5,946 results on '"Lori, S."'
Search Results
2. Phase II study of novel CXCR2 agonist and Plerixafor for rapid stem cell mobilization in patients with multiple myeloma
- Author
-
Sidana, Surbhi, Bankova, Andriyana K., Hosoya, Hitomi, Kumar, Shaji K., Holmes, Tyson H., Tamaresis, John, Le, Anne, Muffly, Lori S., Maysel-Auslender, Sofia, Johnston, Laura, Arai, Sally, Lowsky, Robert, Meyer, Everett, Rezvani, Andrew, Weng, Wen-Kai, Frank, Matthew J., Shiraz, Parveen, Maecker, Holden T., Lu, Ying, Miklos, David B., and Shizuru, Judith A.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Identification of novel 3D-genome altering and complex structural variants underlying retinitis pigmentosa type 17 through a multistep and high-throughput approach
- Author
-
Suzanne E. de Bruijn, Daan M. Panneman, Nicole Weisschuh, Elizabeth L. Cadena, Erica G. M. Boonen, Lara K. Holtes, Galuh D. N. Astuti, Frans P. M. Cremers, Nico Leijsten, Jordi Corominas, Christian Gilissen, Anna Skowronska, Jessica Woodley, Andrew D. Beggs, Vasileios Toulis, Di Chen, Michael E. Cheetham, Alison J. Hardcastle, Terri L. McLaren, Tina M. Lamey, Jennifer A. Thompson, Fred K. Chen, John N. de Roach, Isabella R. Urwin, Lori S. Sullivan, and Susanne Roosing
- Subjects
gene diagnostics ,gene regulation ,inherited retinal dystrophies ,retinitis pigmentosa ,structural variants ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
IntroductionAutosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa type 17 (adRP, type RP17) is caused by complex structural variants (SVs) affecting a locus on chromosome 17 (chr17q22). The SVs disrupt the 3D regulatory landscape by altering the topologically associating domain (TAD) structure of the locus, creating novel TAD structures (neo-TADs) and ectopic enhancer-gene contacts. Currently, screening for RP17-associated SVs is not included in routine diagnostics given the complexity of the variants and a lack of cost-effective detection methods. The aim of this study was to accurately detect novel RP17-SVs by establishing a systematic and efficient workflow.MethodsGenetically unexplained probands diagnosed with adRP (n = 509) from an international cohort were screened using a smMIPs or genomic qPCR-based approach tailored for the RP17 locus. Suspected copy number changes were validated using high-density SNP-array genotyping, and SV breakpoint characterization was performed by mutation-specific breakpoint PCR, genome sequencing and, if required, optical genome mapping. In silico modeling of novel SVs was performed to predict the formation of neo-TADs and whether ectopic contacts between the retinal enhancers and the GDPD1-promoter could be formed.ResultsUsing this workflow, potential RP17-SVs were detected in eight probands of which seven were confirmed. Two novel SVs were identified that are predicted to cause TAD rearrangement and retinal enhancer-GDPD1 contact, one from Germany (DE-SV9) and three with the same SV from the United States (US-SV10). Previously reported RP17-SVs were also identified in three Australian probands, one with UK-SV2 and two with SA-SV3.DiscussionIn summary, we describe a validated multi-step pipeline for reliable and efficient RP17-SV discovery and expand the range of disease-associated SVs. Based on these data, RP17-SVs can be considered a frequent cause of adRP which warrants the inclusion of RP17-screening as a standard diagnostic test for this disease.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Wav2Gloss: Generating Interlinear Glossed Text from Speech.
- Author
-
Taiqi He, Kwanghee Choi, Lindia Tjuatja, Nathaniel Robinson, Jiatong Shi, Shinji Watanabe 0001, Graham Neubig, David R. Mortensen, and Lori S. Levin
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Constructions Are So Difficult That Even Large Language Models Get Them Right for the Wrong Reasons.
- Author
-
Shijia Zhou, Leonie Weissweiler, Taiqi He, Hinrich Schütze, David R. Mortensen, and Lori S. Levin
- Published
- 2024
6. UCxn: Typologically-Informed Annotation of Constructions Atop Universal Dependencies.
- Author
-
Leonie Weissweiler, Nina Böbel, Kirian Guiller, Santiago Herrera, Wesley Samuel Scivetti, Arthur Lorenzi, Nurit Melnik, Archna Bhatia, Hinrich Schütze, Lori S. Levin, Amir Zeldes, Joakim Nivre, William Croft 0001, and Nathan Schneider 0001
- Published
- 2024
7. Robert N. Stavins (1948–)
- Author
-
Bennear, Lori S. and Cord, Robert A., editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Loss of Muscle Mass and Strength After Hip Fracture: an Intervention Target for Nutrition Supplementation
- Author
-
Reider, Lisa, Owen, Erin C., Dreyer, Hans C., Fitton, Lori S., and Willey, Michael C.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Identification of conservation priority units in the Asian elephant, Elephas maximus
- Author
-
Budd, Kris, Gunn, Joe C., Sullivan, Lauren L., and Eggert, Lori S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Early trajectories of virological and immunological biomarkers and clinical outcomes in patients admitted to hospital for COVID-19: an international, prospective cohort study
- Author
-
Sahner, David, Tierney, John, Vogel, Susan E., Herpin, Betsey R., Smolskis, Mary C., McKay, Laura A., Cahill, Kelly, Crew, Page, Sardana, Ratna, Raim, Sharon Segal, Hensely, Lisa, Lorenzo, Johsua, Mock, Rebecca, Zuckerman, Judith, Atri, Negin, Miller, Mark, Vallee, David, Chung, Lucy, Kang, Nayon, Barrett, Kevin, Adam, Stacey J., Read, Sarah, Draghia-Akli, Ruxandra, Currier, Judy, Hughes, Eric, Harrigan, Rachel H., Amos, Laura, Carlsen, Amy, Carter, Anita, Collins, Gary, Davis, Bionca, Denning, Eileen, DuChene, Alain, Eckroth, Kate, Engen, Nicole, Frase, Alex, Gandits, Greg, Grund, Birgit, Harrison, Merrie, Hurlbut, Nancy, Kaiser, Payton, Koopmeiners, Joseph, Larson, Gregg, Meger, Sue, Mistry, Shweta Sharma, Murray, Thomas, Nelson, Ray, Quan, Kien, Quan, Siu Fun, Reilly, Cavan, Siegel, Lianne, Thompson, Greg, Vock, David, Walski, Jamie, Gelijns, Annetine C., Moskowitz, Alan J., Bagiella, Emilia, Moquete, Ellen, O'Sullivan, Karen, Marks, Mary E., Accardi, Evan, Kinzel, Emily, Burris, Sarah, Bedoya, Gabriela, Gupta, Lola, Overbey, Jessica R., Santos, Milerva, Gillinov, Marc A., Miller, Marissa A., Taddei-Peters, Wendy C., Fenton, Kathleen, Sandkovsky, Uriel, Gottlieb, Robert L., Mack, Michael, Berhe, Mezgebe, Haley, Clinton, Dishner, Emma, Bettacchi, Christopher, Golden, Kevin, Duhaime, Erin, Ryan, Madison, Tallmadge, Catherine, Estrada, Lorie, Jones, Felecia, Villa, Samatha, Wang, Samatha, Robert, Raven, Coleman, Tanquinisha, Clariday, Laura, Baker, Rebecca, Hurutado-Rodriguez, Mariana, Iram, Nazia, Fresnedo, Michelle, Davis, Allyson, Leonard, Kiara, Ramierez, Noelia, Thammavong, Jon, Duque, Krizia, Turner, Emma, Fisher, Tammy, Robinson, Dianna, Ransom, Desirae, Maldonado, Nicholas, Lusk, Erica, Killian, Aaron, Palacious, Adriana, Solis, Edilia, Jerrow, Janet, Watts, Matthew, Whitacre, Heather, Cothran, Elizabeth, Smith, Peter K., Barkauskas, Christina E., Vekstein, Andrew M., Ko, Emily R., Dreyer, Grace R., Stafford, Neil, Brooks, Megan, Der, Tatyana, Witte, Marie, Gamarallage, Ruwan, Franzone, John, Ivey, Noel, Lumsden, Rebecca H., Mosaly, Nilima, Mourad, Ahmaad, Holland, Thomas L., Motta, Mary, Lane, Kathleen, McGowan, Lauren M., Stout, Jennifer, Aloor, Heather, Bragg, Kennesha M., Toledo, Barvina, McLendon-Arvik, Beth, Bussadori, Barbara, Hollister, Beth A., Griffin, Michelle, Giangiacomo, Dana M., Rodriguez, Vicente, Bokhart, Gordon, Eichman, Sharon M., Parrino, Patrick E., Spindel, Stephen, Bansal, Aditya, Baumgarten, Katherine, Hand, Johnathan, Vonderhaar, Derek, Nossaman, Bobby, Sylvia Laudun, Ames, DeAnna, Broussard, Shane, Hernandez, Nilmo, Isaac, Geralyn, Dinh, Huan, Zheng, Yiling, Tran, Sonny, McDaniel, Hunter, Crovetto, Nicolle, Perin, Emerson, Costello, Briana, Manian, Prasad, Sohail, M. Rizwan, Postalian, Alexander, Hinsu, Punit, Watson, Carolyn, Chen, James, Fink, Melyssa, Sturgis, Lydia, Walker, Kim, Mahon, Kim, Parenti, Jennifer, Kappenman, Casey, Knight, Aryn, Sturek, Jeffrey M., Barros, Andrew, Enfield, Kyle B., Kadl, Alexandra, Green, China J., Simon, Rachel M., Fox, Ashley, Thornton, Kara, Adams, Amy, Badhwar, Vinay, Sharma, Sunil, Peppers, Briana, McCarthy, Paul, Krupica, Troy, Sarwari, Arif, Reece, Rebecca, Fornaresico, Lisa, Glaze, Chad, Evans, Raquel, Di, Fang, Carlson, Shawn, Aucremanne, Tanja, Tennant, Connie, Sutton, Lisa Giblin, Buterbaugh, Sabrina, Williams, Roger, Bunner, Robin, Traverse, Jay H., Rhame, Frank, Huelster, Joshua, Kethireddy, Rajesh, Davies, Irena, Salamanca, Julianne, Majeski, Christine, Skelton, Paige, Zarambo, Maria, Sarafolean, Andrea, Bowdish, Michael E., Borok, Zea, Wald-Dickler, Noah, Hutcheon, Douglass, Towfighi, Amytis, Lee, Mary, Lewis, Meghan R., Spellberg, Brad, Sher, Linda, Sharma, Aniket, Olds, Anna P., Justino, Chris, Loxano, Edward, Romero, Chris, Leong, Janet, Rodina, Valentina, Quesada, Christine, Hamilton, Luke, Escobar, Jose, Leshnower, Brad, Bender, William, Sharifpour, Milad, Miller, Jeffrey, Farrington, Woodrow, Baio, Kim T., McBride, Mary, Fielding, Michele, Mathewson, Sonya, Porte, Kristina, Maton, Missy, Ponder, Chari, Haley, Elisabeth, Spainhour, Christine, Rogers, Susan, Tyler, Derrick, Madathil, Ronson J., Rabin, Joseph, Levine, Andrea, Saharia, Kapil, Tabatabai, Ali, Lau, Christine, Gammie, James S., Peguero, Maya-Loren, McKernan, Kimberly, Audette, Mathew, Fleischmann, Emily, Akbari, Kreshta, Lee, Myounghee, Chi, Andrew, Salehi, Hanna, Pariser, Alan, Nyguyen, Phuong Tran, Moore, Jessica, Gee, Adrienne, Vincent, Shelika, Zuckerman, Richard A., Iribarne, Alexander, Metzler, Sara, Shipman, Samantha, Johnson, Haley, Newton, Crystallee, Parr, Doug, Miller, Leslie, Schelle, Beth, McLean, Sherry, Rothbaum, Howard R., Alvarez, Michael S., Kalan, Shivam P., Germann, Heather H., Hendershot, Jennifer, Moroney, Karen, Herring, Karen, Cook, Sharri, Paul, Pam, Walker-Ignasiak, Rebecca, North, Crystal, Oldmixon, Cathryn, Ringwood, Nancy, Muzikansky, Ariela, Morse, Richard, Fitzgerald, Laura, Morin, Haley D., Brower, Roy G., Reineck, Lora A., Bienstock, Karen, Steingrub, Jay H., Hou, Peter K., Steingrub, Jay S., Tidswell, Mark A., Kozikowski, Lori-Ann, Kardos, Cynthia, DeSouza, Leslie, Romain, Sarah, Thornton-Thompson, Sherell, Talmor, Daniel, Shapiro, Nathan, Andromidas, Konstantinos, Banner-Goodspeed, Valerie, Bolstad, Michael, Boyle, Katherine