 [76%]) were referred by eye care specialists (74 optometrists and 74 ophthalmologists). The most common ED referral questions were for papilledema (75 of 322 [23%]) and vision loss (72 of 322 [22%]). A total of 219 of 322 patients (68%) received a final active neuro-ophthalmic diagnosis, 222 of 322 patients (69%) were cases of high or very high complexity, and 143 of 322 patients (44%) required admission. Inpatient consultations (n = 172) were requested most frequently by hospitalists, including neurologists (71 of 172 [41%]) and oncologists (20 of 172 [12%]) for vision loss (43 of 172 [25%]) and eye movement disorders (36 of 172 [21%]) and by neurosurgeons (58 of 172 [33%]) for examination for mass or a preoperative evaluation (19 of 172 [11%]). An active neuro-ophthalmic diagnosis was confirmed in 67% of patients (116 of 172). Outpatient neuro-ophthalmology follow-up was required for 291 of 494 patients (59%)., Conclusions: Neuro-ophthalmology consultations are critical to the diagnosis and management in the hospital setting. In the face of a critical shortage of neuro-ophthalmologists, this study highlights the need for technological and diagnostic aids for greater outpatient access., Financial Disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosure may be found in the Footnotes and Disclosures at the end of this article., (Copyright © 2023 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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28. A Bayesian Method for Exposure Prevalence Comparison During Foodborne Disease Outbreak Investigations.
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Khan MA, Bruce BB, Bottichio L, and Wise M
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- Humans, Bayes Theorem, Prevalence, Disease Outbreaks, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Escherichia coli O157
- Abstract
CDC and health departments investigate foodborne disease outbreaks to identify a source. To generate and test hypotheses about vehicles, investigators typically compare exposure prevalence among case-patients with the general population using a one-sample binomial test. We propose a Bayesian alternative that also accounts for uncertainty in the estimate of exposure prevalence in the reference population. We compared exposure prevalence in a 2020 outbreak of Escherichia coli O157:H7 illnesses linked to leafy greens with 2018-2019 FoodNet Population Survey estimates. We ran prospective simulations using our Bayesian approach at three time points during the investigation. The posterior probability that leafy green consumption prevalence was higher than the general population prevalence increased as additional case-patients were interviewed. Probabilities were >0.70 for multiple leafy green items 2 weeks before the exact binomial p -value was statistically significant. A Bayesian approach to assessing exposure prevalence among cases could be superior to the one-sample binomial test typically used during foodborne outbreak investigations.
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- 2023
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29. Epidemiology and Antimicrobial Resistance of Campylobacter Infections in the United States, 2005-2018.
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Ford L, Healy JM, Cui Z, Ahart L, Medalla F, Ray LC, Reynolds J, Laughlin ME, Vugia DJ, Hanna S, Bennett C, Chen J, Rose EB, Bruce BB, Payne DC, and Francois Watkins LK
- Abstract
Background: Campylobacter is the most common cause of bacterial diarrhea in the United States; resistance to macrolides and fluoroquinolones limits treatment options. We examined the epidemiology of US Campylobacter infections and changes in resistance over time., Methods: The Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network receives information on laboratory-confirmed Campylobacter cases from 10 US sites, and the National Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System receives a subset of isolates from these cases for antimicrobial susceptibility testing. We estimated trends in incidence of Campylobacter infection, adjusting for sex, age, and surveillance changes attributable to culture-independent diagnostic tests. We compared percentages of isolates resistant to erythromycin or ciprofloxacin during 2005-2016 with 2017-2018 and used multivariable logistic regression to examine the association of international travel with resistance., Results: Adjusted Campylobacter incidence remained stable or decreased for all groups analyzed since 2012. Among 2449 linked records in 2017-2018, the median patient age was 40.2 years (interquartile range, 21.6-57.8 years), 54.8% of patients were male, 17.2% were hospitalized, and 0.2% died. The percentage of resistant infections increased from 24.5% in 2005-2016 to 29.7% in 2017-2018 for ciprofloxacin ( P < .001) and from 2.6% to 3.3% for erythromycin ( P = .04). Persons with recent international travel had higher odds than nontravelers of having isolates resistant to ciprofloxacin (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] varied from 1.7 to 10.6 by race/ethnicity) and erythromycin (aOR = 1.7; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-2.1)., Conclusions: Campylobacter incidence has remained stable or decreased, whereas resistance to antimicrobials recommended for treatment has increased. Recent international travel increased the risk of resistance., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: No reported conflicts of interest., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America 2023.)
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- 2023
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30. Preliminary Incidence and Trends of Infections Caused by Pathogens Transmitted Commonly Through Food - Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 10 U.S. Sites, 2022.
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Delahoy MJ, Shah HJ, Weller DL, Ray LC, Smith K, McGuire S, Trevejo RT, Scallan Walter E, Wymore K, Rissman T, McMillian M, Lathrop S, LaClair B, Boyle MM, Harris S, Zablotsky-Kufel J, Houck K, Devine CJ, Lau CE, Tauxe RV, Bruce BB, Griffin PM, and Payne DC
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Incidence, Pandemics, Watchful Waiting, COVID-19 epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Each year, infections from major foodborne pathogens are responsible for an estimated 9.4 million illnesses, 56,000 hospitalizations, and 1,350 deaths in the United States (1). To evaluate progress toward prevention of enteric infections in the United States, the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) conducts surveillance for laboratory-diagnosed infections caused by eight pathogens transmitted commonly through food at 10 U.S. sites. During 2020-2021, FoodNet detected decreases in many infections that were due to behavioral modifications, public health interventions, and changes in health care-seeking and testing practices during the COVID-19 pandemic. This report presents preliminary estimates of pathogen-specific annual incidences during 2022, compared with average annual incidences during 2016-2018, the reference period for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Healthy People 2030 targets (2). Many pandemic interventions ended by 2022, resulting in a resumption of outbreaks, international travel, and other factors leading to enteric infections. During 2022, annual incidences of illnesses caused by the pathogens Campylobacter, Salmonella, Shigella, and Listeria were similar to average annual incidences during 2016-2018; however, incidences of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), Yersinia, Vibrio, and Cyclospora illnesses were higher. Increasing culture-independent diagnostic test (CIDT) usage likely contributed to increased detection by identifying infections that would have remained undetected before widespread CIDT usage. Reducing pathogen contamination during poultry slaughter and processing of leafy greens requires collaboration among food growers and processors, retail stores, restaurants, and regulators., Competing Interests: All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. Elaine Scallan Walter reports consulting fees for a peer review of a Salmonella risk profile for the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service via RTI International during 2022. No other potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.
