309 results on '"Robinson, PD"'
Search Results
2. Model analysis of multiple breath nitrogen washout data: robustness to variations in breathing pattern.
- Author
-
Bates, JHT, Milne, S, Handley, BM, Rutting, S, Chapman, DG, King, GG, Farah, CS, Robinson, PD, Thamrin, C, Bates, JHT, Milne, S, Handley, BM, Rutting, S, Chapman, DG, King, GG, Farah, CS, Robinson, PD, and Thamrin, C
- Abstract
We recently developed a model-based method for analyzing multiple breath nitrogen washout data that does not require identification of Phase-III. In the present study, we assessed the effect of irregular breathing patterns on the intra-subject variabilities of the model parameters. Nitrogen fraction at the mouth was measured in 18 healthy and 20 asthmatic subjects during triplicate performances of multiple breath nitrogen washout, during controlled (target tidal volume 1 L at 8-12 breaths per minute) and free (unrestricted) breathing. The parameters Scond, Sacin and functional residual capacity (FRC) were obtained by conventional analysis of the slope of Phase-III. Fitting the model to the washout data provided functional residual capacity (FRCM), dead space volume (VD), the coefficient of variation of regional specific ventilation ([Formula: see text]), and the model equivalent of Sacin (Sacin-M). Intra-participant coefficients of variation for the model parameters for both health and asthma were FRCM < 5.2%, VD < 5.4%, [Formula: see text] < 9.0%, and Sacin-M < 45.6% for controlled breathing, and FRCM < 4.6%, VD < 5.3%, [Formula: see text] < 13.2%, and Sacin-M < 103.2% for free breathing. The coefficients of variation limits for conventional parameters were FRC < 6.1%, with Scond < 73.6% and Sacin < 49.2% for controlled breathing and Scond < 35.0% and Sacin < 74.4% for free breathing. The model-fitting approach to multiple breath nitrogen washout analysis provides a measure of regional ventilation heterogeneity in [Formula: see text] that is less affected by irregularities in the breathing pattern than its corresponding Phase-III slope analysis parameter Scond.
- Published
- 2023
3. Asthma and landscape fire smoke: A Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand position statement.
- Author
-
McDonald, VM, Archbold, G, Beyene, T, Brew, BK, Franklin, P, Gibson, PG, Harrington, J, Hansbro, PM, Johnston, FH, Robinson, PD, Sutherland, M, Yates, D, Zosky, GR, Abramson, MJ, McDonald, VM, Archbold, G, Beyene, T, Brew, BK, Franklin, P, Gibson, PG, Harrington, J, Hansbro, PM, Johnston, FH, Robinson, PD, Sutherland, M, Yates, D, Zosky, GR, and Abramson, MJ
- Abstract
Landscape fires are increasing in frequency and severity globally. In Australia, extreme bushfires cause a large and increasing health and socioeconomic burden for communities and governments. People with asthma are particularly vulnerable to the effects of landscape fire smoke (LFS) exposure. Here, we present a position statement from the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand. Within this statement we provide a review of the impact of LFS on adults and children with asthma, highlighting the greater impact of LFS on vulnerable groups, particularly older people, pregnant women and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. We also highlight the development of asthma on the background of risk factors (smoking, occupation and atopy). Within this document we present advice for asthma management, smoke mitigation strategies and access to air quality information, that should be implemented during periods of LFS. We promote clinician awareness, and the implementation of public health messaging and preparation, especially for people with asthma.
- Published
- 2023
4. Utilising Hem-o-lok® ligation system to safely and efficiently divide bilioenteric fistulae in laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- Author
-
Finch, LM, primary, Robinson, PD, additional, and Szentpali, K, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The effect of oxygen and carbon dioxide cross-sensitivity sensor error in the Eco Medics Exhalyzer D device on measures of conductive and acinar airway function.
- Author
-
Bozier, J, Jeagal, E, Robinson, PD, Prisk, GK, Chapman, DG, King, GG, Thamrin, C, Rutting, S, Bozier, J, Jeagal, E, Robinson, PD, Prisk, GK, Chapman, DG, King, GG, Thamrin, C, and Rutting, S
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The multiple breath nitrogen washout (MBNW) test provides important clinical information in obstructive airways diseases. Recently, a significant cross-sensitivity error in the O2 and CO2 sensors of a widely used commercial MBNW device (Exhalyzer D, Eco Medics AG, Duernten, Switzerland) was detected, which leads to overestimation of N2 concentrations. Significant errors in functional residual capacity (FRC) and lung clearance index (LCI) have been reported in infants and children. This study investigated the impact in adults, and on additional important indices reflecting conductive (S cond) and acinar (S acin) ventilation heterogeneity, in health and disease. METHODS: Existing MBNW measurements of 27 healthy volunteers, 20 participants with asthma and 16 smokers were reanalysed using SPIROWARE V 3.3.1, which incorporates an error correction algorithm. Uncorrected and corrected indices were compared using paired t-tests and Bland-Altman plots. RESULTS: Correction of the sensor error significantly lowered FRC (mean difference 9%) and LCI (8-10%) across all three groups. S cond was higher following correction (11%, 14% and 36% in health, asthma and smokers, respectively) with significant proportional bias. S acin was significantly lower following correction in the asthma and smoker groups, but the effect was small (2-5%) and with no proportional bias. DISCUSSION: The O2 and CO2 cross-sensitivity sensor error significantly overestimated FRC and LCI in adults, consistent with data in infants and children. There was a high degree of underestimation of S cond but minimal impact on S acin. The presence of significant proportional bias indicates that previous studies will require reanalysis to confirm previous findings and to allow comparability with future studies.
- Published
- 2022
6. Tobramycin and Colistin display anti-inflammatory properties in CuFi-1 cystic fibrosis cell line
- Author
-
Sheikh, Z, Bradbury, P, Reekie, TA, Pozzoli, M, Robinson, PD, Kassiou, M, Young, PM, Ong, HX, and Traini, D
- Subjects
Inflammation ,Lipopolysaccharides ,Cystic Fibrosis ,Cell Survival ,Colistin ,organic chemicals ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Interleukin-8 ,Ibuprofen ,Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology ,0801 Artificial Intelligence and Image Processing, 1115 Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 1701 Psychology, 1702 Cognitive Sciences ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Cell Line ,Drug Combinations ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Tobramycin ,Humans ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy - Abstract
Current cystic fibrosis (CF) treatment strategies are primarily focused on oral/inhaled anti-inflammatories and antibiotics, resulting in a considerable treatment burden for CF patients. Therefore, combination treatments consisting of anti-inflammatories with antibiotics could reduce the CF treatment burden. However, there is an imperative need to understand the potential drug-drug interactions of these combination treatments to determine their efficacy. Thus, this study aimed to determine the interactions of the anti-inflammatory agent Ibuprofen with each of the CF-approved inhaled antibiotics (Tobramycin, Colistin and its prodrug colistimethate sodium/Tadim) and anti-bacterial and anti-inflammatory efficacy. Chemical interactions of the Ibuprofen:antibiotic combinations were elucidated using High-Resolution Mass-Spectrometry (HRMS) and 1H NMR. HRMS showed pairing of Ibuprofen and Tobramycin, further confirmed by 1H NMR whilst no pairing was observed for either Ibuprofen:Colistin or Ibuprofen:Tadim combinations. The anti-bacterial activity of the combinations against Pseudomonas aeruginosa showed that neither paired nor non-paired Ibuprofen:antibiotic therapies altered the anti-bacterial activity. The anti-inflammatory efficacy of the combination therapies was next determined at two different concentrations (Low and High) using in vitro models of NuLi-1 (healthy) and CuFi-1 (CF) cell lines. Differential response in the anti-inflammatory efficacy of Ibuprofen:Tobramycin combination was observed between the two concentrations due to changes in the structural conformation of the paired Ibuprofen:Tobramycin complex at High concentration, confirmed by 1H NMR. In contrast, the non-pairing of the Ibuprofen:Colistin and Ibuprofen:Tadim combinations showed a significant decrease in IL-8 secretion at both the concentrations. Importantly, all antibiotics alone showed anti-inflammatory properties, highlighting the inherent anti-inflammatory properties of these antibiotics.
- Published
- 2021
7. Cord blood group 2 innate lymphoid cells are associated with lung function at 6 weeks of age
- Author
-
Martins Costa Gomes, G, de Gouveia Belinelo, P, Starkey, MR, Murphy, VE, Hansbro, PM, Sly, PD, Robinson, PD, Karmaus, W, Gibson, PG, Mattes, J, and Collison, AM
- Subjects
1107 Immunology, 1115 Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences - Abstract
Objective: Offspring born to mothers with asthma in pregnancy are known to have lower lung function which tracks with age. Human group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2) accumulate in foetal lungs, at 10-fold higher levels compared to adult lungs. However, there are no data on foetal ILC2 numbers and the association with respiratory health outcomes such as lung function in early life. We aimed to investigate cord blood immune cell populations from babies born to mothers with asthma in pregnancy. Methods: Cord blood from babies born to asthmatic mothers was collected, and cells were stained in whole cord blood. Analyses were done using traditional gating approaches and computational methodologies (t-distributed stochastic neighbour embedding and PhenoGraph algorithms). At 6 weeks of age, the time to peak tidal expiratory flow as a percentage of total expiratory flow time (tPTEF/tE%) was determined as well as Lung Clearance Index (LCI), during quiet natural sleep. Results: Of 110 eligible infants (March 2017 to November 2019), 91 were successfully immunophenotyped (82.7%). Lung function was attempted in 61 infants (67.0%), and 43 of those infants (70.5% of attempted) had technically acceptable tPTEF/tE% measurements. Thirty-four infants (55.7% of attempted) had acceptable LCI measurements. Foetal ILC2 numbers with increased expression of chemoattractant receptor-homologous molecule (CRTh2), characterised by two distinct analysis methodologies, were associated with poorer infant lung function at 6 weeks of age." Conclusion: Foetal immune responses may be a surrogate variable for or directly influence lung function outcomes in early life.
- Published
- 2021
8. Exposure to stress and air pollution from bushfires during pregnancy: Could epigenetic changes explain effects on the offspring?