L., Cabrera, Payton, deVilla, Arnaldo, Ellis, Joshua C., Grafals, Ana, Hayes, Sharon, Higgins, Conor, Kurt, Lisa, Kurtzman, Nicholas, Redman, Kimberly, Rosseto, Elinita, Scaffidi, Douglas, Filbin, Michael R., Hibbert, Kathryn A., Parry, Blair, Margolin, Justin, Hillis, Brooklynn, Hamer, Rhonda, Brait, Kelsey, Beakes, Caroline, McKaig, Brenna, Kugener, Eleonore, Jones, Alan E., Galbraith, James, Nandi, Utsav, Peacock, Rebekah, Hendey, Gregory, Kangelaris, Kirsten, Ashktorab, Kimia, Gropper, Rachel, Agrawal, Anika, Yee, Kimberley J., Jauregui, Alejandra E., Zhuo, Hanjing, Almasri, Eyad, Fayed, Mohamed, Hubel, Kinsley A., Hughes, Alyssa R., Garcia, Rebekah L., Lim, George W., Chang, Steven Y., Lin, Michael Y., Vargas, Julia, Sihota, Hena, Beutler, Rebecca, Agarwal, Trisha, Wilson, Jennifer G., Vojnik, Rosemary, Perez, Cynthia, McDowell, Jordan H., Roque, Jonasel, Wang, Henry, Huebinger, Ryan M., Patel, Bela, Vidales, Elizabeth, Albertson, Timothy, Hardy, Erin, Harper, Richart, Moss, Marc A., Baduashvili, Amiran, Chauhan, Lakshmi, Douin, David J., Martinez, Flora, Finck, Lani L., Bastman, Jill, Howell, Michelle, Higgins, Carrie, McKeehan, Jeffrey, Finigan, Jay, Stubenrauch, Peter, Janssen, William J., Griesmer, Christine, VerBurg, Olivia, Hyzy, Robert C., Park, Pauline K., Nelson, Kristine, McSparron, Jake I., Co, Ivan N., Wang, Bonnie R., Jimenez, Jose, Olbrich, Norman, McDonough, Kelli, Jia, Shijing, Hanna, Sinan, Gong, Michelle N., Richardson, Lynne D., Nair, Rahul, Lopez, Brenda, Amosu, Omowunmi, Offor, Obiageli, Tzehaie, Hiwet, Nkemdirim, William, Boujid, Sabah, Mosier, Jarrod M., Hypes, Cameron, Campbell, Elizabeth Salvagio, Bixby, Billie, Gilson, Boris, Lopez, Anitza, Bime, Christian, Parthasarathy, Sairam, Cano, Ariana M., Hite, R. Duncan, Terndrup, Thomas E., Wiedemann, Herbert P., Hudock, Kristin, Tanzeem, Hammad, More, Harshada, Martinkovic, Jamie, Sellers, Susan, Houston, Judy, Burns, Mary, Kiran, Simra, Roads, Tammy, Kennedy, Sarah, Duggal, Abhijit, Thiruchelvam, Nirosshan, Ashok, Kiran, King, Alexander H., Mehkri, Omar, Dugar, Siddharth, Sahoo, Debasis, Yealy, Donald M., Angus, Derek C., Weissman, Alexandra J., Vita, Tina M., Berryman, Emily, Hough, Catherine L., Khan, Akram, Krol, Olivia F., Mills, Emmanuel, Kinjal, Mistry, Briceno, Genesis, Reddy, Raju, Hubel, Kinsley, Jouzestani, Milad K., McDougal, Madeline, Deshmukh, Rupali, Johnston, Nicholas J., Robinson, Bryce H., Gundel, Staphanie J., Katsandres, Sarah C., Chen, Peter, Torbati, Sam S., Parimon, Tanyalak, Caudill, Antonina, Mattison, Brittany, Jackman, Susan E., Chen, Po-En, Bayoumi, Emad, Ojukwu, Cristabelle, Fine, Devin, Weissberg, Gwendolyn, Isip, Katherine, Choi-Kuaea, Yunhee, Mehdikhani, Shaunt, Dar, Tahir B., Fleury Augustin, Nsole Biteghe, Tran, Dana, Dukov, Jennifer Emilow, Matusov, Yuri, Choe, June, Hindoyan, Niree A., Wynter, Timothy, Pascual, Ethan, Clapham, Gregg J., Herrera, Lisa, Caudill, Antonia, O’Mahony, D. Shane, Nyatsatsang, Sonam T., Wilson, David M., Wallick, Julie A., Duven, Alexandria M., Fletcher, Dakota D., Miller, Chadwick, Files, D. Clark, Gibbs, Kevin W., Flores, Lori S., LaRose, Mary E., Landreth, Leigha D., Palacios, D. Rafael, Parks, Lisa, Hicks, Madeline, Goodwin, Andrew J., Kilb, Edward F., Lematty, Caitlan T., Patti, Kerilyn, Grady, Abigail, Rasberry, April, Morris, Peter E., Sturgill, Jamie L., Cassity, Evan P., Dhar, Sanjay, Montgomery-Yates, Ashley A., Pasha, Sarah N., Mayer, Kirby P., Pharm.D., Brittany Bissel, Trott, Terren, Rehman, Shahnaz, de Wit, Marjolein, Mason, Jessica, Bledsoe, Joseph, Knowlton, Kirk U., Brown, Samuel, Lanspa, Michael, Leither, Lindsey, Pelton, Ithan, Armbruster, Brent P., Montgomery, Quinn, Kumar, Naresh, Fergus, Melissa, Imel, Karah, Palmer, Ghazal, Webb, Brandon, Klippel, Carolyn, Jensen, Hannah, Duckworth, Sarah, Gray, Andrew, Burke, Tyler, Knox, Dan, Lumpkin, Jenna, Aston, Valerie T., Applegate, Darrin, Serezlic, Erna, Brown, Katie, Merril, Mardee, Harris, Estelle S., Middleton, Elizabeth A., Barrios, Macy A.G., Greer, Jorden, Schmidt, Amber D., Webb, Melissa K., Paine, Roert, Callahan, Sean J., Waddoups, Lindsey J., Yamane, Misty B., Self, Wesley H., Rice, Todd W., Casey, Jonathan D., Johnson, Jakea, Gray, Christopher, Hays, Margaret, Roth, Megan, Menon, Vidya, Kasubhai, Moiz, Pillai, Anjana, Daniel, Jean, Sittler, Daniel, Kanna, Balavenkatesh, Jilani, Nargis, Amaro, Francisco, Santana, Jessica, Lyakovestsky, Aleksandr, Madhoun, Issa, Desroches, Louis Marie, Amadon, Nicole, Bahr, Alaa, Ezzat, Imaan, Guerrero, Maryanne, Padilla, Joane, Fullmer, Jessie, Singh, Inderpreet, Ali Shah, Syed Hamad, Narang, Rajeev, Mock, Polly, Shadle, Melissa, Hernandez, Brenda, Welch, Kevin, Payne, Andrea, Ertl, Gabriela, Canario, Daniel, Barrientos, Isabel, Goss, Danielle, DeVries, Mattie, Folowosele, Ibidolapo, Garner, Dorothy, Gomez, Mariana, Price, Justin, Bansal, Ekta, Wong, Jim, Faulhaber, Jason, Fazili, Tasaduq, Yeary, Brian, Ndolo, Ruth, Bryant, Christina, Smigeil, Bridgette, Robinson, Philip, Najjar, Rana, Jones, Patrice, Nguyen, Julie, Chin, Christina, Taha, Hassan, Najm, Salah, Smith, Christopher, Moore, Jason, Nassar, Talal, Gallinger, Nick, Christian, Amy, Mauer, D’Amber, Phipps, Ashley, Waters, Michael, Zepeda, Karla, Coslet, Jordan, Landazuri, Rosalynn, Pineda, Jacob, Uribe, Nicole, Garcia, Jose Ruiz, Barbabosa, Cecilia, Sandler, Kaitlyn, Overcash, J. Scott, Marquez, Adrienna, Chu, Hanh, Lee, Kia, Quillin, Kimberly, Garcia, Andrea, Lew, Pauline, Rogers, Ralph, Shehadeh, Fadi, Mylona, Evangelia K., Kaczynski, Matthew, Tran, Quynh-Lam, Benitez, Gregorio, Mishra, Biswajit, Felix, Lewis Oscar, Vafea, Maria Tsikala, Atalla, Eleftheria, Davies, Robin, Hedili, Salma, Monkeberg, Maria Andrea, Tabler, Sandra, Harrington, Britt, Meegada, Sreenath, Koripalli, Venkata Sandeep, Muddana, Prithvi, Jain, Lakshay, Undavalli, Chaitanya, Kavya, Parasa, Ibiwoye, Mofoluwaso, Akilo, Hameed, Lovette, Bryce D., Wylie, Jamie-Crystal, Smith, Diana M., Poon, Kenneth, Eckardt, Paula, Heysu, Rubio-Gomez, Sundararaman, Nithya, Alaby, Doris, Sareli, Candice, Sánchez, Adriana, Popielski, Laura, Kambo, Amy, Viens, Kimberley, Turner, Melissa, Vjecha, Michael J., Weintrob, Amy, Brar, Indira, Markowitz, Norman, Pastor, Erika, Corpuz, Roweena, Alangaden, George, McKinnon, John, Ramesh, Mayur, Herc, Erica, Yared, Nicholas, Lanfranco, Odaliz Abreu, Rivers, Emanuel, Swiderek, Jennifer, Gupta, Ariella Hodari, Pabla, Pardeep, Eliya, Sonia, Jazrawi, Jehan, Delor, Jeremy, Desai, Mona, Cook, Aaron, Jaehne, Anja Kathrina, Gill, Jasreen Kaur, Renaud, Sheri, Sarveswaran, Siva, Gardner, Edward, Scott, James, Bianchini, Monica, Melvin, Casey, Kim, Gina, Wyles, David, Kamis, Kevin, Miller, Rachel, Douglas, Ivor, Haukoos, Jason, Hicks, Carrie, Lazarte, Susana, Marines-Price, Rubria, Osuji, Alice, Agbor Agbor, Barbine Tchamba, Petersen, Tianna, Kamel, Dena, Hansen, Laura, Garcia, Angie, Cha, Christine, Mozaffari, Azadeh, Hernandez, Rosa, Cutrell, James, Kim, Mina, DellaValle, Natalie, Gonzales, Sonia, Somboonwit, Charurut, Oxner, Asa, Guerra, Lucy, Hayes, Michael, Nguyen, Thi, Tran, Thanh, Pinto, Avenette, Hatlen, Timothy, Anderson, Betty, Zepeda-Gutierrez, Ana, Martin, Dannae, Temblador, Cindi, Cuenca, Avon, Tanoviceanu, Roxanne, Prieto, Martha, Guerrero, Mario, Daar, Eric, Correa, Ramiro, Hartnell, Gabe, Wortmann, Glenn, Doshi, Saumil, Moriarty, Theresa, Gonzales, Melissa, Garman, Kristin, Baker, Jason V., Frosch, Anne, Goldsmith, Rachael, Driver, Brian, Frank, Christine, Leviton, Tzivia, Prekker, Matthew, Jibrell, Hodan, Lo, Melanie, Klaphake, Jonathan, Mackedanz, Shari, Ngo, Linh, Garcia-Myers, Kelly, Kunisaki, Ken M., Wendt, Chris, Melzer, Anne, Wetherbee, Erin, Drekonja, Dimitri, Pragman, Alexa, Hamel, Aimee, Thielen, Abbie, Hassler, Miranda, Walquist, Mary, Augenbraun, Michael, George, Jensen, Demeo, Lynette, Mishko, Motria, Thomas, Lorraine, Tatem, Luis, Dehovitz, Jack, Abassi, Mahsa, Leuck, Anne-Marie, Rao, Via, Pullen, Matthew, Luke, Darlette, LaBar, Derek, Christiansen, Theresa, Howard, Diondra, Biswas, Kousick, Harrington, Cristin, Garcia, Amanda, Bremer, Tammy, Burke, Tara, Koker, Brittany, Davis-Karim, Anne, Pittman, David, Vasudeva, Shikha S., Johnstone, Jaylynn R., Agnetti, Kate, Davis, Ruby, Trautner, Barbara, Hines-Munson, Casey, Van, John, Dillon, Laura, Wang, Yiqun, Nagy-Agren, Stephanie, Vasudeva, Shikha, Ochalek, Tracy, Caldwell, Erin, Humerickhouse, Edward, Boone, David, McGraw, William, Looney, David J., Mehta, Sanjay R., Johns, Scott Thompson, St. John, Melissa, Raceles, Jacqueline, Sear, Emily, Funk, Stephen, Cesarini, Rosa, Fang, Michelle, Nicalo, Keith, Drake, Wonder, Jones, Beatrice, Holtman, Teresa, Nguyen, Hien H., Maniar, Archana, Johnson, Eric A., Nguyen, Lam, Tran, Michelle T., Barrett, Thomas W., Johnston, Tera, Huggins, John T., Beiko, Tatsiana Y., Hughes, Heather Y., McManigle, William C., Tanner, Nichole T., Washburn, Ronald G., Ardelt, Magdalena, Tuohy, Patricia A., Mixson, Jennifer L., Hinton, Charles G., Thornley, Nicola, Allen, Heather, Elam, Shannon, Boatman, Barry, Baber, Brittany J., Ryant, Rudell, Roller, Brentin, Nguyen, Chinh, Mikail, Amani Morgan, Research, Marivic Hansen, Lichtenberger, Paola, Baracco, Gio, Ramos, Carol, Bjork, Lauren, Sueiro, Melyssa, Tien, Phyllis, Freasier, Heather, Buck, Theresa, Nekach, Hafida, Holodniy, Mark, Chary, Aarthi, Lu, Kan, Peters, Theresa, Lopez, Jessica, Tan, Susanna Yu, Lee, Robert H., Asghar, Aliya, Karyn Isip, Tasadduq Karim, Le, Katherine, Nguyen, Thao, Wong, Shinn, Raben, Dorthe, Murray, Daniel D., Jensen, Tomas O., Peters, Lars, Aagaard, Bitten, Nielsen, Charlotte B., Krapp, Katharina, Nykjær, Bente Rosdahl, Olsson, Christina, Kanne, Katja Lisa, Grevsen, Anne Louise, Joensen, Zillah Maria, Bruun, Tina, Bojesen, Ane, Woldbye, Frederik, Normand, Nick E., Esman, Frederik V.L., Benfield, Thomas, Clausen, Clara Lundetoft, Hovmand, Nichlas, Israelsen, Simone Bastrup, Iversen, Katrine, Leding, Caecilie, Pedersen, Karen Brorup, Thorlacius-Ussing, Louise, Tinggaard, Michaela, Tingsgard, Sandra, Krohn-Dehli, Louise, Pedersen, Dorthe, Villadsen, Signe, Staehr Jensen, Jens-Ulrik, Overgaard, Rikke, Rastoder, Ema, Heerfordt, Christian, Hedsund, Caroline, Ronn, Christian Phillip, Kamstrup, Peter Thobias, Hogsberg, Dorthe