350 results on '"Katz DA"'
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2. Meta-analysis of individual-patient data from EVAR-1, DREAM, OVER and ACE trials comparing outcomes of endovascular or open repair for abdominal aortic aneurysm over 5 years
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Powell, JT, Sweeting, MJ, Ulug, P, Blankensteijn, JD, Lederle, FA, Becquemin, J-P, Greenhalgh, RM, Beard, JD, Buxton, MJ, Brown, LC, Harris, PL, Rose, JDG, Russell, IT, Sculpher, MJ, Thompson, SG, Lilford, RJ, Bell, PRF, Whitaker, SC, Poole-Wilson, PA, Ruckley, CV, Campbell, WB, Dean, MRE, Ruttley, MST, Coles, EC, Halliday, A, Gibbs, SJ, Epstein, D, Hannon, RJ, Johnston, L, Bradbury, AW, Henderson, MJ, Parvin, SD, Shepherd, DFC, Mitchell, AW, Edwards, PR, Abbott, GT, Higman, DJ, Vohra, A, Ashley, S, Robottom, C, Wyatt, MG, Byrne, D, Edwards, R, Leiberman, DP, McCarter, DH, Taylor, PR, Reidy, JF, Wilkinson, AR, Ettles, DF, Clason, AE, Leen, GLS, Wilson, NV, Downes, M, Walker, SR, Lavelle, JM, Gough, MJ, McPherson, S, Scott, DJA, Kessell, DO, Naylor, R, Sayers, R, Fishwick, NG, Gould, DA, Walker, MG, Chalmers, NC, Garnham, A, Collins, MA, Gaines, PA, Ashour, MY, Uberoi, R, Braithwaite, B, Davies, JN, Travis, S, Hamilton, G, Platts, A, Shandall, A, Sullivan, BA, Sobeh, M, Matson, M, Fox, AD, Orme, R, Yusef, W, Doyle, T, Horrocks, M, Hardman, J, Blair, PHB, Ellis, PK, Morris, G, Odurny, A, Vohra, R, Duddy, M, Thompson, M, Loosemore, TML, Belli, AM, Morgan, R, Adiseshiah, M, Brookes, JAS, McCollum, CN, Ashleigh, R, Aukett, M, Baker, S, Barbe, E, Batson, N, Bell, J, Blundell, J, Boardley, D, Boyes, S, Brown, O, Bryce, J, Carmichael, M, Chance, T, Coleman, J, Cosgrove, C, Curran, G, Dennison, T, Devine, C, Dewhirst, N, Errington, B, Farrell, H, Fisher, C, Fulford, P, Gough, M, Graham, C, Hooper, R, Horne, G, Horrocks, L, Hughes, B, Hutchings, T, Ireland, M, Judge, C, Kelly, L, Kemp, J, Kite, A, Kivela, M, Lapworth, M, Lee, C, Linekar, L, Mahmood, A, March, L, Martin, J, Matharu, N, McGuigen, K, Morris-Vincent, P, Murray, S, Murtagh, A, Owen, G, Ramoutar, V, Rippin, C, Rowley, J, Sinclair, J, Spencer, S, Taylor, V, Tomlinson, C, Ward, S, Wealleans, V, West, J, White, K, Williams, J, Wilson, L, Grobbee, DE, Bak, AAA, Buth, J, Pattynama, PM, Verhoeven, ELG, van Voorthuisen, AE, Balm, R, Cuypers, PWM, Prinssen, M, van Sambeek, MRHM, Baas, AF, Hunink, MG, van Engelshoven, JM, Jacobs, MJHM, de Mol, BAJM, van Bockel, JH, Reekers, J, Tielbeek, X, Wisselink, W, Boekema, N, Heuveling, LM, Sikking, I, de Bruin, JL, Buskens, E, Tielbeek, AV, Reekers, JA, Pattynama, P, Prins, T, van der Ham, AC, van der Velden, JJIM, van Sterkenburg, SMM, ten Haken, GB, Bruijninckx, CMA, van Overhagen, H, Tutein Nolthenius, RP, Hendriksz, TR, Teijink, JAW, Odink, HF, de Smet, AAEA, Vroegindeweij, D, van Loenhout, RMM, Rutten, MJ, Hamming, JF, Lampmann, LEH, Bender, MHM, Pasmans, H, Vahl, AC, de Vries, C, Mackaay, AJC, van Dortmont, LMC, van der Vliet, AJ, Schultze Kool, LJ, Boomsma, JHB, van Dop, HR, de Mol van Otterloo, JCA, de Rooij, TPW, Smits, TM, Yilmaz, EN, van den Berg, FG, Visser, MJT, van der Linden, E, Schurink, GWH, de Haan, M, Smeets, HJ, Stabel, P, van Elst, F, Poniewierski, J, Vermassen, FEG, Freischlag, JA, Kohler, TR, Latts, E, Matsumura, J, Padberg, FT, Kyriakides, TC, Swanson, KM, Guarino, P, Peduzzi, P, Antonelli, M, Cushing, C, Davis, E, Durant, L, Joyner, S, Kossack, A, LeGwin, M, McBride, V, O'Connor, T, Poulton, J, Stratton, S, Zellner, S, Snodgrass, AJ, Thornton, J, Haakenson, CM, Stroupe, KT, Jonk, Y, Hallett, JW, Hertzer, N, Towne, J, Katz, DA, Karrison, T, Matts, JP, Marottoli, R, Kasl, S, Mehta, R, Feldman, R, Farrell, W, Allore, H, Perry, E, Niederman, J, Randall, F, Zeman, M, Beckwith, D, O'Leary, TJ, Huang, GD, Bader, M, Ketteler, ER, Kingsley, DD, Marek, JM, Massen, RJ, Matteson, BD, Pitcher, JD, Langsfeld, M, Corson, JD, Goff, JM, Kasirajan, K, Paap, C, Robertson, DC, Salam, A, Veeraswamy, R, Milner, R, Guidot, J, Lal, BK, Busuttil, SJ, Lilly, MP, Braganza, M, Ellis, K, Patterson, MA, Jordan, WD, Whitley, D, Taylor, S, Passman, M, Kerns, D, Inman, C, Poirier, J, Ebaugh, J, Raffetto, J, Chew, D, Lathi, S, Owens, C, Hickson, K, Dosluoglu, HH, Eschberger, K, Kibbe, MR, Baraniewski, HM, Endo, M, Busman, A, Meadows, W, Evans, M, Giglia, JS, El Sayed, H, Reed, AB, Ruf, M, Ross, S, Jean-Claude, JM, Pinault, G, Kang, P, White, N, Eiseman, M, Jones, R, Timaran, CH, Modrall, JG, Welborn, MB, Lopez, J, Nguyen, T, Chacko, JKY, Granke, K, Vouyouka, AG, Olgren, E, Chand, P, Allende, B, Ranella, M, Yales, C, Whitehill, TA, Krupski, WC, Nehler, MR, Johnson, SP, Jones, DN, Strecker, P, Bhola, MA, Shortell, CK, Gray, JL, Lawson, JH, McCann, R, Sebastian, MW, Kistler Tetterton, J, Blackwell, C, Prinzo, PA, Lee, N, Cerveira, JJ, Zickler, RW, Hauck, KA, Berceli, SA, Lee, WA, Ozaki, CK, Nelson, PR, Irwin, AS, Baum, R, Aulivola, B, Rodriguez, H, Littooy, FN, Greisler, H, O'Sullivan, MT, Kougias, P, Lin, PH, Bush, RL, Guinn, G, Bechara, C, Cagiannos, C, Pisimisis, G, Barshes, N, Pillack, S, Guillory, B, Cikrit, D, Lalka, SG, Lemmon, G, Nachreiner, R, Rusomaroff, M, O'Brien, E, Cullen, JJ, Hoballah, J, Sharp, WJ, McCandless, JL, Beach, V, Minion, D, Schwarcz, TH, Kimbrough, J, Ashe, L, Rockich, A, Warner-Carpenter, J, Moursi, M, Eidt, JF, Brock, S, Bianchi, C, Bishop, V, Gordon, IL, Fujitani, R, Kubaska, SM, Behdad, M, Azadegan, R, Ma Agas, C, Zalecki, K, Hoch, JR, Carr, SC, Acher, C, Schwarze, M, Tefera, G, Mell, M, Dunlap, B, Rieder, J, Stuart, JM, Weiman, DS, Abul-Khoudoud, O, Garrett, HE, Walsh, SM, Wilson, KL, Seabrook, GR, Cambria, RA, Brown, KR, Lewis, BD, Framberg, S, Kallio, C, Barke, RA, Santilli, SM, d'Audiffret, AC, Oberle, N, Proebstle, C, Johnson, LL, Jacobowitz, GR, Cayne, N, Rockman, C, Adelman, M, Gagne, P, Nalbandian, M, Caropolo, LJ, Pipinos, II, Johanning, J, Lynch, T, DeSpiegelaere, H, Purviance, G, Zhou, W, Dalman, R, Lee, JT, Safadi, B, Coogan, SM, Wren, SM, Bahmani, DD, Maples, D, Thunen, S, Golden, MA, Mitchell, ME, Fairman, R, Reinhardt, S, Wilson, MA, Tzeng, E, Muluk, S, Peterson, NM, Foster, M, Edwards, J, Moneta, GL, Landry, G, Taylor, L, Yeager, R, Cannady, E, Treiman, G, Hatton-Ward, S, Salabsky, B, Kansal, N, Owens, E, Estes, M, Forbes, BA, Sobotta, C, Rapp, JH, Reilly, LM, Perez, SL, Yan, K, Sarkar, R, Dwyer, SS, Perez, S, Chong, K, Hatsukami, TS, Glickerman, DG, Sobel, M, Burdick, TS, Pedersen, K, Cleary, P, Back, M, Bandyk, D, Johnson, B, Shames, M, Reinhard, RL, Thomas, SC, Hunter, GC, Leon, LR, Westerband, A, Guerra, RJ, Riveros, M, Mills, JL, Hughes, JD, Escalante, AM, Psalms, SB, Day, NN, Macsata, R, Sidawy, A, Weiswasser, J, Arora, S, Jasper, BJ, Dardik, A, Gahtan, V, Muhs, BE, Sumpio, BE, Gusberg, RJ, Spector, M, Pollak, J, Aruny, J, Kelly, EL, Wong, J, Vasilas, P, Joncas, C, Gelabert, HA, DeVirgillio, C, Rigberg, DA, Cole, L, Marzelle, J, Sapoval, M, Favre, J-P, Watelet, J, Lermusiaux, P, Lepage, E, Hemery, F, Dolbeau, G, Hawajry, N, Cunin, P, Harris, P, Stockx, L, Chatellier, G, Mialhe, C, Fiessinger, J-N, Pagny, L, Kobeiter, H, Boissier, C, Lacroix, P, Ledru, F, Pinot, J-J, Deux, J-F, Tzvetkov, B, Duvaldestin, P, Jourdain, C, David, V, Enouf, D, Ady, N, Krimi, A, Boudjema, N, Jousset, Y, Enon, B, Blin, V, Picquet, J, L'Hoste, P, Thouveny, F, Borie, H, Kowarski, S, Pernes, J-M, Auguste, M, Desgranges, P, Allaire, E, Meaulle, P-Y, Chaix, D, Juliae, P, Fabiani, JN, Chevalier, P, Combes, M, Seguin, A, Belhomme, D, Baque, J, Pellerin, O, Favre, JP, Barral, X, Veyret, C, Peillon, C, Plissonier, D, Thomas, P, Clavier, E, Martinez, R, Bleuet, F, C, D, Verhoye, JP, Langanay, T, Heautot, JF, Koussa, M, Haulon, S, Halna, P, Destrieux, L, Lions, C, Wiloteaux, S, Beregi, JP, Bergeron, P, Patra, P, Costargent, A, Chaillou, P, D'Alicourt, A, Goueffic, Y, Cheysson, E, Parrot, A, Garance, P, Demon, A, Tyazi, A, Pillet, J-C, Lescalie, F, Tilly, G, Steinmetz, E, Favier, C, Brenot, R, Krause, D, Cercueil, JP, Vahdat, O, Sauer, M, Soula, P, Querian, A, Garcia, O, Levade, M, Colombier, D, Cardon, J-M, Joyeux, A, Borrelly, P, Dogas, G, Magnan, P-É, Branchereau, A, Bartoli, J-M, Hassen-Khodja, R, Batt, M, Planchard, P-F, Bouillanne, P-J, Haudebourg, P, Bayne, J, Gouny, P, Badra, A, Braesco, J, Nonent, M, Lucas, A, Cardon, A, Kerdiles, Y, Rolland, Y, Kassab, M, Brillu, C, Goubault, F, Tailboux, L, Darrieux, H, Briand, O, Maillard, J-C, Varty, K, Cousins, C, EVAR-1, DREAM, OVER and ACE Trialists, Surgery, ICaR - Ischemia and repair, ACS - Microcirculation, ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes, Halliday, A, Sweeting, Michael [0000-0003-0980-8965], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, and National Institute for Health Research
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Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Vascular damage Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 16] ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Endovascular aneurysm repair ,Medical and Health Sciences ,law.invention ,Aortic aneurysm ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,DESIGN ,law ,Models ,80 and over ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,RISK ,Aged, 80 and over ,Hazard ratio ,Endovascular Procedures ,DREAM ,11 Medical And Health Sciences ,Statistical ,Middle Aged ,Corrigenda ,Abdominal aortic aneurysm ,Aortic Aneurysm ,Treatment Outcome ,CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Female ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,and over ,03 medical and health sciences ,Aneurysm ,medicine ,Journal Article ,MANAGEMENT ,Humans ,Comparative Study ,Abdominal ,OVER and ACE Trialists ,Aged ,Models, Statistical ,business.industry ,MORTALITY ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Vascular Grafting ,business ,Abdominal surgery ,Meta-Analysis ,EVAR-1 ,Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal - Abstract
Background The erosion of the early mortality advantage of elective endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) compared with open repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm remains without a satisfactory explanation. Methods An individual-patient data meta-analysis of four multicentre randomized trials of EVARversus open repair was conducted to a prespecified analysis plan, reporting on mortality, aneurysm-related mortality and reintervention. Results The analysis included 2783 patients, with 14 245 person-years of follow-up (median 5·5 years). Early (0–6 months after randomization) mortality was lower in the EVAR groups (46 of 1393 versus 73 of 1390 deaths; pooled hazard ratio 0·61, 95 per cent c.i. 0·42 to 0·89; P = 0·010), primarily because 30-day operative mortality was lower in the EVAR groups (16 deaths versus 40 for open repair; pooled odds ratio 0·40, 95 per cent c.i. 0·22 to 0·74). Later (within 3 years) the survival curves converged, remaining converged to 8 years. Beyond 3 years, aneurysm-related mortality was significantly higher in the EVAR groups (19 deaths versus 3 for open repair; pooled hazard ratio 5·16, 1·49 to 17·89; P = 0·010). Patients with moderate renal dysfunction or previous coronary artery disease had no early survival advantage under EVAR. Those with peripheral artery disease had lower mortality under open repair (39 deaths versus 62 for EVAR; P = 0·022) in the period from 6 months to 4 years after randomization. Conclusion The early survival advantage in the EVAR group, and its subsequent erosion, were confirmed. Over 5 years, patients of marginal fitness had no early survival advantage from EVAR compared with open repair. Aneurysm-related mortality and patients with low ankle : brachial pressure index contributed to the erosion of the early survival advantage for the EVAR group. Trial registration numbers: EVAR-1, ISRCTN55703451; DREAM (Dutch Randomized Endovascular Aneurysm Management), NCT00421330; ACE (Anévrysme de l'aorte abdominale, Chirurgie versus Endoprothèse), NCT00224718; OVER (Open Versus Endovascular Repair Trial for Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms), NCT00094575.