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- 2023
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31. Optimisation of β -Glucosidase Production in a Crude Aspergillus japonicus VIT-SB1 Cellulase Cocktail Using One Variable at a Time and Statistical Methods and its Application in Cellulose Hydrolysis.
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Singh N, Sithole BB, and Govinden R
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- beta-Glucosidase metabolism, Hydrolysis, Fermentation, Glucose, Cellulose metabolism, Cellulase metabolism
- Abstract
Pulp and paper mill sludge (PPMS) is currently disposed of into landfills which are reaching their maximum capacity. Valorisation of PPMS by enzymatic hydrolysis using cellulases is an alternative strategy. Existing commercial cellulases are expensive and contain low titres of β -glucosidases. In this study, β -glucosidase production was optimised by Aspergillus japonicus VIT-SB1 to obtain higher β -glucosidase titres using the One Variable at a Time (OVAT), Plackett Burman (PBD), and Box Behnken design (BBD)of experiments and the efficiency of the optimised cellulase cocktail to hydrolyse cellulose was tested. β -Glucosidase production was enhanced from 0.4 to 10.13 U/mL, representing a 25.3-fold increase in production levels after optimisation. The optimal BBD production conditions were 6 days of fermentation at 20 °C, 125 rpm, 1.75% soy peptone, and 1.25% wheat bran in (pH 6.0) buffer. The optimal pH for β -glucosidase activity in the crude cellulase cocktail was (pH 5.0) at 50 °C. Optimal cellulose hydrolysis using the crude cellulase cocktail occurred at longer incubation times, and higher substrate loads and enzyme doses. Cellulose hydrolysis with the A. japonicus VIT-SB1 cellulase cocktail and commercial cellulase cocktails resulted in glucose yields of 15.12 and 12.33 µmol/mL glucose, respectively. Supplementation of the commercial cellulase cocktail with 0.25 U/mg of β-glucosidase resulted in a 19.8% increase in glucose yield.
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- 2023
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32. Risk Factors for Non-O157 Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli Infections, United States.
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Marder EP, Cui Z, Bruce BB, Richardson LC, Boyle MM, Cieslak PR, Comstock N, Lathrop S, Garman K, McGuire S, Olson D, Vugia DJ, Wilson S, Griffin PM, and Medus C
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, United States epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Risk Factors, Diarrhea epidemiology, Escherichia coli Infections epidemiology, Shiga-Toxigenic Escherichia coli
- Abstract
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) causes acute diarrheal illness. To determine risk factors for non-O157 STEC infection, we enrolled 939 patients and 2,464 healthy controls in a case-control study conducted in 10 US sites. The highest population-attributable fractions for domestically acquired infections were for eating lettuce (39%), tomatoes (21%), or at a fast-food restaurant (23%). Exposures with 10%-19% population attributable fractions included eating at a table service restaurant, eating watermelon, eating chicken, pork, beef, or iceberg lettuce prepared in a restaurant, eating exotic fruit, taking acid-reducing medication, and living or working on or visiting a farm. Significant exposures with high individual-level risk (odds ratio >10) among those >1 year of age who did not travel internationally were all from farm animal environments. To markedly decrease the number of STEC-related illnesses, prevention measures should focus on decreasing contamination of produce and improving the safety of foods prepared in restaurants.
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- 2023
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33. Presumptive Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension Based on Neuroimaging Findings: A Referral Pattern Study.
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Aung AB, Chen BS, Wicks J, Bruce BB, Meyer BI, Dattilo M, Kedar S, Saindane A, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
- Subjects
- Humans, Lipopolysaccharides, Obesity complications, Neuroimaging, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak diagnosis, Retrospective Studies, Pseudotumor Cerebri complications, Pseudotumor Cerebri diagnosis, Pseudotumor Cerebri epidemiology, Intracranial Hypertension diagnosis, Papilledema diagnosis, Papilledema epidemiology, Papilledema etiology
- Abstract
Background: Radiologic findings of intracranial hypertension (RAD-IH) are common in idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) patients. Paralleling the increasing rates of obesity, the burden of IIH is growing. Urgent neuro-ophthalmology consultations for possible IIH in patients with incidentally detected RAD-IH are increasing, with many patients receiving unnecessary lumbar punctures (LPs) and treatments. This retrospective observational study aimed to determine the prevalence of neuro-ophthalmology consultations for RAD-IH, rate of funduscopic examination by referring providers, prevalence of papilledema, outcomes after neuro-ophthalmic evaluation, and rates of misdiagnosis., Methods: Records of 1,262 consecutive new patients seen in one neuro-ophthalmology clinic from January 2019 to January 2020 were reviewed. We identified patients who were: 1) referred with concern for IIH because of findings of RAD-IH; 2) referred for "papilledema"; 3) referred with a diagnosis of IIH; and 4) referred for spontaneous cranial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks. In addition to basic demographic profiles for all groups, detailed information was collected for patients referred solely for RAD-IH, including referral patterns, prior history of IIH, previous LPs, prior medical or surgical treatment(s), risk factors for increased intracranial pressure (ICP), presenting symptoms, radiologic features observed on neuroimaging, and final disposition. When available, the neuroimaging was reviewed by an expert neuroradiologist., Results: Of 1,262 consecutive new patients, 66 (5%) were referred specifically for RAD-IH; most referrals came from neurologists (58%); 8/66 (12%) patients had papilledema; 16/66 (24%) patients had prior LP and 13/66 (20%) were already treated based on MRI findings; and 22/66 (33%) patients had ≤2 RAD-IH. Only 34/66 (52%) of patients referred for RAD-IH had prior funduscopic examinations. We confirmed papilledema in 26/82 (32%) patients referred for "papilledema." Only 29/83 (35%) patients referred with a diagnosis of IIH had active papilledema, and 3/16 (19%) patients with spontaneous CSF leaks had papilledema. In total, 247/1,262 (20%) new patients were referred to our clinic over 1 year with concern for IIH, among whom only 66 (27%) were confirmed to have active IIH with papilledema., Conclusions: One in 5 new patient referrals seen in our neuro-ophthalmology clinic were referred because of concern for increased ICP, but only 1/4 had active papilledema. Most patients referred for isolated RAD-IH do not have papilledema, many having undergone unnecessary LPs and treatments. The burden of these "rule-out IIH" consultations is overwhelming and will only continue to increase with the concurrent rise of obesity and IIH, straining the already limited neuro-ophthalmologic resources available in the US., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2023
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34. Power Law for Estimating Underdetection of Foodborne Disease Outbreaks, United States.