Sandbaek, Bergsoe, Christina, Søborg, Christian, Hissabu, Nuria M.S., Arp, Bodil C., Ostergaard, Lars, Staerke, Nina Breinholt, Yehdego, Yordanos, Sondergaard, Ane, Johansen, Isik S., Pedersen, Andreas Arnholdt, Knudtzen, Fredrikke C., Larsen, Lykke, Hertz, Mathias A., Fabricius, Thilde, Holden, Inge K., Lindvig, Susan O., Helleberg, Marie, Gerstoft, Jan, Kirk, Ole, Jensen, Tomas Ostergaard, Madsen, Birgitte Lindegaard, Pedersen, Thomas Ingemann, Harboe, Zitta Barrella, Roge, Birgit Thorup, Hansen, Thomas Michael, Glesner, Matilde Kanstrup, Lofberg, Sandra Valborg, Nielsen, Ariella Denize, Leicht von Huth, Sebastian, Nielsen, Henrik, Thisted, Rikke Krog, Petersen, Kristine Toft, Juhl, Maria Ruwald, Podlekareva, Daria, Johnsen, Stine, Andreassen, Helle Frost, Pedersen, Lars, Clara Ellinor Lindnér, Cecilia Ebba, Wiese, Lothar, Knudsen, Lene Surland, Skrøder Nytofte, Nikolaj Julian, Havmøller, Signe Ravn, Expósito, Maria, Badillo, José, Martínez, Ana, Abad, Elena, Chamorro, Ana, Figuerola, Ariadna, Mateu, Lourdes, España, Sergio, Lucero, Maria Constanza, Santos, José Ramón, Lladós, Gemma, Lopez, Cristina, Carabias, Lydia, Molina-Morant, Daniel, Loste, Cora, Bracke, Carmen, Siles, Adrian, Fernández-Cruz, Eduardo, Di Natale, Marisa, Padure, Sergiu, Gomez, Jimena, Ausin, Cristina, Cervilla, Eva, Balastegui, Héctor, Sainz, Carmen Rodríguez, Lopez, Paco, Carbone, Javier, Escobar, Mariam, Balerdi, Leire, Legarda, Almudena, Roldan, Montserrat, Letona, Laura, Muñoz, José, Camprubí, Daniel, Arribas, Jose R., Sánchez, Rocio Montejano, Díaz-Pollán, Beatriz, Stewart, Stefan Mark, Garcia, Irene, Borobia, Alberto, Mora-Rillo, Marta, Estrada, Vicente, Cabello, Noemi, Nuñez-Orantos, M.J., Sagastagoitia, I., Homen, J.R., Orviz, E., Montalvá, Adrián Sánchez, Espinosa-Pereiro, Juan, Bosch-Nicolau, Pau, Salvador, Fernando, Burgos, Joaquin, Morales-Rull, Jose Luis, Moreno Pena, Anna Maria, Acosta, Cristina, Solé-Felip, Cristina, Horcajada, Juan P., Sendra, Elena, Castañeda, Silvia, López-Montesinos, Inmaculada, Gómez-Junyent, Joan, Gonzáles, Carlota Gudiol, Cuervo, Guilermo, Pujol, Miquel, Carratalà, Jordi, Videla, Sebastià, Günthard, Huldrych, Braun, Dominique L., West, Emily, M’Rabeth-Bensalah, Khadija, Eichinger, Mareile L., Grüttner-Durmaz, Manuela, Grube, Christina, Zink, Veronika, pharmacist, Goes pharmacist, Josefine, Fätkenheuer, Gerd, Malin, Jakob J., Tsertsvadze, Tengiz, Abutidze, Akaki, Chkhartishvili, Nikoloz, Metchurtchlishvili, Revaz, Endeladze, Marina, Paciorek, Marcin, Bursa, Dominik, Krogulec, Dominika, Pulik, Piotr, Ignatowska, Anna, Horban, Andrzej, Bakowska, Elzbieta, Kowaska, Justyna, Bednarska, Agnieszka, Jurek, Natalia, Skrzat-Klapaczynska, Agata, Bienkowski, Carlo, Hackiewicz, Malgorzata, Makowiecki, Michal, Platowski, Antoni, Fishchuk, Roman, Kobrynska, Olena, Levandovska, Khrystyna, Kirieieva, Ivanna, Kuziuk, Mykhailo, Naucler, Pontus, Perlhamre, Emma, Mazouch, Lotta, Kelleher, Anthony, Polizzotto, Mark, Carey, Catherine, Chang, Christina C., Hough, Sally, Virachit, Sophie, Davidson, Sarah, Bice, Daniel J., Ognenovska, Katherine, Cabrera, Gesalit, Flynn, Ruth, Young, Barnaby E., Chia, Po Ying, Lee, Tau Hong, Lin, Ray J., Lye, David C., Ong, Sean W.X., Puah, Ser Hon, Yeo, Tsin Wen, Diong, Shiau Hui, Ongko, Juwinda, Yeo, He Ping, Eriobu, Nnakelu, Kwaghe, Vivian, Zaiyad, Habib, Idoko, Godwin, Uche, Blessing, Selvamuthu, Poongulali, Kumarasamy, Nagalingeswaran, Beulah, Faith Ester, Govindarajan, Narayan, Mariyappan, Kowsalya, Losso, Marcelo H., Abela, Cecilia, Moretto, Renzo, Belloc, Carlos G., Ludueña, Jael, Amar, Josefina, Toibaro, Javier, Macias, Laura Moreno, Fernandez, Lucia, Frare, Pablo S., Chaio, Sebastian R., Pachioli, Valeria, Timpano, Stella M., Sanchez, Marisa del Lujan, de Paz Sierra, Mariana, Stanek, Vanina, Belloso, Waldo, Cilenti, Flavia L., Valentini, Ricardo N., Stryjewski, Martin E., Locatelli, Nicolas, Soler Riera, Maria C., Salgado, Clara, Baeck, Ines M., Di Castelnuovo, Valentina, Zarza, Stella M., Hudson, Fleur, Parmar, Mahesh K.B., Goodman, Anna L., Dphil, Badrock, Jonathan, Gregory, Adam, Goodall, Katharine, Harris, Nicola, Wyncoll, James, Bhagani, S., Rodger, A., Luntiel, A., Patterson, C., Morales, J., Witele, E., Preston, A.-M., Nandani, A., Price, D.A., Hanrath, Aiden, Nell, Jeremy, Patel, Bijal, Hays, Carole, Jones, Geraldine, Davidson, Jade, Bawa, T., Mathews, M., Mazzella, A., Bisnauthsing, K., Aguilar-Jimenez, L., Borchini, F., Hammett, S., Touloumi, Giota, Pantazis, Nikos, Gioukari, Vicky, Souliou, Tania, Antoniadou, A., Protopapas, K., Kavatha, D., Grigoropoulou, S., Oikonomopoulo, C., Moschopoulos, C., Koulouris, N.G., Tzimopoulos, K., Koromilias, A., Argyraki, K., Lourida, P., Bakakos, P., Kalomenidis, I., Vlachakos, V., Barmparessou, Z., Balis, E., Zakynthinos, S., Sigala, I., Gianniou, N., Dima, E., Magkouta, S., Synolaki, E., Konstanta, S., Vlachou, M., Stathopoulou, P., Panagopoulos, P., Petrakis, V., Papazoglou, D., Tompaidou, E., Isaakidou, E., Poulakou, G., Rapti, V., Leontis, K., Nitsotolis, T., Athanasiou, K., Syrigos, K., Kyriakoulis, K., Trontzas, I., Arfara-Melanini, M., Kolonis, V., Kityo, Cissy, Mugerwa, Henry, Kiweewa, Francis, Kimuli, Ivan, Lukaakome, Joseph, Nsereko, Christoher, Lubega, Gloria, Kibirige, Moses, Nakahima, William, Wangi, Deus, Aguti, Evelyne, Generous, Lilian, Massa, Rosemary, Nalaki, Margaret, Magala, Felix, Nabaggala, Phiona Kaweesi, Kidega, Robert, Faith, Oryem Daizy, Florence, Apio, Emmanuel, Ocung, Beacham, Mugoonyi Paul, Geoffrey, Amone, Nakiboneka, Dridah, Apiyo, Paska, Kirenga, Bruce, Atukunda, Angella, Muttamba, Winters, Remmy, Kyeyume, Segawa, Ivan, Pheona, Nsubuga, Kigere, David, Mbabazi, Queen Lailah, Boersalino, Ledra, Nyakoolo, Grace, Fred, Aniongo, Alupo, Alice, Ebong, Doryn, Monday, Edson, Nalubwama, Ritah Norah, Kainja, Milton, Ambrose, Munu, Kwehayo, Vanon, Nalubega, Mary Grace, Ongoli, Augustine, Obbo, Stephen, Sebudde, Nicholus, Alaba, Jeniffer, Magombe, Geoffrey, Tino, Harriet, Obonya, Emmanuel, Lutaakome, Joseph, Kitonsa, Jonathan, Onyango, Martin, Naboth, Tukamwesiga, Naluyinda, Hadijah, Nanyunja, Regina, Irene, Muttiibwa, Jane, Biira, Wimfred, Kyobejja, Leonard, Ssemazzi, Deus, Tkiinomuhisha, Babra, Namasaba, Taire, Paul, Nabankema, Evelyn, Ogavu, Joseph, Mugerwa, Oscar, Okoth, Ivan, Mwebaze, Raymond, Mugabi, Timothy, Makhoba, Anthony, Arikiriza, Phiona, Theresa, Nabuuma, Nakayima, Hope, Frank, Kisuule, Ramgi, Patrícia, Pereira, Kássia, Osinusi, Anu, Cao, Huyen, Klekotka, Paul, Price, Karen, Nirula, Ajay, Osei, Suzette, Tipple, Craig, Wills, Angela, Peppercorn, Amanda, Watson, Helen, Gupta, Rajesh, Alexander, Elizabeth, Mogalian, Erik, Lin, Leo, Ding, Xiao, Margolis, David, Yan, Li, Girardet, Jean-Luc, Ma, Ji, Hong, Zhi, Zhu, Quing, Seegobin, Seth, Gibbs, Michael, Latchman, Mickel, Hasior, Katarzyna, Bouquet, Jerome, Wei, Jianxin, Streicher, Katie, Schmelzer, Albert, Brooks, Dennis, Butcher, Jonny, Tonev, Dimitar, Arbetter, Douglas, Damstetter, Philippe, Legenne, Philippe, Stumpp, Michael, Goncalves, Susana, Ramanathan, Krishnan, Chandra, Richa, Baseler, Beth, Teitelbaum, Marc, Schechner, Adam, Holley, H. Preston, Jankelevich, Shirley, Becker, Nancy, Dolney, Suzanne, Hissey, Debbie, Simpson, Shelly, Kim, Mi Ha, Beeler, Joy, Harmon, Liam, Asomah, Mabel, Jato, Yvonne, Stottlemyer, April, Tang, Olivia, Vanderpuye, Sharon, Yeon, Lindsey, Buehn, Molly, Eccard-Koons, Vanessa, Frary, Sadie, MacDonald, Leah, Cash, Jennifer, Hoopengardner, Lisa, Linton, Jessica, Schaffhauser, Marylu, Nelson, Michaela, Spinelli-Nadzam, Mary, Proffitt, Calvin, Lee, Christopher, Engel, Theresa, Fontaine, Laura, Osborne, C.K., Hohn, Matt, Galcik, Michael, Thompson, DeeDee, Kopka, Stacey, Shelley, Denise M., Mendez, Gregg, Brown, Shawn, Albert, Sara, Balde, Abby, Baracz, Michelle, Bielica, Mona, Billouin-Frazier, Shere, Choudary, Jay, Dixon, Mary, Eyler, Carolyn, Frye, Leanne, Gertz, Jensen, Giebeig, Lisa, Gulati, Neelam, Hankinson, Liz, Hogarty, Debi, Huber, Lynda, Krauss, Gary, Lake, Eileen, Manandhar, Meryan, Rudzinski, Erin, Sandrus, Jen, Suders, Connie, Natarajan, Ven, Rupert, Adam W., Baseler, Michael, Lynam, Danielle, Imamichi, Tom, Laverdure, Sylvain, McCormack, Ashley, Paudel, Sharada, Cook, Kyndal, Haupt, Kendra, Khan, Ayub, Hazen, Allison, Badralmaa, Yunden, Smith, Kenneth, Patel, Bhakti, Kubernac, Amanda, Kubernac, Robert, Hoover, Marie L., Solomon, Courtney, Rashid, Marium, Murphy, Joseph, Brown, Craig, DuChateau, Nadine, Ellis, Sadie, Flosi, Adam, Fox, Lisa, Johnson, Les, Nelson, Rich, Stojanovic, Jelena, Treagus, Amy, Wenner, Christine, Williams, Richard, Jensen, Tomas O, Murray, Thomas A, Grandits, Greg A, Jain, Mamta K, Shaw-Saliba, Kathryn, Matthay, Michael A, Baker, Jason V, Dewar, Robin L, Goodman, Anna L, Hatlen, Timothy J, Highbarger, Helene C, Lallemand, Perrine, Leshnower, Bradley G, Looney, David, Moschopoulos, Charalampos D, Murray, Daniel D, Mylonakis, Eleftherios, Rehman, M Tauseef, Rupert, Adam, Stevens, Randy, Turville, Stuart, Wick, Katherine, Lundgren, Jens, and Ko, Emily R
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Bendamustine vs. fludarabine/cyclophosphamide lymphodepletion prior to BCMA CAR-T cell therapy in multiple myeloma
- Author
-
Sidana, Surbhi, Hosoya, Hitomi, Jensen, Alexandria, Liu, Lawrence, Goyal, Anmol, Hovanky, Vanna, Sahaf, Bita, Bharadwaj, Sushma, Latchford, Theresa, Arai, Sally, Leahy, Sheryl, Mei, Matthew, Budde, Lihua E., Muffly, Lori S., Frank, Matthew J., Dahiya, Saurabh, Htut, Myo, Miklos, David, and Janakiram, Murali
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Gender Parity Analysis of the Editorial Boards of Influential Dermatology Journals: Cross-Sectional Study
- Author
-
Mindy D Szeto, Torunn E Sivesind, Lori S Kim, Katie A O’Connell, Kathryn A Sprague, Yvonne Nong, Daniel M Strock, Annie L Cao, Jieying Wu, Lauren M Toledo, Sophia M Wolfe, Wyatt Boothby-Shoemaker, and Robert P Dellavalle
- Subjects
Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Abstract
This study underscores the persistent underrepresentation of women in academic dermatology leadership positions by examining the gender composition of editorial boards across top dermatology journals, emphasizing the urgent need for proactive strategies to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Bendamustine vs. fludarabine/cyclophosphamide lymphodepletion prior to BCMA CAR-T cell therapy in multiple myeloma