- Author
-
Murphy, VE, Karmaus, W, Mattes, J, Brew, BK, Collison, A, Holliday, E, Jensen, ME, Morgan, GG, Zosky, GR, McDonald, VM, Jegasothy, E, Robinson, PD, Gibson, PG, Murphy, VE, Karmaus, W, Mattes, J, Brew, BK, Collison, A, Holliday, E, Jensen, ME, Morgan, GG, Zosky, GR, McDonald, VM, Jegasothy, E, Robinson, PD, and Gibson, PG
- Abstract
Due to climate change, bushfires are becoming a more frequent and more severe phenomenon which contributes to poor health effects associated with air pollution. In pregnancy, environmental exposures can have lifelong consequences for the fetus, but little is known about these consequences in the context of bushfire smoke exposure. In this review we summarise the current knowledge in this area, and propose a potential mechanism linking bushfire smoke exposure in utero to poor perinatal and respiratory outcomes in the offspring. Bushfire smoke exposure is associated with poor pregnancy outcomes including reduced birth weight and an increased risk of prematurity. Some publications have outlined the adverse health effects on young children, particularly in relation to emergency department presentations and hospital admissions for respiratory problems, but there are no studies in children who were exposed to bushfire smoke in utero. Prenatal stress is likely to occur as a result of catastrophic bushfire events, and stress is known to be associated with poor perinatal and respiratory outcomes. Changes to DNA methylation are potential epigenetic mechanisms linking both smoke particulate exposure and prenatal stress to poor childhood respiratory health outcomes. More research is needed in large pregnancy cohorts exposed to bushfire events to explore this further, and to design appropriate mitigation interventions, in this area of global public health importance.
- Published
- 2021
9. Maternal asthma is associated with reduced lung function in male infants in a combined analysis of the BLT and BILD cohorts
- Author
-
De Gouveia Belinelo, P, Collison, AM, Murphy, VE, Robinson, PD, Jesson, K, Hardaker, K, De Queiroz Andrade, E, Oldmeadow, C, Martins Costa Gomes, G, Sly, Peter, Usemann, J, Appenzeller, R, Gorlanova, O, Fuchs, O, Latzin, P, Gibson, PG, Frey, U, Mattes, J, De Gouveia Belinelo, P, Collison, AM, Murphy, VE, Robinson, PD, Jesson, K, Hardaker, K, De Queiroz Andrade, E, Oldmeadow, C, Martins Costa Gomes, G, Sly, Peter, Usemann, J, Appenzeller, R, Gorlanova, O, Fuchs, O, Latzin, P, Gibson, PG, Frey, U, and Mattes, J
- Published
- 2021
10. Controlled versus free breathing for multiple-breath nitrogen washout in asthma.
- Author
-
Handley, BM, Bozier, J, Jeagal, E, Rutting, S, Schoeffel, RE, Robinson, PD, King, GG, Milne, S, Thamrin, C, Handley, BM, Bozier, J, Jeagal, E, Rutting, S, Schoeffel, RE, Robinson, PD, King, GG, Milne, S, and Thamrin, C
- Abstract
The lack of comparability in indices of ventilation heterogeneity between free- and controlled-breathing MBNW protocols is confirmed in asthma https://bit.ly/3lmri4A.
- Published
- 2021
11. Controlled versus free breathing for multiple breath nitrogen washout in healthy adults
- Author
-
Handley BM, Jeagal E, Schoeffel RE, Badal T, Chapman DG, Farrow CE, King GG, Robinson PD, Milne S, and Thamrin C
- Published
- 2020
12. Prevention of cisplatin-induced ototoxicity in children and adolescents with cancer: a clinical practice guideline
- Author
-
Freyer, DR, Brock, PR, Chang, KW, Dupuis, LL, Epelman, S, Knight, K, Mills, D, Phillips, R, Potter, E, Risby, D, Simpkin, P, Sullivan, M, Cabral, S, Robinson, PD, Sung, L, Freyer, DR, Brock, PR, Chang, KW, Dupuis, LL, Epelman, S, Knight, K, Mills, D, Phillips, R, Potter, E, Risby, D, Simpkin, P, Sullivan, M, Cabral, S, Robinson, PD, and Sung, L
- Abstract
Despite ototoxicity being a prevalent consequence of cisplatin chemotherapy, little guidance exists on interventions to prevent this permanent and progressive adverse event. To develop a clinical practice guideline for the prevention of cisplatin-induced ototoxicity in children and adolescents with cancer, we convened an international, multidisciplinary panel of experts and patient advocates to update a systematic review of randomised trials for the prevention of cisplatin-induced ototoxicity. The systematic review identified 27 eligible adult and paediatric trials that evaluated amifostine, sodium diethyldithiocarbamate or disulfiram, systemic sodium thiosulfate, intratympanic therapies, and cisplatin infusion duration. Regarding systemic sodium thiosulfate, the panel made a strong recommendation for administration in non-metastatic hepatoblastoma, a weak recommendation for administration in other non-metastatic cancers, and a weak recommendation against its routine use in metastatic cancers. Amifostine, sodium diethyldithiocarbamate, and intratympanic therapy should not be routinely used. Cisplatin infusion duration should not be altered as a means to reduce ototoxicity. Further research to determine the safety of sodium thiosulfate in patients with metastatic cancer is encouraged.
- Published
- 2020
13. Clinical Practice Guideline for Systemic Antifungal Prophylaxis in Pediatric Patients With Cancer and Hematopoietic Stem-Cell Transplantation Recipients
- Author
-
Lehrnbecher, T, Fisher, BT, Phillips, B, Beauchemin, M, Carlesse, F, Castagnola, E, Duong, N, Dupuis, LL, Fioravantti, V, Groll, AH, Haeusler, GM, Roilides, E, Science, M, Steinbach, WJ, Tissing, W, Warris, A, Patel, P, Robinson, PD, Sung, L, Lehrnbecher, T, Fisher, BT, Phillips, B, Beauchemin, M, Carlesse, F, Castagnola, E, Duong, N, Dupuis, LL, Fioravantti, V, Groll, AH, Haeusler, GM, Roilides, E, Science, M, Steinbach, WJ, Tissing, W, Warris, A, Patel, P, Robinson, PD, and Sung, L
- Abstract
PURPOSE: To develop a clinical practice guideline for systemic antifungal prophylaxis in pediatric patients with cancer and hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) recipients. METHODS: Recommendations were developed by an international multidisciplinary panel that included a patient advocate. We conducted a systematic review of systemic antifungal prophylaxis in children and adults with cancer and HSCT recipients. The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach was used to make strong or weak recommendations and to classify level of evidence as high, moderate, low, or very low. The panel considered directness of the data to pediatric patients. RESULTS: There were 68 randomized trials included in the systematic review, of which 6 (9%) were conducted in a solely pediatric population. Strong recommendations were made to administer systemic antifungal prophylaxis to children and adolescents receiving treatment of acute myeloid leukemia, to those undergoing allogeneic HSCT pre-engraftment, and to those receiving systemic immunosuppression for graft-versus-host disease treatment. A strong recommendation was made to administer a mold-active agent with an echinocandin or a mold-active azole when systemic antifungal prophylaxis is warranted. For children younger than 13 years of age, an echinocandin, voriconazole, or itraconazole is suggested. Posaconazole may also be used in those age 13 years or older. A strong recommendation against routine administration of amphotericin as systemic antifungal prophylaxis was made. CONCLUSION: We developed a clinical practice guideline for systemic antifungal prophylaxis administration in pediatric patients with cancer and HSCT recipients. Implementation and assessment of guideline-concordant rates and impacts are important future steps.
- Published
- 2020
14. Guideline for Antibacterial Prophylaxis Administration in Pediatric Cancer and Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- Author
-
Lehrnbecher, T, Fisher, BT, Phillips, B, Alexander, S, Ammann, RA, Beauchemin, M, Carlesse, F, Castagnola, E, Davis, BL, Dupuis, LL, Egan, G, Groll, AH, Haeusler, GM, Santolaya, M, Steinbach, WJ, van de Wetering, M, Wolf, J, Cabral, S, Robinson, PD, Sung, L, Lehrnbecher, T, Fisher, BT, Phillips, B, Alexander, S, Ammann, RA, Beauchemin, M, Carlesse, F, Castagnola, E, Davis, BL, Dupuis, LL, Egan, G, Groll, AH, Haeusler, GM, Santolaya, M, Steinbach, WJ, van de Wetering, M, Wolf, J, Cabral, S, Robinson, PD, and Sung, L
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacteremia and other invasive bacterial infections are common among children with cancer receiving intensive chemotherapy and in pediatric recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Systemic antibacterial prophylaxis is one approach that can be used to reduce the risk of these infections. Our purpose was to develop a clinical practice guideline (CPG) for systemic antibacterial prophylaxis administration in pediatric patients with cancer and those undergoing HSCT. METHODS: An international and multidisciplinary panel was convened with representation from pediatric hematology/oncology and HSCT, pediatric infectious diseases (including antibiotic stewardship), nursing, pharmacy, a patient advocate, and a CPG methodologist. The panel used the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach to generate recommendations based on the results of a systematic review of the literature. RESULTS: The systematic review identified 114 eligible randomized trials of antibiotic prophylaxis. The panel made a weak recommendation for systemic antibacterial prophylaxis for children receiving intensive chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia and relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Weak recommendations against the routine use of systemic antibacterial prophylaxis were made for children undergoing induction chemotherapy for ALL, autologous HSCT and allogeneic HSCT. A strong recommendation against its routine use was made for children whose therapy is not expected to result in prolonged severe neutropenia. If used, prophylaxis with levofloxacin was recommended during severe neutropenia. CONCLUSIONS: We present a CPG for systemic antibacterial prophylaxis administration in pediatric cancer and HSCT patients. Future research should evaluate the long-term effectiveness and adverse effects of prophylaxis.
- Published
- 2020
15. The Need For Physiological Phenotyping To Develop New Drugs For Airways Disease.
- Author
-
Chapman, DG, King, GG, Robinson, PD, Farah, CS, Thamrin, C, Chapman, DG, King, GG, Robinson, PD, Farah, CS, and Thamrin, C
- Abstract
Asthma and COPD make up the majority of obstructive airways diseases (OADs), which affects ∼11% of the population. The main drugs used to treat OADs have not changed in the past five decades, with advancements mainly comprising variations on existing treatments. The recent biologics are beneficial to only specific subsets of patients. Part of this may lie in our inability to adequately characterise the tremendous heterogeneity in every aspect of OAD. The field is currently moving towards the concept of personalised medicine, based on a focus on treatable traits that are objective, measurable and modifiable. We propose extending this concept via the use of emerging clinical tools for comprehensive physiological phenotyping. We describe, based on published data, the evidence for the use of functional imaging, gas washout techniques and oscillometry, as well as potential future applications, to more comprehensively assess and predict treatment response in OADs. In this way, we hope to demonstrate how physiological phenotyping tools will improve the way in which drugs are prescribed, but most importantly, will facilitate development of new drugs for OADs.
