39 results on '"Friedenberg, S."'
Search Results
2. Genotype imputation in the domestic dog
- Author
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Friedenberg, S. G. and Meurs, K. M.
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- 2016
- Full Text
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3. Canine hip dysplasia is predictable by genotyping
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Guo, G., Zhou, Z., Wang, Y., Zhao, K., Zhu, L., Lust, G., Hunter, L., Friedenberg, S., Li, J., Zhang, Y., Harris, S., Jones, P., Sandler, J., Krotscheck, U., Todhunter, R., and Zhang, Z.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. TWO CASES OF POLIOMYELITIS WITH INTRAVENOUS IMMUNOGLOBULIN RESPONSIVE RADIAL NEUROPATHIES
- Author
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Friedenberg, S. M.
- Published
- 2010
5. Single nucleotide polymorphisms refine QTL intervals for hip joint laxity in dogs
- Author
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Zhu, L., Zhang, Z., Feng, F., Schweitzer, P., Phavaphutanon, J., Vernier-Singer, M., Corey, E., Friedenberg, S., Mateescu, R., Williams, A., Lust, G., Acland, G., and Todhunter, R.
- Published
- 2008
6. The breathing hand: obstetric brachial plexopathy reinnervation from thoracic roots?
- Author
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Friedenberg, S M and Hermann, R C
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- 2004
7. Inflammation and neuropathic attacks in hereditary brachial plexus neuropathy
- Author
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Klein, C J, Dyck, P J B, Friedenberg, S M, Burns, T M, Windebank, A J, and Dyck, P J
- Published
- 2002
8. Lymphocyte Subsets in the Adrenal Glands of Dogs With Primary Hypoadrenocorticism
- Author
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Friedenberg, S. G., primary, Brown, D. L., additional, Meurs, K. M., additional, and Law, J. McHugh, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Lymphocyte Subsets in the Adrenal Glands of Dogs With Primary Hypoadrenocorticism.
- Author
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Friedenberg, S. G., Brown, D. L., Meurs, K. M., and Law, J. McHugh
- Subjects
HYPERADRENOCORTICISM ,ADDISON'S disease ,ENDOCRINE diseases ,ADRENAL diseases ,LABORATORY dogs ,DISEASE risk factors ,DIAGNOSIS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Primary hypoadrenocorticism, or Addison’s disease, is an autoimmune condition common in certain dog breeds that leads to the destruction of the adrenal cortex and a clinical syndrome involving anorexia, gastrointestinal upset, and electrolyte imbalances. Previous studies have demonstrated that this destruction is strongly associated with lymphocytic-plasmacytic inflammation and that the lymphocytes are primarily T cells. In this study, we used both immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization to characterize the T-cell subtypes involved. We collected postmortem specimens of 5 dogs with primary hypoadrenocorticism and 2 control dogs and, using the aforementioned techniques, showed that the lymphocytes are primarily CD4+ rather than CD8+. These findings have important implications for improving our understanding of the pathogenesis and in searching for the underlying causative genetic polymorphisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Natalizumab plus interferon beta-1a reduces lesion formation in relapsing multiple sclerosis
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Ernst Wilhelm, Radue, William, H. Stuart, Peter, A. Calabresi, Christian, Confavreux, Steven, L. Galetta, Richard, A. Rudick, Fred, D. Lublin, Bianca, Weinstock Guttman, Daniel, R. Wynn, Elizabeth, Fisher, Athina, Papadopoulou, Frances, Lynn, Michael, A. Panzara, Alfred, W. Sandrock, For, the SENTINEL Investigators including F. Fazekas, Enzinger, C., Seifert, T., Storch, M., Strasser Fuchs, S., Berger, T., Dilitz, E., Egg, R., Deisenhammer, F., Decoo, D, Lampaert, J., Bartholome, E., Bier, J., Stenager, E., Rasmussen, M., Binzer, M., Shorsh, K., Christensen, M., Ravnborg, M., Soelberg Sørensen, P., Blinkenberg, M., Petersen, B., Hansen, H. J., Bech, E., Petersen, T., Kirkegaard, M., Finland:, J. Eralinna, Ruutiainen, J., Soilu Hänninen, M., Säkö, E., Laaksonen, M., Reunanen, M., Remes, A., Keskinarkaus, I., Moreau, T., Noblet, M., Rouaud, O., Couvreur, G., Edan, G., Lepage, E., Drapier, S., De Burghgraeve, V., Yaouanq, J., Merienne, M., Cahagne, V., Gout, O., Deschamps, R., Le Canuet, P., Moulignier, A., Vermersch, P., De Seze, J., Stojkovic, T., Griffié, G., Engles, Ferriby, D., Debouverie, M., Pittion Vouyouvitch, S., Lacour, J. C., Pelletier, J., Feuillet, L., Suchet, L., Dalecky, A., Tammam, D., Lubetzki, C., Youssov, K., Mrejen, S., Charles, P., Yaici, S., Clavelou, P., Aufauvre, D., Renouil Guy, N., Cesaro, P., Degos, F., Benisty, S., Rumbach, L., Decavel, P., Confavreux, C., Blanc, S., Aubertin, P., Riche, G., Brochet, B., Ouallet, J. C., Anne, O., Menck, S., Grupe, Guttman, Lensch, E., Fucik, E., Heitmann, S., Hartung, H. P., Schröter, M., Kurz, F. M. W., Heidenreich, F., Trebst, C., Pul, R., Hohlfeld, R., Krumbholz, M., Pellkofer, H., Haas, J., Segert, A., Meyer, R., Anagnostou, P., Kabus, C., Poehlau, D., Schneider, K., Hoffmann, V., Zettl, U., Steinhagen, V., Adler, S., Steinbrecher E. Rothenfusser Körber, A. Steinbrecher E. Rothenfusser Körber, Zellner, Baum, K., Günther, A., Bläsing, H., Stoll, G., Gold, R., Bayas, A., Kleinschnitz, C., Limmroth, V., Katsarava, Z., Kastrup, O., Haller, P., Stoeve, S., Höbel, D., Oschmann, P., Voigt, K., Burger, C. V., Israel:, O. Abramsky, Karusiss, D., Achiron, A., Kishner, I., Stern, Y., Sarove Pinhas, I., Dolev, M., Magalashvili, D., Pozzili, : C., Lenzi, D., Scontrini, A., Millefiorini, E., Buttinelli, C., Gallo, P., Ranzato, F., Tiberio, M., Perini, P., Laroni, Alice, Marrosu, M., Cocco P. Marchi, E. Cocco P. Marchi, Spinicci, G., Massole, S., Mascia, M., Floris, G., Trojano, M., Bellacosa, A., Paolicelli, D., Bosco Zimatore, G., Simone, I. L., Giorelli, M., Di Monte, E., Mancardi, GIOVANNI LUIGI, Pizzorno, M., Murialdo, A., Narciso, E., Capello, A., Comi, G., Martinelli, V., Rodegher, M., Esposito, F., Colombo, B., Rossi, P., Polman, C. H., Jasperse, M. M. S., Zwemmer, J. N. P., Nielsen, J., Kragt, J. J., Jongen, P. J. H., De Smet, E., Tacken, H., Frequin, S. T. F. M., Siegers, H. P., Mauser, H. W., Fernandez Fernandez, O., León, A., Romero, F., Alonso, A., Tamayo, J., Montalban, X., Nos, C., Pelayo, R., Tellez, N., Rio, J., Tintore, M., Arbizu, T., Romero, L., Moral, E., Martinez, S., Switzerland:, L. Kappos, Achtnichts, L., Wilmes, S., Turkey:, R. Karabudak, Kurne, A., Erdem, S., Siva, A., Saip, S., Altintas, A., Atamer, A., Eraksoy, M., Bilgili, F., Topcular, B., Giovannoni, G., Lim, E. T., Lava, N., Murnane, M., Dentinger, M., Zimmerman, E., Reiss, M., Gupta, V., Scott, T., Brillman, J., Kunschner, L., Wright, D., Perel, A., Babu, A., Rivera, V., Killian, J., Hutton, G., Lai, E., Picone, M., Cadivid, D., Kamin, S., Shanawani, M., Gauthier, S., Morgan, A., Buckle, G., Margolin, D., Weinstock Guttman, B., Kwen, P. L., Garg, N., Munschauer, F., Khatri, B., Rassouli, M., Saxena, V., Ahmed, A., Turner, A., Fox, E., Couch, C., Tyler, R., Horvit, A., Fodor, P., Humphries, S., Wynn, D., Nagar, C., O'Brien, D., Allen, N., Turel, A., Friedenberg, S., Carlson, J., Hosey, J., Crayton, H., Richert, J., Tornatore, C., Sirdofsky, M., Greenstein, J., Shpigel, Y., Mandel, S., Adbelhak, T., Schmerler, M., Zadikoff, C., Rorick, M., Reed, R., Elias, S., Feit, H., Angus, E., Sripathi, N., Herbert, J., Kiprovski, K., Qu, X., Del Bene, M., Mattson, D., Hingtgen, C., Fleck, J., Horak, H., Javerbaum, J., Elmore, R., Garcia, E., Tasch, E., Gruener, G., Celesia, G., Chawla, J., Miller, A., Drexler, E., Keilson, M., Wolintz, R., Drasby, E., Muscat, P., Belden, J., Sullivan, R., Cohen, J., Stone, L., Marrie, R. A., Fox, R., Hughes, B., Babikian, P., Jacoby, M., Doro, J., Puricelli, M., Rossman, H., Boudoris, W., Belkin, M., Pierce, R., Eggenberger, E., Birbeck, G., Martin, J., Kaufman, D., Stuart, W., English, J. B., Stuart, D. S., Gilbert, R. W., Kaufman, M., Putman, S., Diedrich, A., Follmer, R., Pelletier, D., Waubant, E., Cree, B., Genain, C., Goodin, D., Guarnaccia, J., Patwa, H., Rizo, M., Kitaj, M., Blevins, J., Smith, T., Mcgee, F., Honeycutt, W., Brown, M., Isa, A., Nieves Quinones, D., Krupp, L., Smiroldo, J., Zarif, M., Perkins, C., Sumner, A., Fisher, A., Gutierrez, Jacoby, R., Svoboda, S., Dorn, D., Groeschel, A., Steingo, B., Kishner, R., Cohen, B., Melen, O., Simuni, T., Zee, P., Cohan, S., Yerby, M., Hendin, B., Levine, T., Tamm, H., Travis, L. H., Freedman, S. M., Tim, R., Ferrell, W., Stefoski, D., Stevens, S., Katsamakis, G., Topel, J., Ko, M., Gelber, D., Fortin, C., Green, B., Logan, W., Carpenter, D., Temple, L., Sadiq, S., Sylvester, A., Sim, G., Mihai, C., Vertino, M., Jubelt, B., Mejico, L., Phillips, J. T., Martin, A., Heitzman, D., Greenfield, C. F., Riskind, P., Cabo, A., Paskavitz, J., Moonis, M., Bashir J. Brockington, K. Bashir J. Brockington, Nicholas, A., Slaughter, R., Archer S. Harik, R. Archer S. Harik, Haddad, N., Pippenger, M. A., Van den Noort, S., Thai, G., Olek, M., Demetriou, M., Shin, R., Calabresi, P., Rus, H., Bever, C., Johnson, K., Sheremata, W., Delgado, S., Sherbert, R., Herndon, R., Uschmann, H., Chandler, A., Markowitz, C., Jacobs, D., Balcer, L., Mitchell, G., Chakravorty, S., Heyman, R., Stauber, Z., Goodman, A., Segal, B., Schwid, S., Samkoff, L., Levin, M., Jacewicz, M., Menkes, D., Pulsinelli, W., Frohman, E., Racke, M., Hawker, K., Ulrich, R., Panitch, H., Hamill, R., Tandon, R., Dulaney, E., Simnad, V., Miller, J., Wooten, G. F., Harrison, M., Bowen, J., Doherty, M., Wundes, A., Garden, G. A., Distad, J., Kachuck, N., Berkovich, R., Burnett, M., Sahai, S., Bandari, D., Weiner, L., Storey, J. R., Beesley, B., Hart, D., Moses, H., Sriram, S., Fang, J., O'Duffy, A., Kita, M., Taylor, L., Elliott, M., Roberts, J., Jeffery, D., Maxwell, S., Lefkowitz, D., Kumar, S., Sinclair, M., Neurology, and NCA - Multiple Sclerosis and Other Neuroinflammatory Diseases