- Author
-
Surbhi Sidana, Hitomi Hosoya, Alexandria Jensen, Lawrence Liu, Anmol Goyal, Vanna Hovanky, Bita Sahaf, Sushma Bharadwaj, Theresa Latchford, Sally Arai, Sheryl Leahy, Matthew Mei, Lihua E. Budde, Lori S. Muffly, Matthew J. Frank, Saurabh Dahiya, Myo Htut, David Miklos, and Murali Janakiram
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Genetic differences among the Interior Highlands walleye (Sander vitreus) with mitochondrial and nuclear markers indicate the need for updated stocking practices
- Author
-
Berkman, Leah K., Titus, Chelsea L., Thomas, Dustin R., Fluker, Brook L., Cieslewicz, Paul, Knuth, Dave, Koppelman, Jeffrey B., and Eggert, Lori S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Single-center randomized trial of T-reg graft alone vs T-reg graft plus tacrolimus for the prevention of acute GVHD
- Author
-
Bader, Cameron S., Pavlova, Anna, Lowsky, Robert, Muffly, Lori S., Shiraz, Parveen, Arai, Sally, Johnston, Laura J., Rezvani, Andrew R., Weng, Wen-Kai, Miklos, David B., Frank, Matthew J., Tamaresis, John S., Agrawal, Vaibhav, Bharadwaj, Sushma, Sidana, Surbhi, Shizuru, Judith A., Fernhoff, Nathaniel B., Putnam, Amy, Killian, Scott, Xie, Bryan J., Negrin, Robert S., and Meyer, Everett H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Syntax and Semantics Meet in the 'Middle': Probing the Syntax-Semantics Interface of LMs Through Agentivity.
- Author
-
Lindia Tjuatja, Emmy Liu, Lori S. Levin, and Graham Neubig
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. SigMoreFun Submission to the SIGMORPHON Shared Task on Interlinear Glossing.
- Author
-
Taiqi He, Lindia Tjuatja, Nathaniel R. Robinson, Shinji Watanabe 0001, David R. Mortensen, Graham Neubig, and Lori S. Levin
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Generalized Glossing Guidelines: An Explicit, Human- and Machine-Readable, Item-and-Process Convention for Morphological Annotation.
- Author
-
David R. Mortensen, Ela Gulsen, Taiqi He, Nathaniel R. Robinson, Jonathan Amith, Lindia Tjuatja, and Lori S. Levin
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Identification of Workload Measurement Indicators for School Nursing Practice
- Author
-
Jameson, Beth E., Anderson, Lori S., and Endsley, Patricia
- Abstract
Many school districts rely on caseload or student to school nurse ratios that are not grounded in evidence-based research. There is a need for a comprehensive workload instrument to describe the work of school nurses that incorporates the complexities of the role and includes acuity, care processes, and social determinants of health. The purpose of this qualitative study was to identify workload activities from a previous Delphi study that can be empirically measured as items for a workload instrument. A nationally representative sample of 27 school nurses participated in four focus groups, describing activities important to the measurement of workload. Focus group input resulted in identification and confirmation of workload activities that impact school nurse workload. Use of the National Association of School Nurses' Framework for 21st Century School Nursing Practice™ was integral in capturing gaps and important workload activities for a potential workload instrument.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Impact of prior inotuzumab ozogamicin treatment on brexucabtagene autoleucel outcomes in adults with B-cell ALL
- Author
-
Aldoss, Ibrahim, Roloff, Gregory W., Faramand, Rawan, Kopmar, Noam E., Lin, Chenyu, Advani, Anjali S., Dekker, Simone E., Gupta, Vishal K., O'Connor, Timothy E., Jeyakumar, Nikeshan, Muhsen, Ibrahim N., Valtis, Yannis, Zhang, Amy, Miller, Katharine, Sutherland, Katherine, Dykes, Kaitlyn C., Ahmed, Mohamed, Chen, Evan, Zambrano, Hector, Bradshaw, Danielle, Mercadal, Santiago, Schwartz, Marc, Tracy, Sean, Dholaria, Bhagirathbhai, Kubiak, Michal, Mukherjee, Akash, Majhail, Navneet, Battiwalla, Minoo, Mountjoy, Luke, Malik, Shahbaz A., Mathews, John, Shaughnessy, Paul, Logan, Aaron C., Ladha, Abdullah, Stefan, Maryann, Guzowski, Caitlin, Hoeg, Rasmus T., Hilal, Talal, Moore, Jozal, Connor, Matthew, O'Dwyer, Kristen M., Hill, LaQuisa C., Tsai, Stephanie B., Sasine, Joshua, Solh, Melhem M., Lee, Catherine J., Kota, Vamsi K., Koura, Divya, Veeraputhiran, Muthu, Blunk, Betsy, Oliai, Caspian, Leonard, Jessica T., Frey, Noelle V., Park, Jae H., Luskin, Marlise R., Bachanova, Veronika, Galal, Ahmed, Bishop, Michael R., Stock, Wendy, Cassaday, Ryan D., Pullarkat, Vinod, Shah, Bijal D., and Muffly, Lori S.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Diagnostic agreement between three point-of-care glucose and β-hydroxybutyrate meters and reference laboratory methods in stingrays
- Author
-
Nicholas G. Dannemiller, Carolyn Cray, Lori S. Westmoreland, and Emily F. Christiansen
- Subjects
batoid ,clinical pathology ,elasmobranch ,ketone ,metabolism ,Veterinary medicine ,SF600-1100 - Abstract
Point-of-care (POC) glucose and β-hydroxybutyrate (β-HB) meters can potentially provide rapid insight into an elasmobranch’s metabolic state in clinical and field research settings. This study evaluated the diagnostic agreement of three commercial POC meters against reference laboratory methods for glucose and β-HB concentrations in stingrays. Blood was collected during anesthetized exams from 28 stingrays representing four species: cownose rays (Rhinoptera bonasus), Atlantic stingrays (Hypanus sabina), southern stingrays (Hypanus americanus), and yellow stingrays (Urobatis jamaicensis). Glucose and β-HB concentrations were measured with each POC meter using whole blood and plasma; in parallel, plasma glucose and β-HB concentrations were measured via reference laboratory methods. Agreement between POC meters and reference laboratory methods was assessed using Bland–Altman methods, Passing-Bablok regression, observed total error, percent relative error, and linear mixed effect models. Plasma glucose and β-HB concentrations determined by reference laboratory methods ranged from
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Return to Work Among Young Adult Survivors of Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation in the United States
- Author
-
Bhatt, Neel S, Brazauskas, Ruta, Salit, Rachel B, Syrjala, Karen, Bo-Subait, Stephanie, Tecca, Heather, Badawy, Sherif M, Baker, K Scott, Beitinjaneh, Amer, Bejanyan, Nelli, Byrne, Michael, Dias, Ajoy, Farhadfar, Nosha, Freytes, César O, Ganguly, Siddhartha, Hashmi, Shahrukh, Hayashi, Robert J, Hong, Sanghee, Inamoto, Yoshihiro, Jamani, Kareem, Kasow, Kimberly A, Khera, Nandita, Krem, Maxwell M, Lazarus, Hillard M, Lee, Catherine J, Lee, Stephanie, Majhail, Navneet S, Malone, Adriana K, Marks, David I, Mau, Lih-Wen, Mayo, Samantha J, Muffly, Lori S, Nathan, Sunita, Nishihori, Taiga, Page, Kristin M, Preussler, Jaime, Rangarajan, Hemalatha G, Rotz, Seth J, Salooja, Nina, Savani, Bipin N, Schears, Raquel, Schechter-Finkelstein, Tal, Schiller, Gary, Shah, Ami J, Sharma, Akshay, Wang, Trent, Wirk, Baldeep, Battiwalla, Minoo, Schoemans, Hélène, Hamilton, Betty, Buchbinder, David, Phelan, Rachel, and Shaw, Bronwen
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cancer ,Transplantation ,Clinical Research ,Rehabilitation ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Quality Education ,Female ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Humans ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Return to Work ,Survivors ,Transplantation ,Homologous ,United States ,Young Adult ,Hematopoietic cell transplantation ,Return to work ,Quality of life ,Young adult ,Immunology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Young adult (YA) survivors of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) are at risk for late psychosocial challenges, including the inability to return to work post-HCT. Work-related outcomes in this population remain understudied, however. We conducted this study to assess the post-HCT work status of survivors of allogeneic HCT who underwent HCT as YAs and to analyze the patient-, disease-, and HCT-related factors associated with their work status at 1 year post-HCT. Using Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research data, we evaluated the post-HCT work status (full-time, part-time work, unemployed, or medical disability) of 1365 YA HCT survivors who underwent HCT between 2008 and 2015. Percentages of work status categories were reported at 4 time points: 6 months, 1 year, 2 years, and 3 years post-HCT. Percentages of post-HCT work status categories at the 1-year time point were also described in relation to survivors' pre-HCT work status categories. Factors associated with 1-year post-HCT work status (full-time or part-time work) were examined using logistic regression. From 6 months to 3 years post-HCT, the percentage of survivors working full-time increased from 18.3% to 50.7% and the percentage working part-time increased from 6.9% to 10.5%. Of patients in full-time work pre-HCT, 50% were unemployed or on medical disability at 1 year post-HCT. Female sex (odds ratio [OR], 0.55; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.40 to 0.77), HCT Comorbidity Index score ≥3 (OR, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.39 to 0.82), pre-HCT unemployment (OR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.24 to 0.56), medical disability (OR, 0.44; 95% CI, 0.28 to 0.70), development of grade III-IV acute graft-versus-host disease (OR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.34 to 0.80), and relapse within 1 year post-HCT (OR, 0.34; 95% CI, 0.21 to 0.56) were associated with a lower likelihood of employment at 1 year post-HCT. Compared with myeloablative conditioning (MAC) with total body irradiation (TBI), MAC without TBI (OR, 1.71; 95% CI, 1.16 to 2.53) was associated with a greater likelihood of employment at 1 year post-HCT. Graduate school-level education (OR, 2.47; 95% CI, 1.49 to 4.10) was also associated with a greater likelihood of employment at 1 year post-HCT. Although the work status among YA HCT survivors continued to improve over time, a substantial subset became or remained unemployed or on medical disability. These findings underscore the need for effective interventions to support return to work in this population.