- Published
- 2020
16. Unique subpopulations of cord blood innate lymphoid cells are associated with lung function at 6 weeks of age in babies born to mothers with asthma during pregnancy
- Author
-
Gomes, GMC, Belinelo, PG, Starkey, MR, Jesson, K, Loering, S, Hansbro, PM, Murphy, VE, Hardaker, K, Robinson, PD, Sly, PD, Gibson, PG, Mattes, J, and Collison, AM
- Subjects
Allergy - Published
- 2019
17. Long-term morbidity of respiratory viral infections during chemotherapy in children with leukaemia
- Author
-
Lin, B, Kennedy, B, McBride, J, Dalla-Pozza, L, Trahair, T, McCowage, G, Coward, E, Plush, L, Robinson, PD, Hardaker, K, Widger, J, Ng, A, Jaffe, A, Selvadurai, H, Lin, B, Kennedy, B, McBride, J, Dalla-Pozza, L, Trahair, T, McCowage, G, Coward, E, Plush, L, Robinson, PD, Hardaker, K, Widger, J, Ng, A, Jaffe, A, and Selvadurai, H
- Abstract
Background: Respiratory viruses are a common cause of infection in immunosuppressed children undergoing cancer therapy. Pulmonary sequelae have been documented following respiratory viral infections (RVIs) in hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) recipients; however potential late effects in children undergoing nonmyeloablative chemotherapy have not been investigated. Aim: To evaluate the long-term pulmonary morbidity of respiratory viral infections during chemotherapy in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Methods: Childhood ALL survivors, aged 7 to 18 years, greater than 6 months posttreatment were recruited. Exclusion criteria included HSCT or proven bacterial/fungal respiratory infection during treatment. Subjects were classified into “viral” or “control” groups according to retrospective medical records that documented the presence of laboratory-proven RVIs during chemotherapy. Symptom questionnaires (Liverpool, ISAAC) and lung function testing (spirometry, plethysmography, diffusing capacity, forced oscillation technique to ATS/ERS standards) were then performed cross-sectionally at the time of recruitment. Results: Fifty-four patients (31 viral, 23 control) were recruited: median (range) age 11.2 (7.2-18.1) years, and at 4.9 (0.5-13) years posttherapy. Abnormalities were detected in 17 (31%) individuals (8 viral, 9 control), with the most common being DLCO impairment (3 viral, 4 control) and reduced respiratory reactance at 5 Hz (5 viral, 6 control). Children with RVIs during chemotherapy reported more current respiratory symptoms, particularly wheeze (odds ratio [OR], 3.0; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.9-10.0; P =.09) and cough (OR, 2.7; 95% CI: 0.8-9.5; P =.11). No differences in lung function tests were observed between the two groups. Conclusions: Our study found children with RVIs during chemotherapy developed more long-term respiratory symptoms than controls; however, differences did not reach statistical significance. No differences
- Published
- 2019
18. Enhanced recovery after anterior resection: earlier leak diagnosis and low mortality in a case series
- Author
-
D’Souza, N, primary, Robinson, PD, additional, Branagan, G, additional, and Chave, H, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Guideline for the Management of Clostridium Difficile Infection in Children and Adolescents With Cancer and Pediatric Hematopoietic Stem-Cell Transplantation Recipients
- Author
-
Diorio, C, Robinson, PD, Ammann, RA, Castagnola, E, Erickson, K, Esbenshade, A, Fisher, BT, Haeusler, GM, Kuczynski, S, Lehrnbecher, T, Phillips, R, Cabral, S, Dupuis, LL, Sung, L, Diorio, C, Robinson, PD, Ammann, RA, Castagnola, E, Erickson, K, Esbenshade, A, Fisher, BT, Haeusler, GM, Kuczynski, S, Lehrnbecher, T, Phillips, R, Cabral, S, Dupuis, LL, and Sung, L
- Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of this work was to develop a clinical practice guideline for the prevention and treatment of Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) in children and adolescents with cancer and pediatric hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) patients. METHODS: An international multidisciplinary panel of experts in pediatric oncology and infectious diseases with patient advocate representation was convened. We performed systematic reviews of randomized controlled trials for the prevention or treatment of CDI in any population and considered the directness of the evidence to children with cancer and pediatric HSCT patients. We used the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach to generate recommendations. RESULTS: The panel made strong recommendations to administer either oral metronidazole or oral vancomycin for the initial treatment of nonsevere CDI and oral vancomycin for the initial treatment of severe CDI. Fidaxomicin may be considered in the setting of recurrent CDI. The panel suggested that probiotics not be routinely used for the prevention of CDI, and that monoclonal antibodies and probiotics not be routinely used for the treatment of CDI. A strong recommendation to not use fecal microbiota transplantation was made in this population. We identified key knowledge gaps and suggested directions for future research. CONCLUSION: We present a guideline for the prevention and treatment of CDI in children and adolescents with cancer and pediatric HSCT patients. Future research should include randomized controlled trials that involve children with cancer and pediatric HSCT patients to improve the management of CDI in this population.
- Published
- 2018
20. Automated quality control of forced oscillation measurements: Respiratory artifact detection with advanced feature extraction
- Author
-
Pham, TT, Leong, PHW, Robinson, PD, Gutzler, T, Jee, AS, King, GG, and Thamrin, C
- Subjects
Quality Control ,Adult ,Physiology ,Reproducibility of Results ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Middle Aged ,Asthma ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Automation ,Spirometry ,Oscillometry ,Humans ,Artifacts ,Child - Abstract
© 2017 the American Physiological Society. The forced oscillation technique (FOT) can provide unique and clinically relevant lung function information with little cooperation with subjects. However, FOT has higher variability than spirometry, possibly because strategies for quality control and reducing artifacts in FOT measurements have yet to be standardized or validated. Many quality control procedures rely on either simple statistical filters or subjective evaluation by a human operator. In this study, we propose an automated artifact removal approach based on the resistance against flow profile, applied to complete breaths. We report results obtained from data recorded from children and adults, with and without asthma. Our proposed method has 76% agreement with a human operator for the adult data set and 79% for the pediatric data set. Furthermore, we assessed the variability of respiratory resistance measured by FOT using within-session variation (wCV) and between-session variation (bCV). In the asthmatic adults test data set, our method was again similar to that of the manual operator for wCV (6.5 vs. 6.9%) and significantly improved bCV (8.2 vs. 8.9%). Our combined automated breath removal approach based on advanced feature extraction offers better or equivalent quality control of FOT measurements compared with an expert operator and computationally more intensive methods in terms of accuracy and reducing intrasubject variability. NEW &NOTEWORTHY The forced oscillation technique (FOT) is gaining wider acceptance for clinical testing; however, strategies for quality control are still highly variable and require a high level of subjectivity. We propose an automated, complete breath approach for removal of respiratory artifacts from FOT measurements, using feature extraction and an interquartile range filter. Our approach offers better or equivalent performance compared with an expert operator, in terms of accuracy and reducing intrasubject variability.
- Published
- 2017
21. Utilising Hem-o-lok® ligation system to safely and efficiently divide bilioenteric fistulae in laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
- Author
-
Finch, LM, Robinson, PD, and Szentpali, K
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Respiratory artefact removal in forced oscillation measurements: A machine learning approach
- Author
-
Pham, TT, Thamrin, C, Robinson, PD, McEwan, AL, Leong, PHW, Pham, TT, Thamrin, C, Robinson, PD, McEwan, AL, and Leong, PHW
- Abstract
© 2016 IEEE. Goal: Respiratory artefact removal for the forced oscillation technique can be treated as an anomaly detection problem. Manual removal is currently considered the gold standard, but this approach is laborious and subjective. Most existing automated techniques used simple statistics and/or rejected anomalous data points. Unfortunately, simple statistics are insensitive to numerous artefacts, leading to low reproducibility of results. Furthermore, rejecting anomalous data points causes an imbalance between the inspiratory and expiratory contributions. Methods: From a machine learning perspective, such methods are unsupervised and can be considered simple feature extraction. We hypothesize that supervised techniques can be used to find improved features that are more discriminative and more highly correlated with the desired output. Features thus found are then used for anomaly detection by applying quartile thresholding, which rejects complete breaths if one of its features is out of range. The thresholds are determined by both saliency and performance metrics rather than qualitative assumptions as in previous works. Results: Feature ranking indicates that our new landmark features are among the highest scoring candidates regardless of age across saliency criteria. F1-scores, receiver operating characteristic, and variability of the mean resistance metrics show that the proposed scheme outperforms previous simple feature extraction approaches. Our subject-independent detector, 1IQR-SU, demonstrated approval rates of 80.6% for adults and 98% for children, higher than existing methods. Conclusion: Our new features are more relevant. Our removal is objective and comparable to the manual method. Significance: This is a critical work to automate forced oscillation technique quality control.