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Ford L, Self JL, Wong KK, Hoekstra RM, Tauxe RV, Rose EB, and Bruce BB
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- United States epidemiology, Humans, Public Health, Whole Genome Sequencing, Disease Outbreaks, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
We fit a power law distribution to US foodborne disease outbreaks to assess underdetection and underreporting. We predicted that 788 fewer than expected small outbreaks were identified annually during 1998-2017 and 365 fewer during 2018-2019, after whole-genome sequencing was implemented. Power law can help assess effectiveness of public health interventions.
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- 2023
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35. Foodborne illness outbreaks linked to unpasteurised milk and relationship to changes in state laws - United States, 1998-2018.
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Koski L, Kisselburgh H, Landsman L, Hulkower R, Howard-Williams M, Salah Z, Kim S, Bruce BB, Bazaco MC, Batz MB, Parker CC, Leonard CL, Datta AR, Williams EN, Stapleton GS, Penn M, Whitham HK, and Nichols M
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Disease Outbreaks, Public Health, United States epidemiology, Pasteurization, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Milk legislation & jurisprudence, Milk standards
- Abstract
Consumption of unpasteurised milk in the United States has presented a public health challenge for decades because of the increased risk of pathogen transmission causing illness outbreaks. We analysed Foodborne Disease Outbreak Surveillance System data to characterise unpasteurised milk outbreaks. Using Poisson and negative binomial regression, we compared the number of outbreaks and outbreak-associated illnesses between jurisdictions grouped by legal status of unpasteurised milk sale based on a May 2019 survey of state laws. During 2013-2018, 75 outbreaks with 675 illnesses occurred that were linked to unpasteurised milk; of these, 325 illnesses (48%) were among people aged 0-19 years. Of 74 single-state outbreaks, 58 (78%) occurred in states where the sale of unpasteurised milk was expressly allowed. Compared with jurisdictions where retail sales were prohibited ( n = 24), those where sales were expressly allowed ( n = 27) were estimated to have 3.2 (95% CI 1.4-7.6) times greater number of outbreaks; of these, jurisdictions where sale was allowed in retail stores ( n = 14) had 3.6 (95% CI 1.3-9.6) times greater number of outbreaks compared with those where sale was allowed on-farm only ( n = 13). This study supports findings of previously published reports indicating that state laws resulting in increased availability of unpasteurised milk are associated with more outbreak-associated illnesses and outbreaks.
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- 2022
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36. Preliminary Incidence and Trends of Infections Caused by Pathogens Transmitted Commonly Through Food - Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, 10 U.S. Sites, 2016-2021.
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Collins JP, Shah HJ, Weller DL, Ray LC, Smith K, McGuire S, Trevejo RT, Jervis RH, Vugia DJ, Rissman T, Garman KN, Lathrop S, LaClair B, Boyle MM, Harris S, Kufel JZ, Tauxe RV, Bruce BB, Rose EB, Griffin PM, and Payne DC
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- Humans, Incidence, Pandemics, Population Surveillance, Salmonella, United States epidemiology, Watchful Waiting, COVID-19, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Vibrio
- Abstract
To evaluate progress toward prevention of enteric infections in the United States, the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) conducts active population-based surveillance for laboratory-diagnosed infections caused by Campylobacter, Cyclospora, Listeria, Salmonella, Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), Shigella, Vibrio, and Yersinia at 10 U.S. sites. This report summarizes preliminary 2021 data and describes changes in annual incidence compared with the average annual incidence for 2016-2018, the reference period for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS) Healthy People 2030 goals for some pathogens (1). During 2021, the incidence of infections caused by Salmonella decreased, incidence of infections caused by Cyclospora, Yersinia, and Vibrio increased, and incidence of infections caused by other pathogens did not change. As in 2020, behavioral modifications and public health interventions implemented to control the COVID-19 pandemic might have decreased transmission of enteric infections (2). Other factors (e.g., increased use of telemedicine and continued increase in use of culture-independent diagnostic tests [CIDTs]) might have altered their detection or reporting (2). Much work remains to achieve HHS Healthy People 2030 goals, particularly for Salmonella infections, which are frequently attributed to poultry products and produce, and Campylobacter infections, which are frequently attributed to chicken products (3)., Competing Interests: All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.
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- 2022
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37. Nearest-Neighbors Matching for Case-Control Study Analyses: Better Risk Factor Identification From a Study of Sporadic Campylobacteriosis in the United States.