- Published
- 2021
23. Infantile myofibromatosis: multiple firm nodules in a premature newborn
- Author
-
Szeto, Mindy D, Maymone, Mayra BC, Kim, Lori S, Bodmer, Jenna, Treece, Amy L, and Diaz-Miron, Jose L
- Subjects
infantile myofibromatosis ,IMF ,myofibroma ,myofibromatosis - Abstract
Infantile myofibromatosis is a rare myofibroblastic proliferative disorder characterized by firm, skin-colored to red-purple cutaneous and subcutaneous nodules; these are the most prevalent fibrous tumors observed in infancy. A premature male infant presented at birth with multiple subcutaneous firm skin-colored nodules measuring about 1-2cm each. Full body MRI and excisional biopsy of the right chest nodule confirmed the diagnosis. We review the case of infantile myofibromatosis and discuss its highly heterogeneous presentation and clinical course, as well as histopathology, genetic testing, and approaches to management.
- Published
- 2021
24. The oral selective estrogen receptor degrader GDC-0810 (ARN-810) in postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative (HR + /HER2 −) advanced/metastatic breast cancer
- Author
-
Bardia, Aditya, Mayer, Ingrid, Winer, Eric, Linden, Hannah M., Ma, Cynthia X., Parker, Barbara A., Bellet, Meritxell, Arteaga, Carlos L., Cheeti, Sravanthi, Gates, Mary, Chang, Ching-Wei, Fredrickson, Jill, Spoerke, Jill M., Moore, Heather M., Giltnane, Jennifer, Friedman, Lori S., Chow Maneval, Edna, Chan, Iris, and Jhaveri, Komal
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Outcomes of a Five-Day Warrior Renew Retreat to Reduce Symptoms Related to Military Sexual Trauma for Women Veterans
- Author
-
Katz, Lori S. and Jensen, Gina
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Strategies to reduce the onset of sleeve gastrectomy associated bone loss (STRONG BONES): Trial design and methods
- Author
-
Stapleton, Joshua R., Ard, Jamy D., Beavers, Daniel P., Cogdill, Lori S., Fernandez, Adolfo Z., Howard, Marjorie J., Justice, Jamie N., Lynch, S. Delanie, Newman, Jovita J., Weaver, Ashley A., and Beavers, Kristen M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Venus as a Laboratory for Exoplanetary Science
- Author
-
Kane, Stephen R., Arney, Giada, Crisp, David, Domagal-Goldman2, Shawn, Glaze, Lori S., Goldblatt, Colin, Grinspoon, David, Head, James W., Lenardic, Adrian, Unterborn, Cayman, Way, Michael J., and Zahnle, Kevin J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The current goals of the astrobiology community are focused on developing a framework for the detection of biosignatures, or evidence thereof, on objects inside and outside of our solar system. A fundamental aspect of understanding the limits of habitable environments (surface liquid water) and detectable signatures thereof is the study of where the boundaries of such environments can occur. Such studies provide the basis for understanding how a once inhabitable planet might come to be uninhabitable. The archetype of such a planet is arguably Earth's sibling planet, Venus. Given the need to define the conditions that can rule out biorelated signatures of exoplanets, Venus provides a unique opportunity to explore the processes that led to a completely uninhabitable environment by our current definition of the term. Here we review the current state of knowledge regarding Venus, particularly in the context of remote sensing techniques that are being or will be employed in the search for and characterization of exoplanets. We discuss candidate Venus analogs identified by the Kepler and TESS exoplanet missions and provide an update to exoplanet demographics that can be placed in the potential runaway greenhouse regime where Venus analogs are thought to reside. We list several major outstanding questions regarding the Venus environment and the relevance of those questions to understanding the atmospheres and interior structure of exoplanets. Finally, we outline the path towards a deeper analysis of our sibling planet and the synergy to exoplanetary science., Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in JGR Planets
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Clinical Validation of Tagmentation-Based Genome Sequencing for Germline Disorders
- Author
-
Shen, Wei, Sellers, Heidi L., Choate, Lauren A., Stein, Mariam I., Tandale, Pratyush P., Tan, Jiayu, Setlem, Rohit, Sakai, Yuta, Fadra, Numrah, Sosa, Carlos, McClelland, Shawn P., Barnett, Sarah S., Rasmussen, Kristen J., Runke, Cassandra K., Smoley, Stephanie A., Tillmans, Lori S., Marcou, Cherisse A., Rowsey, Ross A., Thorland, Erik C., Boczek, Nicole J., and Kearney, Hutton M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Investigating student and faculty perspectives related to predictors of NCLEX-RN success: A mixed methods approach
- Author
-
Cosper, Sharon M., Callan, Richard S., and Anderson, Lori S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Improved outcomes for relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma after autologous transplantation in the era of novel agents
- Author
-
Spinner, Michael A., Sica, R. A., Tamaresis, John S., Lu, Ying, Chang, Cheryl, Lowsky, Robert, Frank, Matthew J., Johnston, Laura J., Miklos, David B., Muffly, Lori S., Negrin, Robert S., Rezvani, Andrew R., Shiraz, Parveen, Shizuru, Judith A., Weng, Wen-Kai, Binkley, Michael S., Hoppe, Richard T., Advani, Ranjana H., and Arai, Sally
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Disparities in the Use of Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Among Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults with Acute Leukemia in California
- Author
-
Winestone, Lena E, Li, Qian, Muffly, Lori S, Getz, Kelly D, Alvarez, Elysia, Wun, Ted, and Keegan, Theresa
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Hematology ,Rare Diseases ,Pediatric Cancer ,Transplantation ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Childhood Leukemia ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Immunology - Abstract
Introduction: Previous literature suggests that allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) utilization rates are lower amongst Hispanic and Black compared to non-Hispanic White (NHW) cancer patients. However, no previous studies have focused explicitly on the pediatric and adolescent young adult (AYA) population. We sought to examine utilization of HCT by race/ethnicity using the California Cancer Registry (CCR) and the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) hospitalization database. We hypothesized that Black and Hispanic patients with acute leukemia less frequently receive HCT than NHW patients. Methods: Using population-based data from California, a retrospective cohort of patients aged 0-39 years with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) diagnosed between 2000 and 2015 was assembled. The primary exposure was a composite of race/ethnicity with NHW patients as the reference group. The primary outcome was receipt of first HCT, defined by diagnosis codes in OSHPD or treatment in the CCR. Logistic regression analyses were used to estimate odds ratios (OR) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI). Multivariable models were adjusted for race/ethnicity, age, sex, year of diagnosis, leukemia type, insurance type at diagnosis, rurality, and neighborhood socioeconomic status at diagnosis (SES). Results: Among 7,183 patients (4,790 with ALL and 2,393 with AML), 21% (16% of ALL patients and 31% of AML patients) underwent HCT. Distributions of insurance type and neighborhood SES differed by race/ethnicity with a higher proportion of Black and Hispanic patients having Medicaid insurance and living in lower SES neighborhoods. In univariate analyses, Black and Hispanic race/ethnicity were associated with decreased likelihood of receiving HCT (OR 0.70 95% CI 0.53, 0.94 and OR 0.77 95% CI 0.68, 0.88, respectively) and Asian race was associated with increased likelihood of HCT (OR 1.29 95% CI 1.07, 1.56) compared to NHW patients. In the multivariable model, there was no statistically significant difference in receipt of HCT among Hispanic patients, but disparities persisted among Black patients (Table 1). Uninsured patients and those in the lowest SES quintile were also less likely to receive HCT, while older age and AML were associated with HCT receipt. In analyses stratified by age and leukemia type, we found that the disparities in receipt of HCT among Black patients was largely driven by patients >20 years old (adjusted OR 0.50 95% CI 0.33, 0.78). These analyses also revealed that the increased likelihood of HCT among Asian/PI patients was driven by patients 2 readmissions in the first year post-HCT v. 25%, p=0.005) compared to NHW patients. Conclusions: HCT is a potentially curative treatment for high-risk acute leukemia; thus the observed racial and SES disparities in receipt of HCT may contribute to disparities in leukemia survival. More detailed disease, treatment, and relapse data would provide a better understanding of the etiology of our findings and allow for reduction of existing disparities through improved access to HCT. Disclosures: Muffly: Servier: Research Funding; Amgen: Consultancy; Adaptive: Research Funding. Wun:Glycomimetics, Inc.: Consultancy.
- Published
- 2020
32. Mutations in the Kinesin-2 Motor KIF3B Cause an Autosomal-Dominant Ciliopathy.
- Author
-
Cogné, Benjamin, Latypova, Xenia, Senaratne, Lokuliyanage Dona Samudita, Martin, Ludovic, Koboldt, Daniel C, Kellaris, Georgios, Fievet, Lorraine, Le Meur, Guylène, Caldari, Dominique, Debray, Dominique, Nizon, Mathilde, Frengen, Eirik, Bowne, Sara J, 99 Lives Consortium, Cadena, Elizabeth L, Daiger, Stephen P, Bujakowska, Kinga M, Pierce, Eric A, Gorin, Michael, Katsanis, Nicholas, Bézieau, Stéphane, Petersen-Jones, Simon M, Occelli, Laurence M, Lyons, Leslie A, Legeai-Mallet, Laurence, Sullivan, Lori S, Davis, Erica E, and Isidor, Bertrand
- Subjects
Lives Consortium ,Retina ,Cilia ,Animals ,Zebrafish ,Cats ,Humans ,Rhodopsin ,Pedigree ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Larva ,Heterozygote ,Genes ,Dominant ,Phenotype ,Mutation ,Middle Aged ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Male ,Photoreceptor Cells ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Young Adult ,Ciliopathies ,Kinesins ,KIF3B ,feline genetics ,hepatic fibrosis ,kinesin ,primary cilia ,retinopathy ,whole-exome sequencing ,zebrafish ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Polycystic Kidney Disease ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Congenital Structural Anomalies ,Neurodegenerative ,Kidney Disease ,Rare Diseases ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Eye ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
Kinesin-2 enables ciliary assembly and maintenance as an anterograde intraflagellar transport (IFT) motor. Molecular motor activity is driven by a heterotrimeric complex comprised of KIF3A and KIF3B or KIF3C plus one non-motor subunit, KIFAP3. Using exome sequencing, we identified heterozygous KIF3B variants in two unrelated families with hallmark ciliopathy phenotypes. In the first family, the proband presents with hepatic fibrosis, retinitis pigmentosa, and postaxial polydactyly; he harbors a de novo c.748G>C (p.Glu250Gln) variant affecting the kinesin motor domain encoded by KIF3B. The second family is a six-generation pedigree affected predominantly by retinitis pigmentosa. Affected individuals carry a heterozygous c.1568T>C (p.Leu523Pro) KIF3B variant segregating in an autosomal-dominant pattern. We observed a significant increase in primary cilia length in vitro in the context of either of the two mutations while variant KIF3B proteins retained stability indistinguishable from wild type. Furthermore, we tested the effects of KIF3B mutant mRNA expression in the developing zebrafish retina. In the presence of either missense variant, rhodopsin was sequestered to the photoreceptor rod inner segment layer with a concomitant increase in photoreceptor cilia length. Notably, impaired rhodopsin trafficking is also characteristic of recessive KIF3B models as exemplified by an early-onset, autosomal-recessive, progressive retinal degeneration in Bengal cats; we identified a c.1000G>A (p.Ala334Thr) KIF3B variant by genome-wide association study and whole-genome sequencing. Together, our genetic, cell-based, and in vivo modeling data delineate an autosomal-dominant syndromic retinal ciliopathy in humans and suggest that multiple KIF3B pathomechanisms can impair kinesin-driven ciliary transport in the photoreceptor.
