2,818 results on '"Sapru, A."'
Search Results
2. Endothelial Glycocalyx Degradation Patterns in Sepsis-Associated Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: A Single Center Retrospective Observational Study.
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Hippensteel, Joseph, Miller, Kristen, Oshima, Kaori, Pham, Andrew, Richter, Robert, Belperio, John, Sierra, Yamila, Mourani, Peter, Schmidt, Eric, Sapru, Anil, Maddux, Aline, Schwingshackl, Andreas, and Sallee, Colin
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acute respiratory distress syndrome ,glycocalyx ,glycosaminoglycan ,mechanical ventilation ,pediatric intensive care ,pediatrics ,proteoglycan ,sepsis ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Syndecan-1 ,Chondroitin Sulfates ,Prospective Studies ,Glycocalyx ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Sepsis ,Heparitin Sulfate ,Biomarkers ,Proteoglycans ,Disaccharides - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis-associated destruction of the pulmonary microvascular endothelial glycocalyx (EGCX) creates a vulnerable endothelial surface, contributing to the development of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Constituents of the EGCX shed into circulation, glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans, may serve as biomarkers of endothelial dysfunction. We sought to define the patterns of plasma EGCX degradation products in children with sepsis-associated pediatric ARDS (PARDS), and test their association with clinical outcomes. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed a prospective cohort (2018-2020) of children (≥1 month to 60% of the severe PARDS patients (test for trend, p = 0.04). Higher total heparan sulfate and N-sulfated disaccharide levels were independently associated with fewer 28-day ventilator-free days in children with sepsis-associated PARDS (all p
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- 2024
3. Development of micropropagation protocol for Colebrookea oppositifolia Sm. using nodal segments
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Sen, Yadunandan, Chouhan, Rekha, Meena, Siya Ram, Dhar, Rekha Sapru, and Gandhi, Sumit G.
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- 2024
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4. Whole blood transcriptomics identifies subclasses of pediatric septic shock.
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Yang, Jamie, Zinter, Matt, Pellegrini, Matteo, Wong, Man, Gala, Kinisha, Markovic, Daniela, Nadel, Brian, Peng, Kerui, Do, Nguyen, Mangul, Serghei, Nadkarni, Vinay, Karlsberg, Aaron, Deshpande, Dhrithi, Butte, Manish, Asaro, Lisa, Agus, Michael, and Sapru, Anil
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Adaptive immunity ,Gene expression ,RNA-Seq ,Sepsis ,Subclassification ,Child ,Humans ,Shock ,Septic ,Prospective Studies ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Sepsis ,Transcriptome - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis is a highly heterogeneous syndrome, which has hindered the development of effective therapies. This has prompted investigators to develop a precision medicine approach aimed at identifying biologically homogenous subgroups of patients with septic shock and critical illnesses. Transcriptomic analysis can identify subclasses derived from differences in underlying pathophysiological processes that may provide the basis for new targeted therapies. The goal of this study was to elucidate pathophysiological pathways and identify pediatric septic shock subclasses based on whole blood RNA expression profiles. METHODS: The subjects were critically ill children with cardiopulmonary failure who were a part of a prospective randomized insulin titration trial to treat hyperglycemia. Genome-wide expression profiling was conducted using RNA sequencing from whole blood samples obtained from 46 children with septic shock and 52 mechanically ventilated noninfected controls without shock. Patients with septic shock were allocated to subclasses based on hierarchical clustering of gene expression profiles, and we then compared clinical characteristics, plasma inflammatory markers, cell compositions using GEDIT, and immune repertoires using Imrep between the two subclasses. RESULTS: Patients with septic shock depicted alterations in innate and adaptive immune pathways. Among patients with septic shock, we identified two subtypes based on gene expression patterns. Compared with Subclass 2, Subclass 1 was characterized by upregulation of innate immunity pathways and downregulation of adaptive immunity pathways. Subclass 1 had significantly worse clinical outcomes despite the two classes having similar illness severity on initial clinical presentation. Subclass 1 had elevated levels of plasma inflammatory cytokines and endothelial injury biomarkers and demonstrated decreased percentages of CD4 T cells and B cells and less diverse T cell receptor repertoires. CONCLUSIONS: Two subclasses of pediatric septic shock patients were discovered through genome-wide expression profiling based on whole blood RNA sequencing with major biological and clinical differences. Trial Registration This is a secondary analysis of data generated as part of the observational CAF-PINT ancillary of the HALF-PINT study (NCT01565941). Registered March 29, 2012.