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- 2017
3. Software Citation in HEP: Current State and Recommendations for the Future
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Feickert Matthew, Katz Daniel S., Neubauer Mark S., Sexton-Kennedy Elizabeth, and Stewart Graeme A.
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
In November 2022, the HEP Software Foundation and the Institute for Research and Innovation for Software in High-Energy Physics organized a workshop on the topic of Software Citation and Recognition in HEP. The goal of the workshop was to bring together different types of stakeholders whose roles relate to software citation, and the associated credit it provides, in order to engage the community in a discussion on: the ways HEP experiments handle citation of software, recognition for software efforts that enable physics results disseminated to the public, and how the scholarly publishing ecosystem supports these activities. Reports were given from the publication board leadership of the ATLAS, CMS, and LHCb experiments and HEP open source software community organizations (ROOT, Scikit-HEP, MCnet), and perspectives were given from publishers (Elsevier, JOSS) and related tool providers (INSPIRE, Zenodo). This paper summarizes key findings and recommendations from the workshop as presented at the 26th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP 2023).
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- 2024
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4. FAIR AI Models in High Energy Physics
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Li Haoyang, Duarte Javier, Roy Avik, Zhu Ruike, Huerta E. A., Diaz Daniel, Harris Philip, Kansal Raghav, Katz Daniel S., Kavoori Ishaan H., Kindratenko Volodymyr V., Mokhtar Farouk, Neubauer Mark S., Park Sang Eon, Quinnan Melissa, Rusack Roger, and Zhao Zhizhen
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) data principles serve as a framework for examining, evaluating, and improving data sharing to advance scientific endeavors. There is an emerging trend to adapt these principles for machine learning models—algorithms that learn from data without specific coding—and, more generally, AI models, due to AI’s swiftly growing impact on scientific and engineering sectors. In this paper, we propose a practical definition of the FAIR principles for AI models and provide a template program for their adoption. We exemplify this strategy with an implementation from high-energy physics, where a graph neural network is employed to detect Higgs bosons decaying into two bottom quarks.
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- 2024
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5. Potential role of enzastaurin in the treatment of patients with relapsed or refractory advanced cutaneous T-cell lymphomas: a review
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Katz DA, Plate JM, Nathan S, and Usha L
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lcsh:Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,enzastaurin ,cutaneous T-cell lymphomas ,lcsh:RM1-950 ,serine/threonine kinase inhibitors ,PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway ,PKC-β inhibitors - Abstract
Deborah A Katz, Janet MD Plate, Sunita Nathan, Lydia UshaDivision of Hematology and Oncology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USAAbstract: Cutaneous T-cell lymphomas (CTCLs) are rare extranodal non-Hodgkin lymphomas characterized by neoplastic T-lymphocyte accumulation in the skin. The two most common types of CTCLs are mycosis fungoides and the leukemic variant, Sézary syndrome. Prognosis of CTCLs depends on the stage, with a poor prognosis in advanced-stage disease. A number of agents have recently been developed for the treatment of CTCLs: chemotherapeutic agents such as pralatrexate, interferon-alpha, retinoids such as bexarotene, monoclonal antibodies such as alemtuzumab, and histone deacetylase inhibitors such as vorinostat and romidepsin. Nevertheless, there is no cure for CTCLs except for allogeneic stem cell transplant. A promising new drug is enzastaurin. Enzastaurin is a novel serine/threonine kinase inhibitor that binds to protein kinase C-β (PKC-β) and inhibits the phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K)/AKT/phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) signaling pathway. Enzastaurin induces apoptosis and inhibits angiogenesis; it was also shown to suppress growth of CTCL cell lines in vitro. Given its low toxicity, enzastaurin has been tested against both solid tumors and hematologic malignancies. This article is focused on the potential role of enzastaurin in the treatment of CTCLs. A phase II multicenter trial evaluated enzastaurin monotherapy in patients with CTCLs. However, the results from this study were disappointing, demonstrating that enzastaurin had only modest clinical activity. Hence, enzastaurin is not currently developed for treating CTCLs. Potential strategies to improve enzastaurin efficacy against CTCLs are discussed: validation of enzastaurin targets such as PKC-β expression in CTCL lesions and or/blood; measurement of serum vascular endothelial growth factor levels; dose optimization; combining enzastaurin with other antiangiogenic agents, or glycogen synthase kinase inhibitors, or mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors. Ultimately, developing more potent inhibitors of PKC-β and PI3K/AKT/PTEN/mTOR signaling pathways may be necessary to improve clinical outcomes in CTCLs.Keywords: cutaneous T-cell lymphomas, enzastaurin, PKC-β inhibitors, serine/threonine kinase inhibitors, PI3K/AKT/PTEN pathway
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- 2012
6. 001.2 Azithromycin-resistantneisseria gonorrhoeaein men who have sex with men (msm) in seattle, washington: 2014–2015
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Barbee, LA, primary, Soge, OO, additional, Dombrowski, JC, additional, Katz, DA, additional, Holmes, KK, additional, and Golden, MR, additional
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- 2015
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7. P11.05 Proportion of hiv and sexually transmitted infection (sti) cases among men who have sex with men (msm) attributable to serosorting
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Khosropour, CM, primary, Barbee, LA, additional, Dombrowski, JC, additional, Kerani, RP, additional, Katz, DA, additional, Swanson, F, additional, and Golden, MR, additional
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- 2015
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8. Nodular glomerulosclerosis in a kidney transplant recipient who smokes.
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Suneja M, Khan A, Katz DA, Kalil R, and Nair R
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Cigarette smoking may have harmful effects on both native and transplant kidneys. Although a causal relationship was not shown, nodular glomerulosclerosis was reported in association with long-term cigarette smoking. We report a 48-year-old woman with a long-term history of smoking who underwent cadaveric renal transplantation. A renal biopsy to assess a progressive increase in serum creatinine levels 11 years posttransplantation showed features of nodular glomerulosclerosis. Other causes of nodular glomerulosclerosis were excluded. We speculate that long exposure to smoking may be the etiologic factor for nodular glomerulosclerosis in the kidney graft of our patient. Further confirmation of this risk relationship is important because cessation of smoking may help improve renal survival. Copyright © 2007 by Elsevier Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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9. Does concordance with guideline triage recommendations affect clinical care of patients with possible acute coronary syndrome?
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Katz DA, Dawson J, Beshansky JR, Rahko PS, Aufderheide TP, Bogner M, Tighouart H, and Selker HP
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BACKGROUND: The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) Unstable Angina Practice Guideline recommends outpatient management for patients at low risk and admission to a monitored bed for patients at intermediate-high risk of adverse short-term outcomes, but the clinical consequences of adhering to these recommendations are unclear. METHODS: This analysis included 7466 adults who presented to the emergency department (ED) with symptoms of possible acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and who participated in 3 prospective clinical effectiveness trials during the period 1993 to 2001. The authors used logistic regression to assess the impact of concordance with guideline triage recommendations on subsequent diagnostic testing, follow-up care, and 30-day mortality and applied propensity score methods to adjust for selection bias. RESULTS: Among low-risk patients (n = 1099), ED discharge was not associated with higher mortality and did not increase the need for emergency care or hospitalization during follow-up (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 1.0, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.63-1.6 for ED revisits); however, 1.7% of discharged low-risk patients had confirmed ACS. Among intermediate- to high-risk patients (n = 6367), admission to a monitored bed was not associated with reduction in 30-day mortality but significantly reduced the need for follow-up ED care (adjusted OR = 0.81, 95% CI = 0.69-0.96). CONCLUSIONS: This analysis supports the practice of discharging low-risk ED patients with symptoms of possible ACS but highlights the need to arrange timely follow-up (or to perform additional risk stratification in the ED prior to discharge). It also confirms the benefit of admitting ED patients with intermediate- to high-risk characteristics to a monitored bed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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10. The impact of unstable angina guidelines in the triage of emergency department patients with possible acute coronary syndrome.