- Published
- 2020
33. “Now I just need something sweet”: Racism, emotional eating, and health among African Americans
- Author
-
Hoggard, Lori S., Volpe, Vanessa V., Hatton, Vanessa L., Jones, Steven J., Tikhonov, Aleksandr A., and Davis, Sarah E.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Strategies to reduce the onset of sleeve gastrectomy associated bone loss (STRONG BONES): Trial design and methods
- Author
-
Joshua R. Stapleton, Jamy D. Ard, Daniel P. Beavers, Lori S. Cogdill, Adolfo Z. Fernandez, Marjorie J. Howard, Jamie N. Justice, S. Delanie Lynch, Jovita J. Newman, Ashley A. Weaver, and Kristen M. Beavers
- Subjects
Bone mineral density ,Bariatric surgery ,Older adults ,Weight loss ,Bisphosphonate ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background: Despite recognized improvements in obesity-related comorbidities, mounting evidence implicates surgical weight loss in the onset of skeletal fragility. Sleeve gastrectomy (SG) is the most commonly performed bariatric procedure and is associated with 3–7% axial bone loss in the year following surgery. Bisphosphonates are FDA-approved medications for the prevention and treatment of age-related bone loss and may represent a strategy to reduce bone loss following SG surgery. Methods: The Strategies to Reduce the Onset of Sleeve Gastrectomy Associated Bone Loss (STRONG BONES) trial (NCT04922333) is designed to definitively test whether monthly administration of the bisphosphonate, risedronate, for six months can effectively counter SG-associated bone loss. Approximately 120 middle-aged and older (≥40 years) SG patients will be randomized to six months of risedronate or placebo treatment, with skeletal outcomes assessed at baseline, six, and 12-months post-surgery. The primary outcome of the trial is 12-month change in total hip areal bone mineral density (aBMD), measured by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). This will be complemented by DXA-acquired aBMD assessment at other skeletal sites and quantitative computed tomography (QCT) derived changes in bone quality. Change in muscle mass and function will also be assessed, as well as biomarkers of bone health, turnover, and crosstalk, providing mechanistic insight into intervention-related changes to the bone-muscle unit. Discussion: Results from the STRONG BONES trial have the potential to influence current clinical practice by determining the ability of bisphosphonate use to mitigate bone loss and concomitant fracture risk in middle-aged and older SG patients.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Effects of a hydropower project on a high‐value Asian elephant population
- Author
-
Kris Budd, Daophone Suddychan, Martin Tyson, Camille N. Z. Coudrat, Alex McWilliam, Christopher D. Hallam, Arlyne Johnson, and Lori S. Eggert
- Subjects
elephants ,habitat loss ,human‐elephant conflict ,hydroelectric dam ,hydropower ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Habitat loss and fragmentation are leading contributors to the endangered status of species. In 2006, the Nakai Plateau contained the largest known Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) population in the Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR), and the population was among those with the highest genetic diversity reported for Asian elephants. In 2008, completion of the Nam Theun 2 hydroelectric dam inundated much of the Plateau, resulting in the loss of 40% of elephant habitat. We studied elephant presence, movements, and the incidence of human–elephant conflict (HEC) on the Nakai Plateau and surrounding areas from 2004 to 2020, before and for 12 years after dam completion. To examine contemporary population dynamics in the Nakai elephants, we used genetic sampling to compare minimum population numbers, demography, and levels of genetic diversity from the wet and dry seasons in 2018/2019, 10 years after dam completion, with those reported in a pre‐dam‐completion genetic survey. After dam completion, we found a major increase in HEC locally and the creation of new, serious, and persistent HEC problems as far as 100 km away. While we were unable to compare estimated population sizes before and after dam completion, our data revealed a decrease in genetic diversity, a male‐biased sex ratio, and evidence of dispersal from the Plateau by breeding‐age females. Our results raise concerns about the long‐term viability of this important population as well as that of other species in this region. Given that hydropower projects are of economic importance throughout Laos and elsewhere in southeast Asia, this study has important implications for understanding and mitigating their impact.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Analysis of Dermatology Content by Top Influencers on Twitter and Their Academic Impact: Cross-Sectional Study
- Author
-
Mindy D Szeto, Andrina V Mamo, Kevin Kamel, Jadesola T Olayinka, Payal M Patel, Austin Hamp, Jarett Anderson, Lori S Kim, Madeleine G Yemc, Torunn E Sivesind, and Robert P Dellavalle
- Subjects
Dermatology ,RL1-803 - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Highly Volcanic Exoplanets, Lava Worlds, and Magma Ocean Worlds: An Emerging Class of Dynamic Exoplanets of Significant Scientific Priority
- Author
-
Henning, Wade G., Renaud, Joseph P., Saxena, Prabal, Whelley, Patrick L., Mandell, Avi M., Matsumura, Soko, Glaze, Lori S., Hurford, Terry A., Livengood, Timothy A., Hamilton, Christopher W., Efroimsky, Michael, Makarov, Valeri V., Berghea, Ciprian T., Guzewich, Scott D., Tsigaridis, Kostas, Arney, Giada N., Cremons, Daniel R., Kane, Stephen R., Bleacher, Jacob E., Kopparapu, Ravi K., Kohler, Erika, Lee, Yuni, Rushby, Andrew, Kuang, Weijia, Barnes, Rory, Richardson, Jacob A., Driscoll, Peter, Schmerr, Nicholas C., Del Genio, Anthony D., Davies, Ashley Gerard, Kaltenegger, Lisa, Elkins-Tanton, Linda, Fujii, Yuka, Schaefer, Laura, Ranjan, Sukrit, Quintana, Elisa, Barclay, Thomas S., Hamano, Keiko, Petro, Noah E., Kendall, Jordan D., Lopez, Eric D., and Sasselov, Dimitar D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
Highly volcanic exoplanets, which can be variously characterized as 'lava worlds', 'magma ocean worlds', or 'super-Ios' are high priority targets for investigation. The term 'lava world' may refer to any planet with extensive surface lava lakes, while the term 'magma ocean world' refers to planets with global or hemispherical magma oceans at their surface. 'Highly volcanic planets', including super-Ios, may simply have large, or large numbers of, active explosive or extrusive volcanoes of any form. They are plausibly highly diverse, with magmatic processes across a wide range of compositions, temperatures, activity rates, volcanic eruption styles, and background gravitational force magnitudes. Worlds in all these classes are likely to be the most characterizable rocky exoplanets in the near future due to observational advantages that stem from their preferential occurrence in short orbital periods and their bright day-side flux in the infrared. Transit techniques should enable a level of characterization of these worlds analogous to hot Jupiters. Understanding processes on highly volcanic worlds is critical to interpret imminent observations. The physical states of these worlds are likely to inform not just geodynamic processes, but also planet formation, and phenomena crucial to habitability. Volcanic and magmatic activity uniquely allows chemical investigation of otherwise spectroscopically inaccessible interior compositions. These worlds will be vital to assess the degree to which planetary interior element abundances compare to their stellar hosts, and may also offer pathways to study both the very young Earth, and the very early form of many silicate planets where magma oceans and surface lava lakes are expected to be more prevalent. We suggest that highly volcanic worlds may become second only to habitable worlds in terms of both scientific and public long-term interest., Comment: A white paper submitted in response to the National Academy of Sciences 2018 Exoplanet Science Strategy solicitation, from the NASA Sellers Exoplanet Environments Collaboration (SEEC) of the Goddard Space Flight Center. 6 pages, 0 figures
- Published
- 2018
38. Exoplanet Science Priorities from the Perspective of Internal and Surface Processes for Silicate and Ice Dominated Worlds
- Author
-
Henning, Wade G., Renaud, Joseph P., Mandell, Avi M., Saxena, Prabal, Hurford, Terry A., Matsumura, Soko, Glaze, Lori S., Livengood, Timothy A., Airapetian, Vladimir, Asphaug, Erik, Teske, Johanna K., Schwieterman, Edward, Efroimsky, Michael, Makarov, Valeri V., Berghea, Ciprian T., Bleacher, Jacob, Rushby, Andrew, Lee, Yuni, Kuang, Weijia, Barnes, Rory, Dong, Chuanfei, Driscoll, Peter, Domagal-Goldman, Shawn D., Schmerr, Nicholas C., Del Genio, Anthony D., Jensen, Adam G., Kaltenegger, Lisa, Elkins-Tanton, Linda, Shock, Everett L., Sohl, Linda E., Quintana, Elisa, Schaefer, Laura, Barclay, Thomas S., Fujii, Yuka, Hamano, Keiko, Petro, Noah E., Lopez, Eric D., and Sasselov, Dimitar D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
The geophysics of extrasolar planets is a scientific topic often regarded as standing largely beyond the reach of near-term observations. This reality in no way diminishes the central role of geophysical phenomena in shaping planetary outcomes, from formation, to thermal and chemical evolution, to numerous issues of surface and near-surface habitability. We emphasize that for a balanced understanding of extrasolar planets, it is important to look beyond the natural biases of current observing tools, and actively seek unique pathways to understand exoplanet interiors as best as possible during the long interim prior to a time when internal components are more directly accessible. Such pathways include but are not limited to: (a) enhanced theoretical and numerical modeling, (b) laboratory research on critical material properties, (c) measurement of geophysical properties by indirect inference from imprints left on atmospheric and orbital properties, and (d) the purpose-driven use of Solar System object exploration expressly for its value in comparative planetology toward exoplanet-analogs. Breaking down barriers that envision local Solar System exploration, including the study of Earth's own deep interior, as separate from and in financial competition with extrasolar planet research, may greatly improve the rate of needed scientific progress for exoplanet geophysics. As the number of known rocky and icy exoplanets grows in the years ahead, we expect demand for expertise in 'exogeoscience' will expand at a commensurately intense pace. We highlight key topics, including: how water oceans below ice shells may dominate the total habitability of our galaxy by volume, how free-floating nomad planets may often attain habitable subsurface oceans supported by radionuclide decay, and how deep interiors may critically interact with atmospheric mass loss via dynamo-driven magnetic fields., Comment: A white paper submitted in response to the National Academy of Sciences 2018 Exoplanet Science Strategy solicitation, from the NASA Nexus for Exoplanetary System Science (NExSS). 6 pages, 0 figures
- Published
- 2018
39. Venus: The Making of an Uninhabitable World
- Author
-
Kane, Stephen R., Arney, Giada, Crisp, David, Domagal-Goldman, Shawn, Glaze, Lori S., Goldblatt, Colin, Lenardic, Adrian, Unterborn, Cayman, and Way, Michael J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The goals of the astrobiology community are focussed on developing a framework for the detection of biosignatures, or evidence thereof, on objects inside and outside of our solar system. A fundamental aspect of understanding the limits of habitable environments and detectable signatures is the study of where the boundaries of such environments can occur. Thus, the need to study the creation, evolution, and frequency of hostile environments for habitability is an integral part of the astrobiology story. These provide the opportunity to understand the bifurcation, between habitable and uninhabitable. The archetype of such a planet is the Earth's sister planet, Venus, and provides a unique opportunity to explore the processes that created a completely uninhabitable environment and thus define the conditions that can rule out bio-related signatures. We advocate a continued comprehensive study of our sister planet, including models of early atmospheres, compositional abundances, and Venus-analog frequency analysis from current and future exoplanet data. Moreover, new missions to Venus to provide in-situ data are necessary., Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, white paper submitted in response to the solicitation of feedback for the "Astrobiology Science Strategy for the Search for Life in the Universe" by the National Academy of Sciences
- Published
- 2018
40. Late Effects and Subsequent Neoplasms in Survivors of Adolescent and Young Adult Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Population-Based Analysis Including Impact of Front-Line Regimen Type
- Author
-
Muffly, Lori S, Maguire, Fran, Li, Qian, Kennedy, Vanessa, and Keegan, Theresa HM
- Subjects
Immunology ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
Background: Numerous studies have demonstrated superior survival for adolescents and young adults (AYA) with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treated with pediatric-inspired as opposed to adult-type front-line ALL regimens. However, very little is known regarding the potential impact of therapeutic regimen type on late effects and subsequent neoplasms (SN) in AYA ALL survivors. Using population-based data, we describe associations between subsequent medical conditions/SN, sociodemographics, and ALL therapies, including regimen type (pediatric versus adult) in a large cohort of AYA ALL survivors. Methods: The California Cancer Registry (CCR) linked with California hospitalization data was used to evaluate socio-demographics, therapies, and subsequent medical conditions (late effects) amongst AYAs (15-39 years) diagnosed with ALL in California between 1995-2012 surviving a minimum of three years from diagnosis. The CCR was used to identify front-line therapeutic regimen, receipt of cranial irradiation (CRI), and SN; hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) and late effects were captured through hospitalization data. Late effects were categorized as cardiac (hypertensive disease, coronary artery disease, heart failure), neurologic (stroke, seizure), endocrine (thyroid disease, diabetes, ovarian/testicular dysfunction, other metabolic diseases), respiratory (asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, pulmonary fibrosis), renal (chronic kidney disease, hemodialysis, kidney transplant), liver (chronic liver disease, pancreatitis, cirrhosis, liver transplant), and avascular necrosis (AVN). The 10-year cumulative incidence (CMI) of developing each late effect/SN was estimated, accounting for death as a competing risk. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression analyses (MVA) examined the impact of sociodemographic factors and therapies (pediatric vs adult ALL regimen, HCT, CRI) on the occurrence of each late effect/SN. Front-line regimen type (pediatric vs adult) was highly correlated with receipt of HCT (P
- Published
- 2019
41. Genomic Profiling of Childhood Tumor Patient-Derived Xenograft Models to Enable Rational Clinical Trial Design
- Author
-
Rokita, Jo Lynne, Rathi, Komal S, Cardenas, Maria F, Upton, Kristen A, Jayaseelan, Joy, Cross, Katherine L, Pfeil, Jacob, Egolf, Laura E, Way, Gregory P, Farrel, Alvin, Kendsersky, Nathan M, Patel, Khushbu, Gaonkar, Krutika S, Modi, Apexa, Berko, Esther R, Lopez, Gonzalo, Vaksman, Zalman, Mayoh, Chelsea, Nance, Jonas, McCoy, Kristyn, Haber, Michelle, Evans, Kathryn, McCalmont, Hannah, Bendak, Katerina, Böhm, Julia W, Marshall, Glenn M, Tyrrell, Vanessa, Kalletla, Karthik, Braun, Frank K, Qi, Lin, Du, Yunchen, Zhang, Huiyuan, Lindsay, Holly B, Zhao, Sibo, Shu, Jack, Baxter, Patricia, Morton, Christopher, Kurmashev, Dias, Zheng, Siyuan, Chen, Yidong, Bowen, Jay, Bryan, Anthony C, Leraas, Kristen M, Coppens, Sara E, Doddapaneni, HarshaVardhan, Momin, Zeineen, Zhang, Wendong, Sacks, Gregory I, Hart, Lori S, Krytska, Kateryna, Mosse, Yael P, Gatto, Gregory J, Sanchez, Yolanda, Greene, Casey S, Diskin, Sharon J, Vaske, Olena Morozova, Haussler, David, Gastier-Foster, Julie M, Kolb, E Anders, Gorlick, Richard, Li, Xiao-Nan, Reynolds, C Patrick, Kurmasheva, Raushan T, Houghton, Peter J, Smith, Malcolm A, Lock, Richard B, Raman, Pichai, Wheeler, David A, and Maris, John M
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Pediatric ,Rare Diseases ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Pediatric Cancer ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Orphan Drug ,Biotechnology ,Cancer ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Cell Line ,Tumor ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,Child ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Genomics ,Humans ,Mice ,Mutation ,Neuroblastoma ,Neurofibromin 1 ,Osteosarcoma ,Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Recurrence ,Rhabdomyosarcoma ,Sarcoma ,Ewing ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,Exome Sequencing ,Wilms Tumor ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,classifier ,copy number profiling ,patient-derived xenograft ,pediatric cancer ,preclinical testing ,relapse ,transcriptome sequencing ,whole-exome sequencing ,Pediatric cancer ,whole exome sequencing ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Medical Physiology ,Biological sciences - Abstract
Accelerating cures for children with cancer remains an immediate challenge as a result of extensive oncogenic heterogeneity between and within histologies, distinct molecular mechanisms evolving between diagnosis and relapsed disease, and limited therapeutic options. To systematically prioritize and rationally test novel agents in preclinical murine models, researchers within the Pediatric Preclinical Testing Consortium are continuously developing patient-derived xenografts (PDXs)-many of which are refractory to current standard-of-care treatments-from high-risk childhood cancers. Here, we genomically characterize 261 PDX models from 37 unique pediatric cancers; demonstrate faithful recapitulation of histologies and subtypes; and refine our understanding of relapsed disease. In addition, we use expression signatures to classify tumors for TP53 and NF1 pathway inactivation. We anticipate that these data will serve as a resource for pediatric oncology drug development and will guide rational clinical trial design for children with cancer.