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Adolescent ,Relapsing-Remitting ,Placebo ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Gastroenterology ,Antibodies ,Central nervous system disease ,Pharmacotherapy ,Natalizumab ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,pathology/therapy ,Drug Therapy ,Internal medicine ,Monoclonal ,Medicine ,Humans ,Immunologic Factors ,Humanized ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Patient Selection ,Interferon beta-1a ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Interferon-beta ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Surgery ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,therapeutic use ,Combination ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,pathology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Adolescent, Adult, Antibodies ,Humanized, Antibodies ,therapeutic use, Brain ,pathology, Drug Therapy ,Combination, Female, Humans, Immunologic Factors ,therapeutic use, Interferon-beta ,therapeutic use, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis ,pathology/therapy, Patient Selection, Treatment Outcome ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The SENTINEL study showed that the addition of natalizumab improved outcomes for patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis (MS) who had experienced disease activity while receiving interferon beta-1a (IFNbeta-1a) alone. Previously unreported secondary and tertiary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures are presented here. Patients received natalizumab 300 mg (n=589) or placebo (n=582) intravenously every 4 weeks plus IFNbeta-1a 30 microg intramuscularly once weekly. Annual MRI scans allowed comparison of a range of MRI end points versus baseline. Over 2 years, 67% of patients receiving natalizumab plus IFNbeta-1a remained free of new or enlarging T2-lesions compared with 30% of patients receiving IFNbeta-1a alone. The mean change from baseline in T2 lesion volume over 2 years decreased in patients receiving natalizumab plus IFNbeta-1a and increased in those receiving IFNbeta-1a alone (-277.5mm(3) versus 525.6mm(3); p0.001). Compared with IFNbeta-1a alone, add-on natalizumab therapy resulted in a smaller increase in mean T1-hypointense lesion volume after 2 years (1821.3mm(3) versus 2210.5mm(3); p0.001), a smaller mean number of new T1-hypointense lesions over 2 years (2.3 versus 4.1; p0.001), and a slower rate of brain atrophy during the second year of therapy (-0.31% versus -0.40%; p=0.020). Natalizumab add-on therapy reduced gadolinium-enhancing, T1-hypointense, and T2 MRI lesion activity and slowed brain atrophy progression in patients with relapsing MS who experienced disease activity despite treatment with IFNbeta-1a alone.
- Published
- 2010
11. The incidence and significance of anti-natalizumab antibodies: results from AFFIRM and SENTINEL
- Author
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Calabresi, Pa, Giovannoni, G, Confavreux, C, Galetta, Sl, Havrdova, E, Hutchinson, M, Kappos, L, Miller, Dh, O'Connor, Pw, Phillips, Jt, Polman, Ch, Radue, Ew, Rudick, Ra, Stuart, Wh, Lublin, Fd, Wajgt, A, Weinstock Guttman, B, Wynn, Dr, Lynn, F, Panzara, Ma, Affirm, Investigators, Fazekas, SENTINEL Investigators including: F., Enzinger, C., Seifert, T., Storch, M., Strasser Fuchs, S., Berger, T., Dilitz, E., Egg, R., Eisenhammer, F., Decoo J. Lampaert, D. Decoo J. Lampaert, Bartholome J. Bier, E. Bartholome J. Bier, Stenager, E., Rasmussen, M., Binzer, M., Shorsh, K., Christensen, M., Ravnborg, M., Soelberg Sørensen, P., Blinkenberg, M., Petersen, B., Hansen, H. J., Bech, E., Petersen, T., Kirkegaard, M., Eralinna, J., Ruutiainen, J., Soilu Hänninen, M., Säkö, E., Laaksonen, M., Reunanen, M., Remes, A., Keskinarkaus, I., Moreau, T., Noblet, M., Rouaud, O., Couvreur, G., Edan, G., Lepage, E., Drapier, S., De Burghgraeve, V., Yaouanq, J., Merienne, M., Cahagne, V., Gout, O., Deschamps, R., Le Canuet, P., Moulignier, A., Vermersch, P., De Seze, J., Stojkovic, T., Griffié, G., Engles, A., Ferriby, D., Debouverie, M., Pittionvouyouvitch, S., Lacour, J. C., Pelletier, J., Feuillet, L., Suchet, L., Dalecky, A., Tammam, D., Lubetzki, C., Youssov, K., Mrejen, S., Charles, P., Yaici, S., Clavelou, P., Aufauvre, D., Renouil Guy, N., Cesaro, P., Degos, F., Benisty, S., Rumbach P. Decavel, L. Rumbach P. Decavel, Confavreux, C., Blanc, S., Aubertin, P., Riche, G., Brochet, B., Ouallet, J. C., Anne, O., Menck, S., Grupe, A., Guttman, E., Lensch, E., Fucik, E., Heitmann, S., Hartung, H. P., Schröter, M., Kurz, F. M. W., Heidenreich, F., Trebst, C., Pul, R., Hohlfeld, R., Krumbholz, M., Pellkofer, H., Haas, J., Segert, A., Meyer, R., Anagnostou, P., Kabus, C., Poehlau, D., Schneider, K., Hoffmann, V., Zettl, U., Steinhagen, V., Adler, S., Steinbrecher, A., Rothenfusser Körber, E., Zellner, R., Baum, K., Günther, A., Bläsing, H., Stoll, G., Gold, R., Bayas, A., Kleinschnitz, C., Limmroth, V., Katsarava, Z., Kastrup, O., Haller, P., Stoeve, S., Höbel, D., Oschmann, P., Voigt, K., Burger, C. V., Abramsky D. Karusiss, O. Abramsky D. Karusiss, Achiron, A., Kishner, I., Stern, Y., Sarove Pinhas, I., Dolev, M., Magalashvili, D., Pozzili, C., Lenzi, D., Scontrini, A., Millefiorini, E., Buttinelli, C., Gallo, P., Ranzato, F., Tiberio, M., Perini, P., Laroni, Alice, Marrosu, M., Cocco P. Marchi, E. Cocco P. Marchi, Spinicci, G., Massole, S., Mascia, M., Floris, G., Trojano, M., Bellacosa, A., Paolicelli, D., Bosco Zimatore, G., Simone, I. L., Giorelli, M., Di Monte, E., Mancardi, GIOVANNI LUIGI, Pizzorno, M., Murialdo, A., Narciso, E., Capello, A., Comi, G., Martinelli, V., Rodegher, M., Esposito, F., Colombo, B., Rossi, P., Polman, C. H., Jasperse, M. M. S., Zwemmer, J. N. P., Nielsen, J., Kragt, J. J., Jongen, P. J. H., De Smet, E., Tacken, H., Frequin, S. T. F. M., Siegers, H. P., Mauser, H. W., Fern ez Fern ez, O., León, A., Romero, F., Alonso, A., Tamayo, J., Montalban, X., Nos, C., Pelayo, R., Tellez, N., Rio, J., Tintore, M., Arbizu, T., Romero, L., Moral, E., Martinez, S., Kappos, L., Achtnichts, L., Wilmes, S., Karabudak, R., Kurne, A., Erdem, S., Siva, A., Saip, S., Altintas, A., Atamer, A., Eraksoy, M., Bilgili, F., Topcular, B., Giovannoni ET Lim, G. Giovannoni E. T. Lim, Lava, N., Murnane, M., Dentinger, M., Zimmerman, E., Reiss V. Gupta, M. Reiss V. Gupta, Scott, T., Brillman, J., Kunschner, L., Wright, D., Perel A. Babu, A. Perel A. Babu, Rivera, V., Killian, J., Hutton, G., Lai, E., Picone, M., Cadivid, D., Kamin, S., Shanawani, M., Gauthier, S., Morgan, A., Buckle, G., Margolin, D., Weinstock Guttman, B., Kwen, P. L., Garg, N., Munschauer, F., Khatri, B., Rassouli, M., Saxena, V., Ahmed, A., Turner, A., Fox, E., Couch, C., Tyler, R., Horvit, A., Fodor S. Humphries, P. Fodor S. Humphries, Wynn, D., Nagar, C., O’Brien, D., Allen, N., Turel, A., Friedenberg, S., Carlson, J., Hosey, J., Crayton, H., Richert, J., Tornatore, C., Sirdofsky, M., Greenstein, J., Shpigel, Y., S. M, El, Adbelhak, T., Schmerler, M., Zadikoff, C., Rorick, M., Reed, R., Elias, S., Feit, H., Angus, E., Sripathi, N., Herbert, J., Kiprovski, K., Qu, X., Del Bene, M., Mattson, D., Hingtgen, C., Fleck, J., Horak, H., Kaiser, J. Javerbaum, Elmore, R., Garcia, E., Tasch, E., Gruener, G., Celesia, G., Chawla, J., Miller, A., Drexler, E., Keilson, M., Wolintz, R., Drasby, E., Muscat, P., Belden, J., Sullivan, R., Cohen, J., Stone, L., Marrie, R. A., Fox, R., Hughes, B., Babikian, P., Jacoby, M., Doro, J., Puricelli, M., Rossman, H., Boudoris, W., Belkin, M., Pierce, R., Eggenberger, E., Birbeck, G., Martin, J., Kaufman, D., Stuart, W., English, J. B., Stuart, D. S., Gilbert, R. W., Kaufman, M., Putman, S., Diedrich, A., Follmer, R., Pelletier, D., Waubant, E., Cree, B., Genain, C., Goodin, D., Guarnaccia, J., Patwa, H., Rizo, M., Kitaj, M., Blevins, J., Smith, T., Mcgee, F., Honeycutt, W., Brown, M., Isa, A., Nieves Quinones, D., Krupp, L., Smiroldo, J., Zarif, M., Perkins, C., Sumner, A., Fisher, A., Gutierrez, A., Jacoby, R., Svoboda, S., Dorn, D., Groeschel, A., Steingo R. Kishner, B. Steingo R. Kishner, Cohen, B., Melen, O., Simuni, T., Zee, P., Cohan M. Yerby, S. Cohan M. Yerby, Hendin, B., Levine, T., Tamm, H., Travis, L. H., Freedman, S. M., Tim, R., Ferrell, W., Stefoski, D., Stevens, S., Katsamakis, G., Topel, J., KoD Gelber C. Fortin, M. K. o. D. Gelber C. Fortin, Green, B., Logan, W., Carpenter, D., Temple, L., Sadiq, S., Sylvester, A., Sim, G., Mihai, C., Vertino, M., Jubelt, B., Mejico, L., Phillips, J. T., Martin, A., Heitzman, D., Greenfield, C. F., Riskind, P., Cabo, A., Paskavitz, J., Moonis, M., Bashir, K., Brockington, J., Nicholas, A., Slaughter, R., Archer, R., Harik, S., Haddad, N., Pippenger, M. A., Van den Noort, S., Thai, G., Olek, M., Demetriou, M., Shin, R., Calabresi, P., Rus, H., Bever, C., Johnson, K., Sheremata, W., Delgado, S., Sherbert, R., Herndon, R., Uschmann, H., Ch ler, A., Markowitz, C., Jacobs, D., Balcer, L., Mitchell, G., Chakravorty, S., Heyman, R., Stauber, Z., Goodman, A., Segal, B., Schwid, S., Samkoff, L., Levin, M., Jacewicz, M., Menkes, D., Pulsinelli, W., Frohman, E., Racke, M., Hawker, K., Ulrich, R., Panitch, H., Hamill, R., R. T, On, Dulaney, E., Simnad, V., Miller, J., Wooten, G. F., Harrison, M., Bowen, J., Doherty, M., Wundes, A., Garden, G. A., Distad, J., Kachuck, N., Berkovich, R., Burnett, M., Sahai, S., Ari, D. B, Weiner, L., Storey, J. R., Beesley, B., Hart, D., Moses, H., Sriram, S., Fang, J., O’Duffy, A., Kita, M., Taylor, L., Elliott, M., Roberts, J., Jeffery, D., Maxwell, S., Lefkowitz, D., Kumar, S., Sinclair EW Radue, M. S. i. n. c. l. a. i. r. E. W. Radue, de Vera, A., Bacelar, O., Kuster, P., and Kappos, L. .