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- 2023
5. Identification of post-cardiac arrest blood pressure thresholds associated with outcomes in children: an ICU-Resuscitation study.
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Gardner, Monique, Hehir, David, Reeder, Ron, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael, Berg, Robert, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph, Carpenter, Todd, Dean, J, Diddle, J, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha, Friess, Stuart, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Harding, Monica, Horvat, Christopher, Huard, Leanna, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick, Meert, Kathleen, Morgan, Ryan, Mourani, Peter, Nadkarni, Vinay, Naim, Maryam, Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew, Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather, Yates, Andrew, Zuppa, Athena, Sutton, Robert, and Topjian, Alexis
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Blood pressure ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Hypotension ,Infant ,Neonatal ,Outcomes ,Pediatric ,Post-cardiac arrest ,Child ,Humans ,Blood Pressure ,Heart Arrest ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Hypotension ,Hospital Mortality ,Intensive Care Units - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Though early hypotension after pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) is associated with inferior outcomes, ideal post-arrest blood pressure (BP) targets have not been established. We aimed to leverage prospectively collected BP data to explore the association of post-arrest BP thresholds with outcomes. We hypothesized that post-arrest systolic and diastolic BP thresholds would be higher than the currently recommended post-cardiopulmonary resuscitation BP targets and would be associated with higher rates of survival to hospital discharge. METHODS: We performed a secondary analysis of prospectively collected BP data from the first 24 h following return of circulation from index IHCA events enrolled in the ICU-RESUScitation trial (NCT02837497). The lowest documented systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) were percentile-adjusted for age, height and sex. Receiver operator characteristic curves and cubic spline analyses controlling for illness category and presence of pre-arrest hypotension were generated exploring the association of lowest post-arrest SBP and DBP with survival to hospital discharge and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category of 1-3 or no change from baseline). Optimal cutoffs for post-arrest BP thresholds were based on analysis of receiver operator characteristic curves and spline curves. Logistic regression models accounting for illness category and pre-arrest hypotension examined the associations of these thresholds with outcomes. RESULTS: Among 693 index events with 0-6 h post-arrest BP data, identified thresholds were: SBP > 10th percentile and DBP > 50th percentile for age, sex and height. Fifty-one percent (n = 352) of subjects had lowest SBP above threshold and 50% (n = 346) had lowest DBP above threshold. SBP and DBP above thresholds were each associated with survival to hospital discharge (SBP: aRR 1.21 [95% CI 1.10, 1.33]; DBP: aRR 1.23 [1.12, 1.34]) and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (SBP: aRR 1.22 [1.10, 1.35]; DBP: aRR 1.27 [1.15, 1.40]) (all p 10th percentile for age and DBP > 50th percentile for age during the first 6 h post-arrest.
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- 2023
6. Association of CPR simulation program characteristics with simulated and actual performance during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest.