- Published
- 2017
23. Serious Asthma Events with Fluticasone plus Salmeterol versus Fluticasone Alone
- Author
-
Stempel, Da, Raphiou, Ih, Kral, Km, Yeakey, Am, Emmett, Ah, Prazma, Cm, Buaron, Ks, Pascoe, Sj, Austri, Investigators, Altieri, Hh, Antuni, Jd, Bergna, Ma, Cuadrado, Ja, De Gennaro MS, Fazio Lizandrelo CL, Gattolin, G, Gosn, Am, Larrateguy, Ld, Marcipar, Am, Maspero, Jf, Medina, Iv, Perez Chada RD, Silva, D, Victorio, Cf, Bardin, Pg, Carroll, Pa, Clements, Bs, Dore, Nd, Robinson, Pd, Fitzgerald, Da, Robinson, Pj, Russo, Ma, Sajkov, D, Thomas, Ps, Upham, Jw, Forstner, B, Kaik, G, Koeberl, Gh, Studnicka, M, Wallner, G, Balthazar, Y, Bauler, A, Dupont, Lj, Martinot, Jb, Ninane, V, Peché, R, Pilette, C, Dimitrova, R, Dimova, D, Kissyova Ibrishimova, G, Loboshka Becheva, M, Machkovska, M, Madjarov, S, Mandazhieva Pepelanova, M, Naidenova, I, Noleva, K, Takovska, N, Terziev, C, Aggarwal, Nk, Chapman, Kr, Csanadi, Ma, Dhillon, R, Henein, S, Kelly, Aj, Lam, As, Liem, Jj, Lougheed, Md, Lowe, Dw, Rizvi, Q, van den Berg, L, Zidel, B, Barros Monge MJ, Calvo Gil MA, Castillo Hofer CR, Diaz Amor PV, Lezana Soya, V, Quilodran Silva CN, Bolivar Grimaldos, F, Solarte-Rodriguez, I, Butkovic-Tomljanovic, R, Hegedus-Jungvirth, M, Ivkovic-Jurekovic, I, Simunov-Karuza, G, Buresova, M, Bursova, J, Fratrik, J, Guttlerova, E, Hartman, P, Jirmanova, I, Kalina, P, Kolman, P, Kucera, M, Povysilova, L, Pravda, P, Svabkova, A, Zakova, L, Backer, V, Maltbaek, N, Johnsen, Cr, Aries, Sp, Babyesiza, A, Barth, D, Benedix, A, Berg, P, Bergtholdt, B, Bettig, U, Bindig, Hw, Botzen, U, Brehler, R, Breyer, Go, Bruckhaus-Walter, M, Dapper, T, Eckhard, Jg, Engelhard, R, Feldmeyer, F, Fissan, H, Franz, Kh, Frick, Bs, Funck, J, Gessner, Cm, Ginko, T, Grigat, Ce, Grimm-Sachs, V, Groth, G, Hampf, J, Hanf, G, Havasi-Jost, G, Heinz, Gu, Helm, K, Hoeltz, S, Hofmann, S, Jander, R, Jandl, M, Jasch-Hoppe, B, Jung, T, Junggeburth, Jj, Kardos, P, Knueppel, W, Koch, T, Kolorz, C, Korduan, M, Korth-Wiemann, B, Krezdorn, Hg, Kroker, A, Kruell, M, Kuehne, P, Lenk, U, Liefring, E, Merke, J, Micke, L, Mitlehner, W, Mueller, H, Naudts, If, Neumann, G, Oldenburg, W, Overlack, A, Panzer, F, Reinholz, N, Remppis, R, Riegel, P, Rueckert, P, Schaetzl, Rj, Schauer, U, Hamelmann, E, Schenkenberger, I, Schlegel, V, Scholz, G, Schroers, M, Schwittay, A, Sebert, M, Tyler, K, Soemantri, Pa, Stock, P, Stuchlik, G, Unland, M, von Mallinckrodt, C, Wachter, J, Weber, U, Weberling, F, Wehgartner-Winkler, S, Weimer, J, Wiemer, S, Winkelmann, Ej, Zeisler, Kh, Ziegner, A, Zimny, Hh, Andrasofszky, Z, Bartha, A, Farkas, M, Gömöri, K, Kis, S, Major, K, Mészáros, I, Mezei, M, Rakvacs, M, Szalai, Z, Szántó, J, Szentesi, M, Szolnoki, E, Valyon, E, Zibotics, H, Anwar, J, Arimah, C, Djajalaksana, S, Rai, Ib, Setijadi, Ar, Setyanto, Db, Susanti, F, Syafiuddin, T, Syamsi, Ln, Wijanarko, P, Yunus, F, Bonavia, M, Braga, M, Chetta, Aa, Cerveri, I, Luisetti, M, Crimi, N, Cutrera, R, De Rosa, M, Esposito, S, Foresi, A, Gammeri, E, Iemoli, E, Legnani, Dl, Michetti, G, Pastorello, Ea, Pesci, A, Pistolesi, M, Riva, E, Romano, A, Scichilone, N, Terracciano, L, Tripodi, S, Choi, I, Kim, C, Kim, Js, Kim, Wj, Koh, Yy, Kwon, Ss, Lee, Sh, Lee, S, Lee, Sk, Park, Cs, Cirule, I, Eglite, R, Petrova, I, Poga, M, Smiltena, I, Chomiciene, A, Davoliene, I, Griskeviciene, V, Naudziunas, A, Naudziunas, S, Rudzeviciene, O, Sitkauskiene, B, Urbonas, G, Vaicius, D, Valavicius, A, Valiulis, A, Vebriene, J, bin Abdul Aziz FA, Daud, M, Ismail, Ai, Tengku Saifudin TI, Md Kassim RM, Mohd Fadzli FB, Wan Mohamad WH, Aguilar Dominguez PE, Aguilar-Orozco, Ra, Garza-Salinas, S, Ramirez-Diaz, Sp, Sánchez Llamas, F, Soto-Ramos, M, Velarde-Mora, Hj, Aguirre Sosa, I, Cisneros, Am, Estrella Viladegut RA, Matsuno Fuchigami, A, Adiaz-Baui, Tt, Bernan, Ap, Onia, Af, Sandagon, Mj, S-Naval, S, Yu, Cy, Bartuzi, Z, Bielous-Wilk, A, Błażowski, Ł, Bożek, A, Brzostek, J, Chorostowska-Wynimko, J, Ciekalska, K, Ziora, D, Cieslicki, J, Emeryk, A, Folcik, K, Gałuszka-Bilińska, A, Gawlik, R, Giejlo, M, Harat, R, Hofman, T, Jahnz-Różyk, K, Jedrzejczak, M, Kachel, T, Kamiński, D, Kelm Warchol, A, Konieczny, Z, Kwasniewski, A, Leszczyński, W, Mincewicz, G, Niezgoda, K, Olszewska-Ziąber, A, Onasz-Manitius, M, Pawlukiewicz, M, Piotrowicz, P, Piotrowski, W, Pisarczyk-Bogacka, E, Piskorz, P, Prokop-Staszecka, A, Roslan, A, Słomka, A, Smalera, E, Stelmach, I, Swierczynska-Krepa, M, Szmidt, M, Tarnowska-Matusiak, M, Tłuczykont, B, Tyminska, K, Waszkuc-Golonko, J, Wojciechowska, I, Alexandrescu, Ds, Neamtu, Ml, Todea, D, Alekseeva, E, Aleksandrova, E, Asherova, I, Barbarash, Ol, Bugrova, O, Bukreeva, Eb, Chermenskiy, A, Chizhova, O, Demko, I, Evdokimova, A, Giorgadze, Ml, Grigoryev, S, Irkhina, I, Khurkhurova, Nv, Kondyurina, Eg, Kostin, Vi, Kudelya, L, Laleko, Sl, Lenskaya, L, Levashov, S, Logvinenko, N, Martynov, A, Mizernitski, Y, Nemtsov, B, Novozhenov, Vg, Pavlishchuk, S, Popova, Vv, Reshetko, Ov, Sherenkov, A, Shirinsky, Vs, Shpagina, L, Soloviev, Ki, Tkachev, A, Trofimov, Vi, Vertkin, Al, Vorobeva, E, Idrisova, E, Yakushin, S, Zadionchenko, V, Zhiglinskaya, O, Zykov, K, Dopudja Pantic, V, Nadaskic, R, Nestorovic, B, Skodric Trifunovic, V, Stojanovic, A, Vukcevic, M, Vujic, T, Mitic Milikic, M, Banovcin, P, Horvathova, H, Karako, P Sr, Plutinsky, J, Pribulova, E, Szarazova, M, Zlatos, A, Adams, L, Badat, A, Bassa, A, Breedt, J, Bruning, A, Ellis, Gc, Emanuel, S, Fouche, Lf, Fulat, Ma, Gani, M, Ismail, Ms, Jurgens, Jc, Nell, H, Nieuwoudt, G, Noor, F, Bolliger, Ct, Puterman, As, Siddique, N, Trokis, Js, Vahed, Ya, Van Der Berg BJ, Van der Linden, M, Van Zyl, L, Visser, Ss, Antépara Ercoreca, I, Arnedillo Muñoz, A, Barbe Illa, F, Barreiro López, B, Blanco Aparicio, M, Boada Valmaseda, A, Bosque García, M, Bustamante Ruiz, A, Carretero Anibarro, P, Del Campo Matias, F, Echave-Sustaet, Jm, Espinosa de los Monteros Garde MJ, Garcia Hernandez GM, López Viña, A, Lores Obradors, L, Luengo Planas MT, Monsó Molas, E, Navarro Dourdil, A, Nieto García AJ, Perpina Tordera, M, Picado Valles, C, Rodriguez Alvarez Mdel, M, Saura Vinuesa, A, Serra Batlles, J, Soler Sempere MJ, Toran Montserrat, P, Valdés Cuadrado LG, Villasante Fernandez-Montes, C, Cheng, Sl, Chern, Jh, Chiu, Mh, Chung, Cl, Lai, Rs, Lin, Ck, Liu, Yc, Wang, Cc, Wei, Yf, Amer, L, Berenfus, Vi, Besh, L, Duka, Kd, Fushtey, Im, Garmash, N, Dudnyk, O, Godlevska, O, Vlasenko, Ma, Hospodarskyy, I, Iashyna, L, Kaladze, M, Khvelos, Si, Kostromina, Vp, Krakhmalova, O, Kryuchko, T, Kulynych, Ov, Krasko, Mp, Levchenko, O, Litvinova, T, Panina, Ss, Pasiyeshvili, Lm, Prystupa, Ln, Romaniuk, Li, Sirenko, I, Synenko, Vi, Vynnychenko, Lb, Yatsyshyn, Ri, Zaitsev, I, Zhebel, V, Zubarenko, O, Arthur, Cp, Brown, V, Burhan, H, Chaudhuri, R, Collier, D, Barnes, Nc, Davies, Ej, Ellery, A, Kwok, S, Lenney, W, Nordstrom, M, Pandya, Hc, Parker, Iw, Rajakulasingam, K, Seddon, P, Sharma, R, Thomas, Ec, Wakeling, Ja, Abalos-Galito, M, Abboy, C, Abreu, E, Ackerman, If, Acosta, Ia, Adaoag, Aa, Ahmed, M, Ali, Mi, Allen, Dr, Allen GG Jr, Diogo, Jj, Allison, Dc, Alwine, Lk, Apaliski, Sj, Arastu, Rs, Arora, Cm, Auerbach, D, Azzam, Sj, Badar FL 3rd, Baker, Jw, Barasch, Jp, Barber, Ma, Bardinas-Rodriguez, R, Barreiro, Tj, Baumbach, Rr, Baur, Ce, Baxter, Bs, Beach, Jl, Beasley, Rl, Beavins, Je, Beliveau, Wj, Benbow, Mj, Bennett, Nl, Bennett, Rl, Bernal, H, Bernstein, Di, Blaiss, Ms, Blumenthal, Kw, Boas, Sr, Borders, Jl, Boscia, Ja, Boulware, Wn, Bowling, Bt, Brabec, Ba, Bramlet, Dg, Figueroa, Dp, Brautigam, Df, Brownell, Jm, Bruce, Tr, Call, Rs, Campbell, Ca, Canaan, Ya, Cannon, Df, Carpio, Jm, Cathcart, Ws, Cevallos, Jp, Chauhan, Av, Chuang, Rb, Chevalier, D, Christensen, J, Christensen, Ta, Christina, Mo, Chrzanowski, Rr, Civitarese, Fa, Clark, Jp, Clifford, Dp, Lapidus, Rj, Coggi, Ja, Lenz, Jj, Cohen, Kr, Collins, Bg, Collins, H, Comellas, A, Condit, J, Cordasco EM Jr, Corder, Cn, Covar, Ra, Coverston, Kd, Croce, Sa, Cruz, H, Curtis, Ct, Daftary, Pk, Dalan, D, Dalawari, Sp, Daly, Wc, Davis, Kc, Dawes, Kw, Decotiis, Ba, Deluca, Rf, Desantis, Dm, De Valle OL, Diaz, Jl, Diaz, Jd, Dice, Jp, Elizalde, A, Hosler, Mr, Dixon, C, Dobkin, La, Dobrusin, Rs, Dransfield, Mt, Ebbeling, Wl, Edwards, Jd, Elacion, Jm, Elkayam, D, Ellison, Wt, Elsen, Jr, Engel, Lr, Ensz, Dj, Ericksen, Cl, Ervin, Je, Fang, C, Abrahamian, F, Farrah, Vb, Field, Jd, Fishman, Hj, Florea, R, Nayyar, S, Focil, A, Focauld, F, Franco MA