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Relapsing-Remitting ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Gastroenterology ,Antibodies ,law.invention ,Disability Evaluation ,Natalizumab ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Randomized controlled trial ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Antibody Specificity ,Internal medicine ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,Secondary Prevention ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Antibodies, Blocking ,Humanized ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Brain ,Flow Cytometry ,Interferon-beta ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Placebo Effect ,Treatment Outcome ,Neuroscience (all) ,Expanded Disability Status Scale ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Interferon beta-1a ,medicine.disease ,Blocking ,Multiple sclerosis functional composite ,Immunology ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective: To determine the incidence and clinical effects of antibodies that develop during treatment with natalizumab. Methods: In two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies (natalizumab safety and efficacy in relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis [MS, AFFIRM] and safety and efficacy of natalizumab in combination with interferon β-1a [INFβ1a] in patients with relapsing remitting MS [SENTINEL]) of patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis, blood samples were obtained at baseline and every 12 weeks to determine the presence of antibodies against natalizumab. Antibodies to natalizumab were measured using an ELISA. Patients were categorized as “transiently positive” if they had detectable antibodies (≥0.5 μg/mL) at a single time point or “persistently positive” if they had antibodies at two or more time points ≥6 weeks apart. Results: In the AFFIRM study, antibodies were detected in 57 of 625 (9%) of natalizumab-treated patients: Twenty (3%) were transiently positive and 37 (6%) were persistently positive. Persistently positive patients showed a loss of clinical efficacy as measured by disability progression ( p ≤ 0.05), relapse rate ( p = 0.009), and MRI ( p ≤ 0.05) compared with antibody-negative patients. In transiently positive patients, full efficacy was achieved after approximately 6 months of treatment, the time when patients were becoming antibody negative. The incidence of infusion-related adverse events was significantly higher in persistently positive patients. Results of SENTINEL were similar to AFFIRM, except with regard to sustained disability progression; differences between persistently positive and antibody-negative patients were not statistically significant. Conclusions: The incidence of persistent antibody positivity associated with natalizumab is 6%. Reduced clinical efficacy is apparent in persistently positive patients. Patients with a suboptimal clinical response or persistent infusion-related adverse events should be considered for antibody testing. GLOSSARY: BLQ = below the limit of quantification; EDSS = Expanded Disability Status Scale; Gd+ = gadolinium enhancing; IFNβ1a = interferon β-1a; MS = multiple sclerosis; MSFC = multiple sclerosis functional composite; OD = optical density.
- Published
- 2007
12. Health-related quality of life in multiple sclerosis: Effects of natalizumab
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Rudick, R. A., Miller, D., Hass, S., Hutchinson, M, Calabresi, P. A., Confavreux, C., Galetta, S. L., Giovannoni, G., Havrdova, E., Kappos, L., Lublin, F. D., Miller, D. H., O'Connor, P. W., Phillips, J. T., Polman, C. H., Radue, Ew, Stuart, W. H., Wajgt, A., Weinstock Guttman, B., Wynn, D. R., Lynn, F., Panzara, M. A., Affirm, Macdonell, SENTINEL Investigators including: R., Hughes, A., Taylor, I., Lee, Y. C., Ma, H., King, J., Kilpatrick, T., Butzkueven, H., Marriott, M., Pollard, J., Spring, P., Spies, J., Barnett, M., Dehaene, I., Vanopdenbosch, L., D’Hooghe, M., Van Zandijcke, M., Derijck, O., Seeldrayers, P., Jacquy, J., Piette, T., De Cock, C., Medaer, R., Soors, P., Vanroose, E., Vanderhoven, L., Nagels, G., Dubois, B., Deville, M. C., D’Haene, R., Jacques, F., Hallé, D., Gagnon, S., Likavcan, E., Murray, T. J., Bhan, V., Mackelvey, R., Maxner, C. E., Christie, S., Giaccone, R., Guzman, D. A., Melanson, M., Esfahani, F., Gomori, A. J., Nagaria, M. H., Grand’Maison, F., Berger, L., Nasreddine, Z., Duplessis, M., Brunet, D., Jackson, A., Pari, G., O’Connor, P., Gray, T., Hohol, M., Marchetti, P., Lee, L., Murray, B., Sahlas, J., Perry, J., Devonshire, V., Hooge, J., Hashimoto, S., Oger, J., Smyth, P., Rice, G., Kremenchutzky, M., Stourac, P., Kadanka, Z., Benesova, Y., Niedermayerova, I., Meluzinova, E., Marusic, P., M, Bojar, Zarubova, K., Houzvicková, E., Piková, J., Talab, R., Faculty, Hospital Olomouc, Olomouc, B. Muchova, Urbánek, K, Kettnerova, Z., Mares, J., Otruba, P., Zapletalová, O., Hradilek, P., Ddolezil, D. Dolezil, Woznicova, I., Höfer, R., Ambler J. Fiedler, Z. Ambler J. Fiedler, Sucha, J., Matousek, V., Rektor, I., Dufek, M., Mikulik, R., Mastik, J., Tyrlikova, I., General, Teaching Hospital, Prague, E. Havrdová, Horakova, D., Kalistová, H., Týblová, M., Ehler, E., Novotná, A., Geier, P., Soelberg Sorensen, P., Ravnborg, M., Petersen, B., Blinkenberg, M., Färkkilä, M., Harno, H., Kallela, M., Häppölä, O., Elovaara, I., Kuusisto, H., Ukkonen, M., Peltola, J., Palmio, J., Pelletier, J., Feuillet, L., Suchet, L., Dalecky, A., Tammam, D., Edan, G., Le Page, E., Mérienne, M., Yaouanq, J., Clanet, M., Mekies, C., Azais Vuillemin, C., Senard, A., Lau, G., Steinmetz, G., Warter V. Wolff, J. Warter V. Wolff, Fleury, M., Tranchant, C., Stark, E., Buckpesch Heberer, U., Henn, K. H., Skoberne, T., Schimrigk, S., Hellwig, K., Brune, N., Weiller, C., Gbadamosi, J., Röther, J., Heesen, C., Buhmann, C., Karageorgiou, C., Korakaki, D., Giannoulis, D. r., Tsiara, S., Thomaides, T., Thomopoulos, I., Papageorgiou, H., Armakola, F., Komoly, S., Rózsa, C., Matolcsi, J., Szabó, G. y., Molnár, B., Lovas, G., Dioszeghy, P., Szulics, P., Magyar, Z., Incze, J., Farkas, J., Clemens, B., Kánya, J., Valicskó, Z. s., Bense, E., Nagy, Z. s., Geréby, G., Perényi, J., Simon, Z. s., Szapper, M., Gedeon, L., Csanyi, A., Rum, G., Lipóth, S., Szegedi, A., Jávor, L., Nagy, I., Adám, I., Szirmai, I., Simó, M., Ertsey, C., I, Amrein, Kamondi, A., Harcos, P., Dobos, E., Szabó, B., Balas, V., Guseo, A., Fodor, E., Jófejü, E., Eizler, K., Csiba, L., Csépány, T., Pallagi, E., Bereczki, D., Jakab, G., Juhász, M., Bszabó, B. Szabó I. Mayer, Katona, G., Hutchinson, M., O’Dwyer, J., O’Rourke, K., Sanders, E. A. C. M., Rijk van Andel, J. F., Bomhof, M. A. M., van Erven, P., Hintzen I. Hoppenbrouwers, R. Q. Hintzen I. Hoppenbrouwers, Neuteboom, R. F., Zemel, D., van Doorn, P. A., Jacobs, B. C., Munster, E. T. h. L. Van, ter Bruggen, J. P., Bernsen, R., Jongen, P. J. H., de Smet, E. A. A., Tacken, H. F. H., Polman, C., Zwemmer, J., Nielsen, J., Kalkers, N., Kragt, J., Jasperse, B., Willoughby, E., Anderson, N. E., Barber, A., Anderson, T., Parkin, P. J., Fink, J., Avery, S., Mason, D., Kwiecinski, H., Zakrzewska Pniewska, B., Kaminska, A., Podlecka, A., Nojszewska, M., Czlonkowska, A., Zaborski, J., Wicha, W., Kruszewska Ozimowska, J., Darda Ledzion, L., Selmaj, K., Mochecka Thoelke, A., Pentela Nowicka, J., Walczak, A., Stasiolek, M., Stelmasiak, Z., Bartosik Psujek, H., Mitosek Szewczyk, K., Belniak, E., Chyrchel, U., Maciejowski, M., Strzyzewska Lubos, L., Lubos, L., Matusik, E., Maciejek, Z., Niezgodzinska Maciejek, A., Sobczynska, D., Slotala, T., Wawrzyniak, S., Kochanowicz K. Kuczynski, J. Kochanowicz K. Kuczynski, Zimnoch, R., Pryszmont, M., Drozdowski, W., Baniukiewicz, E., Kulakowska, A., Borowik, H., Lewonowska, M., Szczudlik, A., Róg, T., Gryz