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Cashen, Katherine, Sutton, Robert, Reeder, Ron, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael, Berg, Robert, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph, Carpenter, Todd, Wesley Diddle, J, Federman, Myke, Fink, Ericka, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha, Friess, Stuart, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David, Horvat, Christopher, Huard, Leanna, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick, Morgan, Ryan, Mourani, Peter, Nadkarni, Vinay, Naim, Maryam, Notterman, Daniel, Palmer, Chella, Pollack, Murray, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew, Srivastava, Neeraj, Viteri, Shirley, Wolfe, Heather, Yates, Andrew, Zuppa, Athena, and Meert, Kathleen
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Cardiac arrest ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Child ,Infant ,Neonate ,Simulation ,Child ,Humans ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Prospective Studies ,Heart Arrest ,Clinical Competence ,Hospitals ,Pediatric - Abstract
AIM: To evaluate associations between characteristics of simulated point-of-care cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training with simulated and actual intensive care unit (ICU) CPR performance, and with outcomes of children after in-hospital cardiac arrest. METHODS: This is a pre-specified secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation Project; a prospective, multicentre cluster randomized interventional trial conducted in 18 ICUs from October 2016-March 2021. Point-of-care bedside simulations with real-time feedback to allow multidisciplinary ICU staff to practice CPR on a portable manikin were performed and quality metrics (rate, depth, release velocity, chest compression fraction) were recorded. Actual CPR performance was recorded for children 37 weeks post-conceptual age to 18 years who received chest compressions of any duration, and included intra-arrest haemodynamics and CPR mechanics. Outcomes included survival to hospital discharge with favourable neurologic status. RESULTS: Overall, 18,912 point-of-care simulations were included. Simulation characteristics associated with both simulation and actual performance included site, participant discipline, and timing of simulation training. Simulation characteristics were not associated with survival with favourable neurologic outcome. However, participants in the top 3 sites for improvement in survival with favourable neurologic outcome were more likely to have participated in a simulation in the past month, on a weekday day, to be nurses, and to achieve targeted depth of compression and chest compression fraction goals during simulations than the bottom 3 sites. CONCLUSIONS: Point-of-care simulation characteristics were associated with both simulated and actual CPR performance. More recent simulation, increased nursing participation, and simulation training during daytime hours may improve CPR performance.
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- 2023
7. Outcomes and characteristics of cardiac arrest in children with pulmonary hypertension: A secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUS clinical trial.
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Morgan, Ryan, Reeder, Ron, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael, Berger, John, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph, Carpenter, Todd, Dean, J, Diddle, J, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha, Friess, Stuart, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David, Himebauch, Adam, Horvat, Christopher, Huard, Leanna, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick, Meert, Kathleen, Mourani, Peter, Nadkarni, Vinay, Naim, Maryam, Notterman, Daniel, Page, Kent, Pollack, Murray, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew, Srivastava, Neeraj, Tabbutt, Sarah, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather, Yates, Andrew, Zuppa, Athena, Berg, Robert, and Sutton, Robert
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Blood pressure ,Cardiac arrest ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Pediatrics ,Pulmonary hypertension ,Child ,Humans ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Heart Arrest ,Hypertension ,Pulmonary ,Intensive Care Units ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have identified pulmonary hypertension (PH) as a relatively common diagnosis in children with in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA), and preclinical laboratory studies have found poor outcomes and low systemic blood pressures during CPR for PH-associated cardiac arrest. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of PH among children with IHCA and the association between PH diagnosis and intra-arrest physiology and survival outcomes. METHODS: This was a prospectively designed secondary analysis of patients enrolled in the ICU-RESUS clinical trial (NCT02837497). The primary exposure was a pre-arrest diagnosis of PH. The primary survival outcome was survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score 1-3 or unchanged from baseline). The primary physiologic outcome was event-level average diastolic blood pressure (DBP) during CPR. RESULTS: Of 1276 patients with IHCAs during the study period, 1129 index IHCAs were enrolled; 184 (16.3%) had PH and 101/184 (54.9%) were receiving inhaled nitric oxide at the time of IHCA. Survival with favorable neurologic outcome was similar between patients with and without PH on univariate (48.9% vs. 54.4%; p = 0.17) and multivariate analyses (aOR 0.82 [95%CI: 0.56, 1.20]; p = 0.32). There were no significant differences in CPR event outcome or survival to hospital discharge. Average DBP, systolic BP, and end-tidal carbon dioxide during CPR were similar between groups. CONCLUSIONS: In this prospective study of pediatric IHCA, pre-existing PH was present in 16% of children. Pre-arrest PH diagnosis was not associated with statistically significant differences in survival outcomes or intra-arrest physiologic measures.