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Cui Z, Marder EP, Click ES, Hoekstra RM, and Bruce BB
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- Case-Control Studies, Humans, Meat, Odds Ratio, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Campylobacter Infections epidemiology, Campylobacter Infections microbiology, Gastroenteritis
- Abstract
Background: Case-control studies are commonly used to explore factors associated with enteric bacterial diseases. Control of confounding is challenging due to a large number of exposures of interest and the low frequencies of many of them., Methods: We evaluated nearest-neighbors matching in a case-control study (originally 1:1 matched, published in 2004) of sporadic Campylobacter infections that included information on 433 exposures in 2632 subjects during 1998-1999. We performed multiple imputations of missing data (m = 100) and calculated Gower distances between cases and controls using all possible confounders for each exposure in each dataset. We matched each case with ≤20 controls within a data-determined distance. We calculated odds ratios and population attributable fractions (PAFs)., Results: Examination of pairwise correlation between exposures found very strong associations for 1046 pairs of exposures. More than 100 exposures were associated with campylobacteriosis, including nearly all risk factors identified using the previously published approach that included only 16 exposures and some less studied, rare exposures such as consumption of chicken liver and raw clams. Consumption of chicken and nonpoultry meat had the highest PAFs (62% and 59%, respectively)., Conclusions: Nearest-neighbors matching appear to provide an improved ability to examine rare exposures and better control for numerous highly associated confounders., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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38. Prognostic Value of the Neurological Pupil Index in Patients With Acute Subarachnoid Hemorrhage.
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Sharma RA, Garza PS, Biousse V, Samuels OB, Newman NJ, and Bruce BB
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- Humans, Prognosis, Pupil, Retrospective Studies, Respiratory Insufficiency complications, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage complications, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage diagnosis
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Background: The Neurological Pupil index (NPi) provides a quantitative assessment of pupil reactivity and may have prognostic value in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). We aimed to explore associations between the NPi and clinical outcomes in patients with SAH., Methods: A retrospective analysis of 79 consecutive patients with acute SAH. Age, sex, Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation-II score, and respiratory failure and NPi in each eye were recorded at admission. The primary outcomes included death and poor clinical outcome (defined as inpatient death, care withdrawal, or discharge Glasgow Outcome Score <4). Groups were compared using the Fisher exact test, and predictive models developed with fast-and-frugal trees (FFTs)., Results: A total of 53 patients were included: 21 (40%) had poor clinical outcomes and 2 (4%) died. Univariate analysis found that only APACHE-II score (P < 0.001) and respiratory failure (P = 0.04) were significantly associated with poor clinical outcomes. NPi was lower among patients with poor clinical outcomes (mean 4.3 in the right eye and 4.2 in the left eye) vs those without (mean 4.5 in the right eye and 4.5 in the left eye), but neither was significant. However, the most accurate FFTs for death and poor clinical outcome included NPi after accounting for age in the death FFT and APACHE-II score in the poor outcome FFT (sensitivity [sn] = 100%, specificity [sp] = 94%, and accuracy (ac) = 94% in a model for death; sn = 100%, sp = 50%, and ac = 70%) in a model for poor clinical outcome., Conclusions: Our study supports the NPi as a useful prognostic marker for poor outcomes in acute SAH after accounting for age and APACHE-II score., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2022
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39. Foodborne Illness Outbreaks Reported to National Surveillance, United States, 2009-2018.
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White AE, Tillman AR, Hedberg C, Bruce BB, Batz M, Seys SA, Dewey-Mattia D, Bazaco MC, and Walter ES
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- Disease Outbreaks, Humans, Population Surveillance, Public Health, United States epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology
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Foodborne outbreaks reported to national surveillance systems represent a subset of all outbreaks in the United States; not all outbreaks are detected, investigated, and reported. We described the structural factors and outbreak characteristics of outbreaks reported during 2009-2018. We categorized states (plus DC) as high (highest quintile), middle (middle 3 quintiles), or low (lowest quintile) reporters on the basis of the number of reported outbreaks per 10 million population. Analysis revealed considerable variation across states in the number and types of foodborne outbreaks reported. High-reporting states reported 4 times more outbreaks than low reporters. Low reporters were more likely than high reporters to report larger outbreaks and less likely to implicate a setting or food vehicle; however, we did not observe a significant difference in the types of food vehicles identified. Per capita funding was strongly associated with increased reporting. Investments in public health programming have a measurable effect on outbreak reporting.
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- 2022
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40. Use of Whole Genome Sequencing by the Federal Interagency Collaboration for Genomics for Food and Feed Safety in the United States.
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Stevens EL, Carleton HA, Beal J, Tillman GE, Lindsey RL, Lauer AC, Pightling A, Jarvis KG, Ottesen A, Ramachandran P, Hintz L, Katz LS, Folster JP, Whichard JM, Trees E, Timme RE, McDERMOTT P, Wolpert B, Bazaco M, Zhao S, Lindley S, Bruce BB, Griffin PM, Brown E, Allard M, Tallent S, Irvin K, Hoffmann M, Wise M, Tauxe R, Gerner-Smidt P, Simmons M, Kissler B, Defibaugh-Chavez S, Klimke W, Agarwala R, Lindsay J, Cook K, Austerman SR, Goldman D, McGARRY S, Hale KR, Dessai U, Musser SM, and Braden C
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- Animals, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Food Safety, Genomics, United States, Whole Genome Sequencing, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases prevention & control
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Abstract: This multiagency report developed by the Interagency Collaboration for Genomics for Food and Feed Safety provides an overview of the use of and transition to whole genome sequencing (WGS) technology for detection and characterization of pathogens transmitted commonly by food and for identification of their sources. We describe foodborne pathogen analysis, investigation, and harmonization efforts among the following federal agencies: National Institutes of Health; Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA); and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service, Agricultural Research Service, and Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. We describe single nucleotide polymorphism, core-genome, and whole genome multilocus sequence typing data analysis methods as used in the PulseNet (CDC) and GenomeTrakr (FDA) networks, underscoring the complementary nature of the results for linking genetically related foodborne pathogens during outbreak investigations while allowing flexibility to meet the specific needs of Interagency Collaboration partners. We highlight how we apply WGS to pathogen characterization (virulence and antimicrobial resistance profiles) and source attribution efforts and increase transparency by making the sequences and other data publicly available through the National Center for Biotechnology Information. We also highlight the impact of current trends in the use of culture-independent diagnostic tests for human diagnostic testing on analytical approaches related to food safety and what is next for the use of WGS in the area of food safety., (Published 2022 by the International Association for Food Protection. Not subject to U.S. Copyright.)