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Katz DA, Aufderheide TP, Bogner M, Rahko PR, Brown RL, Brown LM, Prekker ME, and Selker HP
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OBJECTIVE: The primary aim of this study is to determine whether implementing the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) Unstable Angina Practice Guideline improves emergency physician's decision making in patients with symptoms of possible acute coronary syndrome (ACS), including those for whom the diagnosis of unstable angina is uncertain. METHODS: The authors conducted a prospective guideline implementation trial with pre-post design in the emergency departments of 1 university hospital and 1 university-affiliated community teaching hospital from January 2000 to May 2001. They enrolled 1140 adults who presented with chest pain or other symptoms of possible ACS. The intervention included the following: 1) physician training in use of the AHCPR risk groups, 2) algorithm for risk stratification, and 3) group feedback. To determine how accurately physicians interpreted the guideline algorithm, the authors compared their risk ratings with actual guideline risk groups. RESULTS: No significant difference in physician triage decisions was observed between baseline and intervention periods. Analysis of physician's risk ratings during the intervention period revealed low overall concordance with actual guideline risk groups (kappa = 0.31); however, physician's risk ratings showed superior discrimination in identifying patients with confirmed ACS (receiver operating characteristic [ROC] area .81 v. .74, P = 0.008). Strict adherence to guideline recommendations would have resulted in hospitalizing 9% more non-ACS patients without lowering the rate of missed ACS. CONCLUSION: Implementation of the AHCPR guideline did not improve triage decisions in emergency department patients with possible ACS. Assessing physician triage solely based on concordance with the AHCPR guideline may not accurately reflect the quality of patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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11. Anterior and middle column thoracolumbar spine injuries in young female gymnasts: report of seven cases and review of the literature.
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Katz DA and Scerpella TA
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- 2003
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12. Effect of treatment on quality of life among men with clinically localized prostate cancer.
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Schapira MM, Lawrence WF, Katz DA, McAuliffe TL, Nattinger AB, Schapira, M M, Lawrence, W F, Katz, D A, McAuliffe, T L, and Nattinger, A B
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- 2001
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13. Lower dosages of phentermine-fenfluramine given in the afternoon: five cases with significant weight loss.
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Katz DA, Maloney MJ, Sutkamp JC, and McConville BJ
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Phentermine and fenfluramine are widely used in the treatment of obesity. Despite the fact that primary pulmonary hypertension and mitral valve insufficiency have been associated with fenfluramine use, many of these patients need medication to achieve weight loss. Small degrees of weight loss have been shown to significantly improve obesity-related medical conditions such as hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Current practice is to give phentermine and fenfluramine in the morning and afternoon. Doses for phentermine have ranged from 15 to 37.5 mg and for fenfluramine from 20 to 120 mg per day. We report five cases of severely obese women with medical complications who were treated with phentermine 8 mg twice per day (at 1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.) and fenfluramine 20 mg per day (at 4:00 p.m.). Because many obese patients skip breakfast and eat more in the afternoon and evening, medication was dosed in order to cover these high-risk eating periods. Overall, these patients lost a mean of 22.4% of their initial weight (range 18.6% to 32.8%) over an average of 8.4 months (range 3.5 to 16 months). These cases suggest that short-term weight loss can be achieved with a low dose of fenfluramine when both medications are given in the afternoon to better target the eating patterns of obese subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1999
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14. Real-time HEP analysis with funcX, a high-performance platform for function as a service
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Woodard Anna Elizabeth, Trisovic Ana, Li Zhuozhao, Babuji Yadu, Chard Ryan, Skluzacek Tyler, Blaiszik Ben, Katz Daniel S., Foster Ian, and Chard Kyle
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We explore how the function as a service paradigm can be used to address the computing challenges in experimental high-energy physics at CERN. As a case study, we use funcX—a high-performance function as a service platform that enables intuitive, flexible, efficient, and scalable remote function execution on existing infrastructure—to parallelize an analysis operating on columnar data to aggregate histograms of analysis products of interest in real-time. We demonstrate efficient execution of such analyses on heterogeneous resources.
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- 2020
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15. The use of empiric clinical data in the evaluation of practice guidelines for unstable angina.
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Katz DA, Griffith JL, Beshansky JR, Selker HP, Katz, D A, Griffith, J L, Beshansky, J R, and Selker, H P
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Objective: To determine the applicability to emergency department (ED) clinical practice of a nationally disseminated practice guideline on the disposition of patients with a diagnosis of unstable angina, and to determine the potential impact of the guideline on hospital admissions and demand for intensive care beds.Design: Application of guideline criteria for ED disposition decisions to a validation sample derived from a prospective clinical trial.Setting: Five hospitals, including 2 urban general teaching hospitals, 2 urban tertiary care university hospitals, and 1 suburban university-affiliated community hospital.Patients: A consecutive sample of 457 patients who presented with symptoms suggestive of acute cardiac ischemia and who had "unstable angina" or "rule out unstable angina" diagnosed by ED physicians. Greater than 90% of eligible patients were enrolled in the clinical trial; follow-up data sufficient for assignment of a definitive diagnosis were obtained for 99% of subjects.Main Outcome Measures: Acute myocardial infarction and unstable angina, based on blind review of initial and follow-up clinical data, including cardiac enzyme levels and electrocardiograms. After completion of the trial, without knowledge of final diagnosis or outcome, the investigators classified patients into risk groups specified by the unstable angina guideline.Results: Of subjects with an ED diagnosis of unstable angina, only 6% (n=28) met the guideline's criteria corresponding to low risk for adverse events and were therefore suitable for discharge directly to home. Fifty-four percent (n=247) met the intermediate-risk criteria; 40% (n=182) met the high-risk criteria and were identified as requiring admission to an intensive care unit. Actual ED disposition differed from guideline recommendations in 2 major areas: only 4% (1/28) of low-risk patients were discharged to home with outpatient follow-up, and only 40% (72/182) of high-risk patients were admitted to an intensive care unit.Conclusions: Although the guideline was intended to reduce hospitalization by identifying a low-risk group, the small size of this group among ED patients suggests that little reduction in hospitalization can be expected. Indeed, the guideline may increase demand for the limited number of intensive care beds to accommodate patients with unstable angina considered high-risk but currently placed elsewhere. These results emphasize the need to use empiric data from target clinical settings to assess the likely actual impact of guidelines on clinical care prior to national dissemination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1996
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16. Cerebral necrosis after radiotherapy and/or intraarterial chemotherapy for brain tumors: PET and neuropathologic studies
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Di Chiro, G, primary, Oldfield, E, additional, Wright, DC, additional, De Michele, D, additional, Katz, DA, additional, Patronas, NJ, additional, Doppman, JL, additional, Larson, SM, additional, Ito, M, additional, and Kufta, CV, additional
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- 1988
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17. Characteristics of right ventricular free wall motion in young patients with ventricular arrhythmia, a cardiac MRI study
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Katz Daniel H, Shah Moneal, Cummings Ellen, and Cao Jie J
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2012
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18. Toward long-term all-sky time domain surveys-SINDICS: a prospective concept for a Seismic INDICes Survey of half a million red giants
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Michel Eric, Haywood Misha, Mosser Benoit, García Rafael A., Babusiaux Carine, Ballot Jérôme, Samadi Reza, Katz David, Belkacem Kevin, Bernardi Pernelle, and Buey Tristan
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
CoRoT and Kepler have brought a new and deep experience in long-term photometric surveys and how to use them. This is true for exoplanets characterizing, stellar seismology and beyond for studying several other phenomena, like granulation or activity. Based on this experience, it has been possible to propose new generation projects, like TESS and PLATO, with more specific scientific objectives and more ambitious observational programs in terms of sky coverage and/or duration of the observations. In this context and as a prospective exercise, we explore here the possibility to set up an all-sky survey optimized for seismic indices measurement, providing masses, radii and evolution stages for half a million solar-type pulsators (subgiants and red giants), in our galactic neighborhood and allowing unprecedented stellar population studies.
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- 2015
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19. Effect of fruit and vegetable concentrates on endothelial function in metabolic syndrome: A randomized controlled trial
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Ma Yingying, Njike Valentine Y, Yazaki Yuka, Ali Ather, and Katz David L
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phytonutrients ,dietary supplements ,cardiovascular ,antioxidant ,randomized ,fruit ,vegetable ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Background and Objective Dehydrated fruit and vegetable concentrates provide an accessible form of phytonutrient supplementation that may offer cardioprotective effects. This study assessed the effects of two blends of encapsulated juice powder concentrates (with and without added berry powders) on endothelial function in persons with metabolic syndrome, a risk factor for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Methods Randomized, double blind, placebo controlled crossover clinical trial with three treatment arms. 64 adults with metabolic syndrome were enrolled and received 8-week sequences of each blend of the concentrates and placebo. The primary outcome measure was change in endothelial function (assessed as flow-mediated dilatation of the brachial artery) 2 hr after consuming a 75 g glucose load, after 8-weeks of daily consumption (sustained) or 2 hr after consumption of a single dose (acute). Secondary outcome measures included plasma glucose, serum insulin, serum lipids, and body weight. Results No significant between-group differences in endothelial function with daily treatment for 8 weeks were seen. No other significant treatment effects were discerned in glucose, insulin, lipids, and weight. Conclusion Encapsulated fruit and vegetable juice powder concentrates did not alter insulin or glucose measures in this sample of adults with metabolic syndrome. Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov NCT01224743
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- 2011
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20. Daily egg consumption in hyperlipidemic adults - Effects on endothelial function and cardiovascular risk
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Gonzalez-Simon Anjelica L, Dutta Suparna, Faridi Zubaida, Njike Valentine, and Katz David L
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Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseases ,RC620-627 - Abstract
Abstract Background Limiting consumption of eggs, which are high in cholesterol, is generally recommended to reduce risk of cardiovascular disease. However, recent evidence suggests that dietary cholesterol has limited influence on serum cholesterol or cardiac risk. Objective To assess the effects of egg consumption on endothelial function and serum lipids in hyperlipidemic adults. Methods Randomized, placebo-controlled crossover trial of 40 hyperlipidemic adults (24 women, 16 men; average age = 59.9 ± 9.6 years; weight = 76.3 ± 21.8 kilograms; total cholesterol = 244 ± 24 mg/dL). In the acute phase, participants were randomly assigned to one of the two sequences of a single dose of three medium hardboiled eggs and a sausage/cheese breakfast sandwich. In the sustained phase, participants were then randomly assigned to one of the two sequences of two medium hardboiled eggs and 1/2 cup of egg substitute daily for six weeks. Each treatment assignment was separated by a four-week washout period. Outcome measures of interest were endothelial function measured as flow mediated dilatation (FMD) and lipid panel. Results Single dose egg consumption had no effects on endothelial function as compared to sausage/cheese (0.4 ± 1.9 vs. 0.4 ± 2.4%; p = 0.99). Daily consumption of egg substitute for 6 weeks significantly improved endothelial function as compared to egg (1.0 ± 1.2% vs. -0.1 ± 1.5%; p < 0.01) and lowered serum total cholesterol (-18 ± 18 vs. -5 ± 21 mg/dL; p < 0.01) and LDL (-14 ± 20 vs. -2 ± 19 mg/dL; p = 0.01). Study results (positive or negative) are expressed in terms of change relative to baseline. Conclusions Egg consumption was found to be non-detrimental to endothelial function and serum lipids in hyperlipidemic adults, while egg substitute consumption was beneficial.