Jr, Frandsen, Br, Ganti, K, Garcia, Fl, Lee, Wm, Garscadden, Ag, Gatti, Ea, Gellady, Am, George, Ar, Gibbon, Gw, Gleason, Gp, Goldberg, P, Goldstein, Mf, Gonzalez, Ge, Gower, Rg, Grande, Ja, Gregory, D, Grubb, Sd, Guthrie, Rp, Haas, Ta, Haft, Ks, Hajal, R, Hammond, Gd, Hansel, Nn, Hansen, Vr, Harris, Af, Hartman, An, Harvey, Rr, Hazan-Steinberg, S, Headley, Dm, Heigerick, Gc, Heller, Bn, Hendrix, El, Herrod, Jn, Hewitt, Mj, Hines, Rl, Hirdt, Ap, Hirschfield, Ja, Hoffman, Ks, Hogan, Ad, Howland, Wc, Hsu, Cc, Hsu, Fj, Hubbard, Wm, Hudson, Jd, Huffman, C, Hussain, M, Ioachimescu, Oc, Ismail, Ym, Jaffrani, Na, Jiang, N, Jones, Sw, Jordan, Rs, Joshi, Ke, Kaashmiri, Mw, Kalafer, M, Kamdar, Ba, Kanuga, Jg, Kao, Nl, Karetzky, M, Katsetos, Jc, Kay, Js, Kimmel, Ma, Kimura, Sh, Kingsley, Jk, Mahmood, Sm, Subich, Dc, Kirstein, Jl, Kleerup, Ec, Klein, Rm, Koh, Dw, Kohli, N, Koura, Fa, Kovacs, Sp, Kratzer, J, Kreit, Ci, Kreutter, Fm, Kubicki, Tm, Labuda, Jm, Latorre, Aj, Lara, Mm, Lechin, Ae, Lee, Jj, Lee, Md, Lentnek, Al, Lesh, Kw, Levins, Pf, Anspach, Rb, Levinsky, Dm, Lillestol, Mj, Lim, H, Livezey, Md, Lloyd-Turney, Cw, Lockey, Rf, Long, Ra, Lynch, Mj, Macgillivray, Bk, Mahadevan, Kp, Makam, Sk, Maloney, Mj, Mapel, D, Margolis, Bd, Margulies, J, Martin, Ef, Martin, Ee, Mascolo, M, Mataria, H, Sunbuli, M, Mathur, Rn, Mattar, Pn, Maynard, Km, Maynard, N, Mccormick, B, Mcelya, M, Mcevoy, Ce, Mckenzie, Wc, Medwedeff, Le, Mehta, Kd, Melamed, Ir, Meli, Jv, Merrick, Bh, Meyers, Pj, Miller, Bt, Minton, Sm, Miranda, Fg, Mohar, De, Montenegro, Ch, Morris, Fa, Morrison, Bs, Moss, Mh, Munoz, F, Naini, Gr, Nakamura, Ct, Naseeruddin, S, Nassim, C, Navazo, Lj, Nissim, Je, Norman, D, Oberoi, Ms, O'Connor, Tm, Offenberger, J, Orr, Rr, Osea, Ea, Paine, Wj, Rasmussen, Nl, Palatnik, M, Pangtay, D, Panuto, Ja, Patel, M, Perera, Ms, Perez, A, Peters PH Jr, Pimentel SM Jr, Pluto, Tm, Pollock, Mt, Posner, Ls, Pritchard, Jc, Pudi, Kk, Puig, Cm, Qaqundah, Py, Radbill, Mk, Rahman, St, Raikhel, M, Raissy, Hh, Ramstad, Ds, Ranasinghe, Es, Rangel, Os, Rapo, Se, Raschal, Sp, Reddy, Dg, Rehman, Sm, Reyes, Sr, Rhodes, Rb, Riffer, E, Rihal, Ps, Riley ED 4th, Rodriguez, Dh, Rogers, Cm, Rohlf, Jl, Romeu, H, Roney, Cw, Ronsick, So, Rosen, Jb, Rowe, Ms, Ruoff, Ge, Ryan, Eh, Saff, Rh, Saini, N, Anand, S, Balakrishnan, K, Samuels, Bs, Samuelson, Rj, Saniuk, Rj, Sargeant, Wo, Saunders, Mk, Saway, W, Scarupa, Md, White, Mv, Schear, Mj, Schwarz, Cm, Scott, Rb, Segall, N, Seibert, Af, Seidmeyer, V, Seidner, Mr, Seifer, Fd, Serje, J, Shah, Ms, Shah, Sb, Shapero, Pa, Shearer, Sd, Sheikh, Sq, Shepherd, Ts, Sher, Er, Sher, Ld, Short, Bh, Silas, Pe, Alvey, Jc, Silverfield, Jc, Simon, Sj, Sitar, S, Skoner, Dp, Smallow, Sa, Smart, Ba, Smith, Ca, Smith, Ke, Smith, Sk, Snyders, Gc, Soong, W, Soufer, J, Spangenthal, S, Stahlman, Je, Steele, Lg, Stegemoller, Rk, Stocks, J, Storms, Ww, Suen, J, Surowitz, Rz, Swauger, Jr, Taber, La, Tan, Ae, Pratt, Se, Tanus, T, Tarpay, Mm, Tarshis, Ga, Tenney, Jw, Tilghman, Kg, Trevino, Me, Troyan, Be, Twiddy, Sk, Updegrove, Jd, Urval, Kr, Uusinarkaus, Kt, Vaela, R, Van Cleeff, M, Varano, S, Vo, Qd, Wainz, Rj, Wald, Ja, Wall, Sj, Wasserman, Rl, Weinstein, Dl, Welker, Ja, Wellmon, B 2nd, Wells, T, Wenocur, Hs, Williams, Dl, Williams, Sl, Win, Ph, Wingo, Td, Wisman PP Jr, Wyszomierski, Da, Yamada, Hm, Yarows, S, Yunger TM Jr, Ziering, Rw., the AUSTRI Investigators, Stempel, D., Raphiou, I., Kral, K., Yeakey, A., Emmett, A., Prazma, C., Buaron, K., and Pascoe, S. Scichilone N tra i collaboratori
- Subjects
Male ,asthma ,serious events ,fluticasone ,salmeterol ,AUSTRI ,Exacerbation ,Intention to Treat Analysi ,INHALED CORTICOSTEROIDS ,Severity of Illness Index ,law.invention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,immune system diseases ,Ús terapèutic ,Broncodilatadors ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Fluticasone ,RISK ,ACTING BETA-AGONISTS ,EXACERBATIONS ,METAANALYSIS ,MORTALITY ,SAFETY ,DEATH ,FDA ,Medicine (all) ,Hazard ratio ,General Medicine ,Bronchodilator agents ,Middle Aged ,Fluticasone-Salmeterol Drug Combination ,Bronchodilator Agents ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Salmeterol ,medicine.drug ,Human ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Settore MED/10 - Malattie Dell'Apparato Respiratorio ,Fluticasone propionate ,03 medical and health sciences ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,Administration, Inhalation ,medicine ,Humans ,Asma ,Bronchodilator Agent ,Asthma ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,business.industry ,Therapeutic use ,medicine.disease ,respiratory tract diseases ,030228 respiratory system ,Fluticasone Propionate, Salmeterol Xinafoate Drug Combination ,Proportional Hazards Model ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND The safe and appropriate use of long-acting beta-agonists (LABAs) for the treatment of asthma has been widely debated. In two large clinical trials, investigators found a potential risk of serious asthma-related events associated with LABAs. This study was designed to evaluate the risk of administering the LABA salmeterol in combination with an inhaled glucocorticoid, fluticasone propionate. METHODS In this multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial, adolescent and adult patients (age, ≥12 years) with persistent asthma were assigned to receive either fluticasone with salmeterol or fluticasone alone for 26 weeks. All the patients had a history of a severe asthma exacerbation in the year before randomization but not during the previous month. Patients were excluded from the trial if they had a history of lifethreatening or unstable asthma. The primary safety end point was the first serious asthma-related event (death, endotracheal intubation, or hospitalization). Noninferiority of fluticasone–salmeterol to fluticasone alone was defined as an upper boundary of the 95% confidence interval for the risk of the primary safety end point of less than 2.0. The efficacy end point was the first severe asthma exacerbation. RESULTS Of 11,679 patients who were enrolled, 67 had 74 serious asthma-related events, with 36 events in 34 patients in the fluticasone–salmeterol group and 38 events in 33 patients in the fluticasone-only group. The hazard ratio for a serious asthmarelated event in the fluticasone–salmeterol group was 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.64 to 1.66), and noninferiority was achieved (P = 0.003). There were no asthma-related deaths; 2 patients in the fluticasone-only group underwent asthmarelated intubation. The risk of a severe asthma exacerbation was 21% lower in the fluticasone–salmeterol group than in the fluticasone-only group (hazard ratio, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.70 to 0.89), with at least one severe asthma exacerbation occurring in 480 of 5834 patients (8%) in the fluticasone–salmeterol group, as compared with 597 of 5845 patients (10%) in the fluticasone-only group (P
- Published
- 2016
24. Enhanced recovery after anterior resection: earlier leak diagnosis and low mortality in a case series.
- Author
-
D'Souza, N, Robinson, PD, Branagan, G, and Chave, H
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Feature Engineering and Supervised Learning Classifiers for Respiratory Artefact Removal in Lung Function Tests
- Author
-
Pham, TT, Nguyen, DN, Dutkiewicz, E, McEwan, AL, Thamrin, C, Robinson, PD, Leong, PHW, Pham, TT, Nguyen, DN, Dutkiewicz, E, McEwan, AL, Thamrin, C, Robinson, PD, and Leong, PHW
- Abstract
A critical task in forced oscillation technique (FOT), a promising lung function test, is to remove respiratory artefacts. Manual removal by specialists is widely used but time-consuming and subjective. Most existing automated techniques have involved simple thresholding methods in an unsupervised manner. Breath cycles can be classified by a binary classification model (classes: artefactual and accepted). While attempting to use off-the-shelf sorting algorithms (e.g., one-class support vector machine, knearest neighbours, and adaptive boosting ensemble), we noticed their poor detection performance. This may result from the dependence of samples as found in physiological studies of the lung function that challenges the learning process. Specifically, statistics of breaths that we recorded may change from one to another patient and even within the same recording of a patient. We introduce an additional feature engineering step that is an intermediate module to decorrelate samples, called feature learning (using Wilcoxon signed rank tests). To that end, we collected FOT recordings from various groups of patients (paediatric and adult including healthy and asthmatics). Artefacts in this work were recorded naturally and processed in a complete-breath approach. Performance metrics include evaluations on preservation of “accepted” breaths in the filtered output (including F1- score, throughput, and approval rate). Our experiment found that our feature engineering steps significantly improve the artefact removal performance of all implemented classifiers especially with feature inputs selected by mutual information criterion.