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- 2022
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41. Salmonella Serotypes Associated with Illnesses after Thanksgiving Holiday, United States, 1998-2018.
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Tobolowsky FA, Cui Z, Hoekstra RM, and Bruce BB
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- Animals, Serogroup, Turkeys, United States epidemiology, Holidays, Salmonella genetics
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We sought to determine which Salmonella serotypes cause illness related to the Thanksgiving holiday in the United States and to foods disproportionately eaten then (e.g., turkey). Using routine surveillance for 1998-2018 and a case-crossover design, we found serotype Reading to be most strongly associated with Thanksgiving.
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- 2022
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42. Predictors at Admission of Mechanical Ventilation and Death in an Observational Cohort of Adults Hospitalized With Coronavirus Disease 2019.
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Jackson BR, Gold JAW, Natarajan P, Rossow J, Neblett Fanfair R, da Silva J, Wong KK, Browning SD, Bamrah Morris S, Rogers-Brown J, Hernandez-Romieu AC, Szablewski CM, Oosmanally N, Tobin-D'Angelo M, Drenzek C, Murphy DJ, Hollberg J, Blum JM, Jansen R, Wright DW, Sewell WM, Owens JD, Lefkove B, Brown FW, Burton DC, Uyeki TM, Bialek SR, Patel PR, and Bruce BB
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- Aged, Hospitalization, Humans, Middle Aged, Respiration, Artificial, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, SARS-CoV-2, United States, COVID-19
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Background: Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) can cause severe illness and death. Predictors of poor outcome collected on hospital admission may inform clinical and public health decisions., Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational cohort investigation of 297 adults admitted to 8 academic and community hospitals in Georgia, United States, during March 2020. Using standardized medical record abstraction, we collected data on predictors including admission demographics, underlying medical conditions, outpatient antihypertensive medications, recorded symptoms, vital signs, radiographic findings, and laboratory values. We used random forest models to calculate adjusted odds ratios (aORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for predictors of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) and death., Results: Compared with age <45 years, ages 65-74 years and ≥75 years were predictors of IMV (aORs, 3.12 [95% CI, 1.47-6.60] and 2.79 [95% CI, 1.23-6.33], respectively) and the strongest predictors for death (aORs, 12.92 [95% CI, 3.26-51.25] and 18.06 [95% CI, 4.43-73.63], respectively). Comorbidities associated with death (aORs, 2.4-3.8; P < .05) included end-stage renal disease, coronary artery disease, and neurologic disorders, but not pulmonary disease, immunocompromise, or hypertension. Prehospital use vs nonuse of angiotensin receptor blockers (aOR, 2.02 [95% CI, 1.03-3.96]) and dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (aOR, 1.91 [95% CI, 1.03-3.55]) were associated with death., Conclusions: After adjustment for patient and clinical characteristics, older age was the strongest predictor of death, exceeding comorbidities, abnormal vital signs, and laboratory test abnormalities. That coronary artery disease, but not chronic lung disease, was associated with death among hospitalized patients warrants further investigation, as do associations between certain antihypertensive medications and death., (Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2020.)
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- 2021
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43. Referral Patterns of Central Retinal Artery Occlusion to an Academic Center Affiliated With a Stroke Center.
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Flowers AM, Chan W, Meyer BI, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Referral and Consultation, Retrospective Studies, Tertiary Care Centers, Young Adult, Retinal Artery Occlusion diagnosis, Retinal Artery Occlusion drug therapy, Stroke diagnosis, Stroke therapy
- Abstract
Background: Central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) is a medical emergency, and patients who present acutely should be immediately referred to the nearest stroke center. We evaluated practice patterns for CRAO management at one academic center over the last decade., Methods: This was a retrospective study on all adult patients diagnosed with a CRAO seen at one tertiary hospital and outpatient clinic affiliated with a comprehensive stroke center ("our institution") from 2010 to 2020. Our electronic medical records were searched for CRAO diagnoses, and patient medical records were reviewed. The exclusion criteria were incorrect diagnosis, unclear diagnosis, historical CRAO, or satellite clinic location. Demographics, distance and time to presentation to our institution, number and type of prior providers seen, diagnostic tests performed, and treatments provided were collected. Summary statistics of median, mean, and frequency were calculated and reported with measures of variance (interquartile range [IQR], ranges). F, Tukey, and Fisher exact tests were used for comparisons., Results: We included 181 patients with a diagnosis of CRAO (80 [44.2%] women; median age 69 years [range 20-101]). The median distance from patient's home to our institution was 27.8 miles (IQR 15.5-57.4; range 2.4-930). The median time from visual loss to presentation at our institution was 144 hours (IQR 23-442 hours, range 0.5-2,920) from 2010 to 2013, 72 hours (IQR 10.5-372 hours, range 0-13,140) from 2014 to 2016, and 48 hours (IQR 7-180 hours, range 0-8,030) from 2017 to 2020 (P = 0.07). 91/181 (50%) patients presented to an outpatient provider. 73/181 (40%) presented to an emergency department. Eighty-six percent presented within 1 week of visual loss onset, and rates of comprehensive inpatient evaluation for acute CRAO improved from 44% in 2010-2013 to 82% in 2017-2020 (P < 0.01)., Conclusions: Patients with CRAO often present late and only after evaluation by multiple outpatient providers. Improvement has occurred over the past decade, but delays underscore the barriers to performing clinical trials evaluating very acute treatments for CRAO. Educational interventions for healthcare providers and patients are necessary., Competing Interests: N. J. Newman is a consultant for GenSight, Santhera, Neurophoenix, and Stealth. V. Biousse is a consultant for GenSight and Neurophoenix. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2021
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44. Estimating the Number of Illnesses Caused by Agents Transmitted Commonly Through Food: A Scoping Review.