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- 2010
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21. A before-after implementation trial of smoking cessation guidelines in hospitalized veterans
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Reisinger Heather, Tinkelman David, Buchanan Lynne, Grant Kathleen, Prochazka Allan, Fu Steve, Vander Weg Mark, Katz David, Brooks John, Hillis Stephen L, Joseph Anne, and Titler Marita
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Although most hospitalized smokers receive some form of cessation counseling during hospitalization, few receive outpatient cessation counseling and/or pharmacotherapy following discharge, which are key factors associated with long-term cessation. US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals are challenged to find resources to implement and maintain the kind of high intensity cessation programs that have been shown to be effective in research studies. Few studies have applied the Chronic Care Model (CCM) to improve inpatient smoking cessation. Specific objectives The primary objective of this protocol is to determine the effect of a nurse-initiated intervention, which couples low-intensity inpatient counseling with sustained proactive telephone counseling, on smoking abstinence in hospitalized patients. Key secondary aims are to determine the impact of the intervention on staff nurses' attitudes toward providing smoking cessation counseling; to identify barriers and facilitators to implementation of smoking cessation guidelines in VA hospitals; and to determine the short-term cost-effectiveness of implementing the intervention. Design Pre-post study design in four VA hospitals Participants Hospitalized patients, aged 18 or older, who smoke at least one cigarette per day. Intervention The intervention will include: nurse training in delivery of bedside cessation counseling, electronic medical record tools (to streamline nursing assessment and documentation, to facilitate prescription of pharmacotherapy), computerized referral of motivated inpatients for proactive telephone counseling, and use of internal nursing facilitators to provide coaching to staff nurses practicing in non-critical care inpatient units. Outcomes The primary endpoint is seven-day point prevalence abstinence at six months following hospital admission and prolonged abstinence after a one-month grace period. To compare abstinence rates during the intervention and baseline periods, we will use random effects logistic regression models, which take the clustered nature of the data within nurses and hospitals into account. We will assess attitudes of staff nurses toward cessation counseling by questionnaire and will identify barriers and facilitators to implementation by using clinician focus groups. To determine the short-term incremental cost per quitter from the perspective of the VA health care system, we will calculate cessation-related costs incurred during the initial hospitalization and six-month follow-up period. Trial number NCT00816036
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- 2009
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22. Giant cell tumor of a lumbar vertebra in a 7-year-old child: a case report.
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Metkar U, Wardak Z, Katz DA, and Lavelle WF
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- 2012
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23. HIV testing services and HIV self-testing programming within emergency care in Kenya: a qualitative study of healthcare personnel to inform enhanced service delivery approaches.
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Aluisio AR, Bergam SJ, Kinuthia J, Maina JW, Pirirei S, Bukusi D, Waweru H, Bosire R, Chen J, Ojuka DK, Katz DA, Farquhar C, Mello MJ, and Guthrie KM
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In Kenya, persons insufficiently engaged in HIV Testing Services (HTS) are often treated in emergency departments (ED). There are limited data from healthcare workers on ED-HTS. A qualitative study was completed to understand challenges and facilitators for ED-HTS and HIV self-testing (HIVST). Data were collected via six focus groups of healthcare workers. Data were inductively analyzed and mapped to the Capability-Opportunity-Motivation Behavioral Model. Focus groups were completed with 49 healthcare workers: 18 nurses, 15 HIV counselors, 10 physicians and 6 administrators. HTS challenges included staff burdens, resources access, deficiencies in systems integration and illness severity. HTS facilitators included education of healthcare workers and patients, services coordination, and specific follow-up processes. HIVST challenges included accuracy concerns, follow-up barriers and psychosocial risks. HIVST facilitators were patient autonomy and confidentiality, resource utilization and ability to reach higher-risk persons. Mapping to the Capability-Opportunity-Motivation Behavioral Model interventions within the domains of knowledge, decision processes, environmental aspects, social influences and professional identities could support enhanced ED-HTS with integrated HIVST delivery. This study provided insights into challenges and facilitators on ED-HTS and identifies pragmatic approaches to improve healthcare workers' behaviors and abilities to provide services to persons already in contact with healthcare.
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- 2024
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24. Cost and Cost-Effectiveness of Distributing HIV Self-Tests within Assisted Partner Services in Western Kenya.
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Mudhune V, Sharma M, Masyuko S, Ngure K, Otieno G, Roy Paladhi U, Katz DA, Kariithi E, Farquhar C, and Bosire R
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Background: Assisted partner services (APS) is a recommended public health approach to promote HIV testing for sexual partners of individuals diagnosed with HIV. We evaluated the cost and cost-effectiveness of integrating oral HIV self-testing (HIVST) into existing APS programs. Methods: Within the APS-HIVST study conducted in western Kenya (2021-2022), we conducted micro-costing, time-and-motion, and provider surveys to determine incremental HIVST distribution cost (2022 USD). Using a decision tree model, we estimated the incremental cost per new diagnosis (ICND) for HIVST incorporated into APS, compared to APS with provider-delivered testing only. Scenario, parameter and probabilistic sensitivity analyses were conducted to explore influential assumptions. Results: The cost per HIVST distributed within APS was USD 8.97, largest component costs were testing supplies (38%) and personnel (30%). Under conditions of a facility-based testing uptake of <91%, or HIVST utilization rates of <27%, HIVST integration into APS is potentially cost-effective. At a willing-to-pay threshold of USD 1000, the net monetary benefit was sensitive to the effectiveness of HIVST in increasing testing rates, phone call rates, HIVST sensitivity, HIV prevalence, cost of HIVST, space allocation at facilities, and personnel time during facility-based testing. In a best-case scenario, the HIVST option was cheaper by USD 3037 and diagnosed 11 more cases (ICND = 265.82). Conclusions: Implementers and policy makers should ensure that HIVST programs are implemented under conditions that guarantee efficiency by focusing on facilities with low uptake for provider-delivered facility-based testing, while deliberately targeting HIVST utilization among the few likely to benefit from remote testing. Additional measures should focus on minimizing costs relating to personnel and testing supplies.
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- 2024
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25. Partner Characteristics and HIV Outcomes among Partners Reached by Phone vs. In-person for Assisted Partner Services in Western Kenya.
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Roy Paladhi U, Kariithi E, Otieno G, Hughes JP, Lagat H, Sharma M, Masyuko S, Macharia P, Bosire R, Mugambi M, Farquhar C, and Katz DA
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Background: Assisted partner services (APS) is an effective strategy for testing people with undiagnosed HIV but there is limited information on the relative reach and effectiveness of phone versus in-person contact., Methods: We analyzed data from 31 facilities in Western Kenya providing APS to female index clients newly HIV-diagnosed, their male partners, and female partners of men newly HIV-diagnosed. APS providers attempted contacting partners using phone first and, if unsuccessful, in-person in the community. Using log-linear mixed models, we estimated relative risks (RR) between phone being the final contact method and partner characteristics and HIV outcomes., Results: From May 2018-March 2020, 2534 female index clients named 7614 male partners, of whom 772 (10.1%) tested positive and named an additional 4956 non-index female partners. Of 11,912 (94.7%) partners reached, 5179 (43.5%) were via phone and 6733 (56.5%) in-person. Of 8076 testing-eligible partners, 99.7% tested and 11.2% first-time tested. Of those tested, 13.1% were newly-diagnosed, of whom 87.0% linked to care. Newly-diagnosed partners were less likely to have been reached by phone vs. in-person (9.8% vs. 15.9%; adjusted RR:0.61, 95%CI:0.53-0.70). Being reached by phone was not significantly associated with testing, first-time testing, or linkage to care., Conclusions: In an APS program that reached 94% of elicited partners, fewer than half were successfully contacted by phone. A combined phone and in-person approach is likely essential for equitable, effective APS., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest and Sources of Funding: There are no conflicts of interest to report for all authors. This study was funded by the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health (grant number R01 AI134130). Additional support was provided by the University of Washington/Fred Hutch Center for AIDS Research, an NIH-funded program (P30 AI027757)., (Copyright © 2024 American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. Sarcopenia is associated with survival in patients awaiting kidney transplant.
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Wendland J, Seth A, Ten Eyck P, Longo J, Binns G, Sanders ML, Hornickel JL, Swee M, Kalil R, and Katz DA
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Background: The relationship of sarcopenia to frailty and other survival determinants in patients waitlisted for kidney transplant is not well characterized. Our goal was to evaluate the relationship of muscle area to functional and frailty metrics and its impact on survival in patients waitlisted for kidney transplant., Methods: Among 303 consecutively listed transplant candidates, 172 had a computed scan within 3 months of frailty and biochemical testing that permitted muscle area evaluation. Third lumbar level psoas muscle indices (total bilateral psoas area/height
2 ) were calculated. Testing included frailty metrics, treadmill and pedometer ability, troponin, and brain natriuretic peptide levels. Associations between muscle area, demographic, biochemical, and frailty measures were analyzed. Log-rank test was used to evaluate waitlist survival on the basis of muscle area, and multivariate Cox proportional hazards modeling was used to evaluate factors independently associated with survival., Results: Demographic factors associated with third lumbar level psoas muscle indices include male sex (P < .001), race (P = .02), age (P = .004), and body mass index (P < .0001). Grip strength, treadmill ability, and Sit-Stands positively correlated with third lumbar level psoas muscle indices (P < .01). Brain natriuretic peptide and Up and Go negatively correlated with third lumbar level psoas muscle indices (P < .01). Survival was significantly associated with third lumbar level psoas muscle indices (P = 0.02). Treadmill ability, Sit-Stands, Up and Go, race and muscle area were most closely associated with waitlist survival on multivariate modeling., Conclusion: Sarcopenia as assessed with muscle area measurements is independently associated with kidney waitlist survival. Functional ability and muscle area may be overlapping, but noncongruent, determinants of waitlist outcomes and may need to be individually assessed to create the most predictive survival model., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest/Disclosure Dr Katz reports commercial research support for immunosuppression drug trials from Bristol Myers Squibb and participation in the Hansa Biopharma ConfideS imlifidase trial in highly sensitized transplant candidates. Dr Kalil reports a research grant from Eurofins. All other authors declare no potential conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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27. Assessment of the HIV Enhanced Access Testing in the Emergency Department (HEATED) program in Nairobi, Kenya: a quasi-experimental prospective study.
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Aluisio AR, Smith-Sreen J, Offorjebe A, Maina W, Pirirei S, Kinuthia J, Bukusi D, Waweru H, Bosire R, Ojuka DK, Eastment MC, Katz DA, Mello MJ, and Farquhar C
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- Humans, Kenya, Prospective Studies, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Adolescent, HIV Testing methods, HIV Testing statistics & numerical data, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Mass Screening statistics & numerical data, Mass Screening methods, Program Evaluation, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections diagnosis
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Background: Persons seeking emergency injury care are often from higher-risk and underserved key populations (KPs) and priority populations (PPs) for HIV programming. While facility-based HIV Testing Services (HTS) in Kenya are effective, emergency department (ED) delivery is limited, despite the potential to reach underserved persons., Methods: This quasi-experimental prospective study evaluated implementation of the HIV Enhanced Access Testing in Emergency Departments (HEATED) at Kenyatta National Hospital ED in Nairobi, Kenya. The HEATED program was designed as a multi-component intervention employing setting appropriate strategies for HIV care sensitization and integration, task shifting, resource reorganization, linkage advocacy, skills development and education to promote ED-HTS with a focus on higher-risk persons. KPs included sex workers, gay men, men who have sex with men, transgender persons and persons who inject drugs. PPs included young persons (18-24 years), victims of interpersonal violence, persons with hazardous alcohol use and persons never HIV tested. Data were obtained from systems-level records, enrolled injured patient participants and healthcare providers. Systems and patient-level data were collected during a pre-implementation period (6 March - 16 April 2023) and post-implementation (period 1, 1 May - 26 June 2023). Additional, systems-level data were collected during a second post-implementation (period 2, 27 June - 20 August 2023). HTS data were evaluated as facility-based HIV testing (completed in the ED) and distribution of HIV self-tests independently, and aggregated as ED-HTS. Evaluation analyses were completed across reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation and maintenance framework domains., Results: All 151 clinical staff were reached through trainings and sensitizations on the HEATED program. Systems-level ED-HTS among all presenting patients increased from 16.7% pre-implementation to 23.0% post-implementation periods 1 and 2 (RR = 1.31, 95% CI: 1.21-1.43; p < 0.001). Among 605 enrolled patient participants, facilities-based HTS increased from 5.7% pre-implementation to 62.3% post-implementation period 1 (RR = 11.2, 95%CI: 6.9-18.1; p < 0.001). There were 440 (72.7%) patient participants identified as KPs (5.6%) and/or PPs (65.3%). For enrolled KPs/PPs, facilities-based HTS increased from 4.6% pre-implementation to 72.3% post-implementation period 1 (RR = 13.8, 95%CI: 5.5-28.7, p < 0.001). Systems and participant level data demonstrated successful adoption and implementation of the HEATED program. Through 16 wk post-implementation a significant increase in ED-HTS delivery was maintained as compared to pre-implementation., Conclusions: The HEATED program increased overall ED-HTS and augmented delivery to KPs/PPs, suggesting that broader implementation could improve HIV services for underserved persons already in contact with health systems.