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- 2023
8. Brief report: incidence and outcomes of pediatric tracheal intubation-associated cardiac arrests in the ICU-RESUS clinical trial
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Nishisaki, Akira, Reeder, Ron W., McGovern, Elizabeth Laverriere, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Diddle, Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fink, Ericka L., Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick, Meert, Kathleen L., Morgan, Ryan W., Mourani, Peter M., Nadkarni, Vinay M., Naim, Maryam Y., Notterman, Daniel, Palmer, Chella A., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Srivastava, Neeraj, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A., Yates, Andrew R., Zuppa, Athena F., Sutton, Robert M., and Berg, Robert A.
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- 2024
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9. Early bolus epinephrine administration during pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation for bradycardia with poor perfusion: an ICU-resuscitation study
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O’Halloran, Amanda J., Reeder, Ron W., Berg, Robert A., Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Dean, J. Michael, Diddle, J. Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L., Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Kienzle, Martha F., Kilbaugh, Todd J., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Meert, Kathleen L., Mourani, Peter M., Nadkarni, Vinay M., Naim, Maryam Y., Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Topjian, Alexis A., Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A., Yates, Andrew R., Zuppa, Athena F., Sutton, Robert M., and Morgan, Ryan W.
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- 2024
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10. Calcium use during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest is associated with worse outcomes.
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Cashen, Katherine, Sutton, Robert, Reeder, Ron, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael, Berg, Robert, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph, Carpenter, Todd, Michael Dean, J, Wesley Diddle, J, Federman, Myke, Fink, Ericka, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha, Friess, Stuart, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David, Horvat, Christopher, Huard, Leanna, KirkpatrickN, Theresa, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, Morgan, Ryan, Mourani, Peter, Nadkarni, Vinay, Naim, Maryam, Notterman, Daniel, Page, Kent, Pollack, Murray, Qunibi, Danna, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew, Srivastava, Neeraj, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather, Yates, Andrew, Zuppa, Athena, Meert, Kathleen, and Mcquillen, Patrick
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Calcium ,Cardiac arrest ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Child ,Infant ,Neonate ,Child ,Infant ,Newborn ,Humans ,Infant ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Calcium ,Heart Arrest ,Patient Discharge ,Hospitals ,Pediatric ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
AIM: To evaluate associations between calcium administration and outcomes among children with in-hospital cardiac arrest and among specific subgroups in which calcium use is hypothesized to provide clinical benefit. METHODS: This is a secondary analysis of observational data collected prospectively as part of the ICU-RESUScitation project. Children 37 weeks post-conceptual age to 18 years who received chest compressions in one of 18 intensive care units from October 2016-March 2021 were eligible. Data included child and event characteristics, pre-arrest laboratory values, pre- and intra-arrest haemodynamics, and outcomes. Outcomes included sustained return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), survival to hospital discharge, and survival to hospital discharge with favourable neurologic outcome. A propensity score weighted cohort was used to evaluate associations between calcium use and outcomes. Subgroups included neonates, and children with hyperkalaemia, sepsis, renal insufficiency, cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass, and calcium-avid cardiac diagnoses. RESULTS: Of 1,100 in-hospital cardiac arrests, median age was 0.63 years (IQR 0.19, 3.81); 450 (41%) received calcium. Among the weighted cohort, calcium use was not associated with sustained ROSC (aOR, 0.87; CI95 0.61-1.24; p = 0.445), but was associated with lower rates of both survival to hospital discharge (aOR, 0.68; CI95 0.52-0.89; p = 0.005) and survival with favourable neurologic outcome at hospital discharge (aOR, 0.75; CI95 0.57-0.98; p = 0.038). Among subgroups, calcium use was associated with lower rates of survival to hospital discharge in children with sepsis and renal insufficiency. CONCLUSIONS: Calcium use was common during paediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest and associated with worse outcomes at hospital discharge.