- Published
- 2019
42. Delays in diagnosis in young patients with leukemia and lymphoma.
- Author
-
Winestone, Lena, McPheeters, Jeffrey, Puccetti, Diane, Wilkes, Jennifer Jill, Muffly, Lori S, Kahn, Justine, Henk, Henry J, Ginsberg, Jill P, Keegan, Theresa, Pollock, Brad H, and Alvarez, Elysia Marie
- Subjects
Prevention ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Lymphoma ,Hematology ,Pediatric ,Cancer ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
e18138 Background: Patients diagnosed with leukemia and lymphoma typically present with nonspecific symptoms, making a timely diagnosis difficult. Little is known about factors associated with delays in diagnosis. We hypothesized that age, minority race/ethnicity, and low income are associated with greater time to diagnosis. Methods: Using the OptumLabs Data Warehouse, which includes claims data for privately insured enrollees in a large US health plan, we identified 17,536 pediatric (0-14 y), adolescent (15-21 y), and young adult (22-39 y) patients diagnosed with acute leukemia or lymphoma between 2001-17. Using this retrospective cohort, potential cancer-related symptoms occurring up to 6 months pre-diagnosis were identified. Delay was defined as > 3 months from symptom onset to diagnosis. Contingency table analysis with chi-squared tests and unconditional logistic regression were used to estimate the association between sociodemographic factors and delays in diagnosis. Results: Seventy-eight percent of patients had a diagnosis of a cancer-related symptom in the 6 months prior to diagnosis. The most common presenting symptoms were lymphadenopathy, fever, and cytopenias. The median days to diagnosis was longer in young adults (93) than children (86) or adolescents (81) (p = < 0.0001). For pediatric v. AYA patients, median days to diagnosis differed for those with constitutional symptoms (18 v. 37, p = < 0.001), infectious symptoms (93 v. 74, p = < 0.001), and cytopenias (11 v. 22, p = < 0.001). Multivariable analysis identified younger age, female sex, and low household income to be significantly associated with delays in diagnosis (table below). Conclusions: In this large cohort of privately insured patients, adolescents had the shortest time to diagnosis. We saw no disparities by race/ethnicity or education but observed that low income ( < $40K) and female patients had greater odds of delays in diagnosis. [Table: see text]
- Published
- 2019
43. Racial Discrimination and Acute Physiological Responses Among Black Young Adults: The Role of Racial Identity
- Author
-
Volpe, Vanessa V, Lee, Daniel B, Hoggard, Lori S, and Rahal, Danny
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,African Americans ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Racism ,Resilience ,Psychological ,Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia ,Self Concept ,Southeastern United States ,Stress ,Psychological ,Young Adult ,Respiratory sinus arrhythmia ,Racial discrimination ,Racial identity ,Black Americans ,Young adults ,Black or African American ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeRacial discrimination has long-term consequences for cardiovascular health, potentially by dysregulating acute physiological responses. However, the role of psychological factors that may be protective or increase vulnerability for dysregulated responses, such as racial identity, remains unclear. This study examines the association between racial discrimination and acute parasympathetic responses, and the role of racial centrality, private regard, and public regard in this association.MethodsBlack young adults (N = 119, Mage = 19.45) recruited from a predominantly White institution in the southeastern United States completed an online survey (in which racial discrimination, racial identity, and control variables were reported) and a laboratory visit, during which they were exposed to a vignette of racial discrimination while their parasympathetic activity (indexed by respiratory sinus arrhythmia) was recorded.ResultsWhile racial discrimination was not associated with respiratory sinus arrhythmia reactivity or recovery, centrality moderated this association such that more frequent racial discrimination was associated with greater parasympathetic reactivity and recovery only among participants low in racial centrality. Neither private regard nor public regard emerged as significant moderators.ConclusionsThis study is the first to show that lower levels of racial centrality can mitigate the association between discrimination and acute parasympathetic responses, which has important implications for initiatives aimed at reducing cardiovascular risk for Black young adults.
- Published
- 2019
44. Anti-Black Structural Racism Goes Online : A Conceptual Model for Racial Health Disparities Research
- Author
-
Volpe, Vanessa V., Hoggard, Lori S., Willis, Henry A., and Tynes, Brendesha M.
- Published
- 2021
45. An Examination of RFID Ethical Issues Supports the Need for Improved Business and Legal Strategies
- Author
-
Raineri, Ellen Marie, primary, Elias Reno, Lori S., additional, Cho, Pauline S., additional, and Dignazio, Gina M., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Efficacy and safety of two neutralising monoclonal antibody therapies, sotrovimab and BRII-196 plus BRII-198, for adults hospitalised with COVID-19 (TICO): a randomised controlled trial
- Author
-
Self, Wesley H., Sandkovsky, Uriel, Reilly, Cavan S., Vock, David M., Gottlieb, Robert L., Mack, Michael, Golden, Kevin, Dishner, Emma, Vekstein, Andrew, Ko, Emily R., Der, Tatyana, Franzone, John, Almasri, Eyad, Fayed, Mohamed, Filbin, Michael R., Hibbert, Kathryn A., Rice, Todd W., Casey, Jonathan D., Hayanga, J. Awori, Badhwar, Vinay, Leshnower, Bradley G., Sharifpour, Milad, Knowlton, Kirk U., Peltan, Ithan D., Bakowska, Elizieta, Kowalska, Justyna, Bowdish, Michael E., Sturek, Jeffrey M., Rogers, Angela J., Files, D. Clark, Mosier, Jarrod M., Gong, Michelle N., Douin, David J., Hite, R. Duncan, Trautner, Barbara W., Jain, Mamta K., Gardner, Edward M., Khan, Akram, Jensen, Jens-Ulrik, Matthay, Michael A., Ginde, Adit A., Brown, Samuel M., Higgs, Elizabeth S., Pett, Sarah, Weintrob, Amy C., Chang, Christina C., Murrary, Daniel D., Günthard, Huldrych F., Moquete, Ellen, Grandits, Greg, Engen, Nicole, Grund, Birgit, Sharma, Shweta, Cao, Huyen, Gupta, Rajesh, Osei, Suzette, Margolis, David, Zhu, Qing, Polizzotto, Mark N., Babiker, Abdel G., Davey, Victoria J., Kan, Virginia, Thompson, B. Taylor, Gelijns, Annetine C., Neaton, James D., Lane, H. Clifford, Jundgren, Jens D., Tierney, John, Barrett, Kevin, Herpin, Betsey R., Smolskis, Mary C., Voge, Susan E., McNay, Laura A., Cahill, Kelly, Crew, Page, Kirchoff, Matthew, Sardana, Ratna, Raim, Sharon Segal, Chiu, Joseph, Hensley, Lisa, Lorenzo, Josua, Mock, Rebecca, Shaw-Saliba, Katy, Zuckerman, Judith, Adam, Stacey J., Currier, Judy, Read, Sarah, Hughes, Eric, Amos, Laura, Carlsen, Amy, Carter, Anita, Davis, Bionca, Denning, Eileen, DuChene, Alain, Harrison, Merrie, Kaiser, Payton, Koopmeiners, Joseph, Meger, Sue, Murray, Thomas, Quan, Kien, Quan, Siu Fun, Thompson, Greg, Walski, Jamie, Wentworth, Deborah, Moskowitz, Alan J., Bagiella, Emilia, O'Sullivan, Karen, Marks, Mary E., Accardi, Evan, Kinzel, Emily, Bedoya, Gabriela, Gupta, Lopa, Overbey, Jessica R., Padillia, Maria L., Santos, Milerva, Gillinov, Marc A., Miller, Marissa A., Taddei-Peters, Wendy C., Fenton, Kathleen, Berhe, Mezgebe, Haley, Clinton, Bettacchi, Christopher, Duhaime, Erin, Ryan, Madison, Burris, Sarah, Jones, Felecia, Villa, Samantha, Want, Samantha, Robert, Raven, Coleman, Tanquinisha, Clariday, Laura, Baker, Rebecca, Hurutado-Rodriguez, Marian, Iram, Nazia, Fresnedo, Michelle, Davis, Allyson, Leonard, Kiara, Ramierez, Noelia, Thammavong, Jon, Duque, Krizia, Turner, Emma, Fisher, Tammy, Robinson, Dianna, Ransom, Desirae, Lusk, Erica, Killian, Aaron, Palacious, Adriana, Solis, Edilia, Jerrow, Janet, Watts, Matthew, Whitacre, Heather, Cothran, Elizabeth, Smith, Peter K., Barkauskas, Christina E., Dreyer, Grace R., Witte, Marie, Mosaly, Nilima, Mourad, Ahmad, Holland, Thomas L., Lane, Kathleen, Bouffler, Andrew, McGowan, Lauren M., Motta, Marry, Tipton, Gregory, Stallings, Ben, Stout, Gennifer, McLendon-Arvik, Beth, Hollister, Beth A., Giangiacomo, Dana M., Sharma, Sunil, Pappers, Brian, McCarthy, Paul, Krupica, Troy, Sarwari, Arif, Reece, Rebecca, Fornaresio, Lisa, Glaze, Chad, Evans, Raquel, Preamble, Katarina, Sutton, Lisa Giblin, Buterbaugh, Sabrina, Bartolo, Elizabeth Berry, Williams, Roger, Bunner, Robin, Bender, William, Miller, Jeffrey, Baio, Kim T., McBride, Mary K., Fielding, Michele, Mathewson, Sonya, Porte, Kristina, Maton, Missy, Ponder, Chari, Haley, Elizabeth, Spainhour, Christine, Rogers, Susan, Tyler, Derrick, Wald-Dickler, Noah, Hutcheon, Douglass, Towfighi, Amytis, Lee, May M., Lewis, Meghan R., Spellberg, Brad, Sher, Linda, Sharma, Aniket, Olds, Anna P., Justino, Chris, Lozano, Edward, Romero, Chris, Leong, Janet, Rodina, Valentina, Possemato, Tammie, Escobar, Jose, Chiu, Charlene, Weissman, Kevin, Barros, Andrew, Enfield, Kyle B., Kadl, Alexandra, Green, China J., Simon, Rachel M., Fox, Ashley, Thornton, Kara, Parrino, Patrick E., Spindel, Stephen, Bansal, Aditya, Baumgarten, Katherine, Hand, Jonathan, Vonderhaar, Derek, Nossaman, Bobby, Laudun, Sylvia, Ames, DeAnna, Broussard, Shane, Hernandez, Nilmo, Isaac, Geralyn, Dinh, Huan, Zheng, Yiling, Tran, Sonny, McDaniel, Hunter, Crovetto, Nicolle, Miller, Leslie, Schelle, Beth, McLean, Sherry, Rothbaum, Howard