Kurek, E., Pankiewicz, J., Furgal, J., Kimkowicz, A., Fryze, W., Wierbicki, T., Michalak, L., Kowalewska, J., Swiatkiewicz, J., Hillert, J., Åkesson, E, Fredrikson, S., Diener, P, Olsson, T., Wallström, E., Fpiehl, F. Piehl L. Hopia, Brundin, L., Marta, M., Andersson, M., Lycke, J., Runmarker, B., Malmeström, C., Vaghfeldt, P., Skoog, B., Schluep, M., Bogousslavskyr, J., Du Pasquier, R., Achtnichts, L., Kuhle, J., Buitrago Telez, C., Schläger, R., Naegelin, Y., Eraksoy, M., Bebek, N., Akman Demir, G., Topcuoglu, B., Kurtuncu, M., Istanbul, University, Istanbul:, A. Siva, Saip, S., Altintas, A., Kiyat, A., Sharief, M., Kasti, M., Lim, E. T., Rashid, W., Silber, E., Saldanha, G., Hawkins, C., Mamutse, G., Woolmore, J., Hawkes, C., Findley, L., Dasilva, R., Gunasekara, H., Palace, J., Cader, Z., Littleton, E., Burke, G., Sharrack O. Suliman, B. Sharrack O. Suliman, Klaffke, S., Swash, M., Dhillon, H., Bates, D., Westwood, M., Nichol, P., Barnes, D., Wren, D., Stoy, N., Robertson, N., Pickersgill, T., Pearson, O., Lawthom, C., Young, C., Mills, R., Lecky, B., Ford, C., Katzman, J., Rosenberg, G., Cooper, J., Wrubel, B., Richardson, B., Lynch, S., Ridings, L., Mcvey, A., Nowack, W., Rae Grant, A., Mackin, G. A., Castaldo, J. E., Spikol, L. J., Carter, J., Wingerchuk, D., Caselli, R., Dodick, D., Scarberry, S., Bailly, R., Garnaas, K., Haake, B., Rossman, H., Belkin, M., Boudouris, W. D., Pierce, R. P., Mass, M., Yadav, V., Bourdette, D., Whitham, R. H., Heitzman, D., Martin, A., Greenfield, C. F., Agius, M., Richman, D. P., Vijayan, N., Wheelock, V. L., Reder, A., Arnason, B., Noronha, A., Balabanov, R., Ray, A., Sheremata, W., Delgado, S., Shebert, B., Maldonado, J., Bowen, J., Garden, G. A., Distad, B. J., Carrithers, M., Rizzo, M., Vollmer, T., Reiningerova, J., Guarnaccia, J., Lo, A., Richardson, G. B., Fazekas, F., Enzinger, C., Seifert, T., Storch, M., Strasser Fuchs, S., Berger, T., Dilitz, E., Egg, R., Deisenhammer, F., Decoo, : D, Lampaert, J., Bartholome, E., Bier, J., Stenager, : E., Rasmussen, M., Binzer, M., Shorsh, K., Christensen, M., Soelberg Sørensen, P., Hansen, H. J., Bech, E., Petersen, T., Kirkegaard, M., Eralinna, : J., Ruutiainen, J., Soilu Hänninen, M., Säkö, E., Laaksonen, M., Reunanen, M., Remes, A., Keskinarkaus, I., Moreau, : T., Noblet, M., Rouaud, O., Couvreur, G., Lepage, E., Drapier, S., De Burghgraeve, V., Merienne, M., Cahagne, V., Gout, O., Deschamps, R., Le Canuet, P., Moulignier, A., Vermersch, P., De Seze, J., Stojkovic, T., Griffié, G., Engles, Ferriby, D., Debouverie, M., Pittion Vouyouvitch, S., Lacour, J. C., Lubetzki, C., Youssov, K., Mrejen, S., Charles, P., Yaici, S., Clavelou, P., Aufauvre, D., Renouil Guy, N., Cesaro, P., Degos, F., Benisty, S., Rumbach, L., Decavel, P., Blanc, S., Aubertin, P., Riche, G., Brochet, B., Ouallet, J. C., Anne, O., Menck, : S., Grupe, A., Gutmann, E., Lensch, E., Fucik, E., Heitmann, S., Hartung, H. P., Schröter, M., Kurz, F. M. W., Heidenreich, F., Trebst, C., Pul, R., Hohlfeld, R., Krumbholz, M., Pellkofer, H., Haas, J., Segert, A., Meyer, R., Anagnostou, P., Kabus, C., Poehlau, D., Schneider, K., Hoffmann, V., Zettl, U., Steinhagen, V., Adler, S., Steinbrecher E. Rothenfusser Körber, A. Steinbrecher E. Rothenfusser Körber, Zellner, R., Baum, K., Günther, A., Bläsing, H., Stoll, G., Gold, R., Bayas, A., Kleinschnitz, C., Limmroth, V., Katsarava, Z., Kastrup, O., Haller, P., Stoeve, S., Höbel, D., Oschmann, P., Voigt, K., Burger, C. V., Abramsky, : O., Karusiss, D., Achiron, A., Kishner, I., Stern, Y., Sarove Pinhas, I., Dolev, M., Magalashvili, D., Pozzili, : C., Lenzi, D., Scontrini, A., Millefiorini, E., Buttinelli, C., Gallo, P., Ranzato, F., Tiberio, M., Perini, P., Laroni, Alice, Marrosu, M., Cocco P. Marchi, E. Cocco P. Marchi, Spinicci, G., Massole, S., Mascia, M., Floris, G., Trojano, M., Bellacosa, A., Paolicelli, D., Bosco Zimatore, G., Simone, I. L., Giorelli, M., Di Monte, E., Mancardi, GIOVANNI LUIGI, Pizzorno, M., Murialdo, A., Narciso, E., Capello, A., Comi, G., Martinelli, V., Rodegher, M., Esposito, F., Colombo, B., Rossi, P., Polman, : C. H., Jasperse, M. M. S., Zwemmer, J. N. P., Kragt, J. J., De Smet, E., Tacken, H., Frequin, S. T. F. M., Siegers, H. P., Mauser, H. W., Fernandez Fernandez, : O., León, A., Romero, F., Alonso, A., Tamayo, J., Montalban, X., Nos, C., Pelayo, R., Tellez, N., Rio, J., Tintore, M., Arbizu, T., Romero, L., Moral, E., Martinez, S., Kappos, : L., Wilmes, S., Karabudak, : R., Kurne, A., Erdem, S., Siva, A., Atamer, A., Bilgili, F., Topcular, B., Giovannoni, : G., Lava, : N., Murnane, M., Dentinger, M., Zimmerman, E., Reiss, M., Gupta, V., Scott, T., Brillman, J., Kunschner, L., Wright, D., Perel, A., Babu, A., Rivera, V., Killian, J., Hutton, G., Lai, E., Picone, M., Cadivid, D., Kamin, S., Shanawani, M., Gauthier, S., Morgan, A., Buckle, G., Margolin, D., Kwen, P. L., Garg, N., Munschauer, F., Khatri, B., Rassouli, M., Saxena, V., Ahmed, A., Turner, A., Fox, E., Couch, C., Tyler, R., Horvit, A., Fodor, P., Humphries, S., Wynn, D., Nagar, C., O’Brien, D., Allen, N., Turel, A., Friedenberg, S., Carlson, J., Hosey, J., Crayton, H., Richert, J., Tornatore, C., Sirdofsky, M., Greenstein, J., Shpigel, Y., Mandel, S., Adbelhak, T., Schmerler, M., Zadikoff, C., Rorick, M., Reed, R., Elias, S., Feit, H., Angus, E., Sripathi, N., Herbert, J., Kiprovski, K., Qu, X., Del Bene, M., Mattson, D., Hingtgen, C., Fleck, J., Horak, H., Javerbaum, J., Elmore, R., Garcia, E., Tasch, E., Gruener, G., Celesia, G., Chawla, J., Miller, A., Drexler, E., Keilson, M., Wolintz, R., Drasby, E., Muscat, P., Belden, J., Sullivan, R., Cohen, J., Stone, L., Marrie, R. A., Fox, R., Hughes, B., Babikian, P., Jacoby, M., Doro, J., Puricelli, M., Boudoris, W., Pierce, R., Eggenberger, E., Birbeck, G., Martin, J., Kaufman, D., Stuart, W., English, J. B., Stuart, D. S., Gilbert, R. W., Kaufman, M., Putman, S., Diedrich, A., Follmer, R., Pelletier, D., Waubant, E., Cree, B., Genain, C., Goodin, D., Patwa, H., Rizo, M., Kitaj, M., Blevins, J., Smith, T., Mcgee, F., Honeycutt, W., Brown, M., Isa, A., Nieves Quinones, D., Krupp, L., Smiroldo, J., Zarif, M., Perkins, C., Sumner, A., Fisher, A., Gutierrez, A., Jacoby, R., Svoboda, S., Dorn, D., Groeschel, A., Steingo, B., Kishner, R., Cohen, B., Melen, O., Simuni, T., Zee, P., Cohan, S., Yerby, M., Hendin, B., Levine, T., Tamm, H., Travis, L. H., Freedman, S. M., Tim, R., Ferrell, W., Stefoski, D., Stevens, S., Katsamakis, G., Topel, J., Ko, M., Gelber, D., Fortin, C., Green, B., Logan, W., Carpenter, D., Temple, L., Sadiq, S., Sylvester, A., Sim, G., Mihai, C., Vertino, M., Jubelt, B., Mejico, L., Riskind, P., Cabo, A., Paskavitz, J., Moonis, M., Bashir J. Brockington, K. Bashir J. Brockington, Nicholas, A., Slaughter, R., Archer S. Harik, R. Archer S. Harik, Haddad, N., Pippenger, M. A., Van den Noort, S., Thai, G., Olek, M., Demetriou, M., Shin, R., Calabresi, P., Rus, H., Bever, C., Johnson, K., Sherbert, R., Herndon, R., Uschmann, H., Chandler, A., Markowitz, C., Jacobs, D., Balcer, L., Mitchell, G., Chakravorty, S., Heyman, R., Stauber, Z., Goodman, A., Segal, B., Schwid, S., Samkoff, L., Levin, M., Jacewicz, M., Menkes, D., Pulsinelli, W., Frohman, E., Racke, M., Hawker, K., Ulrich, R., Panitch, H., Hamill, R., Tandon, R., Dulaney, E., Simnad, V., Miller, J., Wooten, G. F., Harrison, M., Doherty, M., Wundes, A., Distad, J., Kachuck, N., Berkovich, R., Burnett, M., Sahai, S., Bandari, D., Weiner, L., Storey, J. R., Beesley, B., Hart, D., Moses, H., Sriram, S., Fang, J., O’Duffy, A., Kita, M., Taylor, L., Elliott, M., Roberts, J., Jeffery, D., Maxwell, S., Lefkowitz, D., Kumar, S., Sinclair, M., Radue, E. W., de Vera, A., Bacelar, O., and Kuster, P.