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- 2024
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28. Effectiveness of Using Additional HIV Self-Test Kits as an Incentive to Increase HIV Testing Within Assisted Partner Services.
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Roy Paladhi U, Katz DA, Otieno G, Hughes JP, Thirumurthy H, Lagat H, Masyuko S, Sharma M, Macharia P, Bosire R, Mugambi M, Kariithi E, and Farquhar C
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- Humans, Male, Female, Kenya, Adult, Cross-Over Studies, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Sexual Partners, Adolescent, Mass Screening methods, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Testing methods, Motivation, Self-Testing
- Abstract
Background: Incentives have shown mixed results in increasing HIV testing rates in low-resource settings. We investigated the effectiveness of offering additional self-tests (HIVSTs) as an incentive to increase testing among partners receiving assisted partner services (APS)., Setting: Western Kenya., Methods: We conducted a single-crossover study nested within a cluster-randomized controlled trial. Twenty-four facilities were randomized 1:1 to (1) control: provider-delivered testing or (2) intervention: offered 1 HIVST or provider-delivered testing for 6 months (pre-implementation), then switched to offering 2 HIVSTs for 6 months (post-implementation). A difference-in-differences approach using generalized linear mixed models, accounting for facility clustering and adjusting for age, sex, and income, was used to estimate the effect of the incentive on HIV testing and first-time testing among partners in APS., Results: March 2021-June 2022, 1127 index clients received APS and named 8155 partners, among whom 2333 reported a prior HIV diagnosis and were excluded from analyses, resulting in 5822 remaining partners: 3646 (62.6%) and 2176 (37.4%) in the pre-implementation and post-implementation periods, respectively. Overall, 944/2176 partners (43%) were offered a second HIVST during post-preimplementation, of whom 34.3% picked up 2 kits, of whom 71.7% reported that the second kit encouraged HIV testing. Comparing partners offered 1 vs. two HIVSTs showed no difference in HIV testing (relative risk: 1.01, 95% confidence interval: 0.951 to 1.07) or HIV testing for the first time (relative risk: 1.23, 95% confidence interval: 0.671 to 2.24)., Conclusions: Offering a second HIVST as an incentive within APS did not significantly impact HIV testing or first-time testing, although those opting for 2 kits reported it incentivized them to test., Competing Interests: The authors have no funding or conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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29. Preferences and uptake of home-based HIV self-testing for maternal retesting in Kenya.
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Drake AL, Jiang W, Kitao P, Farid S, Richardson BA, Katz DA, Wagner AD, Johnson CC, Matemo D, Stewart G, and Kinuthia J
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- Humans, Female, Kenya, Adult, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Young Adult, Prenatal Care, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious diagnosis, HIV Testing methods, Patient Preference statistics & numerical data, Mass Screening methods, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections epidemiology, Self-Testing
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Objective: To compare preferences, uptake, and cofactors for unassisted home-based oral self-testing (HB-HIVST) versus clinic-based rapid diagnostic blood tests (CB-RDT) for maternal HIV retesting., Design: Prospective cohort., Methods: Between November 2017 and June 2019, HIV-negative pregnant Kenyan women receiving antenatal care were enrolled and given a choice to retest with HB-HIVST or CB-RDT. Women were asked to retest between 36 weeks gestation and 1-week post-delivery if the last HIV test was <24 weeks gestation or at 6 weeks postpartum if ≥24 weeks gestation, and self-report on retesting at a 14-week postpartum., Results: Overall, 994 women enrolled and 33% (n = 330) selected HB-HIVST. HB-HIVST was selected because it was private (n = 224, 68%), convenient (n = 211, 63%), and offered flexibility in the timing of retesting (n = 207, 63%), whereas CB-RDT was selected due to the trust of providers to administer the test (n = 510, 77%) and convenience of clinic testing (n = 423, 64%). Among 905 women who reported retesting at follow-up, 135 (15%) used HB-HIVST. Most (n = 595, 94%) who selected CB-RDT retested with this strategy, compared to 39% (n = 120) who selected HB-HIVST retesting with HB-HIVST. HB-HIVST retesting was more common among women with higher household income and those who may have been unable to test during pregnancy (both retested postpartum and delivered <37 weeks gestation) and less common among women who were depressed. Most women said they would retest in the future using the test selected at enrollment (99% [n = 133] HB-HIVST; 93% [n = 715] CB-RDT-RDT)., Conclusions: While most women preferred CB-RDT for maternal retesting, HB-HIVST was acceptable and feasible and could be used to expand HIV retesting options., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Drake et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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30. Characterizing the Communication Networks of Spanish- and English-Speaking Latinx Sexual Minority Men and Their Roles in Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Uptake.
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Lee JJ, Wang L, Vo K, Gonzalez C, Orellana ER, Kerani RP, Katz DA, Sanchez TH, and Graham SM
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- Humans, Male, Adult, United States, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Adolescent, Surveys and Questionnaires, Communication Barriers, Communication, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Patient Acceptance of Health Care ethnology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections ethnology, Sexual and Gender Minorities statistics & numerical data, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Language
- Abstract
While pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has demonstrated efficacy in preventing HIV transmission, disparities in access persist in the United States, especially among Hispanic/Latinx sexual minority men (SMM). Language barriers and differences in how Latinx SMM obtain information may impact access to PrEP and HIV prevention. This study used data from the 2021 American Men's Internet Survey (AMIS) to examine differences in communication networks and PrEP use among Latinx SMM by primary language (Spanish vs. English). We examined the associations between Latinx SMM's individual- and meso-level communication networks and PrEP-related outcomes using modified Poisson regression with robust variances. Spanish-speaking Latinx SMM in the study were less likely to test for HIV, be aware of PrEP, and use daily PrEP, compared to English-speaking participants. Sexuality disclosure to a healthcare provider was positively associated with PrEP uptake among all participants and predicted STI testing over the past 12 months among English-speaking Latinx SMM. Findings highlight disparities in PrEP awareness and uptake among Latinx SMM, especially among those whose primary language is Spanish. Addressing these disparities through targeted interventions, including improved communication with healthcare providers, may help facilitate PrEP access and use in this population.
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- 2024
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31. Providing HIV-assisted partner services to partners of partners in western Kenya: an implementation science study.
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Sharma M, Mambo BW, Kingston H, Otieno G, Masyuko S, Lagat H, Katz DA, Wamuti B, Macharia P, Bosire R, Mugambi M, Kariithi E, and Farquhar C
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- Humans, Kenya epidemiology, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, HIV Testing methods, Middle Aged, Adolescent, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections prevention & control, Sexual Partners, Implementation Science, Contact Tracing methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Assisted partner services (APS), or exposure notification and HIV testing for sexual partners of persons diagnosed HIV positive (index clients), is recommended by the World Health Organization. Most APS literature focuses on outcomes among index clients and their partners. There is little data on the benefits of providing APS to partners of partners diagnosed with HIV., Methods: We utilized data from a large-scale APS implementation project across 31 facilities in western Kenya from 2018 to 2022. Females testing HIV positive at facilities were offered APS; those who consented provided contact information for all male sexual partners in the last 3 years. Male partners were notified of their potential HIV exposure and offered HIV testing services (HTS). Males newly testing positive were also offered APS and asked to provide contact information for their female partners in the last 3 years. Female partners of male partners (FPPs) were provided exposure notification and HTS. All participants with HIV were followed up at 12 months post-enrolment to assess linkage-to antiretroviral treatment (ART) and viral suppression. We compared HIV positivity, demographics and linkage outcomes among female index clients and FPPs., Results: Overall, 5708 FPPs were elicited from male partners, of whom 4951 received HTS through APS (87% coverage); 291 FPPs newly tested HIV positive (6% yield), an additional 1743 (35.2%) reported a prior HIV diagnosis, of whom 99% were on ART at baseline. At 12 months follow-up, most FPPs were taking ART (92%) with very few adverse events: <1% reported intimate partner violence or reported relationship dissolution. FPPs were more likely than female index clients to report HIV risk behaviours including no condom use at last sex (45% vs. 30%) and multiple partners (38% vs. 19%)., Conclusions: Providing HIV testing via APS to FPP is a safe and effective strategy to identify newly diagnosed females and achieve high linkage and retention to ART and can be an efficient means of identifying HIV cases in the era of declining HIV incidence. The high proportion of FPPs reporting HIV risk behaviours suggests APS may help interrupt community HIV transmission via increased knowledge of HIV status and linkage to treatment., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International AIDS Society.)
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- 2024
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32. Effectiveness of HIV self-testing when offered within assisted partner services in Western Kenya (APS-HIVST Study): a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Roy Paladhi U, Katz DA, Otieno G, Hughes JP, Lagat H, Masyuko S, Sharma M, Macharia P, Bosire R, Mugambi M, Kariithi E, and Farquhar C
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- Humans, Kenya, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Adolescent, HIV Testing methods, HIV Testing statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections diagnosis, Self-Testing, Sexual Partners
- Abstract
Introduction: Assisted partner services (APS) is an effective strategy for increasing HIV testing, new diagnosis, and linkage to care among sexual partners of people living with HIV (PLWH). APS can be resource intensive as it requires community tracing to locate each partner named and offer them testing. There is limited evidence for the effectiveness of offering HIV self-testing (HIVST) as an option for partner testing within APS., Methods: We conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial comparing provider-delivered HIV testing (Standard APS) versus offering partners the option of provider-delivered testing or HIVST (APS+HIVST) at 24 health facilities in Western Kenya. Facilities were randomized 1:1 and we conducted intent-to-treat analyses using Poisson generalized linear mixed models to estimate intervention impact on HIV testing, new HIV diagnoses, and linkage to care. All models accounted for clustering at the clinic level and new diagnoses and linkage models were adjusted for individual-level age, sex, and income a priori., Results: From March to December 2021, 755 index clients received APS and named 5054 unique partners. Among these, 1408 partners reporting a prior HIV diagnosis were not eligible for HIV testing and were excluded from analyses. Of the remaining 3646 partners, 96.9% were successfully contacted for APS and tested for HIV: 2111 (97.9%) of 2157 in the APS+HIVST arm and 1422 (95.5%) of 1489 in the Standard APS arm. In the APS+HIVST arm, 84.6% (1785/2111) tested via HIVST and 15.4% (326/2111) received provider-delivered testing. Overall, 16.7% of the 3533 who tested were newly diagnosed with HIV (APS+HIVST = 357/2111 [16.9%]; Standard APS = 232/1422 [16.3%]). Of the 589 partners who were newly diagnosed, 90.7% were linked to care (APS+HIVST = 309/357 [86.6%]; Standard APS = 225/232 [97.0%]). There were no significant differences between the two arms in HIV testing (relative risk [RR]: 1.02, 95% CI: 0.96-1.10), new HIV diagnoses (adjusted RR [aRR]: 1.03, 95% CI: 0.76-1.39) or linkage to care (aRR: 0.88, 95% CI: 0.74-1.06)., Conclusions: There were no differences between APS+HIVST and Standard APS, demonstrating that integrating HIVST into APS continues to be an effective strategy for identifying PLWH by successfully reaching and HIV testing >95% of elicited partners, newly diagnosing with HIV one in six of those tested, >90% of whom were linked to care., Clinical Trial Number: NCT04774835., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of the International AIDS Society published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International AIDS Society.)