- Published
- 2016
26. Pre-litigation strategies--gathering and preserving documentary evidence
- Author
-
Robinson Pd, Richmond Gd, and Trubatch Sl
- Subjects
Plaintiff ,Jurisdiction ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Malpractice ,Documentation ,Environmental Exposure ,Temptation ,United States ,Documentary evidence ,Admissible evidence ,Radioactive Waste ,Medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Hearsay ,Element (criminal law) ,business ,Radiation Injuries ,health care economics and organizations ,Allegation ,Law and economics ,media_common - Abstract
Radiation injury claims may arise under various legal theories. In addition, plaintiffs may advance such claims within different jurisdictional venues, such as federal and state courts and workers' compensation boards. Irrespective of the jurisdiction or the legal theory underlying the claim, one element remains common to these claims--the quality and quantity of the evidence. While many different pieces of evidence may be needed to litigate a radiation injury claim, the most important evidence for the investigating health physicist is that which establishes the nature and extent of radiation exposure. Most radiation injury claims are associated with late radiation injury, often an allegation of radiation-induced cancer. Because radiation-induced cancers have a long latency period, claims may not arise for years, or even decades, after exposure. Therefore, the immediate challenge to the health physicist, who investigates an exposure, is to avoid the temptation of a "wait and see" approach to gathering evidence. Not only may evidence be short-lived in nature, but with the passage of time memories grow dim and witnesses may become unavailable. Prompt and thorough gathering of pertinent evidence likely will be a determining factor in the outcome of any radiation injury claim. Although ensuring the availability of all pertinent evidence is the key role of the investigating health physicist, he or she also can help to ensure that the evidence does not inadvertently become inadmissible in a court of law, for example, under the hearsay rule. To ensure that the necessary evidence is available in admissible form, the task of gathering evidence should be systematically approached using a pre-established process that reflects a basic understanding of the rules of evidence. Such a process is discussed here.
- Published
- 2001
27. Forced Oscillation Technique at Ages 3, 5, and 8 Years in a High Risk Asthma Birth Cohort.
- Author
-
Robinson, PD, primary, King, GG, additional, Brown, N, additional, and Marks, G, additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. SDCDI, an Additional Index to Sacin To Assess Diffusion-Convection Dependent Inhomogeneity in Multiple Breath Inert Gas Washout Analysis.
- Author
-
Robinson, PD, primary, Wernstedt, P, additional, Brune, M, additional, and Gustafsson, PM, additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Comparison of the Utility of Multiple Breath Inert Gas Washout Parameters in Cystic Fibrosis.
- Author
-
Robinson, PD, primary, Lindblad, A, additional, and Gustafsson, PM, additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Asthma and allergy patterns over 18 years after severe RSV bronchiolitis in the first year of life.
- Author
-
Sigurs N, Aljassim F, Kjellman B, Robinson PD, Sigurbergsson F, Bjarnason R, and Gustafsson PM
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Are children just small adults? The differences between paediatric and adult sleep medicine.
- Author
-
Robinson PD and Waters K
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The re-emerging burden of rickets: a decade of experience from Sydney.
- Author
-
Robinson PD, Högler W, Craig ME, Verge CF, Walker JL, Piper AC, Woodhead HJ, Cowell CT, and Ambler GR
- Abstract
AIM: To define the demographics and clinical characteristics of cases presenting with nutritional rickets to paediatric centres in Sydney, Australia. METHODS: Retrospective descriptive study of 126 cases seen from 1993 to 2003 with a diagnosis of vitamin D deficiency and/or confirmed rickets defined by long bone x ray changes. RESULTS: A steady increase was seen in the number of cases per year, with a doubling of cases from 2002 to 2003. Median age of presentation was 15.1 months, with 25% presenting at less than 6 months of age. The most common presenting features were hypocalcaemic seizures (33%) and bowed legs (22%). Males presented at a younger age, with a lower weight SDS, and more often with seizures. The caseload was almost exclusively from recently immigrated children or first generation offspring of immigrant parents, with the region of origin predominantly the Indian subcontinent (37%), Africa (33%), and the Middle East (11%). Seventy nine per cent of the cases were born in Australia. Eleven cases (all aged <7 months) presented atypically with hyperphosphataemia. CONCLUSIONS: This large case series shows that a significant and increasing caseload of vitamin D deficiency remains, even in a developed country with high sunlight hours. Cases mirror recent immigration trends. Since birth or residence in Australia does not appear to be protective, screening of at risk immigrant families should be implemented through public health policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
33. Balance control, flexibility, and cardiorespiratory fitness among older Tai Chi practitioners.
- Author
-
Hong Y, Li JX, Robinson PD, Hong, Y, Li, J X, and Robinson, P D
- Abstract
Background: Tai Chi Chuan (TTC) exercise has beneficial effects on the components of physical condition and can produce a substantial reduction in the risk of multiple falls. Previous studies have shown that short term TCC exercise did not improve the scores in the single leg stance test with eyes closed and the sit and reach test. There has apparently been no research into the effects of TCC on total body rotation flexibility and heart rate responses at rest and after a three minute step test.Methods: In this cross sectional study, 28 male TCC practitioners with an average age of 67.5 years old and 13.2 years of TCC exercise experience were recruited to form the TCC group. Another 30 sedentary men aged 66.2 were selected to serve as the control group. Measurements included resting heart rate, left and right single leg stance with eyes closed, modified sit and reach test, total body rotation test (left and right), and a three minute step test.Results: Compared with the sedentary group, the TCC group had significantly better scores in resting heart rate, three minute step test heart rate, modified sit and reach, total body rotation test on both right and left side (p < 0.01), and both right and left leg standing with eyes closed (p < 0.05). According to the American Fitness Standards, the TCC group attained the 90th percentile rank for sit and reach and total body rotation test, right and left.Conclusion: Long term regular TCC exercise has favourable effects on the promotion of balance control, flexibility, and cardiovascular fitness in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2000
34. Complicated 'pneumonia'.
- Author
-
Robinson PD, Lord DJE, Pozza LD, Harvey JG, Van Asperen PP, Robinson, Paul D, Lord, David J E, Dalla Pozza, Luciano, Harvey, John G, and Van Asperen, Peter P
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Sarcoidosis with oral involvement
- Author
-
Altman, K and Robinson, PD
- Published
- 1984
36. Clinical practice guideline-inconsistent chemotherapy-induced vomiting prophylaxis in pediatric cancer patients in community settings: A Children's Oncology Group study.
- Author
-
Sugalski AJ, Grimes AC, Nuño MM, Ramakrishnan S, Beauchemin MP, Robinson PD, Santesso N, Walsh AM, Wrightson AR, Yu LC, Parsons SK, Sung L, and Dupuis LL
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Child, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Infant, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Follow-Up Studies, Prognosis, Vomiting chemically induced, Vomiting prevention & control, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms complications, Antiemetics therapeutic use, Antiemetics administration & dosage, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to determine the proportion of patients receiving clinical practice guideline (CPG)-inconsistent care related to chemotherapy-induced vomiting (CIV) prophylaxis, and to describe the association between CPG-inconsistent care and site size. The association between delivery of CPG-inconsistent care and patient outcomes (CIV control, admission prolongation, and unplanned healthcare visits) was also described., Methods: This was a retrospective study conducted at Children's Oncology Group (COG) National Cancer Institute Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) sites. Eligible patients received highly (HEC) or moderately emetogenic chemotherapy (MEC) as inpatients from January 2014 through December 2015, and were previously enrolled in a COG study. The COG generated a patient list from which patients were randomly selected for chart review by participating sites. A central panel adjudicated CIV prophylaxis received as CPG-consistent or -inconsistent., Results: Twenty-four sites participated. Over half of patients received CPG-inconsistent CIV prophylaxis (HEC: 59/112, 52.6%; MEC: 119/215, 55.3%). The most common reasons for CPG-inconsistency were shortened duration of antiemetic administration or omission of dexamethasone. Site size was not found to be associated with CPG-inconsistent care delivery (HEC: adjusted odds ratio [OR]: 0.96, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.76-1.23; MEC: adjusted OR: 1.07; 95% CI: 0.92-1.24). Additionally, there was no statistically significant association between receipt of CPG-inconsistent care and patient outcomes., Conclusions: Patients receiving MEC or HEC often received CPG-inconsistent CIV prophylaxis. Site size was not associated with receipt of CPG-inconsistent care. Future studies should evaluate strategies to improve CIV control among pediatric oncology patients including those aimed at improving CPG adherence., (© 2024 The Author(s). Pediatric Blood & Cancer published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Detailed characterization and impact of small airway dysfunction in school-age asthma.
- Author
-
Kjellberg S, Olin AC, Schiöler L, and Robinson PD
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Adolescent, Male, Female, Respiratory Function Tests, Breath Tests, Asthma physiopathology, Asthma diagnosis, Oscillometry, Spirometry
- Abstract
Background: Small airway dysfunction (SAD) is increasingly recognized as an important feature of pediatric asthma yet typically relies on spirometry-derived FEF
25-75 to detect its presence. Multiple breath washout (MBW) and oscillometry potentially offer improved sensitivity for SAD detection, but their utility in comparison to FEF25-75 , and correlations with clinical outcomes remains unclear for school-age asthma. We investigated SAD occurrence using these techniques, between-test correlation and links to clinical outcomes in 57 asthmatic children aged 8-18 years., Methods: MBW and spirometry abnormality were defined as z -scores above/below ± 1.96, generating MBW reference equations from contemporaneous controls ( n = 69). Abnormal oscillometry was defined as > 97.5th percentile, also from contemporaneous controls ( n = 146). Individuals with abnormal FEF25-75 , MBW, or oscillometry were considered to have SAD., Results: Using these limits of normal, SAD was present on oscillometry in 63% (resistance at 5-20 Hz; R5-R20; >97.5th percentile), on MBW in 54% (Scond ; z -scores> +1.96) and in spirometry FEF25-75 in 44% of participants ( z -scores< -1.96). SAD, defined by oscillometry and/or MBW abnormality, occurred in 77%. Among those with abnormal R5-R20, Scond was abnormal in 71%. Correlations indicated both R5-R20 and Scond were linked to asthma medication burden, baseline FEV1 and reversibility. Additionally, Scond correlated with FE NO and magnitude of bronchial hyper-responsiveness. SAD, detected by oscillometry and/or MBW, occurred in almost 80% of school-aged asthmatic children, surpassing FEF25-75 detection rates., Conclusions: Discordant oscillometry and MBW abnormality suggests they reflect different aspects of SAD, serving as complementary tools. Key asthma clinical features, like reversibility, had stronger correlation with MBW-derived Scond than oscillometry-derived R5-R20.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Assessment of bronchodilator response in preschoolers: A systematic review.