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Scallan Walter EJ, Griffin PM, Bruce BB, and Hoekstra RM
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- Food Microbiology, Food Safety, Humans, Population Surveillance, Reproducibility of Results, Salmonella, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Shiga-Toxigenic Escherichia coli
- Abstract
Estimates of the overall human health impact of agents transmitted commonly through food complement surveillance and help guide food safety interventions and regulatory initiatives. The purpose of this scoping review was to summarize the methods and reporting practices used in studies that estimate the total number of illnesses caused by these agents. We identified and included 43 studies published from January 1, 1995, to December 31, 2019, by searching PubMed and screening selected articles for other relevant publications. Selected articles presented original estimates of the number of illnesses caused by ≥1 agent transmitted commonly through food. The number of agents (species or subspecies for pathogens) included in each study ranged from 1 to 31 (median: 4.5; mean: 9.2). Of the 40 agents assessed across the 43 studies, the most common agent was Salmonella (36; 84% of studies), followed by Campylobacter (33; 77%), Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (25; 58%), and norovirus (20; 47%). Investigators used a variety of data sources and methods that could be grouped into four distinct estimation approaches-direct, surveillance data scaled-up, syndrome or population scaled-down, and inferred. Based on our review, we propose four recommendations to improve the interpretability, comparability, and reproducibility of studies that estimate the number of illnesses caused by agents transmitted commonly through food. These include providing an assessment of statistical and nonstatistical uncertainty, providing a ranking of estimates by agent, including uncertainties; describing the rationale used to select agents and data sources; and publishing raw data and models, along with clear, detailed methods. These recommendations could lead to better decision-making about food safety policies. Although these recommendations have been made in the context of illness estimation for agents transmitted commonly through food, they also apply to estimates of other health outcomes and conditions.
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- 2021
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45. Optic Nerve Angle in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension.
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Chen BS, Asnafi S, Lin MY, Bruce BB, Lock JH, Sharma RA, Newman NJ, Biousse V, and Saindane AM
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- Female, Humans, Intracranial Pressure physiology, Optic Nerve diagnostic imaging, Retrospective Studies, Intracranial Hypertension, Papilledema diagnosis, Papilledema etiology, Pseudotumor Cerebri complications, Pseudotumor Cerebri diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: The tortuosity of the optic nerve can be quantified radiologically by measuring the angle of optic nerve deformation (the "optic nerve angle" [ONA]). In patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH), lowering the intracranial pressure (ICP) to a normal range by lumbar puncture leads to straightening of the optic nerve and an increase in the measured sagittal ONA on MRI. It is uncertain whether there is any correlation between ONA and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) opening pressure or visual function., Methods: Retrospective study of patients with and without IIH who had MRI of the brain followed by lumbar puncture with CSF opening pressure within 24 hours of MRI. Before LP and within 24 hours of MRI of the brain, all patients with IIH had neuro-ophthalmologic assessment including visual acuity, Humphrey Visual Field (HVF), and fundus photography. Sagittal ONA was measured on multiplanar T2-SPACE images on a DICOM viewer. Papilledema on the fundus photographs was graded using the Frisén scale., Results: Fifty-four patients with IIH and 30 unmatched controls were included. The IIH group was 6.3 years younger (95% CI 2.4-10.3, P = 0.002), had 8.7 kg/m2 higher body mass index (4.9-12.5, P < 0.001), and 26.3% more women (P = 0.011) compared with controls. In both eyes, the ONA was significantly smaller in patients with IIH by 12° compared with controls (7°-17°, P < 0.00001). In the IIH group, no correlation between ONA and the CSF opening pressure was present in either eye (right eye r = 0.19, P = 0.15; left eye r = 0.18, P = 0.19) The ONA did not correlate with logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution visual acuity (right eye r = 0.26, P = 0.063; left eye r = 0.15, P = 0.27), HVF mean deviation (right eye r = 0.0059, P = 0.97; left eye r = -0.069, P = 0.63), or Frisén grade (Spearman's rho right eye 0.058, P = 0.67; left eye 0.14, P = 0.30)., Conclusions: The ONA is significantly smaller in patients with IIH compared to controls, but does not correlate with CSF opening pressure, severity of papilledema, or visual function. The ONA may be useful in identifying patients with raised ICP, but not necessarily those with a poor visual prognosis., Competing Interests: B. S. Chen is the recipient of the V. J Chapman Research Fellowship, awarded by the Neurological Foundation of New Zealand. B. B. Bruce is a medicolegal consultant for Bayer and individual litigants on the topic of idiopathic intracranial hypertension. V. Biousse and N. J. Newman are consultants for GenSight Biologics. They are supported in part by an unrestricted departmental grant (Department of Ophthalmology) from Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc, New York, by NIH/NEI core grant P30-EY06360 (Department of Ophthalmology, Emory University School of Medicine), and by NIH/NINDS (RO1NSO89694). N. J. Newman is a consultant for Santhera Pharmaceuticals and Stealth BioTherapeutics. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2021
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46. Prediction of Postoperative Risk of Raised Intracranial Pressure After Spontaneous Skull Base Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak Repair.