R., Alvarez, Michael S., Kalan, Shivam P., Germann, Heather H., Hendershot, Jennifer, Maroney, Karen, Herring, Karen, Cook, Sharri, Paul, Pam, Madathil, Ronson J., Rabin, Joseph, Levine, Andrea, Saharia, Kapil, Tabatabai, Ali, Lau, Christine, Gammie, James S., Peguero, Maya-Loren, McKernan, Kimberley, Audette, Matthew, Fleischmann, Emily, Akbari, Freshta, Lee, Maia, Lee, Myounghee, Chi, Andrew, Salehi, Hanna, Pariser, Alan, Nguyen, Phuong Tran, Moore, Jessica, Gee, Adrienne, Vincent, Shelika, Zuckerman, Richard A., Iribarne, Alexander, Metzler, Sara, Shipman, Samantha, Caccia, Taylor, Johnson, Haley, Newton, Crystallee, Parr, Doug, Rodriguez, Vicente, Bokhart, Gordon, Eichman, Sharon M., North, Crystal, Oldmixon, Cathryn, Ringwood, Nancy, Fitzgerald, Laura, Morin, Haley D., Muzikansky, Ariela, Morse, Richard, Brower, Roy G., Reineck, Lora A., Aggarwal, Neil R., Bienstock, Karen, Hou, Peter, Steingrub, Jay, Tidswell, Mark A., Kozikowski, Lori-Ann, Kardos, Cynthia, DeSouza, Leslie, Thornton-Thompson, Sherell, Talmor, Daniel, Shapiro, Nathan, Banner-Goodspeed, Valerie, Boyle, Katherine L., Hayes, Sharon, Jones, Alan E., Galbraith, James, Nandi, Utsav, Peacock, Rebekah K., Parry, Blair Alden, Margolin, Justin D., Brait, Kelsey, Beakes, Caroline, Kangelaris, Kirsten N., Yee, Kimberly J., Ashktorab, Kimia, Jauregui, Alejandra E., Zhuo, Hanjing, Hendey, Gregory, Hubel, Kinsley A., Hughes, Alyssa R., Garcia, Rebekah L., Wilson, Jennifer G., Vojnik, Rosemary, Roque, Jonasel, Perez, Cynthia, Lim, George W., Chang, Steven Y., Beutler, Rebecca, Agarwal, Trisha, Vargas, Julia, Moss, Marc, Baduashvili, Amiran, Chauhan, Lakshmi, Finck, Lani L., Howell, Michelle, Hyzy, Robert C., Park, Pauline K., Nelson, Kristine, McSparron, Jake I., Co, Ivan N., Wang, Bonnie R., Jia, Shijing, Sullins, Barbara, Hanna, Sinan, Olbrich, Norman, Richardson, Lynne D., Nair, Rahul, Offor, Obiageli, Lopez, Brenda, Amosu, Omowunmi, Tzehaie, Hiwet, Terndrup, Thomas E., Wiedemann, Herbert P., Duggal, Abhijit, Thiruchelvam, Nirosshan, Ashok, Kiran, King, Alexander H., Mehkri, Omar, Hudock, Kristin, Kiran, Simra, More, Harshada, Roads, Tammy, Martinkovic, Jamie, Kennedy, Sarah, Robinson, Bryce H., Hough, Catherine L., Krol, Olivia F., Kinjal, Mistry, Mills, Emmanuel, McDougal, Madeline, Deshmukh, Rupali, Chen, Peter, Torbati, Sam S., Matusov, Yuri, Choe, June, Hindoyan, Niree A., Jackman, Susan E., Bayoumi, Emad, Wynter, Timothy, Caudill, Antonina, Pascual, Ethan, Clapham, Gregg J., Herrera, Lisa, Ojukwu, Cristabelle, Mehdikhani, Shaunt, O'Mahony, D. Shane, Nyatsatsang, Sonam T., Wilson, David M., Wallick, Julie A., Miller, Chadwick, Gibbs, Keven W., Flores, Lori S., LaRose, Mary E., Landreth, Leigha D., Morris, Peter E., Sturgill, Jamie L., Cassity, Evan P., Dhar, Sanjay, Montgomery-Yates, Ashley A., Pasha, Sara N., Mayer, Kirby P., Bissel, Brittany, Bledsoe, Joseph, Brown, Samuel, Lanspa, Michael, Leither, Lindsey, Armbruster, Brent P., Montgomery, Quinn, Applegate, Darrin, Kumar, Naresh, Fergus, Melissa, Serezlic, Erna, Imel, Karah, Palmer, Ghazal, Webb, Brandon, Aston, Valerie T., Johnson, Jakea, Gray, Christopher, Hays, Margaret, Roth, Megan, Sánchez, Adriana, Popielski, Laura, Rivasplata, Heather, Turner, Melissa, Vjecha, Michael, Petersen, Tianna, Kamel, Dena, Hansen, Laura, Lucas, Claudia Sanchez, DellaValle, Natalie, Gonzales, Sonia, Scott, James, Wyles, David, Douglas, Ivor, Haukoos, Jason, Kamis, Kevin, Robinson, Caitlin, Baker, Jason V., Frosch, Anne, Goldsmith, Rachael, Jibrell, Hodan, Lo, Melanie, Klaphake, Jonathan, Mackedanz, Shari, Ngo, Linh, Garcia-Myers, Kelly, Markowitz, Norman, Pastor, Erika, Ramesh, Mayur, Brar, Indira, Rivers, Emanuel, Kumar, Princy, Menna, Maximiliano, Biswas, Kousick, Harrington, Cristin, Delp, Alex, Pandit, Lavannya, Hines-Munson, Casey, Van, John, Dillon, Laura, Want, Yiqun, Lichtenberger, Paola, Baracco, Gio, Ramos, Carol, Bjork, Lauren, Sueiro, Melyssa, Tien, Phyllis, Freasier, Heather, Buck, Theresa, Nekach, Hafida, Nagy-Agren, Stephanie, Vasudeva, Shikha, Ochalek, Tracy, Roller, Brentin, Nguyen, Chinh, Mikail, Amani, Raben, Dorthe, Jensen, Tomas O., Aagaard, Bitten, Nielsen, Charlotte B., Krapp, Katharina, Nykjær, Bente Rosdahl, Kanne, Katja Lisa, Grevsen, Anne Louise, Joensen, Zillah Maria, Bruun, Tina, Bojesen, Ane, Woldbye, Frederik, Normand, Nick E., Esmann, Frederik V.L., Clausen, Clara Lundetoft, Hovmand, Nichlas, Pedersen, Karen Brorup, Thorlacius-Ussing, Louise, Tinggaard, Michaela, Høgsberg, Dorthe S., Rastoder, Ema, Kamstrup, Thobias, Bergsøe, Christina Marisa, Østergaard, Lars, Stærke, Nina Breinholt, Johansen, Isik S., Knudtzen, Fredrikke C., Larsen, Lykke, Hertz, Mathias A., Fabricius, Thilde, Helleberg, Marie, Gerstoft, Jan, Jensen, Tomas Østergaard, Lindegaard, Birgitte, Pedersen, Thomas Ingemann, Røge, Birgit Thorup, Løfberg, Sandra Valborg, Hansen, Thomas Michael, Nielsen, Ariella Denize, von Huth, Sebastian Leicht, Nielsen, Henrik, Thisted, Rikke Krog, Podlekareva, Daria, Johnsen, Stine, Andreassen, Helle Frost, Pedersen, Lars, Lindnér, Cecilia Ebba Clara Ellinor, Wiese, Lothar, Knudsen, Lene Surland, Nytofte, Nikolaj Julian Skrøder, Havmøller, Signe Ravn, Paredes, Roger, Exposito, Maria, Fernández-Cruz, Eduardo, Muñoz, José, Arribas, Jose R., Estrada, Vicente, Horcajada, Juan P., Burgos, Joaquin, Morales-Rull, Jose Luis, Braun, Dominique L., West, Emily, M'Rabeth-Bensalah, Khadija, Eichinger, Mareile L., Grüttner-Durmaz, Manuela, Grube, Christina, Zink, Veronika, Horban, Andrzej, Bednarska, Agnieszka, Jurek, Natalia, Fätkenheuer, Gerd, Malinm, Jakob J., Matthews, Gail, Kelleher, Anthony, Cabrera, Gesalit, Carey, Catherine, Hough, Sally, Virachit, Sophie, Zhong, Amy, Young, Barnaby E., Chia, Po Ying, Lee, Tau Hong, Lin, Ray J., Lye, David, Ong, Sean, Puah, Ser Hon, Yeo, Tsin Wen, Diong, Shiau Hui, Ongko, Juwinda, Hudson, Fleur, Parmar, Mahesh KB, Goodman, Anna, Badrock, Jonathan, Gregory, Adam, Harris, Nicola, Touloumi, Giota, Pantaz, Nikos, Gioukari, Vicky, Lutaakome, Joseph, Kityo, Cissy M., Mugerwa, Henry, Kiweewa, Francis, Osinusi, Anu, Tipple, Craig, Willis, Angela, Peppercorn, Amanda, Watson, Helen, Alexander, Elizabeth, Mogalian, Erik, Lin, Leo, Ding, Xiao, Yan, Li, Girardet, Jean-Luc, Ma, Ji, Hong, Zhi, Adams, Amy, Albert, Sara, Balde, Abby, Baracz, Michelle, Baseler, Beth, Becker, Nancy, Bielica, Mona, Billouin-Frazier, Shere, Cash, Jennifer, Choudhary, Jay, Dolney, Suzanne, Dixon, Mary, Eyler, Carolyn, Frye, Leanna, Galcik, Michael, Gertz, Jensen, Giebeig, Lisa, Gulati, Neelam, Hankinson, Liz, Hissey, Debbie, Hogarty, Debi, Hohn, Matt, Holley, H Preston, Hoopengardner, Lisa, Huber, Lynda, Jankelevich, Shirley, Krauss, Gary, Lake, Eileen, Linton, Jessica, MacDonald, Leah, Manandhar, Meryan, Spinelli-Nadzam, Mary, Oluremi, Charles, Proffitt, Calvin, Rudzinski, Erin, Sandrus, Jen, Schaffhauser, Marylu, Schechner, Adam, Suders, Connie, Gerry, Norman P., Smith, Kenneth, Solomon, Courtney, Kubernac, Amanda, Rashid, Marium, Patel, Bhakti, Kubernac, Robert, Murphy, Joseph, Hoover, Marie L., Brown, Craig, DuChateau, Nadine, Flosi, Adam, Johnson, Les, Treagus, Amy, and Wenner, Christine
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. High-Throughput Assessment of Bile Salt Export Pump Inhibition Using RapidFire-MS and DESI-MS.
- Author
-
Li, Jie, Morato, Nicolás M., Westover, Lori S., Abeywickrema, Pravien, Geng, Jieping, Piassek, Madison, Harden, David, Strambeanu, Iulia, Shi, Zhicai, Cooks, R. Graham, and Meng, Juncai
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Treating Bacterial Pneumonia in Dogs and Cats.
- Author
-
Rheingold, Curtis G. and Waddell, Lori S.
- Subjects
PNEUMONIA treatment ,DOG diseases ,ANTIBIOTICS ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,PHYSICAL therapy - Abstract
Bacterial pneumonia in dogs and cats can be caused by inhalation of pathogens, aspiration of bacteria, or (less likely) hematogenous spread or inhalation of foreign bodies. Before initiating empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics for patients requiring hospitalization or those predisposed to multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, airway sampling is recommended, if possible. After culture and sensitivity results are available and depending on patient response to treatment, antimicrobial therapy should be de-escalated. Adjunctive therapeutics include supplemental oxygen, intravenous fluids, and physiotherapy aimed at promoting clearance of mucus. The treatment, presentation, and approach to pneumonia frequently differ between species, and the disease is less common in cats than in dogs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
49. Pretransplant Assessment for Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation Recipients and Donors
- Author
-
Kennedy, Vanessa E., Muffly, Lori S., Maziarz, Richard T., editor, and Slater, Susan Schubach, editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Experimental evidence for recovery of mercury-contaminated fish populations
- Author
-
Blanchfield, Paul J., Rudd, John W. M., Hrenchuk, Lee E., Amyot, Marc, Babiarz, Christopher L., Beaty, Ken G., Bodaly, R. A. Drew, Branfireun, Brian A., Gilmour, Cynthia C., Graydon, Jennifer A., Hall, Britt D., Harris, Reed C., Heyes, Andrew, Hintelmann, Holger, Hurley, James P., Kelly, Carol A., Krabbenhoft, David P., Lindberg, Steve E., Mason, Robert P., Paterson, Michael J., Podemski, Cheryl L., Sandilands, Ken A., Southworth, George R., St Louis, Vincent L., Tate, Lori S., and Tate, Michael T.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.