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- 2024
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33. "We're On The Same Team": A Qualitative Study On Communication And Care Coordination Surrounding The Requirement To Quit Smoking Prior To Elective Orthopaedic Surgery.
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Golden SE, Sun CJ, Young A, Katz DA, Vander Weg MW, Mayeda MS, Gundle KR, and Bailey SR
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Introduction: Many surgeons require patients to quit smoking prior to elective surgeries to reduce the risk of postoperative complications. Our aim was to qualitatively evaluate the communication and care experiences of patients and clinicians involved in conversations about quitting smoking prior to elective orthopaedic surgery., Methods: A qualitative interview study of rural-residing Veterans, primary care providers (PCPs), and Veterans Administration (VA) orthopaedic surgery staff and pharmacists, who care for rural Veterans. We performed a combination of deductive and inductive approaches to support conventional content analysis using a Patient-Centered Care framework., Results: Patients appreciated a shared approach with their PCP on the plan and reasons for cessation. Despite not knowing if the motivation for elective surgeries served as a teachable moment to facilitate long-term abstinence, almost all clinicians believed it typically helped in the short-term. There was a lack of standardized workflow between primary care and surgery, especially when patients used care delivered outside of VA., Conclusions: While clinician-provided information about the reasons behind the requirement to quit smoking preoperatively was beneficial, patients appreciated the opportunity to collaborate with their care teams on developing a plan for cessation and abstinence. Other aspects of patient-centered care need to be leveraged, such as the therapeutic alliance or patient-as-person, to build trust and improve communication surrounding tobacco use treatment. System-level changes may need to be made to improve coordination and connection of clinicians within and across disciplines., Implications: This study included perspectives from patients, primary care teams, and surgical teams and found that, in addition to providing information, clinicians need to address other aspects of patient-centered care such as the therapeutic alliance and patient-as-person domains to promote patient engagement in tobacco use treatment. This, in turn, could enhance the potential of surgery as a teachable moment and patient success in quitting smoking., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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34. Behavior Change Among HIV-Negative Men Who Have Sex with Men Not Using PrEP in the United States.
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Goodreau SM, Barry MP, Hamilton DT, Williams AM, Wang LY, Sanchez TH, Katz DA, and Delaney KP
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- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino psychology, HIV Seronegativity, Risk-Taking, Sexual and Gender Minorities statistics & numerical data, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Sexual Behavior statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States epidemiology, White, Condoms statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections epidemiology, Homosexuality, Male statistics & numerical data, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis statistics & numerical data, Sexual Partners, Unsafe Sex statistics & numerical data, Unsafe Sex psychology
- Abstract
This study measures changes in condomless anal sex (CAS) among HIV-negative men who have sex with men (MSM) who are not taking pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). It considers the 2014-2019 cycles of the American Men's Internet Survey, a serial, cross-sectional web-based survey of US cisgender MSM aged ≥ 15 years, in which ~ 10% of each year's sample is drawn from the previous year. Among those surveyed for 2 years who remained HIV-negative and off PrEP, reports of having any CAS and of CAS partner number were compared across years. We disaggregated by partner HIV status, and considered demographic predictors. The overall population saw a significant 2.2 percentage-point (pp) increase in reports of any CAS year-over-year. Sub-populations with the largest year-on-year increases were 15-24-year-olds (5.0-pp) and Hispanic respondents (5.1-pp), with interaction (young Hispanic respondents = 12.8-pp). On the relative scale, these numbers correspond to 3.2%, 7.2%, 7.3% and 18.7%, respectively. Absolute increases were concentrated among partners reported as HIV-negative. Multivariable analyses for CAS initiation found effects concentrated among Hispanic and White youth and residents of fringe counties of large metropolitan areas. CAS partner number increases were similarly predicted by Hispanic identity and young age. Although condom use remains more common than PrEP use, increasing CAS among MSM not on PrEP suggests potential new HIV transmission pathways. Concentration of increases among 18-24-year-old MSM portends future increases in the proportion of newly diagnosed HIV that occur among youth. Concentration among young Hispanic MSM will likely expand existing disparities. Although reducing barriers to PrEP remains vital, condom promotion for MSM remains a key public health practice and appears to be missing key audiences. LGBTQ+-inclusive sex education is one avenue for enhancing these efforts., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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35. Correction: Behavior Change Among HIV-Negative Men Who Have Sex with Men Not Using PrEP in the United States.
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Goodreau SM, Barry MP, Hamilton DT, Williams AM, Wang LY, Sanchez TH, Katz DA, and Delaney KP
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- 2024
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36. Implementation and Assessment of the HIV Enhanced Access Testing in the Emergency Department (HEATED) Program in Nairobi, Kenya: A Quasi-Experimental Prospective Study.
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Aluisio AR, Smith-Sreen J, Offorjebe A, Maina W, Pirirei S, Kinuthia J, Bukusi D, Waweru H, Bosire R, Ojuka DK, Eastment MC, Katz DA, Mello MJ, and Farquhar C
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Background: Persons seeking emergency injury care are often from underserved key populations (KPs) and priority populations (PPs) for HIV programming. While facility-based HIV Testing Services (HTS) in Kenya are effective, emergency department (ED) delivery is limited, despite the potential to reach underserved persons., Methods: This quasi-experimental prospective study evaluated implementation of the HIV Enhanced Access Testing in Emergency Departments (HEATED) at Kenyatta National Hospital ED in Nairobi, Kenya. The HEATED program was designed using setting specific data and utilizes resource reorganization, services integration and HIV sensitization to promote ED-HTS. KPs included sex workers, gay men, men who have sex with men, transgender persons and persons who inject drugs. PPs included young persons (18-24 years), victims of interpersonal violence, persons with hazardous alcohol use and those never previously HIV tested. Data were obtained from systems-level records, enrolled injured patient participants and healthcare providers. Systems and patient-level data were collected during a pre-implementation period (6 March - 16 April 2023) and post-implementation (period 1, 1 May - 26 June 2023). Additional, systems-level data were collected during a second post-implementation (period 2, 27 June - 20 August 2023). Evaluation analyses were completed across reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation and maintenance framework domains., Results: All 151 clinical staff were reached through trainings and sensitizations on the HEATED program. Systems-level ED-HTS increased from 16.7% pre-implementation to 23.0% post-implementation periods 1 and 2 (RR=1.31, 95% CI:1.21-1.43; p<0.001) with a 62.9% relative increase in HIV self-test kit provision. Among 605 patient participants, facilities-based HTS increased from 5.7% pre-implementation to 62.3% post-implementation period 1 (RR=11.2, 95%CI:6.9-18.1; p<0.001). There were 440 (72.7%) patient participants identified as KPs (5.6%) and/or PPs (65.3%). For enrolled KPs/PPs, HTS increased from 4.6% pre-implementation to 72.3% post-implementation period 1 (RR=13.8, 95%CI:5.5-28.7, p<0.001). Systems and participant level data demonstrated successful adoption and implementation of the HEATED program. Through 16-weeks post-implementation a significant increase in ED-HTS delivery was maintained as compared to pre-implementation., Conclusions: The HEATED program increased ED-HTS and augmented delivery to KPs/PPs, suggesting that broader implementation could improve HIV services for underserved persons, already in contact with health systems.
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- 2024
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37. Reasons for Migration and Their Associations with HIV Risk and Prevention Among Cisgender Sexual Minority Men: A Latent Class Analysis.
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Lee JJ, Kerani RP, Robles G, Sanchez TH, and Katz DA
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- Male, Humans, United States epidemiology, Homosexuality, Male, Latent Class Analysis, Sexual Behavior, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections prevention & control, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology, Illicit Drugs
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The immigrant population in the United States (U.S.) is rapidly growing; yet there is limited knowledge about how reasons for migrating to the U.S. are associated with HIV prevention behaviors. Using data from the American Men's Internet Survey (2018-2020), we performed a Latent Class Analysis (LCA) to identify patterns in reasons for migration among cisgender gay, bisexual, and other sexual minority men (SMM) who born outside the U.S. We used multivariable logistic regression controlling for demographic characteristics to assess class associations with the following in the past 12 months: condomless anal sex (CAS), illicit drug use, marijuana use, HIV testing, and PrEP use. LCA identified six distinct patterns in reasons for migration among the sample (n = 1,657): (1) Family and friends (14%); (2) Financial (17%); (3) Personal freedom related to being gay (10%); (4) Pursuit of opportunities while living openly as SMM (12%); (5) Educational purposes (18%); (6) Not my decision (29%). While HIV testing (range = 57.6-65.4%) and PrEP use (range = 15.6-21.4%) did not vary by class (p > .05 for all), CAS and illicit drug use were significantly different (p < .05). SMM who migrated to pursue opportunities while living openly and whose reasons were not their decision had greater odds of CAS than SMM who migrated for educational purposes (aOR:1.72, 95% confidence interval [95%CI]:1.15-2.59; 1.57, 1.13-2.19, respectively). Reasons for migration among SMM were associated with behaviors that can increase HIV risk, but not testing or PrEP. Push and pull factors related to migration should be considered when developing behavioral HIV interventions for immigrant SMM., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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38. Consensus of the definitions of the OMERACT glucocorticoid impact core domain set for people with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases.
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Lyne SA, Yip K, Vasiliou VS, Katz DA, Richards P, Tieu J, Black RJ, Bridgewater S, Palmowski A, Beaton D, Maxwell LJ, Robson JC, Mackie SL, Goodman SM, and Hill CL
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- Humans, Consensus, Glucocorticoids therapeutic use, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Rheumatology, Rheumatic Diseases drug therapy, Musculoskeletal Diseases
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Background: The Outcome Measures in Rheumatology (OMERACT) Glucocorticoid (GC) Impact Working Group has been working to develop a core domain set to measure the impact of GCs on patients living with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases. The mandatory domains previously identified for inclusion in all clinical trials measuring the GC effects include infection, bone fragility, mood disturbance, hypertension, diabetes, weight, fatigue, and mortality. Before progressing to instrument selection, the Working Group sought to establish precise definitions of all mandatory domains within the core domain set., Methods: OMERACT methodology was applied with the use of evidence and consensus-based decision making of all stakeholder groups (patient research partners, health care professionals, clinician researchers, industry members and methodologists) to develop detailed definitions for the broad domain, target domain and domain components, taking into consideration sources of variability that could affect measurement of the domain. The working group synthesized prior qualitative studies, quantitative work, and results from Delphi rounds, to develop a rich definition of 'what' is to be measured., Results: Between 2021 and 2023, the OMERACT Working Group on GC Impact conducted virtual meetings to establish domain definitions. First, we mapped each domain onto an OMERACT Core Area. All domains were primarily represented within the Pathophysiological Manifestations Core Area, except from Fatigue which was primarily Life Impact and Weight which spanned both Core Areas. Sources of variability included cultural factors, age, gender, education level, socioeconomic status, personal experiences, emotional state, and language barriers. The domain definitions will form the foundation for instrument selection and the initial step of domain / concept match and content validity in the OMERACT pillar of 'truth' before moving on to feasibility and discrimination., Conclusion: The OMERACT GC Impact Working Group has developed and agreed upon detailed domain definitions for core domains. Future steps of the working group are to select instruments and develop the core outcome measurement set for clinical trials measuring the impact of GC on patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: DAK: is an employee, officer, and owner of Sparrow Pharmaceuticals. JT: Unrestricted research grant from Vifor. JCR: Consultancy and speaking fees Vifor. Unrestricted research grant from Vifor and Sanofi Ltd. Support to attend EULAR 2023 in person from Vifor. SLM: Consultancy on behalf of her institution for Roche/Chugai, Sanofi, AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Pfizer; Investigator on clinical trials for Sanofi, GSK, Sparrow; speaking/lecturing on behalf of her institution for Roche/Chugai, Vifor, Pfizer, UCB, Novartis and AbbVie; chief investigator on STERLING-PMR trial, funded by NIHR; patron of the charity PMRGCAuk. No personal remuneration was received for any of the above activities. Support from Roche/Chugai to attend EULAR2019 in person and from Pfizer to attend ACR Convergence 2021 virtually. SLM is supported in part by the NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NIHR, the NIHR Leeds Biomedical Research Centre, the National Health Service or the UK Department of Health and Social Care. CH: Unrestricted research grant from Vifor. Chief investigator on STERLING-PMR trial, funded by NIHR; Medical Advisor of Arthritis SA. Board Member, Australia New Zealand Vasculitis Society. No personal remuneration was received for any of the above activities. LJM: Paid staff member of OMERACT., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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39. A smoking cessation intervention for rural veterans tailored to individual risk factors: A multicenter randomized clinical trial.