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Visual analogue scale ,Health Status ,Population ,Pain ,Comorbidity ,Placebo ,Antibodies ,law.invention ,Natalizumab ,Randomized controlled trial ,Quality of life ,Double-Blind Method ,law ,Internal medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Monoclonal ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,education ,Humanized ,education.field_of_study ,Expanded Disability Status Scale ,Neuroscience (all) ,business.industry ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Female ,Patient Satisfaction ,Treatment Outcome ,United States ,Quality of Life ,Multiple sclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Physical therapy ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective To report the relationship between disease activity and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in relapsing multiple sclerosis, and the impact of natalizumab. Methods HRQoL data were available from 2,113 multiple sclerosis patients in natalizumab clinical studies. In the Natalizumab Safety and Efficacy in Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis (AFFIRM) study, patients received natalizumab 300mg (n = 627) or placebo (n = 315); in the Safety and Efficacy of Natalizumab in Combination with Interferon Beta-1a in Patients with Relapsing Remitting Multiple Sclerosis (SENTINEL) study, patients received interferon beta-1a (IFN-β-1a) plus natalizumab 300mg (n = 589), or IFN-β-1a plus placebo (n = 582). The Short Form-36 (SF-36) and a subject global assessment visual analog scale were administered at baseline and weeks 24, 52, and 104. Prespecified analyses included changes from baseline to week 104 in SF-36 and visual analog scale scores. Odds ratios for clinically meaningful improvement or worsening on the SF-36 Physical Component Summary (PCS) and Mental Component Summary were calculated. Results Mean baseline SF-36 scores were significantly less than the general US population and correlated with Expanded Disability Status Scale scores, sustained disability progression, relapse number, and increased volume of brain magnetic resonance imaging lesions. Natalizumab significantly improved SF-36 PCS and Mental Component Summary scores at week 104 in AFFIRM. PCS changes were significantly improved by week 24 and at all subsequent time points. Natalizumab-treated patients in both studies were more likely to experience clinically important improvement and less likely to experience clinically important deterioration on the SF-36 PCS. The visual analog scale also showed significantly improved HRQoL with natalizumab. Interpretation HRQoL was impaired in relapsing multiple sclerosis patients, correlated with severity of disease as measured by neurological ratings or magnetic resonance imaging, and improved significantly with natalizumab. Ann Neurol 2007
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- 2007
13. The incidence and significance of anti-natalizumab antibodies. Results from the AFFIRM and SENTINEL
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Calabresi, Pa, Giovannoni, G, Confavreux, C, Galetta, Sl, Havrdova, E, Hutchinson, M, Kappos, L, Miller, Dh, O'Connor, Pw, Phillips, Jt, Polman, Ch, Radue, Ew, Rudick, Ra, Stuart, Wh, Lublin, Fd, Wajgt, A, Weinstock Guttman, B, Wynn, Dr, Lynn, F, Panzara, Ma, Fazekas, The following investigators participated in the SENTINEL study: F., Enzinger, * C., Seifert, T., Storch, M., Strasser Fuchs, S., Berger, T., Dilitz, * E., Egg, R., Deisenhammer, F., Lampaert, D. Decoo* J., Bier, E. Bartholome* J., Stenager, Denmark: E., Rasmussen, * M., Binzer, M., Ravnborg, M., Soelberg Sørensen, * P., Blinkenberg, M., Petersen, B., Hansen, H. J., Bech, * E., Petersen, T., Kirkegaard, M., Eralinna, J., Ruutiainen, * J., Soilu Hänninen, M., Reunanen, M., Remes, * A., Keskinarkaus, I., Moreau, T., Noblet, * M., Rouaud, O., Couvreur, G., Edan, G., Lepage, * E., Drapier, S., De Burghgraeve, V., Yaouanq, J., Gout, O., Deschamps, * R., Le Canuet, P., Moulignier, A., Vermersch, P., De Seze, * J., Stojkovic, T., Griffié, G., Engles, A., Ferriby, D., Debouverie, M., Pittion Vouyouvitch, * S., Lacour, J. C., Pelletier, J., Feuillet, * L., Suchet, L., Dalecky, A., Tammam, D., Lubetzki, C., Youssov, * K., Mrejen, S., Charles, P., Yaici, S., Clavelou, P., Aufauvre, * D., Renouil Guy, N., Cesaro, P., Degos, * F., Benisty, S., Decavel, L. Rumbach* P., Confavreux, C., Blanc, * S., Aubertin, P., Riche, G., Brochet, B., Ouallet, * J. C., Anne, O., Menck, S., Grupe, * A., Guttman, E., Lensch, E., Fucik, * E., Heitmann, S., Hartung, H. P., Schröter, * M., Kurz, F. M. W., Heidenreich, F., Trebst, * C., Pul, R., Hohlfeld, R., Krumbholz, * M., Pellkofer, H., Haas, J., Segert, * A., Meyer, R., Anagnostou, P., Kabus, C., Poehlau, D., Schneider, * K., Hoffmann, V., Zettl, U., Steinhagen, * V., Adler, S., Steinbrecher, A., Rothenfusser Körber, * E., Zellner, R., Baum, K., Günther, * A., Bläsing, H., Stoll, G., Gold, * R., Bayas, * A., Kleinschnitz, C., Limmroth, V., Katsarava, * Z., Kastrup, O., Haller, P., Stoeve, * S., Höbel, D., Oschmann, P., Voigt, * K., Burger, C. V., Karusiss, O. Abramsky* D., Achiron, A., Kishner, * I., Stern, Y., Sarove Pinhas, I., Dolev, M., Magalashvili, D., Pozzili, C., Lenzi, * D., Scontrini, A., Millefiorini, E., Buttinelli, C., Gallo, Paolo, Ranzato, * F., Tiberio, M., Perini, P., Laroni, A., Marrosu, M., Marchi, * E. Cocco P., Spinicci, G., Massole, S., Mascia, M., Floris, G., Trojano, M., Bellacosa, * A., Paolicelli, D., Bosco Zimatore, G., Simone, I. L., Giorelli, M., Di Monte, E., Mancardi, G., Pizzorno, * M., Murialdo, A., Narciso, E., Capello, A., Comi, G., Martinelli, * V., Rodegher, M., Esposito, F., Colombo, B., Rossi, P., Polman, C. H., Jasperse, * M. M. S., Zwemmer, J. N. P., Nielsen, J., Kragt, J. J., Jongen, P. J. H., De Smet, * E., Tacken, H., Frequin, S. T. F. M., Siegers, * H. P., Mauser, H. W., Fernandez Fernandez, O., León, * A., Romero, F., Alonso, A., Tamayo, J., Montalban, X., Nos, * C., Pelayo, R., Tellez, N., Rio, J., Tintore, M., Arbizu, T., Romero, * L., Moral, E., Martinez, S., Kappos, L., Achtnichts, * L., Wilmes, S., Karabudak, R., Kurne, * A., Erdem, S., Siva, A., Saip, * S., Altintas, A., Atamer, A., Eraksoy, M., Bilgili, * F., Topcular, B., Lim, G. Giovannoni* E. T., Lava, N., Murnane, * M., Dentinger, M., Zimmerman, E., Gupta, M. Reiss* V., Scott, T., Brillman, * J., Kunschner, L., Wright, D., Babu, A. Perel* A., Rivera, V., Killian, * J., Hutton, G., Lai, E., Picone, Bernard W. M., Cadivid, * D., Kamin, S., Shanawani, M., Gauthier, S., Morgan, * A., Buckle, G., Margolin, D., Weinstock Guttman, B., Kwen, * P. L., Garg, N., Munschauer, F., Khatri, B., Rassouli, * M., Saxena, V., Ahmed, A., Turner, A., Fox, E., Couch, * C., Tyler, R., Horvit, A., Humphries, P. Fodor* S., Wynn, D., Nagar, * C., O’Brien, D., Allen, N., Turel, A., Friedenberg, * S., Carlson, J., Hosey, J., Crayton, H., Richert, * J., Tornatore, C., Sirdofsky, M., Greenstein, J., Shpigel, * Y., Mandel, S., Adbelhak, T., Schmerler, M., Zadikoff, * C., Rorick, M., Reed, R., Elias, S., Feit, * H., Angus, E., Sripathi, N., Herbert, J., Kiprovski, * K., Qu, X., Del Bene, M., Mattson, D., Hingtgen, * C., Fleck, J., Horak, H., Javerbaum, J., Elmore, * R., Garcia, E., Tasch, E., Gruener, G., Celesia, * G., Chawla, J., Miller, A., Drexler, * E., Keilson, M., Wolintz, R., Drasby, E., Muscat, * P., Belden, J., Sullivan, R., Cohen, J., Stone, * L., Marrie, R. A., Fox, R., Hughes, B., Babikian, * P., Jacoby, M., Doro, J., Puricelli, M., Rossman, H., Boudoris, * W., Belkin, M., Pierce, R., Eggenberger, E., Birbeck, * G., Martin, J., Kaufman, D., Stuart, W., English, * J. B., Stuart, D. S., Gilbert, R. W., Kaufman, MS M., Putman, . *. S., Diedrich, A., Follmer, R., Pelletier, D., Waubant, * E., Cree, B., Genain, C., Goodin, D., Guarnaccia, J., Patwa, * H., Rizo, M., Kitaj, M., Blevins, Neurolo J., Smith, * T., Mcgee, F., Honeycutt, W., Brown, * M., Isa, A., Nieves Quinones, D., Krupp, L., Smiroldo, * J., Zarif, M., Perkins, C., Sumner, A., Fisher, A., Gutierrez, A., Jacoby, R., Svoboda, * S., Dorn, D., Groeschel, A., Kishner, B. Steingo* R., Cohen, B., Melen, * O., Simuni, T., Zee, P., Yerby, S. Cohan* M., Hendin, B., Levine, * T., Tamm, H., Travis, L. H., Freedman, S. M., Tim, * R., Ferrell, W., Stefoski, D., Stevens, * S., Katsamakis, G., Topel, J., Ko, M., Fortin, D. Gelber* C., Green, B., Logan, * W., Carpenter, D., Temple, L., Sadiq, S., Sylvester, * A., Sim, G., Mihai, C., Vertino, * M., Jubelt, B., Mejico, L., Phillips, J. T., Martin, * A., Heitzman, D., Greenfield, C. F., Riskind, P., Cabo, * A., Paskavitz, J., Moonis, M., Bashir, K., Brockington, * J., Nicholas, A., Slaughter, R., Archer, R., Harik, * S., Haddad, N., Pippenger, M. A., Van den Noort, S., Thai, * G., Olek, M., Demetriou, M., Shin, R., Cala bresi, * P., Rus, H., Bever, C., Johnson, K., Sheremata, W., Delgado, * S., Sherbert, R., Herndon, R., Uschmann, * H., Chandler, A., Markowitz, C., Jacobs, * D., Balcer, L., Mitchell, G., Chakra vorty, * S., Heyman, R., Stauber, Z., Goodman, A., Segal, * B., Schwid, S., Samkoff, L., Levin, M., Jacewicz, * M., Menkes, D., Pulsinelli, W., Frohman, E., Racke, * M., Hawker, K., Ulrich, R., Panitch, H., Hamill, * R., Tandon, R., Dulaney, E., Simnad, V., Miller, * J., Wooten, G. F., Harrison, M., Bowen, J., Doherty, * M., Wundes, A., Garden, G. A., Distad, J., Kachuck, N., Berkovich, * R., Burnett, M., Sahai, S., Bandari, D., Weiner, L., Storey, J. R., Beesley, * B., Hart, D., Moses, H., Sriram, * S., Fang, J., O’Duffy, A., Kita, M., Taylor, * L., Elliott, M., Roberts, J., Jeffery, D., Maxwell, * S., Lefkowitz, D., Kumar, S., and Sinclair, M.