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- 2023
11. Combining Physician Expertise and Women’s Lived Experience to Educate Health Professionals about Preventing Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
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Sapru, Saloni, Mitchell, Kathleen, and McFadden, Tonya
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- 2024
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12. Epinephrine Dosing Intervals Are Associated With Pediatric In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Outcomes: A Multicenter Study
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Kienzle, Martha F., Morgan, Ryan W., Reeder, Ron W., Ahmed, Tageldin, Berg, Robert A., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Cooper, Kellimarie K., Diddle, J. Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Frizzola, Meg, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Horvat, Christopher, Huard, Leanna L., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Meert, Kathleen L., Mourani, Peter M., Nadkarni, Vinay M., Naim, Maryam Y., Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Tabbutt, Sarah, Viteri, Shirley, Wolfe, Heather A., Sutton, Robert M., Bell, Michael J., Burns, Candice, Dean, J. Michael, Fink, Ericka L., Hehir, David, Landis, William P., Notterman, Daniel, Palmer, Chella A., Siems, Ashley, Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Wessel, David, Yates, Andrew R., and Zuppa, Athena F.
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- 2024
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13. Executive Summary of the Second International Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (PALICC-2).
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Emeriaud, Guillaume, López-Fernández, Yolanda, Iyer, Narayan, Bembea, Melania, Agulnik, Asya, Barbaro, Ryan, Baudin, Florent, Bhalla, Anoopindar, Brunow de Carvalho, Werther, Carroll, Christopher, Cheifetz, Ira, Chisti, Mohammod, Cruces, Pablo, Curley, Martha, Dahmer, Mary, Dalton, Heidi, Erickson, Simon, Essouri, Sandrine, Fernández, Analía, Flori, Heidi, Grunwell, Jocelyn, Jouvet, Philippe, Killien, Elizabeth, Kneyber, Martin, Kudchadkar, Sapna, Korang, Steven, Lee, Jan, Macrae, Duncan, Maddux, Aline, Modesto I Alapont, Vicent, Morrow, Brenda, Nadkarni, Vinay, Napolitano, Natalie, Newth, Christopher, Pons-Odena, Martí, Quasney, Michael, Rajapreyar, Prakadeshwari, Rambaud, Jerome, Randolph, Adrienne, Rimensberger, Peter, Rowan, Courtney, Sanchez-Pinto, L, Sapru, Anil, Sauthier, Michael, Shein, Steve, Smith, Lincoln, Steffen, Katerine, Takeuchi, Muneyuki, Thomas, Neal, Tse, Sze, Valentine, Stacey, Ward, Shan, Watson, R, Yehya, Nadir, Zimmerman, Jerry, and Khemani, Robinder
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Child ,Humans ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Acute Lung Injury ,Consensus - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We sought to update our 2015 work in the Second Pediatric Acute Lung Injury Consensus Conference (PALICC-2) guidelines for the diagnosis and management of pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS), considering new evidence and topic areas that were not previously addressed. DESIGN: International consensus conference series involving 52 multidisciplinary international content experts in PARDS and four methodology experts from 15 countries, using consensus conference methodology, and implementation science. SETTING: Not applicable. PATIENTS: Patients with or at risk for PARDS. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Eleven subgroups conducted systematic or scoping reviews addressing 11 topic areas: 1) definition, incidence, and epidemiology; 2) pathobiology, severity, and risk stratification; 3) ventilatory support; 4) pulmonary-specific ancillary treatment; 5) nonpulmonary treatment; 6) monitoring; 7) noninvasive respiratory support; 8) extracorporeal support; 9) morbidity and long-term outcomes; 10) clinical informatics and data science; and 11) resource-limited settings. The search included MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL Complete (EBSCOhost) and was updated in March 2022. Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation methodology was used to summarize evidence and develop the recommendations, which were discussed and voted on by all PALICC-2 experts. There were 146 recommendations and statements, including: 34 recommendations for clinical practice; 112 consensus-based statements with 18 on PARDS definition, 55 on good practice, seven on policy, and 32 on research. All recommendations and statements had agreement greater than 80%. CONCLUSIONS: PALICC-2 recommendations and consensus-based statements should facilitate the implementation and adherence to the best clinical practice in patients with PARDS. These results will also inform the development of future programs of research that are crucially needed to provide stronger evidence to guide the pediatric critical care teams managing these patients.