- Author
-
Wong MD, Condon K, Robinson PD, Suresh S, Zahir SF, Sly PD, and Blake TL
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Preschool, Child, Asthma drug therapy, Asthma physiopathology, Respiratory Function Tests methods, Spirometry methods, Bronchodilator Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Several techniques can be used to assess bronchodilator response (BDR) in preschool-aged children, including spirometry, respiratory oscillometry, the interrupter technique, and specific airway resistance. However, there has not been a systematic comparison of BDR thresholds across studies yet., Methods: A systematic review was performed on all studies up to May 2023 measuring a bronchodilator effect in children 2-6 years old using one of these techniques (PROSPERO CRD42021264659). Studies were identified using MEDLINE, Cochrane, EMBASE, CINAHL via EBSCO, Web of Science databases, and reference lists of relevant manuscripts., Results: Of 1224 screened studies, 43 were included. Over 85% were from predominantly European ancestry populations, and only 22 studies (51.2%) calculated a BDR cutoff based on a healthy control group. Five studies included triplicate testing with a placebo to account for the within-subject intrasession repeatability. A relative BDR was most consistently reported by the included studies (95%) but varied widely across all techniques. Various statistical methods were used to define a BDR, with six studies using receiver operating characteristic analyses to measure the discriminative power to distinguish healthy from wheezy and asthmatic children., Conclusion: A BDR in 2- to 6-year-olds cannot be universally defined based on the reviewed literature due to inconsistent methodology and cutoff calculations. Further studies incorporating robust methods using either distribution-based or clinical anchor-based approaches to define BDR are required., (© 2024 The Author(s). Pediatric Pulmonology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Mental health, behaviour and sleep quality in children 6-11 years before and after elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor initiation.
- Author
-
Douglas T, Deery M, Kimball H, Cobham VE, Panochini S, Robinson PD, Wainwright CE, Sly PD, and Blake T
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest TD reports institutional reimbursement from Vertex Pharmaceuticals (Australia) P/L for Steering Committee Member duties leading Vertex sponsored educational Symposia; and for presentations at Vertex sponsored educational symposia in Australia 2019–2024. TD is a sub-investigator for Vertex Pharmaceutical clinical trials. PDS, PDR, SP, MD and HK have nothing to declare. CW reports institutional reimbursement from Vertex Pharmaceuticals (Australia) P/L for consultancy work, honoraria, and is an investigator for Vertex Pharmaceutical clinical trials. TB holds a Children's Hospital Foundation ECR Fellowship for salary support and an Australian CFA Research Trust Innovation Grant for unrelated research.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Clinical Practice Guideline-Inconsistent Management of Fertility Preservation in Pediatric Cancer Patients in Community Settings: A Children's Oncology Group Study.
- Author
-
Grimes AC, Sugalski AJ, Nuño MM, Ramakrishnan S, Beauchemin MP, Robinson PD, Santesso N, Walsh AM, Wrightson AR, Yu LC, Parsons SK, Sung L, and Dupuis LL
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adolescent, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Adult, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Fertility Preservation methods, Neoplasms complications, Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: The primary objective was to measure adherence to clinical practice guideline (CPG) recommendations for fertility preservation (FP) in pediatric cancer patients treated in National Cancer Institute Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) sites. Secondary objectives were to describe factors such as site size associated with CPG-inconsistent care delivery and cryopreservation completion. Methods: This retrospective, multicenter study included patients 15 to 21 years old with a first cancer diagnosis from January 2014 through December 2015 who were previously enrolled to a Children's Oncology Group (COG) study and received care at a participating NCORP site. Patients were randomly selected from a list generated by the COG for chart review by participating sites. Primary outcome was care delivery that was inconsistent with a strong CPG recommendation on FP, namely discussion and offering of FP options before cancer treatment initiation, as adjudicated centrally by a panel. Results: A total of 129 patients from 25 sites were included. Among these, 48% (62/129) received CPG-inconsistent care. Most CPG-inconsistent care was due to lack of FP discussion documentation (93.5%, 58/62). Small site size, treatment at a pediatric (vs mixed adult/pediatric) site, and female sex were associated with higher odds of CPG-inconsistent care delivery. Conclusions: Newly diagnosed pediatric cancer patients often received CPG-inconsistent care for FP, with disproportionate gaps noted for females, and those treated at smaller or pediatric NCORP sites. The primary reason for CPG-inconsistent care is lack of FP discussion from clinicians. Opportunities to improve FP CPG implementation are highlighted.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. ERS technical standard: Global Lung Function Initiative reference values for multiple breath washout indices.
- Author
-
Ramsey KA, Stanojevic S, Chavez L, Johnson N, Bowerman C, Hall GL, Latzin P, O'Neill K, Robinson PD, Stahl M, Weiner DJ, Zwitserloot AM, and Horsley A
- Abstract
Background: Multiple breath washout is a lung function test based on tidal breathing that assesses lung volume and ventilation distribution. The aim of this analysis was to use the Global Lung Function Initiative methodology to develop all-age reference equations for the multiple breath washout indices lung clearance index (LCI) and functional residual capacity (FRC)., Methods: Multiple breath washout data from healthy individuals were collated from sites. Data were re-analysed using the latest software versions. Reference equations were derived using the lambda-mu-sigma (LMS) method using the generalised additive models of location shape and scale programme in R. The impact of equipment type, inert tracer gas, and equipment dead space volume on the derived reference ranges were investigated., Results: Data from 23 sites (n=3647 test occasions) were submitted. Reference equations were derived from 1581 unique observations from participants between the ages of 2 and 81 years. Equipment type, inert tracer gas, and equipment dead space volume did not significantly affect the prediction equations for either LCI or FRC. Reference equations for LCI include age as the only predictor, whereas sex-specific reference equations for FRC included height and age., Conclusions: Global Lung Function Initiative reference equations for multiple breath washout variables provide a standard for reporting and interpretation of LCI and FRC., (Copyright ©The authors 2024. For reproduction rights and permissions contact permissions@ersnet.org.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Ageing and ivacaftor: unravelling the long-term effects.
- Author
-
Robinson PD
- Subjects
- Humans, Aging physiology, Aging drug effects, Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator genetics, Aminophenols therapeutic use, Quinolones therapeutic use, Quinolones pharmacology, Cystic Fibrosis drug therapy, Chloride Channel Agonists therapeutic use
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Clearing the air: Understanding the long-term lung effects of the Hazelwood coal mine fire.
- Author
-
Robinson PD and Vilcins D
- Subjects
- Humans, Fires, Lung Diseases, Lung, Coal, Coal Mining
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Comparative sensitivity of early cystic fibrosis lung disease detection tools in school aged children.
- Author
-
Bayfield KJ, Weinheimer O, Middleton A, Boyton C, Fitzpatrick R, Kennedy B, Blaxland A, Jayasuriya G, Caplain N, Wielpütz MO, Yu L, Galban CJ, Robinson TE, Bartholmai B, Gustafsson P, Fitzgerald D, Selvadurai H, and Robinson PD
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Female, Male, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Early Diagnosis, Exercise Test methods, Oscillometry methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Bronchiectasis physiopathology, Bronchiectasis diagnosis, Bronchiectasis etiology, Cystic Fibrosis physiopathology, Cystic Fibrosis diagnosis, Cystic Fibrosis complications, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Respiratory Function Tests methods, Spirometry methods
- Abstract
Background: Effective detection of early lung disease in cystic fibrosis (CF) is critical to understanding early pathogenesis and evaluating early intervention strategies. We aimed to compare ability of several proposed sensitive functional tools to detect early CF lung disease as defined by CT structural disease in school aged children., Methods: 50 CF subjects (mean±SD 11.2 ± 3.5y, range 5-18y) with early lung disease (FEV
1 ≥70 % predicted: 95.7 ± 11.8 %) performed spirometry, Multiple breath washout (MBW, including trapped gas assessment), oscillometry, cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) and simultaneous spirometer-directed low-dose CT imaging. CT data were analysed using well-evaluated fully quantitative software for bronchiectasis and air trapping (AT)., Results: CT bronchiectasis and AT occurred in 24 % and 58 % of patients, respectively. Of the functional tools, MBW detected the highest rates of abnormality: Scond 82 %, MBWTG RV 78 %, LCI 74 %, MBWTG IC 68 % and Sacin 51 %. CPET VO2 peak detected slightly higher rates of abnormality (9 %) than spirometry-based FEV1 (2 %). For oscillometry AX (14 %) performed better than Rrs (2 %) whereas Xrs and R5-19 failed to detect any abnormality. LCI and Scond correlated with bronchiectasis (r = 0.55-0.64, p < 0.001) and AT (r = 0.73-0.74, p < 0.001). MBW-assessed trapped gas was detectable in 92 % of subjects and concordant with CT-assessed AT in 74 %., Conclusions: Significant structural and functional deficits occur in early CF lung disease, as detected by CT and MBW. For MBW, additional utility, beyond that offered by LCI, was suggested for Scond and MBW-assessed gas trapping. Our study reinforces the complementary nature of these tools and the limited utility of conventional oscillometry and CPET in this setting., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflict of interests to declare, (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Detection of Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome after Pediatric Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation: An Official American Thoracic Society Clinical Practice Guideline.
- Author
-
Shanthikumar S, Gower WA, Srinivasan S, Rayment JH, Robinson PD, Bracken J, Stone A, Das S, Barochia A, Charbek E, Tamae-Kakazu M, Reardon EE, Abts M, Blinman T, Calvo C, Cheng PC, Cole TS, Cooke KR, Davies SM, De A, Gross J, Mechinaud F, Sheshadri A, Siddaiah R, Teusink-Cross A, Towe CT, Walkup LL, Yanik GA, Bergeron A, Casey A, Deterding RR, Liptzin DR, Schultz KR, Iyer NP, and Goldfarb S
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, United States, Respiratory Function Tests, Child, Preschool, Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects, Bronchiolitis Obliterans diagnosis, Bronchiolitis Obliterans etiology, Bronchiolitis Obliterans therapy
- Abstract
Background: Many children undergo allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) for the treatment of malignant and nonmalignant conditions. Unfortunately, pulmonary complications occur frequently post-HSCT, with bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) being the most common noninfectious pulmonary complication. Current international guidelines contain conflicting recommendations regarding post-HSCT surveillance for BOS, and a recent NIH workshop highlighted the need for a standardized approach to post-HSCT monitoring. As such, this guideline provides an evidence-based approach to detection of post-HSCT BOS in children. Methods: A multinational, multidisciplinary panel of experts identified six questions regarding surveillance for, and evaluation of, post-HSCT BOS in children. A systematic review of the literature was undertaken to answer each question. The Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach was used to rate the quality of evidence and the strength of recommendations. Results: The panel members considered the strength of each recommendation and evaluated the benefits and risks of applying the intervention. In formulating the recommendations, the panel considered patient and caregiver values, the cost of care, and feasibility. Recommendations addressing the role of screening pulmonary function testing and diagnostic tests in children with suspected post-HSCT BOS were made. Following a Delphi process, new diagnostic criteria for pediatric post-HSCT BOS were also proposed. Conclusions: This document provides an evidence-based approach to the detection of post-HSCT BOS in children while also highlighting considerations for the implementation of each recommendation. Further, the document describes important areas for future research.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Diagnosis of Post-Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome in Children: Time for a Rethink?