- Published
- 2007
14. Natalizumab plus interferon beta-1a for relapsing multiple sclerosis
- Author
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Richard, A. Rudick, William, H. Stuart, Peter, A. Calabresi, Christian, Confavreux, Steven, L. Galetta, Ernst Wilhelm, Radue, Fred, D. Lublin, Bianca, Weinstock Guttman, Daniel, R. Wynn, Frances, Lynn, Msc, M. S. c., Michael, A. Panzara, Alfred, W. Sandrock, For, the SENTINEL Investigators including: F. Fazekas, Enzinger, C., Seifert, T., Storch, M., Strasser Fuchs, S., Berger, T., Dilitz, E., Egg, R., Eisenhammer, F., Decoo J. Lampaert, D. Decoo J. Lampaert, Bartholome J. Bier, E. Bartholome J. Bier, Stenager, E., Rasmussen, M., Binzer, M., Shorsh, K., Christensen, M., Ravnborg, M., Soelberg Sørensen, P., Blinkenberg, M., Petersen, B., Hansen, H. J., Bech, E., Petersen, T., Kirkegaard, M., Eralinna, J., Ruutiainen, J., Soilu Hänninen, M., Säkö, E., Laaksonen, M., Reunanen, M., Remes, A., Keskinarkaus, I., Moreau, T., Noblet, M., Rouaud, O., Couvreur, G., Edan, G., Lepage, E., Drapier, S., De Burghgraeve, V., Yaouanq, J., Merienne, M., Cahagne, V., Gout, O., Deschamps, R., Le Canuet, P., Moulignier, A., Vermersch, P., De Seze, J., Stojkovic, T., Griffié, G., Engles, A., Ferriby, D., Debouverie, M., Pittionvouyouvitch, S., Lacour, J. C., Pelletier, J., Feuillet, L., Suchet, L., Dalecky, A., Tammam, D., Lubetzki, C., Youssov, K., Mrejen, S., Charles, P., Yaici, S., Clavelou, P., Aufauvre, D., Renouil Guy, N., Cesaro, P., Degos, F., Benisty, S., Rumbach P. Decavel, L. Rumbach P. Decavel, Confavreux, C., Blanc, S., Aubertin, P., Riche, G., Brochet, B., Ouallet, J. C., Anne, O., Menck, S., Grupe, A., Guttman, E., Lensch, E., Fucik, E., Heitmann, S., Hartung, H. P., Schröter, M., Kurz, F. M. W., Heidenreich, F., Trebst, C., Pul, R., Hohlfeld, R., Krumbholz, M., Pellkofer, H., Haas, J., Segert, A., Meyer, R., Anagnostou, P., Kabus, C., Poehlau, D., Schneider, K., Hoffmann, V., Zettl, U., Steinhagen, V., Adler, S., Steinbrecher, A., Rothenfusser Körber, E., Zellner, R., Baum, K., Günther, A., Bläsing, H., Stoll, G., Gold, R., Bayas, A., Kleinschnitz, C., Limmroth, V., Katsarava, Z., Kastrup, O., Haller, P., Stoeve, S., Höbel, D., Oschmann, P., Voigt, K., Burger, C. V., Abramsky D. Karusiss, O. Abramsky D. Karusiss, Achiron, A., Kishner, I., Stern, Y., Sarove Pinhas, I., Dolev, M., Magalashvili, D., Pozzili, C., Lenzi, D., Scontrini, A., Millefiorini, E., Buttinelli, C., Gallo, P., Ranzato, F., Tiberio, M., Perini, P., Laroni, Alice, Marrosu, M., Cocco P. Marchi, E. Cocco P. Marchi, Spinicci, G., Massole, S., Mascia, M., Floris, G., Trojano, M., Bellacosa, A., Paolicelli, D., Bosco Zimatore, G., Simone, I. L., Giorelli, M., Di Monte, E., Mancardi, GIOVANNI LUIGI, Pizzorno, M., Murialdo, A., Narciso, E., Capello, A., Comi, G., Martinelli, V., Rodegher, M., Esposito, F., Colombo, B., Rossi, P., Polman, C. H., Jasperse, M. M. S., Zwemmer, J. N. P., Nielsen, J., Kragt, J. J., Jongen, P. J. H., De Smet, E., Tacken, H., Frequin, S. T. F. M., Siegers, H. P., Mauser, H. W., Fern ez Fern ez, O., León, A., Romero, F., Alonso, A., Tamayo, J., Montalban, X., Nos, C., Pelayo, R., Tellez, N., Rio, J., Tintore, M., Arbizu, T., Romero, L., Moral, E., Martinez, S., Kappos, L., Achtnichts, L., Wilmes, S., Karabudak, R., Kurne, A., Erdem, S., Siva, A., Saip, S., Altintas, A., Atamer, A., Eraksoy, M., Bilgili, F., Topcular, B., Giovannoni ET Lim, G. Giovannoni E. T. Lim, Lava, N., Murnane, M., Dentinger, M., Zimmerman, E., Reiss V. Gupta, M. Reiss V. Gupta, Scott, T., Brillman, J., Kunschner, L., Wright, D., Perel A. Babu, A. Perel A. Babu, Rivera, V., Killian, J., Hutton, G., Lai, E., Picone, M., Cadivid, D., Kamin, S., Shanawani, M., Gauthier, S., Morgan, A., Buckle, G., Margolin, D., Weinstock Guttman, B., Kwen, P. L., Garg, N., Munschauer, F., Khatri, B., Rassouli, M., Saxena, V., Ahmed, A., Turner, A., Fox, E., Couch, C., Tyler, R., Horvit, A., Fodor S. Humphries, P. Fodor S. Humphries, Wynn, D., Nagar, C., O’Brien, D., Allen, N., Turel, A., Friedenberg, S., Carlson, J., Hosey, J., Crayton, H., Richert, J., Tornatore, C., Sirdofsky, M., Greenstein, J., Shpigel, Y., S. M, El, Adbelhak, T., Schmerler, M., Zadikoff, C., Rorick, M., Reed, R., Elias, S., Feit, H., Angus, E., Sripathi, N., Herbert, J., Kiprovski, K., Qu, X., Del Bene, M., Mattson, D., Hingtgen, C., Fleck, J., Horak, H., Kaiser, J. Javerbaum, Elmore, R., Garcia, E., Tasch, E., Gruener, G., Celesia, G., Chawla, J., Miller, A., Drexler, E., Keilson, M., Wolintz, R., Drasby, E., Muscat, P., Belden, J., Sullivan, R., Cohen, J., Stone, L., Marrie, R. A., Fox, R., Hughes, B., Babikian, P., Jacoby, M., Doro, J., Puricelli, M., Rossman, H., Boudoris, W., Belkin, M., Pierce, R., Eggenberger, E., Birbeck, G., Martin, J., Kaufman, D., Stuart, W., English, J. B., Stuart, D. S., Gilbert, R. W., Kaufman, M., Putman, S., Diedrich, A., Follmer, R., Pelletier, D., Waubant, E., Cree, B., Genain, C., Goodin, D., Guarnaccia, J., Patwa, H., Rizo, M., Kitaj, M., Blevins, J., Smith, T., Mcgee, F., Honeycutt, W., Brown, M., Isa, A., Nieves Quinones, D., Krupp, L., Smiroldo, J., Zarif, M., Perkins, C., Sumner, A., Fisher, A., Gutierrez, A., Jacoby, R., Svoboda, S., Dorn, D., Groeschel, A., Steingo R. Kishner, B. Steingo R. Kishner, Cohen, B., Melen, O., Simuni, T., Zee, P., Cohan M. Yerby, S. Cohan M. Yerby, Hendin, B., Levine, T., Tamm, H., Travis, L. H., Freedman, S. M., Tim, R., Ferrell, W., Stefoski, D., Stevens, S., Katsamakis, G., Topel, J., KoD Gelber C. Fortin, M. K. o. D. Gelber C. Fortin, Green, B., Logan, W., Carpenter, D., Temple, L., Sadiq, S., Sylvester, A., Sim, G., Mihai, C., Vertino, M., Jubelt, B., Mejico, L., Phillips, J. T., Martin, A., Heitzman, D., Greenfield, C. F., Riskind, P., Cabo, A., Paskavitz, J., Moonis, M., Bashir, K., Brockington, J., Nicholas, A., Slaughter, R., Archer, R., Harik, S., Haddad, N., Pippenger, M. A., Van den Noort, S., Thai, G., Olek, M., Demetriou, M., Shin, R., Calabresi, P., Rus, H., Bever, C., Johnson, K., Sheremata, W., Delgado, S., Sherbert, R., Herndon, R., Uschmann, H., Ch ler, A., Markowitz, C., Jacobs, D., Balcer, L., Mitchell, G., Chakravorty, S., Heyman, R., Stauber, Z., Goodman, A., Segal, B., Schwid, S., Samkoff, L., Levin, M., Jacewicz, M., Menkes, D., Pulsinelli, W., Frohman, E., Racke, M., Hawker, K., Ulrich, R., Panitch, H., Hamill, R., R. T, On, Dulaney, E., Simnad, V., Miller, J., Wooten, G. F., Harrison, M., Bowen, J., Doherty, M., Wundes, A., Garden, G. A., Distad, J., Kachuck, N., Berkovich, R., Burnett, M., Sahai, S., Ari, D. B, Weiner, L., Storey, J. R., Beesley, B., Hart, D., Moses, H., Sriram, S., Fang, J., O’Duffy, A., Kita, M., Taylor, L., Elliott, M., Roberts, J., Jeffery, D., Maxwell, S., Lefkowitz, D., Kumar, S., Sinclair EW Radue, M. S. i. n. c. l. a. i. r. E. W. Radue, de Vera, A., Bacelar, O., Kuster, P., and Kappos, L. .