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- 2023
14. Diastolic Blood Pressure Threshold During Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Survival Outcomes: A Multicenter Validation Study.
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Berg, Robert, Morgan, Ryan, Reeder, Ron, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph, Carpenter, Todd, Dean, J, Diddle, J, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha, Friess, Stuart, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David, Horvat, Christopher, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick, Meert, Kathleen, Mourani, Peter, Nadkarni, Vinay, Naim, Maryam, Notterman, Daniel, Palmer, Chella, Pollack, Murray, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew, Srivastava, Neeraj, Tabbutt, Sarah, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather, Yates, Andrew, Zuppa, Athena, Sutton, Robert, and Huard, Leanna
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Infant ,Child ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Prospective Studies ,Blood Pressure ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Heart Arrest ,Patient Discharge - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Arterial diastolic blood pressure (DBP) greater than 25 mm Hg in infants and greater than 30 mm Hg in children greater than 1 year old during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was associated with survival to hospital discharge in one prospective study. We sought to validate these potential hemodynamic targets in a larger multicenter cohort. DESIGN: Prospective observational study. SETTING: Eighteen PICUs in the ICU-RESUScitation prospective trial from October 2016 to March 2020. PATIENTS: Children less than or equal to 18 years old with CPR greater than 30 seconds and invasive blood pressure (BP) monitoring during CPR. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Invasive BP waveform data and Utstein-style CPR data were collected, including prearrest patient characteristics, intra-arrest interventions, and outcomes. Primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge, and secondary outcomes were return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome. Multivariable Poisson regression models with robust error estimates evaluated the association of DBP greater than 25 mm Hg in infants and greater than 30 mm Hg in older children with these outcomes. Among 1,129 children with inhospital cardiac arrests, 413 had evaluable DBP data. Overall, 85.5% of the patients attained thresholds of mean DBP greater than or equal to 25 mm Hg in infants and greater than or equal to 30 mm Hg in older children. Initial return of circulation occurred in 91.5% and 25% by placement on extracorporeal membrane oxygenator. Survival to hospital discharge occurred in 58.6%, and survival with favorable neurologic outcome in 55.4% (i.e. 94.6% of survivors had favorable neurologic outcomes). Mean DBP greater than 25 mm Hg for infants and greater than 30 mm Hg for older children was significantly associated with survival to discharge (adjusted relative risk [aRR], 1.32; 1.01-1.74; p = 0.03) and ROSC (aRR, 1.49; 1.12-1.97; p = 0.002) but did not reach significance for survival to hospital discharge with favorable neurologic outcome (aRR, 1.30; 0.98-1.72; p = 0.051). CONCLUSIONS: These validation data demonstrate that achieving mean DBP during CPR greater than 25 mm Hg for infants and greater than 30 mm Hg for older children is associated with higher rates of survival to hospital discharge, providing potential targets for DBP during CPR.