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Vander Weg MW, Howren MB, Grant KM, Prochazka AV, Duffy S, Burke R, Cretzmeyer M, Parker C, Thomas EBK, Rizk MT, Bayer J, Kinner EM, Clark JM, and Katz DA
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- Humans, Counseling, Tobacco Products, Smoking Cessation, Veterans, Tobacco Use Disorder therapy
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Introduction: Rates of cigarette use remain elevated among those living in rural areas. Depressive symptoms, risky alcohol use, and weight concerns frequently accompany cigarette smoking and may adversely affect quitting. Whether treatment for tobacco use that simultaneously addresses these issues affects cessation outcomes is uncertain., Methods: The study was a multicenter, two-group, randomized controlled trial involving mostly rural veterans who smoke (N = 358) receiving treatment at one of five Veterans Affairs Medical Centers. The study randomly assigned participants to a tailored telephone counseling intervention or referral to their state tobacco quitline. Both groups received guideline-recommended smoking cessation pharmacotherapy, selected using a shared decision-making approach. The primary outcome was self-reported seven-day point prevalence abstinence (PPA) at three and six months. The study used salivary cotinine to verify self-reported quitting at six months., Results: Self-reported PPA was significantly greater in participants assigned to Tailored Counseling at three (OR = 1.66; 95 % CI: 1.07-2.58) but not six (OR = 1.35; 95 % CI: 0.85-2.15) months. Post hoc subgroup analyses examining treatment group differences based on whether participants had a positive screen for elevated depressive symptoms, risky alcohol use, and/or concerns about weight gain indicated that the cessation benefit of Tailored Counseling at three months was limited to those with ≥1 accompanying concern (OR = 2.02, 95 % CI: 1.20-3.42). Biochemical verification suggested low rates of misreporting., Conclusions: A tailored smoking cessation intervention addressing concomitant risk factors enhanced short-term abstinence but did not significantly improve long-term quitting. Extending the duration of treatment may be necessary to sustain treatment effects., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None of the authors has a conflict of interest to disclose related to this work., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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40. HIV self-testing acceptability among injured persons seeking emergency care in Nairobi, Kenya.
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Aluisio AR, Bergam SJ, Sugut J, Kinuthia J, Bosire R, Ochola E, Ngila B, Guthrie KM, Liu T, Mugambi M, Katz DA, Farquhar C, and Mello MJ
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- Humans, Male, Adolescent, Adult, Female, Self-Testing, HIV, Kenya, Self Care, HIV Testing, Mass Screening, HIV Infections diagnosis, Emergency Medical Services
- Abstract
Background: Emergency department-based HIV self-testing (ED-HIVST) could increase HIV-testing services to high-risk, under-reached populations., Objectives: This study sought to understand the injury patient acceptability of ED-HIVST., Methods: Injury patients presenting to the Kenyatta National Hospital Accident and Emergency Department were enrolled from March to May 2021. Likert item data on HIVST assessing domains of general acceptability, personal acceptability, and acceptability to distribute to social and/or sexual networks were collected. Ordinal regression was performed yielding adjusted odds ratios (aOR) to identify characteristics associated with high HIVST acceptability across domains., Results: Of 600 participants, 88.7% were male, and the median age was 29. Half reported having primary care providers (PCPs) and 86.2% reported prior HIV testing. For each Likert item, an average of 63.5% of the participants reported they 'Agree Completely' with positive statements about ED-HIVST in general, for themselves, and for others. In adjusted analysis for general acceptability, those <25 (aOR = 1.67, 95%CI:1.36-2.08) and with prior HIV testing (aOR = 1.68, 95%CI:1.27-2.21) had greater odds of agreeing completely. For personal acceptability, those with a PCP (aOR = 3.31, 95%CI:2.72-4.03) and prior HIV testing (aOR = 1.83, 95%CI:1.41-2.38) had greater odds of agreeing completely. For distribution acceptability, participants with a PCP (aOR = 2.42, 95%CI:2.01-2.92) and prior HIV testing (aOR = 1.79, 95%CI: 1.38-2.33) had greater odds of agreeing completely., Conclusions: ED-HIVST is perceived as highly acceptable, and young people with prior testing and PCPs had significantly greater favourability. These data provide a foundation for ED-HIVST programme development in Kenya.
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- 2023
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41. Leveraging emergency care to reach key populations for 'the last mile' in HIV programming: a waiting opportunity.
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Smith-Sreen J, Bosire R, Farquhar C, Katz DA, Kimani J, Masyuko S, Mello MJ, and Aluisio AR
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- Humans, HIV Infections prevention & control, Emergency Medical Services
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- 2023
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42. "It Is A Carrot-Stick Model": A Qualitative Study of Rural-Serving Clinician and Rural-Residing Veteran Perceptions of Requirements to Quit Smoking prior to Elective Surgery.
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Golden SE, Young A, Sun CJ, Mayeda MS, Katz DA, Vander Weg MW, Gundle KR, and Bailey SR
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Introduction: Some medical centers and surgeons require patients to stop smoking cigarettes prior to elective orthopaedic surgeries in an effort to decrease surgical complications. Given higher rates of smoking among rural individuals, rural patients may be disproportionately impacted by these requirements. We assessed the perceptions and experiences of rural-residing Veterans and clinicians related to this requirement., Methods: We conducted qualitative semistructured one-on-one interviews of 26 rural-residing veterans, 10 VA orthopaedic surgery staff (from two Veterans Integrated Services Networks), 24 PCPs who serve rural veterans (14 VA; 10 non-VA), and 4 VA pharmacists. Using the knowledge, attitudes, and behavior framework, we performed conventional content analysis., Results: We found three primary themes across respondents: (1) knowledge of and the evidence base for the requirement varied widely; (2) strong personal attitudes toward the requirement; and (3) implementation and possible implications of this requirement. All surgery staff reported knowledge of requirements at their institution. VA PCPs reported knowledge of requirements but typically could not recall specifics. Most patients were unaware. The majority of respondents felt this requirement could increase motivation to quit smoking. Some PCPs felt a more thorough explanation of smoking-related complications would result in increased quit attempts. About half of all patients reported belief that the requirement was reasonable regardless of initial awareness. Respondents expressed little concern that the requirement might increase rural-urban disparities. Most PCPs and patients felt that there should be exceptions for allowing surgery, while surgical staff disagreed. Discussion . Most respondents thought elective surgery was a good motivator to quit smoking; but patients, PCPs, and surgical staff differed on whether there should be exceptions to the requirement that patients quit preoperatively. Future efforts to augment perioperative smoking cessation may benefit from improving coordination across services and educating patients more about the benefits of quitting., Competing Interests: All authors declare no conflicts of interest with the work presented in this manuscript., (Copyright © 2023 Sara E. Golden et al.)
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- 2023
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43. Dexamethasone Suppression Testing in a Contemporary Cohort with Adrenal Incidentalomas in Two U.S. Integrated Healthcare Systems.
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Crawford M, McDonald B, Chen W, Chowdhry H, Contreras R, Reyes IAC, Dhakal E, Villanueva T, Barzilay JI, Vaughn CF, Czerwiec FS, Katz DA, Adams AL, and Gander JC
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Autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS) from an adrenal adenoma can increase the risk for comorbidities and mortality. The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) is the standard method to diagnose ACS. A multi-site, retrospective cohort of adults with diagnosed adrenal tumors was used to understand patient characteristics associated with DST completion and ACS. Time to DST completion was defined using the lab value and result date; follow-up time was from the adrenal adenoma diagnosis to the time of completion or censoring. ACS was defined by a DST > 1.8 µg/dL (50 nmol/L). The Cox proportional hazards regression model assessed associations between DST completion and patient characteristics. In patients completing a DST, a logistic regression model evaluated relationships between elevated ACS and covariates. We included 24,259 adults, with a mean age of 63.1 years, 48.1% obese, and 28.7% with a Charlson comorbidity index ≥ 4. Approximately 7% (n = 1768) completed a DST with a completion rate of 2.36 (95% CI 2.35, 2.37) per 100 person-years. Fully adjusted models reported that male sex and an increased Charlson comorbidity index were associated with a lower likelihood of DST completion. Current or former smoking status and an increased Charlson comorbidity index had higher odds of a DST > 1.8 μg/dL. In conclusion, clinical policies are needed to improve DST completion and the management of adrenal adenomas.
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- 2023
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44. Changes in Oral and Anal Sex With Opposite-Sex Partners Among Sexually Active Females and Males Aged 15 to 44 Years in the United States: National Survey of Family Growth, 2011-2019.
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Katz DA, Copen CE, Haderxhanaj LT, Hogben M, Goodreau SM, Spicknall IH, and Hamilton DT
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- Male, Humans, Female, United States epidemiology, Sexual Partners, Sexual Behavior, Condoms, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sexually Transmitted Diseases epidemiology, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control, HIV Infections
- Abstract
Background: Oral and anal sex with opposite-sex partners is common and associated with sexually transmitted infection (STI) transmission. Trends in these behaviors over the last decade, during which bacterial STI diagnoses have reached historic highs while HIV diagnoses have decreased, are not well understood. We examined recent trends in oral and anal sex and associated condom use with opposite-sex partners among females and males., Methods: We analyzed data from 16,926 female and 13,533 male respondents aged 15 to 44 years who reported sex with an opposite-sex partner in the past 12 months from the National Survey of Family Growth, 2011-2019. We used survey-weighted linear or logistic regression to evaluate linear temporal trends in oral and anal sex behaviors., Results: From 2011-2013 to 2017-2019, reports of oral sex and number of oral sex partners in the past 12 months increased among females (85.4% in 2011-2013 to 89.4% in 2017-2019; odds ratio [OR], 1.05 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 1.02-1.09], and β = 0.014 [95% CI, 0.005-0.023]; respectively) but not males (ranges, 87.9%-89.1%; 1.27-1.31). Condom use at last oral sex decreased among both females and males (6.3%-4.3%: OR, 0.93 [95% CI, 0.88-0.99]; 5.9%-4.4%: OR, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.91-1.00]). Anal sex (ranges, 21.0%-23.3% [females] and 23.3%-24.6% [males]), number of anal sex partners (females, 0.22-0.25; males, 0.26-0.30), and condom use at last anal sex (females, 15.3%-18.2%; males, 27.0%-28.7%) remained stable., Conclusions: The frequency of oral and anal sex with opposite-sex partners among U.S. 15- to 44-year-olds, paired with limited and-for oral sex-decreasing condom use, demonstrates the need to understand the role of these behaviors in increasing STI diagnosis rates and the potential role of extragenital screening and condoms in reducing STI transmission., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest and Sources of Funding: None reported., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association.)