- Author
-
Shanthikumar S, Gower WA, Cooke KR, Bergeron A, Schultz KR, Barochia A, Tamae-Kakazu M, Charbek E, Reardon EE, Calvo C, Casey A, Cheng PC, Cole TS, Davies SM, Das S, De A, Deterding RR, Liptzin DR, Mechinaud F, Rayment JH, Robinson PD, Siddaiah R, Stone A, Srinivasin S, Towe CT, Yanik GA, Iyer NP, and Goldfarb SB
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Forced Expiratory Volume, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Respiratory Function Tests, Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome diagnosis, Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome etiology, Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome therapy, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is undertaken in children with the aim of curing a range of malignant and nonmalignant conditions. Unfortunately, pulmonary complications, especially bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS), are significant sources of morbidity and mortality post-HSCT. Currently, criteria developed by a National Institutes of Health (NIH) working group are used to diagnose BOS in children post-HSCT. Unfortunately, during the development of a recent American Thoracic Society (ATS) Clinical Practice Guideline on this topic, it became apparent that the NIH criteria have significant limitations in the pediatric population, leading to late diagnosis of BOS. Specific limitations include use of an outdated pulmonary function testing reference equation, a reliance on spirometry, use of a fixed forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV
1 ) threshold, focus on obstructive defects defined by FEV1 /vital capacity, and failure to acknowledge that BOS and infection can coexist. In this review, we summarize the evidence regarding the limitations of the current criteria. We also suggest potential evidence-based ideas for improving these criteria. Finally, we highlight a new proposed criteria for post-HSCT BOS in children that were developed by the authors of the recently published ATS clinical practice guideline, along with a pathway forward for improving timely diagnosis of BOS in children post-HSCT., (Copyright © 2024 The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Outcomes of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting guideline adherence in pediatric and adult patients: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Renaux Torres MC, Robinson PD, Sung L, and Dupuis LL
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Child, Treatment Outcome, Nausea chemically induced, Nausea prevention & control, Nausea drug therapy, Vomiting chemically induced, Vomiting prevention & control, Vomiting drug therapy, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Antiemetics therapeutic use, Neoplasms drug therapy, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
Purpose: This study describes chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) control rates in pediatric and adult patients who did or did not receive guideline-consistent CINV prophylaxis., Methods: We conducted a systematic literature review of studies published in 2000 or later that evaluated CINV control in patients receiving guideline-consistent vs. guideline-inconsistent CINV prophylaxis and reported at least one CINV-related patient outcome. Studies were excluded if the guideline evaluated was not publicly available or not developed by a professional organization. Over-prophylaxis was defined as antiemetic use recommended for a higher level of chemotherapy emetogenicity than a patient was receiving., Results: We identified 7060 citations and retrieved 141 publications for full-text evaluation. Of these, 21 publications (14 prospective and seven retrospective studies) evaluating guidelines developed by six organizations were included. The terms used to describe CINV endpoints and definition of guideline-consistent CINV prophylaxis varied among studies. Included studies either did not address over-prophylaxis in their definition of guideline-consistent CINV prophylaxis (48%; 10/21) or defined it as guideline-inconsistent (38%; 8/21) or guideline-consistent (3/21; 14%). Eleven included studies (52%; 11/21) reported a clinically meaningful improvement in at least one CINV endpoint in patients receiving guideline-consistent CINV prophylaxis. Ten reported a statistically significant improvement., Conclusions: This evidence supports the use of guideline-consistent prophylaxis to optimize CINV control. Institutions caring for patients with cancer should systematically adapt CINV CPGs for local implementation and routinely evaluate CINV outcomes., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Healthcare professional perspectives following implementation of an infection management care pathway for pediatric patients with cancer: a qualitative study.
- Author
-
Mark C, Yan AP, Robinson PD, Alexander S, Aitcheson M, Cox S, Gibson P, Johnston DL, Koo A, Seelisch J, Tomlinson D, Dupuis LL, and Sung L
- Subjects
- Humans, Ontario, Child, Infection Control methods, Infection Control organization & administration, Female, Male, Interviews as Topic, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Neoplasms therapy, Qualitative Research, Critical Pathways organization & administration, Critical Pathways standards, Attitude of Health Personnel, Health Personnel psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: The Pediatric Oncology Group of Ontario (POGO) supported an effort to implement infection management care pathways based on clinical practice guidelines, to improve the consistency of infection management in pediatric cancer patients. The objective of this qualitative study was to describe the perspective of healthcare professionals (HCPs) following implementation., Methods: Four tertiary pediatric oncology centers in Ontario, Canada, implemented the pathways. We randomly identified three HCPs per group (clinical pharmacists; nurse case managers, educators or practitioners and physician assistants; pediatric oncology fellows; or pediatric oncology staff physicians) per site and invited them to participate in a qualitative interview. One-on-one interviews were conducted remotely, followed by thematic analysis of interview transcripts., Results: A total of 66 invitations were extended and 42 HCPs participated. Identified themes were: (1) implementation approach, (2) access and navigation, (3) engagement, (4) concerns, (5) workplace benefits, (6) reception, and (7) provincial harmonization. HCPs preferred in-person implementation strategies over e-mail communication. They identified teaching/educational utility and benefits to non-oncology departments and non-tertiary centers participating in shared care of patients. Other positive aspects related to evidence-based practice, safety, supporting oncology HCPs, and benefits to patients and families. Concerns included need to ensure users applied clinical judgement and loss of autonomy. Provincial harmonization of practice was viewed positively, although potential logistical and institutional cultural barriers were raised., Conclusions: Following infection management care pathway implementation, HCPs described educational utility and benefits to non-oncology departments, oncology HCPs, patients, and families. Our findings may facilitate future infection management care pathway provincial harmonization., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. In utero smoking exposure induces changes to lung clearance index and modifies risk of wheeze in infants.
- Author
-
De Queiroz Andrade E, Sena CRDS, de Gouveia Belinelo P, Robinson PD, Blaxland A, Sly PD, Murphy VE, Gibson PG, Collison AM, and Mattes J
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Infant, Male, Smoking adverse effects, Lung physiopathology, Asthma etiology, Asthma epidemiology, Adult, Risk Factors, Respiratory Function Tests, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects, Respiratory Sounds etiology, Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects
- Abstract
Background: Fetal exposure to tobacco smoking throughout pregnancy is associated with wheezing in infancy. We investigated the influence of in utero smoking exposure on lung ventilation homogeneity and the relationship between lung ventilation inhomogeneity at 7 weeks of age and wheezing in the first year of life., Methods: Maternal smoking was defined as self-reported smoking of tobacco or validated by exhaled (e)CO > 6 ppm. Lung function data from healthy infants (age 5-9 weeks) born to asthmatic mothers and parent-reported respiratory questionnaire data aged 12 months were collected in the Breathing for Life Trial (BLT) birth cohort. Tidal breathing analysis and SF
6 -based Multiple Breath Washout testing were performed in quiet sleep. Descriptive statistics and regression analysis were used to assess associations., Results: Data were collected on 423 participants. Infants born to women who self-reported smoking during pregnancy (n = 42) had higher lung clearance index (LCI) than those born to nonsmoking mothers (7.90 vs. 7.64; p = .030). Adjusted regression analyzes revealed interactions between self-reported smoking and LCI (RR: 1.98, 95% CI: 1.07-3.63, 0.028, for each unit increase in LCI) and between eCO > 6 ppm and LCI (RR: 2.25, 95% CI: 1.13-4.50, 0.022) for the risk of wheeze in the first year of life., Conclusion: In utero tobacco smoke exposure induces lung ventilation inhomogeneities. Furthermore, an interaction between smoke exposure and lung ventilation inhomogeneities increases the risk of having a wheeze in the first year of life., (© 2024 The Authors. Pediatric Pulmonology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Guideline for the management of Clostridioides difficile infection in pediatric patients with cancer and hematopoietic cell transplantation recipients: 2024 update.
- Author
-
Patel P, Robinson PD, Fisher BT, Phillips R, Morgan JE, Lehrnbecher T, Kuczynski S, Koenig C, Haeusler GM, Esbenshade A, Elgarten C, Duong N, Diorio C, Castagnola E, Beauchemin MP, Ammann RA, Dupuis LL, and Sung L
- Abstract
Our objective was to update a clinical practice guideline for the prevention and treatment of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) in pediatric patients with cancer and hematopoietic cell transplantation recipients. We reconvened an international multi-disciplinary panel. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for the prevention or treatment of CDI in any population was updated and identified 31 new RCTs. Strong recommendations were made to use either oral metronidazole or oral vancomycin for non-severe CDI treatment, and to use either oral vancomycin or oral fidaxomicin for severe CDI. A strong recommendation that fecal microbiota transplantation should not be routinely used to treat CDI was also made. The panel made two new good practice statements to follow infection control practices including isolation in patients experiencing CDI, and to minimize systemic antibacterial administration where feasible, especially in patients who have experienced CDI., Competing Interests: BTF has served on a data safety monitoring board for Astellas and BTF's institution has received grant support from Allovir and Pfizer as well as CDC, FDA and NIH for research performed. CD has received support from Abramson Cancer Center K12 and a CIHR Fellowship Award. TL's institution has received an unrestricted research grant by Gilead Sciences and TL has received payments or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing or educational events from: Astra Zeneca, EUSA Pharma, Gilead Sciences, MSD/Merck and Pfizer. TL has received support for attending meetings and/or travel from EUSA Pharma and has served on a data safety monitoring board or advisory board for: EUSA Pharma, Gilead Sciences, Merck/MSD, Mundipharma, Pfizer and Pharming. TL has had a leadership or fiduciary role in other board, society, committee or advocacy group, paid or unpaid at: Working Party Infection German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology and Working Party Infection German Society of Pediatric Infectious Diseases. LS is supported by the Canada Research Chair in Pediatric Oncology Supportive Care. No other authors declared a conflict of interest., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.