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- 2023
15. The Temporal Association of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Quality and Outcomes.
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Morgan, Ryan W, Wolfe, Heather A, Reeder, Ron W, Alvey, Jessica S, Frazier, Aisha H, Friess, Stuart H, Maa, Tensing, McQuillen, Patrick S, Meert, Kathleen L, Nadkarni, Vinay M, Sharron, Matthew P, Siems, Ashley, Yates, Andrew R, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A, Carpenter, Todd C, Dean, J Michael, Diddle, J Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L, Franzon, Deborah, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David, Horvat, Christopher M, Huard, Leanna L, Manga, Arushi, Mourani, Peter M, Naim, Maryam Y, Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray M, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Srivastava, Nerraj, Tabbutt, Sarah, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Zuppa, Athena F, Berg, Robert A, and Sutton, Robert M
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Humans ,Heart Arrest ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Retrospective Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Pandemics ,COVID-19 ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Rehabilitation ,Good Health and Well Being ,cardiac arrest ,cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,pediatrics ,Nursing ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics - Abstract
ObjectivesThe COVID-19 pandemic resulted in adaptations to pediatric resuscitation systems of care. The objective of this study was to determine the temporal association between the pandemic and pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) process of care metrics, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) quality, and patient outcomes.DesignMulticenter retrospective analysis of a dataset comprising observations of IHCA outcomes pre pandemic (March 1, 2019 to February 29, 2020) versus pandemic (March 1, 2020 to February 28, 2021).SettingData source was the ICU-RESUScitation Project ("ICU-RESUS;" NCT028374497), a prospective, multicenter, cluster randomized interventional trial.PatientsChildren (≤ 18 yr) who received cardiopulmonary resuscitation while admitted to the ICU and were enrolled in ICU-RESUS.InterventionsNone.Measurements and main resultsAmong 429 IHCAs meeting inclusion criteria, occurrence during the pandemic period was associated with higher frequency of hypotension as the immediate cause of arrest. Cardiac arrest physiology, cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality metrics, and postarrest physiologic and quality of care metrics were similar between the two periods. Survival with favorable neurologic outcome (Pediatric Cerebral Performance Category score 1-3 or unchanged from baseline) occurred in 102 of 195 subjects (52%) during the pandemic compared with 140 of 234 (60%) pre pandemic ( p = 0.12). Among survivors, occurrence of IHCA during the pandemic period was associated with a greater increase in Functional Status Scale (FSS) (i.e., worsening) from baseline (1 [0-3] vs 0 [0-2]; p = 0.01). After adjustment for confounders, IHCA survival during the pandemic period was associated with a greater increase in FSS from baseline (+1.19 [95% CI, 0.35-2.04] FSS points; p = 0.006) and higher odds of a new FSS-defined morbidity (adjusted odds ratio, 1.88 [95% CI, 1.03-3.46]; p = 0.04).ConclusionsUsing the ICU-RESUS dataset, we found that relative to the year prior, pediatric IHCA during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with greater worsening of functional status and higher odds of new functional morbidity among survivors.
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- 2022
16. Comparing the Reliability of the Glomerular Filtration Rate Estimated with 99m-Technetium Diethylene-Triamine-Pentaacetate versus the Effective Renal Plasma Flow Obtained with 99m-Technetium Ethylene Dicysteine: A Prospective Observational Study
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Shantanu Sapru, Nilotpal Choudhary, Abhilash Chandra, Rimpa Mudi, Rahul Tripathi, and Satyawati Deswal
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Medicine - Abstract
The glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is important for assessing renal function and must be calculated reliably and reproducibly. This study aimed to compare the reliability and accuracy of GFR estimated with 99m-technetium diethylene-triamine-pentaacetate (99mTc-DTPA) versus that calculated from the effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) (GFR is 20% of ERPF) determined by the 99m-technetium ethylene dicysteine (99mTc-EC) technique. Forty-five patients suffering from cancer requiring platinum compound-based chemotherapy or from chronic renal failure were recruited. The patients were divided into two cohorts: (1) those with normal serum creatinine (SCr) levels (≤2 mg/dL) and (2) deranged SCr levels (>2 mg/dL). For all patients, the relative renal function was estimated by the 99mTc-DTPA and 99mTc-EC methods, 2–4 days apart. A 24-h urine sample for estimating 24-h creatinine clearance (CrCl) was obtained. GFR was also calculated using the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) formula. The GFR estimated via 24-h urine CrCl, 99mTc-DTPA, and ERPF obtained with 99mTc-EC were examined by quantile comparison plots, and all showed evidence of following a non-Gaussian distribution. For SCr values ≤2 mg/dL, the GFR estimated by the MDRD formula consistently shows significantly higher values than the GFR estimated with 99mTc-DTPA or 99mTc-EC. We found a high degree of correlation between the 99mTc-DTPA and 99mTc-EC radionuclide methods of estimating GFR. However, in patients with renal dysfunction, GFR estimated through Gates' method using a gamma camera overestimated the GFR; in these patients, calculating the GFR from the ERPF obtained with 99mTc-EC is more accurate.