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- 2023
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45. Modeling the impact of changing sexual behaviors with opposite-sex partners and STI testing among women and men ages 15-44 on STI diagnosis rates in the United States 2012-2019.
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Hamilton DT, Katz DA, Haderxhanaj LT, Copen CE, Spicknall IH, and Hogben M
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Objective: To estimate the potential contributions of reported changes in frequency of penile-vaginal sex (PVS), condom use and STI screening to changes in gonorrhea and chlamydial diagnoses from 2012 to 2019., Methods: An agent-based model of the heterosexual population in the U.S. simulated the STI epidemics. Baseline was calibrated to 2012 diagnosis rates, testing, condom use, and frequency of PVS. Counterfactuals used behaviors from the 2017-2019 NSFG, and we evaluated changes in diagnosis and incidence rates in 2019., Results: Higher testing rates increased gonorrhea and chlamydia diagnosis by 14% and 13%, respectively, but did not reduce incidence. Declining frequency of PVS reduced the diagnosis rate for gonorrhea and chlamydia 6% and 3% respectively while reducing incidence by 10% and 9% respectively. Declining condom use had negligible impact on diagnosis and incidence., Conclusion: Understanding how changing behavior drives STI incidence is essential to addressing the growing epidemics. Changes in testing and frequency of PVS likely contributed to some, but not all, of the changes in diagnoses. More research is needed to understand the context within which changing sexual behavior and testing are occurring., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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46. Population Target-Mediated Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Modeling to Evaluate SPI-62 Exposure and Hepatic 11β-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1 (HSD-1) Inhibition in Healthy Adults.
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Wu N, Katz DA, and An G
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- Humans, Adult, Computer Simulation, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Delivery Systems methods, Models, Biological, 11-beta-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1, Software
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Introduction: SPI-62 is a small-molecule 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (HSD-1) inhibitor exhibiting complicated nonlinear pharmacokinetics (PK) in human. Previously, we developed a target-mediated drug disposition (TMDD) model to characterize the substantial nonlinear PK of SPI-62., Objective: The aim of the current analysis was to perform population PK/PD analysis to further link SPI-62 exposure (i.e., PK) with its response (i.e., inhibition of hepatic HSD-1 activity) to gain a quantitative understanding of the SPI-62 dose-exposure-response relationship., Methods: PK and PD data from the first-in-human (FIH) clinical trials, including single ascending dose (SAD) and multiple ascending dose (MAD) studies, were used for model development. During the model development process, the final model selection was based on biological and physiological plausibility, goodness-of-fit plots, stability of parameter estimates, and objective function value. The nonlinear-mixed effect modeling (NONMEM) software was used for both the implementation of the PK/PD model and model simulation. SPI-62 plasma levels and hepatic HSD-1 inhibition over time following various dose regimens were simulated., Results: The final model was a two-compartment TMDD model component for SPI-62 and an inhibitory I
max model component for hepatic HSD-1 activity. The TMDD-hepatic PD model that we established adequately characterized all remarkable PK and PD behaviors of SPI-62, such as extremely low plasma exposures following the first low doses, nonlinear PK turned into linear PK after repeated low doses, and substantial and long-lasting hepatic HSD-1 inhibition following low doses. SPI-62 was estimated to bind to the target with a second-order association rate constant (Kon ) of 8.43 nM-1 h-1 and first-order dissociation rate constant (Koff ) value of 0.229 h-1 , indicating that SPI-62 binds rapidly to, and dissociates slowly from, its pharmacological target. The estimated target capacity (Rtot ) of 5460 nmol corresponds to approximately 2.2 mg of SPI-62, which comports well with the dose range in which PK nonlinearity is prominent. Model simulation results reveal that a 6 mg once-daily regimen can lead to long-lasting and substantial hepatic HSD-1 inhibition., Conclusions: A population TMDD-PD model that explains SPI-62 nonlinear PK and hepatic HSD-1 inhibition following different dose regimens in healthy adults was successfully established. Our simulation results provide a solid foundation for model-informed development of SPI-62., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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47. Associations Between Characteristics of Individuals With Fontan Circulation With Blood and Urine Biomarkers of Kidney Injury and Dysfunction.
- Author
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Katz DA, Gao Z, Freytag J, Mahendran A, Szugye C, Woodly S, Alvarez TCE, Lubert AM, Alsaied T, Goldstein SL, and Opotowsky AR
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Lipocalin-2, Cystatin C, Creatinine, Kidney, Biomarkers, Glomerular Filtration Rate physiology, Fontan Procedure adverse effects, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic diagnosis
- Abstract
Background Fontan circulation is associated with kidney injury and dysfunction, often unappreciated until Fontan circulatory failure. We hypothesized that cystatin C-estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) would identify chronic kidney disease more frequently and that urine kidney injury biomarkers would be higher with declining Fontan physiological features. Methods and Results We enrolled 100 ambulatory individuals. Blood and urinary laboratory measurements were compared with demographics and clinically obtained data. Different eGFR equations were used for individuals aged ≥19 years and <19 years. Chronic kidney disease was defined as eGFR <90 mL/min per 1.73 m
2 . Median (25th-75th percentile) age was 19 (14-26) years, and 43% were female patients. Cystatin C eGFR detected chronic kidney disease (37%) in more patients than creatinine eGFR (11%). Cystatin C eGFR was positively associated, and skeletal muscle mass was negatively associated, with creatinine eGFR in both univariate (cystatin C eGFR β=0.44±0.12, P =0.0006; skeletal muscle mass β=-0.72±0.32, P =0.03) and multivariable analysis (cystatin C eGFR β=0.43±0.12, P =0.0005; skeletal muscle mass β=-0.69±0.29, P =0.02). Urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin concentration correlated with Fontan pressure ( r =0.28; P =0.04), ventricular end-diastolic pressure ( r =0.28; P =0.04), and body fat mass ( r =0.26; P =0.03). Conclusions Cystatin C eGFR identified more kidney dysfunction, likely attributable to creatinine eGFR being confounded by skeletal muscle mass. Elevated urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin was associated with worse Fontan hemodynamics and higher percentage body fat, suggesting that higher venous pressure and higher adiposity are associated with ongoing kidney injury.- Published
- 2023
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48. The Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Care Continuum Among English-Speaking Latino Sexual Minority Men in the United States (2014-2020).
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Lee JJ, Barry MP, Kerani RP, Sanchez TH, and Katz DA
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- Male, Humans, United States, Homosexuality, Male, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hispanic or Latino, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis, HIV Infections drug therapy, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Background: There is limited understanding of the pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) care continuum specific to Latino/x gay, bisexual, and other sexual minority men (SMM) that encompasses the population residing outside of large metropolitan or urban areas., Setting: We examined trends and characteristics associated with the PrEP care continuum with data from the 2014-2020 cycles of the American Men's Internet Survey, an annual online cross-sectional behavioral survey of cisgender SMM in the United States., Methods: We calculated PrEP continuum outcomes overall and by year among Hispanic/Latino SMM (n = 9010). We used generalized estimating equations with Poisson links to examine (1) temporal trends (2014-2020) in each step of the PrEP continuum and PrEP use in the past year stratified by PrEP eligibility and (2) correlates of each step of the PrEP continuum in 2020 using multivariable models., Results: Among 2283 Latino SMM in 2020, 84% reported PrEP awareness, 30% discussed PrEP with a provider, 15% used PrEP in the past year, and 12% were currently using PrEP. PrEP awareness increased from 52% in 2014 to 84% in 2020; and PrEP use in the past year increased from 4% in 2014 to 15% in 2020. In the multivariable models, age and PrEP eligibility were associated with PrEP use in the past year, and urban-rural classification was associated with current PrEP use., Conclusions: While most of the Latino SMM are aware of PrEP, significant gaps remain in this population in discussing PrEP with a provider and using PrEP that require tailored strategies to enhance access to HIV prevention services., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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49. Condom Use Behaviors, Risk Perception, and Partner Communication Following Oral HIV Self-testing Among Adolescents and Young Adults in Kenya: A Cohort Study.
- Author
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Driver M, Katz DA, Manyeki V, Mungala C, Otiso L, Mugo C, McClelland S, Kohler P, Simoni JM, Inwani I, and Wilson K
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- Female, Humans, Young Adult, Adolescent, Adult, Self-Testing, Cohort Studies, Condoms, Kenya epidemiology, Interpersonal Relations, Risk-Taking, Perception, HIV, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections prevention & control
- Abstract
HIV self-testing (HIVST) can improve testing completion among adolescents and young adults (AYA), although its influence on sexual behaviors is unclear. We evaluated whether HIVST was associated with changes in talking with sexual partners about HIVST, condom use, and HIV risk perception among AYA ages 15-24 years in a study of HIVST distribution through homes, pharmacies, and nightclubs in Nairobi, Kenya. All participants had negative HIVST results. Regression models were used to evaluate changes between pre-HIVST and 4 months post-HIVST. Overall, there was a significant increase in talking with sexual partners about HIVST. There was a significant reduction in number of condomless sex acts among AYA recruited through pharmacies and homes. Unexpectedly, among females, there was a significant decrease in consistent condom use with casual partners. HIVST services for AYA may benefit from including strategies to support condom use and partner communication about self-testing adapted to specific populations and partnerships., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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50. "I feel good because I have saved their lives": Acceptability of assisted partner services among female index clients and male sexual partners in Kenya.
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Naughton B, Owuor M, Wamuti B, Katz DA, Sharma M, Liu W, Lagat H, Kariithi E, Mugambi M, Bosire R, Masyuko S, Farquhar C, and Weiner BJ
- Abstract
Introduction: Assisted partner services (APS), or notification for sexual partners of people diagnosed with HIV, is an efficient, effective, and high yield strategy to identify people living with HIV and is recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO). However, there remains a need to further understand the acceptability of APS qualitatively from a client lens, particularly when APS is integrated into the national health system. We investigated acceptability of APS when integrated into HIV services in Kenya., Methods: Starting in May 2018, APS was implemented in 31 health facilities in Kisumu and Homa Bay counties in western Kenya. From January to December 2019, we conducted in-depth interviews (IDIs) with female index clients (n = 16) and male sexual partners (n = 17) in 10 facilities participating in an APS scale up study. Interviews assessed APS satisfaction, perceived benefits of the intervention, and challenges that may affect delivery or uptake. We applied the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability by Sekhon et al. (2017) as a guide to organize our findings., Results: We find that views of APS are often guided by an individual's trust in the intervention's design and implementation, and an interest to preserve one's health and that of one's family and children. There were strong and consistent acceptable views of APS as "doing good" and "saving a life" and as a means of showing love towards one's partner(s). The initial acceptability framing of individuals engaging with APS was predicated either on a feeling of comfort with the intervention, or a wariness of divulging sex partner personal information. Health care workers (HCWs) were seen to play an important role in mitigating participant fears linked with the intervention, particularly around the sensitive nature of HIV disclosure and sexual partners. Clients noted considerable challenges that affected acceptability, including the risk to the relationship of disclosing one's HIV status, and the risk of intimate partner violence., Discussion: We found that APS is acceptable as a strategy to reach male sexual partners of females diagnosed with HIV, and these findings provide opportunities to inform recommendations for further scale-up. Opportunities such as focusing on intervention confidentiality and appropriate counseling, excluding female clients at risk of IPV from this intervention, and highlighting the altruistic benefits of APS to potential clients. Understanding the perspectives of clients receiving APS in a real-world setting may be valuable to policy-makers and stakeholders interested in scaling up or enhancing APS within health systems., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Naughton et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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