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Adult ,Male ,Infusions ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Adolescent ,Combination therapy ,Integrin alpha4 ,Peripheral edema ,Progressive Multifocal ,Relapsing-Remitting ,Gastroenterology ,Antibodies ,Natalizumab ,Drug Therapy ,Leukoencephalopathy ,Internal medicine ,Monoclonal ,Secondary Prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Humanized ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Expanded Disability Status Scale ,business.industry ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Brain ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Disease Progression ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Interferon-beta ,JC Virus ,Leukoencephalopathy, Progressive Multifocal ,Middle Aged ,Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting ,Medicine (all) ,Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy ,Multiple sclerosis ,Hazard ratio ,Interferon beta-1a ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Combination ,medicine.symptom ,Intravenous ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Interferon beta is used to modify the course of relapsing multiple sclerosis. Despite interferon beta therapy, many patients have relapses. Natalizumab, an α 4 integrin antagonist, appeared to be safe and effective alone and when added to interferon beta-1a in preliminary studies. Methods We randomly assigned 1171 patients who, despite interferon beta-1a therapy, had had at least one relapse during the 12-month period before randomization to receive continued interferon beta-1a in combination with 300 mg of natalizumab (589 patients) or placebo (582 patients) intravenously every 4 weeks for up to 116 weeks. The primary end points were the rate of clinical relapse at 1 year and the cumulative probability of disability progression sustained for 12 weeks, as measured by the Expanded Disability Status Scale, at 2 years. Results Combination therapy resulted in a 24 percent reduction in the relative risk of sustained disability progression (hazard ratio, 0.76; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.61 to 0.96; P = 0.02). Kaplan–Meier estimates of the cumulative probability of progression at two years were 23 percent with combination therapy and 29 percent with interferon beta-1a alone. Combination therapy was associated with a lower annualized rate of relapse over a two-year period than was interferon beta-1a alone (0.34 vs. 0.75, P
- Published
- 2006
15. Inflammation and neuropathic attacks in hereditary brachial plexus neuropathy
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Klein, C, Dyck, P, Friedenberg, S, Burns, T, Windebank, A, Klein, C, Dyck, P, Friedenberg, S, Burns, T, and Windebank, A
- Abstract
Objective: To study the role of mechanical, infectious, and inflammatory factors inducing neuropathic attacks in hereditary brachial plexus neuropathy (HBPN), an autosomal dominant disorder characterised by attacks of pain and weakness, atrophy, and sensory alterations of the shoulder girdle and upper limb muscles.
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- 2002
16. How to remove an imbedded fishhook in five seconds without really trying
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Friedenberg S
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business.industry ,Medicine ,Humans ,Computer vision ,General Medicine ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Foreign Bodies - Published
- 1971
17. Empowering Health Care Providers: A Collaborative Approach to Enhance Financial Performance and Productivity in Clinical Practice.
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Friedenberg S, Stefanowicz E, Frymoyer T, Schirmer CM, Holland NR, and Dempsey T
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Background: The combination of inadequate financial training, limited benchmarks, and mindset contribute to many physicians prioritizing revenue below quality, outcomes, and safety. This creates a challenge as hospital administrators aim to motivate clinicians to improve RVU generation and increase revenue., Recent Findings: Creating physician/administrator teams that defines and explores the gap between observed and expected financial performance in parallel with appreciating the physician's practice preferences can create new opportunities for billing. The proposed 3 phase approach emphasizes nonjudgmental communication, education and partnership. The most common and effective opportunities for improvement include billing optimization, scheduling and system infrastructure modifications., Implications for Practice: As reimbursement decrease, balancing revenue generation with physician satisfaction has become paramount. Promoting data drive bidirectional communication can lead to identifying previously unrecognized billing opportunities where change is driven by providers rather than by 1-dimensional institutional goals., Competing Interests: The authors report no relevant disclosures. Full disclosure form information provided by the authors is available with the full text of this article at Neurology.org/cp., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2024
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18. Using Design Thinking to Understand the Reason for Headache Referrals and Reduce Referral Rates.
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Patel AD, Sponenberg M, Webster L, Cole S, Stefanowicz E, Dinko JA, Seeley B, and Friedenberg S
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Background: The demand for neurology services exceeds the current supply. We convened multiple stakeholders to learn what drives our primary care providers (PCPs) to refer patients with headache to our neurology practice. This information guided a collaborative effort to evaluate the impact of an electronic health record (EHR) headache tool on care delivery in our PCP clinics., Recent Findings: Neurology referrals and MRI ordering declined by 77% and 35%, respectively, after the release of the EHR tool for an estimated savings of $207,600 over 3 months. PCPs prescribing habits minimally changed., Implications for Practice: Electronically embedding a neurologist's knowledge in our PCP office was an effective way to shape the demand for headache consultation. By further leveraging stakeholder collaboration, we plan to improve the tool and disseminate it across our health system to reduce headache burden and health care costs., Competing Interests: S. Friedenberg is supported by a Geisinger Health Plan Grant for headache research and an American Medical Association grant. Full disclosure form information provided by the authors is available with the full text of this article at Neurology.org/cp.TAKE-HOME POINTSDespite well-established diagnostic criteria and evidence-based treatments, undertreated primary headache disorders are the most common reason for referral to neurology.Primary care providers refer headache patients to neurologists for assistance with diagnosis and management, at the patient's request and to compensate for time constraints.A design thinking approach helps bring together multiple perspectives, creates local champions, and develops solutions to serve all stakeholders.A tool that puts the neurologist's skill set in the room with a primary care provider reduced referrals to neurology and MRI orders. It did not change the number of preventative or abortive medications prescribed to patients.Design thinking allows for identification of the root cause of a problem and opens the door for future improvements based on data., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2024
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19. Impact of an Electronic Health Record-Based Interruptive Alert Among Patients With Headaches Seen in Primary Care: Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Pradhan A, Wright EA, Hayduk VA, Berhane J, Sponenberg M, Webster L, Anderson H, Park S, Graham J, and Friedenberg S
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Background: Headaches, including migraines, are one of the most common causes of disability and account for nearly 20%-30% of referrals from primary care to neurology. In primary care, electronic health record-based alerts offer a mechanism to influence health care provider behaviors, manage neurology referrals, and optimize headache care., Objective: This project aimed to evaluate the impact of an electronic alert implemented in primary care on patients' overall headache management., Methods: We conducted a stratified cluster-randomized study across 38 primary care clinic sites between December 2021 to December 2022 at a large integrated health care delivery system in the United States. Clinics were stratified into 6 blocks based on region and patient-to-health care provider ratios and then 1:1 randomized within each block into either the control or intervention. Health care providers practicing at intervention clinics received an interruptive alert in the electronic health record. The primary end point was a change in headache burden, measured using the Headache Impact Test 6 scale, from baseline to 6 months. Secondary outcomes included changes in headache frequency and intensity, access to care, and resource use. We analyzed the difference-in-differences between the arms at follow-up at the individual patient level., Results: We enrolled 203 adult patients with a confirmed headache diagnosis. At baseline, the average Headache Impact Test 6 scores in each arm were not significantly different (intervention: mean 63, SD 6.9; control: mean 61.8, SD 6.6; P=.21). We observed a significant reduction in the headache burden only in the intervention arm at follow-up (3.5 points; P=.009). The reduction in the headache burden was not statistically different between groups (difference-in-differences estimate -1.89, 95% CI -5 to 1.31; P=.25). Similarly, secondary outcomes were not significantly different between groups. Only 11.32% (303/2677) of alerts were acted upon., Conclusions: The use of an interruptive electronic alert did not significantly improve headache outcomes. Low use of alerts by health care providers prompts future alterations of the alert and exploration of alternative approaches., (© Apoorva Pradhan, Eric A Wright, Vanessa A Hayduk, Juliana Berhane, Mallory Sponenberg, Leeann Webster, Hannah Anderson, Siyeon Park, Jove Graham, Scott Friedenberg. Originally published in JMIR Medical Informatics (https://medinform.jmir.org).)
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- 2024
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20. A novel mutation of the CLCN1 gene in a cat with myotonia congenita: Diagnosis and treatment.
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Woelfel C, Meurs K, Friedenberg S, DeBruyne N, and Olby NJ
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- Animals, Cats, Chloride Channels genetics, Electromyography veterinary, Exons, Male, Mutation, Cat Diseases diagnosis, Cat Diseases drug therapy, Cat Diseases genetics, Myotonia Congenita diagnosis, Myotonia Congenita drug therapy, Myotonia Congenita genetics, Myotonia Congenita veterinary
- Abstract
Case Description: A 10-month-old castrated male domestic longhair cat was evaluated for increasing frequency of episodic limb rigidity., Clinical Findings: The cat presented for falling over and lying recumbent with its limbs in extension for several seconds when startled or excited. Upon examination, the cat had hypertrophied musculature, episodes of facial spasm, and a short-strided, stiff gait., Diagnostics: Electromyography (EMG) identified spontaneous discharges that waxed and waned in amplitude and frequency, consistent with myotonic discharges. A high impact 8-base pair (bp) deletion across the end of exon 3 and intron 3 of the chloride voltage-gated channel 1 (CLCN1) gene was identified using whole genome sequencing., Treatment and Outcome: Phenytoin treatment was initiated at 3 mg/kg po q24 h and resulted in long-term improvement., Clinical Relevance: This novel mutation within the CLCN1 gene is a cause of myotonia congenita in cats and we report for the first time its successful treatment., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine.)
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- 2022
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21. A mutation in MTM1 causes X-Linked myotubular myopathy in Boykin spaniels.
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Olby NJ, Friedenberg S, Meurs K, DeProspero D, Guevar J, Lau J, Yost O, Guo LT, and Shelton GD
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- Animals, Dogs, Male, Pedigree, Phenotype, Myopathies, Structural, Congenital genetics, Myopathies, Structural, Congenital pathology, Myopathies, Structural, Congenital physiopathology, Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Non-Receptor genetics
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to report the findings of clinical and genetic evaluation of a 3-month old male Boykin spaniel (the proband) that presented with progressive weakness. The puppy underwent a physical and neurological examination, serum biochemistry and complete blood cell count, electrophysiological testing, muscle biopsy and whole genome sequencing. Clinical evaluation revealed generalized neuromuscular weakness with tetraparesis and difficulty holding the head up and a dropped jaw. There was diffuse spontaneous activity on electromyography, most severe in the cervical musculature. Nerve conduction studies were normal, the findings were interpreted as consistent with a myopathy. Skeletal muscle was grossly abnormal on biopsy and there were necklace fibers and abnormal triad structure localization on histopathology, consistent with myotubular myopathy. Whole genome sequencing revealed a premature stop codon in exon 13 of MTM1 (ChrX: 118,903,496 C > T, c.1467C>T, p.Arg512X). The puppy was humanely euthanized at 5 months of age. The puppy's dam was heterozygous for the variant, and 3 male puppies from a subsequent litter all of which died by 2 weeks of age were hemizygous for the variant. This naturally occurring mutation in Boykin spaniels causes a severe form of X-linked myotubular myopathy, comparable to the human counterpart., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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22. Genome-wide association analysis in West Highland White Terriers with atopic dermatitis.