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Buchowicz B, Chen BS, Bidot S, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, Saindane AM, Levy JM, and Biousse V
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- Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak diagnosis, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak etiology, Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak surgery, Humans, Intracranial Pressure physiology, Retrospective Studies, Skull Base surgery, Intracranial Hypertension diagnosis, Intracranial Hypertension etiology, Intracranial Hypertension surgery, Pseudotumor Cerebri
- Abstract
Background: A relationship between idiopathic intracranial hypertension and spontaneous skull base cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks has been proposed, by which CSF leak decreases intracranial pressure (ICP) and masks the symptoms and signs of elevated ICP. These patients are at risk of developing papilledema, symptoms of elevated ICP, or a recurrent CSF leak after CSF leak repair. The objective of this study was to assess whether radiographic signs of raised ICP on preoperative magnetic resonance or computed venography (MRI or CTV) are predictors of postoperative papilledema, recurrence of CSF leak, or need for CSF shunt surgery., Methods: We performed a retrospective review of systematically collected demographics, fundus examination, and presurgical brain MRI and magnetic resonance venography/computed tomography venography (MRV/CTV) in patients seen at 1 institution between 2013 and 2019 with spontaneous skull base CSF leak repair. Patients were divided into 2 groups depending on whether they developed papilledema, recurrent CSF leak, or required CSF shunting (Group 1) or not (Group 2)., Results: Fifty-seven patients were included, among whom 19 were in Group 1. There was no difference in demographic characteristics or clinical features between patients in Group 1 and Group 2. Controlling for other imaging features, bilateral transverse venous sinus stenosis (TVSS) on preoperative imaging increased the odds of being in Group 1 by 4.2 times (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.04-21.2, P = 0.04), optic nerve tortuosity decreased the odds of being in Group 1 by 8.3 times (95% CI: 1.4-74.6, P = 0.02)., Conclusion: Imaging of the intracranial venous system with MRV or CTV is warranted before repair of spontaneous CSF leak, as bilateral TVSS is an independent risk factor for postoperative papilledema, CSF leak recurrence, or need for a CSF shunting procedure., Competing Interests: B. S. Chen is the recipient of the VJ Chapman Research Fellowship awarded by the New Zealand Neurological Foundation. The remaining authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 by North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.)
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- 2021
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47. Vision-related quality-of-life in pediatric primary brain tumor patients.
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Peragallo JH, Bruce BB, Vasseneix C, Jariyakosol S, Janss AJ, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- Child, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vision Disorders epidemiology, Vision Disorders etiology, Visual Acuity, Brain Neoplasms complications, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Purpose: Brain tumors are the leading cause of death from childhood cancer. Although overall survival has improved due to earlier detection, better therapies, and improved surveillance, visual dysfunction and impaired vision-related quality-of-life (VR-QOL) are often unrecognized in children. This project investigated VR-QOL in pediatric brain tumor patients., Methods: We evaluated visual impairment and quality-of-life (QOL) in a quality improvement project at one tertiary care center. Patients ≤ 18, greater than 6 months from diagnosis of brain tumor, excluding intrinsic anterior visual pathway tumors, underwent standardized neuro-ophthalmologic examination. Health-related QOL (HR-QOL) (PedsQL Brain Tumor Module) and VR-QOL questionnaires [CVFQ (Children's Visual Function Questionnaire) in children < 8, and EYE-Q in children 8-18] were obtained from patients and parents., Results: Among 77 patients, craniopharyngiomas (n = 16, 21%) and astrocytomas (n = 15, 20%) were the most common tumors. Among 44/77 (57%) visually impaired children, 7 (16%) were legally blind. Eye-Q median score was 3.40 (interquartile range 3.00-3.75), worse than average scores for normal children. Eye-Q score decreased 0.12 with every 0.1 increase in logMAR visual acuity (p < 0.001). Patients who were legally blind had a significantly lower Eye-Q score than those who were not [0.70 vs. 3.44 (p < 0.001)]. Cognitive HR-QOL scores decreased 1.3 for every 0.1 increase in logMAR visual acuity (p = 0.02)., Conclusions: Pediatric brain tumor patients' vision, HR-QOL, and VR-QOL were often severely affected even when tumors were considered cured. Visual acuity and legal blindness correlated with VR-QOL. Systematic neuro-ophthalmologic examinations in pediatric primary brain tumor patients are necessary to facilitate early preventative and corrective ophthalmologic interventions., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2021
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48. Acute Central Retinal Artery Occlusion Seen within 24 Hours at a Tertiary Institution.
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Chan W, Flowers AM, Meyer BI, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Catchment Area, Health, Emergency Service, Hospital, Female, Fibrinolytic Agents adverse effects, Humans, Infusions, Intravenous, Male, Middle Aged, Retinal Artery Occlusion diagnosis, Retinal Artery Occlusion physiopathology, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Fibrinolytic Agents administration & dosage, Retinal Artery Occlusion drug therapy, Tertiary Care Centers, Thrombolytic Therapy adverse effects, Time-to-Treatment, Vision, Ocular drug effects
- Abstract
Objective: Acute central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO) is an emergency with poor visual outcome. Intravenous thrombolysis within 4.5 h of vision loss is safe and may improve vision, but is rarely administered because of frequent delays in presentation. We describe a subgroup of CRAO patients presenting within 24 h of vision loss to a tertiary care center affiliated with a comprehensive stroke center., Materials and Methods: Retrospective review of 181 consecutive CRAO patients seen at our institution from 2010 to 2020., Results: Out of 181 CRAO patients, 62 (34%) presented within 24 h of vision loss and tended to live closer to the hospital. These patients were more likely to be admitted to the hospital and receive comprehensive stroke work-up compared to patients who presented after 24 h of vision loss. Patients presenting after 24 h did not necessarily receive prior appropriate work-up at outside institutions. Conservative treatments for CRAO were administered to 20/181 patients, and only 3 patients received intravenous thrombolysis., Conclusions: Patients with CRAO do not present to the emergency department fast enough and diagnosis of CRAO is often delayed. Despite having a protocol in place, only 3/181 patients received IV thrombolysis, emphasizing the difficulty in administering very acute treatments for CRAO. Public education regarding CRAO is necessary to improve presentation times, management, and visual outcomes. Hospitals need to develop accelerated diagnostic pathway protocols for patients with acute vision loss so that CRAO patients may be diagnosed and be considered for potential acute treatments as quickly as possible., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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49. Late Conditions Diagnosed 1-4 Months Following an Initial Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Encounter: A Matched-Cohort Study Using Inpatient and Outpatient Administrative Data-United States, 1 March-30 June 2020.
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Chevinsky JR, Tao G, Lavery AM, Kukielka EA, Click ES, Malec D, Kompaniyets L, Bruce BB, Yusuf H, Goodman AB, Dixon MG, Nakao JH, Datta SD, MacKenzie WR, Kadri SS, Saydah S, Giovanni JE, and Gundlapalli AV
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- Adult, COVID-19 Testing, Cohort Studies, Humans, Inpatients, SARS-CoV-2, United States epidemiology, COVID-19, Outpatients
- Abstract
Background: Late sequelae of COVID-19 have been reported; however, few studies have investigated the time course or incidence of late new COVID-19-related health conditions (post-COVID conditions) after COVID-19 diagnosis. Studies distinguishing post-COVID conditions from late conditions caused by other etiologies are lacking. Using data from a large administrative all-payer database, we assessed type, association, and timing of post-COVID conditions following COVID-19 diagnosis., Methods: Using the Premier Healthcare Database Special COVID-19 Release (release date, 20 October 2020) data, during March-June 2020, 27 589 inpatients and 46 857 outpatients diagnosed with COVID-19 (case-patients) were 1:1 matched with patients without COVID-19 through the 4-month follow-up period (control-patients) by using propensity score matching. In this matched-cohort study, adjusted ORs were calculated to assess for late conditions that were more common in case-patients than control-patients. Incidence proportion was calculated for conditions that were more common in case-patients than control-patients during 31-120 days following a COVID-19 encounter., Results: During 31-120 days after an initial COVID-19 inpatient hospitalization, 7.0% of adults experienced ≥1 of 5 post-COVID conditions. Among adult outpatients with COVID-19, 7.7% experienced ≥1 of 10 post-COVID conditions. During 31-60 days after an initial outpatient encounter, adults with COVID-19 were 2.8 times as likely to experience acute pulmonary embolism as outpatient control-patients and also more likely to experience a range of conditions affecting multiple body systems (eg, nonspecific chest pain, fatigue, headache, and respiratory, nervous, circulatory, and gastrointestinal symptoms) than outpatient control-patients., Conclusions: These findings add to the evidence of late health conditions possibly related to COVID-19 in adults following COVID-19 diagnosis and can inform healthcare practice and resource planning for follow-up COVID-19 care., (Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America 2021.)
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- 2021
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50. Prevalence of Incidentally Detected Signs of Intracranial Hypertension on Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Their Association With Papilledema.
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Chen BS, Meyer BI, Saindane AM, Bruce BB, Newman NJ, and Biousse V
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Incidental Findings, Intracranial Hypertension diagnostic imaging, Intracranial Hypertension epidemiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Papilledema diagnostic imaging, Papilledema epidemiology
- Abstract
Importance: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signs of intracranial hypertension (IH) are traditionally associated with idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH), but these signs are also detected among individuals with primary headaches and among asymptomatic individuals without papilledema., Objective: To examine the prevalence of MRI signs of IH among consecutive outpatients undergoing brain MRI for any clinical indication and to explore their association with papilledema., Design, Setting, and Participants: This prospective cross-sectional study of outpatients undergoing brain MRI at 1 outpatient imaging facility was conducted between August 1, 2019, and March 31, 2020, with ocular fundus photographs taken concurrently. Radiographic images from consecutive adult patients who were undergoing brain MRI and able to participate in fundus photography were analyzed for MRI signs of IH. A univariate analysis using either Fisher exact tests or t tests was performed., Main Outcomes and Measures: Prevalence of MRI signs of IH and prevalence of papilledema detected on ocular fundus photographs. Radiographic signs of IH included empty sella, optic nerve head protrusion, posterior scleral flattening, increased perioptic cerebrospinal fluid, optic nerve tortuosity, enlarged Meckel caves, cephaloceles, cerebellar tonsillar descent, and bilateral transverse venous sinus stenosis., Results: A total of 388 patients were screened for eligibility; of those, 92 patients were excluded (58 declined participation, 16 were unable to consent, 14 were unable to complete fundus photography, and 4 completed MRI and fundus photography twice, so their second set of findings was removed). Among the 296 patients included in the study, the median age was 49.5 years (interquartile range, 37.8-62.0 years), and 188 patients (63.5%) were female. The most common indication for MRI was surveillance of a brain neoplasm (82 patients [27.7%]). Investigations of headaches (26 patients [8.8%]) and disorders of intracranial pressure (4 patients [1.4%]) were uncommon. At least 1 radiographic sign of IH was present in 145 patients (49.0%). Among 296 total study patients, 98 patients (33.1%) had empty sella, 47 patients (15.9%) had enlarged Meckel caves, 32 patients (10.8%) had increased perioptic cerebrospinal fluid, 23 patients (7.8%) had optic nerve tortuosity, 2 patients (0.7%) had scleral flattening, and 4 patients (1.4%) had cephaloceles. Bilateral transverse venous sinus stenosis was present in 6 of 198 patients (3.0%). Five patients (1.7%) had papilledema. Compared with patients without papilledema, those with papilledema had a significantly higher body mass index and history of IIH, in addition to an increased prevalence of empty sella, optic nerve tortuosity, and transverse venous sinus stenosis detected on MRI. The prevalence of papilledema increased from 2.8% among patients with at least 1 MRI sign of IH to 40.0% among patients with 4 or more MRI signs of IH., Conclusions and Relevance: Magnetic resonance imaging signs of IH were common among patients undergoing brain MRI in this study but rarely associated with papilledema. The management of patients with incidentally detected signs of IH likely does not require systematic lumbar puncture unless concerning symptoms or papilledema are present.
- Published
- 2021
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