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Agler CS, Friedenberg S, Olivry T, Meurs KM, and Olby NJ
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- Animals, Cohort Studies, Dermatitis, Atopic genetics, Dogs, Female, Genome-Wide Association Study veterinary, Genotyping Techniques veterinary, Male, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Dermatitis, Atopic veterinary, Dog Diseases genetics
- Abstract
Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common disease of dogs and humans. In both species, the interplay of genetic and environmental factors affect disease expression. In dogs with AD, differences in the breed studied and in their geographical origin have led to heterogeneity in genetic association and while different loci have been identified, a causative genetic mutation has not. We hypothesized that AD could be mapped in a large cohort of rigorously phenotyped, geographically restricted West Highland White Terriers (WHWT), a breed with a high prevalence of the disease., Objectives: A) Collect phenotypes and DNA from a large cohort of WHWT born in the USA. B) Perform a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for AD in these dogs to identify associated regions and genes of interest. C) Sequence genes of interest to identify pathologic variants., Methods: We collected DNA from 96 WHWT with AD and 87 controls from the same breed. DNA was isolated and dogs were genotyped using the Illumina CanineHD BeadChip. A GWAS was performed using EMMAX and associated regions were examined for genes of interest. Genes with possible relevance to AD were examined more closely in two affected and two normal WHWT using next-generation sequencing. Variants in these genes that were unique to the two affected WHWT were compared to a database of variants derived from whole genome sequencing of 200 non-WHWT dogs across 33 additional breeds., Results: The GWAS identified a 2.7 Mb genomic region on CFA3 that included 37 genes. There was a missense variant in the F2R gene in both affected dogs but this variant was also found in 35 dogs in 9 breeds in the database of whole genome sequences for whom the phenotype regarding atopic dermatitis was unknown., Conclusions: Atopic dermatitis in WHWT is associated with a region on CFA3 that contains several candidate genes. Of these, a homozygous variant in the F2R gene present in multiple breeds that also suffer from AD warrants further evaluation., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Evaluation of genes associated with human myxomatous mitral valve disease in dogs with familial myxomatous mitral valve degeneration.
- Author
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Meurs KM, Friedenberg SG, Williams B, Keene BW, Atkins CE, Adin D, Aona B, DeFrancesco T, Tou S, and Mackay T
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA blood, Dogs, Heart Valve Diseases genetics, Humans, Mitral Valve Prolapse genetics, Mutation, Species Specificity, Whole Genome Sequencing veterinary, Dog Diseases genetics, Heart Valve Diseases veterinary, Mitral Valve
- Abstract
Myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) is the most common heart disease in the dog. It is believed to be heritable in Cavalier King Charles spaniels (CKCS) and Dachshunds. Myxomatous mitral valve disease is a familial disease in human beings as well and genetic mutations have been associated with its development. We hypothesized that a genetic mutation associated with the development of the human form of MMVD was associated with the development of canine MMVD. DNA was isolated from blood samples from 10 CKCS and 10 Dachshunds diagnosed with MMVD, and whole genome sequences from each animal were obtained. Variant calling from whole genome sequencing data was performed using a standardized bioinformatics pipeline for all samples. After filtering, the canine genes orthologous to the human genes known to be associated with MMVD were identified and variants were assessed for likely pathogenic implications. No variant was found in any of the genes evaluated that was present in least eight of 10 affected CKCS or Dachshunds. Although mitral valve disease in the CKCS and Dachshund is a familial disease, we did not identify genetic cause in the genes responsible for the human disease in the dogs studied here., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Child advocacy center based group treatment for child sexual abuse.
- Author
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Hubel GS, Campbell C, West T, Friedenberg S, Schreier A, Flood MF, and Hansen DJ
- Subjects
- Caregivers, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Treatment Outcome, Child Abuse, Sexual diagnosis, Child Abuse, Sexual therapy, Child Advocacy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Psychotherapy, Group
- Abstract
The present study examines initial symptom presentation among participants, outcomes, and social validity for a group treatment for child sexual abuse delivered at a child advocacy center. Participants were 97 children and their nonoffending caregivers who were referred to Project SAFE (Sexual Abuse Family Education), a standardized, 12-week cognitive-behavioral group treatment for families who have experienced child sexual abuse. Sixty-four percent of children presented with clinically significant symptoms on at least one measure with established clinical cutoffs. Caregivers of children who presented with clinically significant symptoms reported more distress about their competence as caregivers. Children who presented as subclinical were more likely to have experienced intrafamilial sexual abuse. Posttreatment results indicated significant improvements in functioning for all children who participated in treatment, with greater improvements reported for children who initially presented with clinically significant symptoms. Overall, the program was rated favorably on the posttreatment evaluation of social validity.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The long (and winding) road to gene discovery for canine hip dysplasia.
- Author
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Zhu L, Zhang Z, Friedenberg S, Jung SW, Phavaphutanon J, Vernier-Singer M, Corey E, Mateescu R, Dykes N, Sandler J, Acland G, Lust G, and Todhunter R
- Subjects
- Animals, Breeding, Chromosome Mapping, Dogs genetics, Genotype, Hip Joint diagnostic imaging, Hip Joint pathology, Microsatellite Repeats, Phenotype, Quantitative Trait Loci, Radiography, Hip Dysplasia, Canine genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
- Abstract
Hip dysplasia is a common inherited trait of dogs that results in secondary osteoarthritis. In this article the methods used to uncover the mutations contributing to this condition are reviewed, beginning with hip phenotyping. Coarse, genome-wide, microsatellite-based screens of pedigrees of greyhounds and dysplastic Labrador retrievers were used to identify linked quantitative trait loci (QTL). Fine-mapping across two chromosomes (CFA11 and 29) was employed using single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping. Power analyses and preferential selection of dogs for ongoing SNP-based genotyping is described with the aim of refining the QTL intervals to 1-2 megabases on these and several additional chromosomes prior to candidate gene screening. The review considers how a mutation or a genetic marker such as a SNP or haplotype of SNPs might be combined with pedigree and phenotype information to create a 'breeding value' that could improve the accuracy of predicting a dog's hip conformation.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Migraine-associated seizure: a case of reversible MRI abnormalities and persistent nondominant hemisphere syndrome.
- Author
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Friedenberg S and Dodick DW
- Subjects
- Anticonvulsants therapeutic use, Brain pathology, Epilepsy, Generalized diagnosis, Epilepsy, Generalized drug therapy, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Migraine Disorders prevention & control, Valproic Acid therapeutic use, Epilepsy, Generalized etiology, Migraine Disorders complications
- Abstract
The complex relationship between migraine and epilepsy is highlighted by the occurrence of a seizure during a migraine attack without aura. This phenomenon, referred to as migralepsy, suggests an inherent overlap in the underlying pathophysiology of these events. We report the case of a patient who had a generalized seizure, persistent nondominant hemisphere syndrome, and reversible magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities during a prolonged migraine attack without aura.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Spectroscopic and kinetic properties of unphosphorylated rat hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase expressed in Escherichia coli. Comparison of resting and activated states.
- Author
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Kappock TJ, Harkins PC, Friedenberg S, and Caradonna JP
- Subjects
- Allosteric Regulation, Animals, Blotting, Western, Chromatography, Gel, Chromatography, Ion Exchange, Cloning, Molecular, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Enzyme Activation, Escherichia coli, Gene Expression, Kinetics, Lysophosphatidylcholines pharmacology, Macromolecular Substances, Molecular Weight, Phenylalanine Hydroxylase isolation & purification, Phosphorylation, Plasmids, Rats, Recombinant Proteins chemistry, Recombinant Proteins isolation & purification, Recombinant Proteins metabolism, Spectrometry, Fluorescence, Spectrophotometry, Thermodynamics, Liver enzymology, Phenylalanine Hydroxylase chemistry, Phenylalanine Hydroxylase metabolism, Protein Conformation
- Abstract
The non-heme iron-dependent metalloenzyme, rat hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase (EC 1.14.16.1; phenylalanine 4-monooxygenase (PAH) was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity, allowing a detailed comparison of the kinetic, hydrodynamic, and spectroscopic properties of its allosteric states. The homotetrameric recombinant enzyme, which is highly active and contains 0.7-0.8 iron atoms per subunit, is identical to the native enzyme in several properties: Km, 6-methyltetrahydropterin = 61 microM and L-Phe = 170 microM; Vmax = 9 s-1 (compared to 45 microM, 180 microM, and 13 s-1 for the rat hepatic enzyme). L-Phe and lysolecithin treatment induce the rPAHT-->rPAHR (where r is recombinant) allosteric transformation necessary for rPAH activity. Characteristic changes in the fluorescence spectra, increased hydrophobicity, a large activation energy barrier, and a 10% volume increase of the tetrameric structure are consistent with a significant reorganization of the protein following allosteric activation. However, optical and EPR spectroscopic data suggest that only minor changes occur in the primary coordination sphere (carboxylate/histidine/water) of the catalytic iron center. Detailed steady state kinetic investigations, using 6-methyltetrahydropterin as cofactor and lysolecithin as activator, indicate rPAH follows a sequential mechanism. A catalytic Arrhenius Eact of 14.6 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol subunit was determined from temperature-dependent stopped-flow kinetics data. rPAH inactivates during L-Phe hydroxylation with a half-life of 4.3 min at 25 degrees C, corresponding to an Arrhenius Eact of 10 +/- 1 kcal/mol subunit for the inactivation process. Catechol binding (2.4 x 10(6) M-1) is shown to occur only at catalytically competent iron sites. Ferrous rPAH binds NO, giving rise to an ST = 3/2 spin system.
- Published
- 1995
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28. Joint congruence. A correlation of joint congruence and thickness of articular cartilage in dogs.
- Author
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Simon WH, Friedenberg S, and Richardson S
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomechanical Phenomena, Cartilage, Articular physiology, Dogs, Forelimb, Hindlimb, Hip Joint physiology, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Joint Diseases physiopathology, Joints physiopathology, Shoulder Joint physiology, Stress, Mechanical, Cartilage, Articular anatomy & histology, Joints physiology
- Published
- 1973
29. Tobias George Smollett; pamphleteer, playwright and proctologist.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Colorectal Surgery, Famous Persons, History, 18th Century
- Published
- 1957
30. The therapeutic test a neglected diagnostic tool.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Humans, Diagnosis
- Published
- 1949
31. DID SHAKESPEARE DESCRIBE ANGINA PECTORIS?
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Humans, Angina Pectoris, Medicine, Medicine in Literature, Publications
- Published
- 1964
32. Primary splenic neutropenia.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S and COTTON RS Jr
- Subjects
- Humans, Agranulocytosis pathology, Disease, Neutropenia, Spleen, Splenic Diseases, Splenomegaly
- Published
- 1951
33. Wegener's granulomatosis. Report of a case.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Humans, Blood Vessels, Disease, Granuloma, Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis, Medical Records, Respiration Disorders, Respiratory System, Respiratory Tract Diseases, Vascular Diseases
- Published
- 1960
34. Scabies among the well-washed.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Humans, Scabies
- Published
- 1947
35. Tryparsamide optic neuritis treated by 2,3 dimercaptopropanol (BAL).
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Arsenicals, Humans, Arsenic Poisoning, Dimercaprol, Neuritis, Optic Neuritis
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Dissecting aneurysm of the aorta associated with nonspecific pericarditis.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S and GILLERLAIN J
- Subjects
- Humans, Aortic Dissection, Aorta, Aortic Aneurysm complications, Pericarditis complications
- Published
- 1956
37. Triparsamédica optic neuritis treated by Bal.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Dimercaprol therapy, Neuritis, Optic Neuritis
- Published
- 1948
38. A low-sodium diet for hypertensive vascular disease precipitating Addison's disease and miliary tuberculosis, report of a case.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Adrenal Insufficiency, Humans, Hypoadrenocorticism, Familial, Addison Disease, Blood Pressure, Blood Pressure Determination, Diet, Sodium-Restricted, Hypertension, Sodium, Sodium, Dietary, Tuberculosis, Miliary
- Published
- 1950
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Systemic medication by rectal suppository.
- Author
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FRIEDENBERG S
- Subjects
- Humans, Suppositories
- Published
- 1946
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