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- 2023
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17. Treatment Pattern, Healthcare Resource Utilization and Symptom Burden Among Patients with Triple Class Exposed Multiple Myeloma: A Population-Based Cohort Study
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Mian, Hira, Seow, Hsien, Pond, Gregory R., Gayowsky, Anastasia, Foley, Ronan, Balistky, Amaris, Ebraheem, Mohammed, Cipkar, Christopher, Sapru, Hyra, Mohyuddin, Ghulam Rehman, Hadidi, Samer Al, and Visram, Alissa
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- 2024
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18. Inflammatory and coagulant responses after acute respiratory failure in children of different body habitus
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Ward, Shan L., Flori, Heidi R., Dahmer, Mary K., Weeks, Heidi M., Sapru, Anil, Quasney, Michael W., Curley, Martha A. Q., Liu, Kathleen D., and Matthay, Michael A.
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- 2023
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19. Semantic novelty modulates neural responses to visual change across the human brain
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Nentwich, Maximilian, Leszczynski, Marcin, Russ, Brian E., Hirsch, Lukas, Markowitz, Noah, Sapru, Kaustubh, Schroeder, Charles E., Mehta, Ashesh D., Bickel, Stephan, and Parra, Lucas C.
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- 2023
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20. Beyond the Alveolar Epithelium: Plasma Soluble Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products Is Associated With Oxygenation Impairment, Mortality, and Extrapulmonary Organ Failure in Children With Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.
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Lim, Michelle J, Zinter, Matt S, Chen, Lucia, Wong, Kayley Man Yee, Bhalla, Anoopindar, Gala, Kinisha, Guglielmo, Mona, Alkhouli, Mustafa, Huard, Leanna L, Hanudel, Mark R, Vangala, Sitaram, Schwingshackl, Andreas, Matthay, Michael, and Sapru, Anil
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Lung ,Epithelium ,Humans ,Inflammation ,Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein D ,Surface-Active Agents ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Lung Injury ,Biomarkers ,Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products ,Glycation End Products ,Advanced ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Rare Diseases ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,acute ,respiratory distress syndrome ,inflammation ,multiple organ dysfunction syndrome ,pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome ,soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products ,surfactant protein-D ,Clinical Sciences ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
ObjectivesSoluble receptor for advanced glycation end products is a known plasma marker of alveolar epithelial injury. However, RAGE is also expressed on cell types beyond the lung, and its activation leads to up-regulation of pro-inflammatory mediators. We sought to examine the relationship between plasma soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products and primary pulmonary dysfunction, extrapulmonary organ dysfunction, and mortality in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome patients at two early time points following acute respiratory distress syndrome diagnosis and compare these results to plasma surfactant protein-D, a marker of pure alveolar epithelial injury.DesignProspective observational study.SettingFive academic PICUs.PatientsTwo hundred fifty-eight pediatric patients 30 days to 18 years old meeting Berlin Criteria for acute respiratory distress syndrome.InterventionsNone.Measurements and main resultsPlasma was collected for soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products and surfactant protein-D measurements within 24 hours (day 1) and 48 to 72 hours (day 3) after acute respiratory distress syndrome diagnosis. Similar to surfactant protein-D, plasma soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products was associated with a higher oxygenation index (p < 0.01) and worse lung injury score (p < 0.001) at the time of acute respiratory distress syndrome diagnosis. However, unlike surfactant protein-D, plasma soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products was associated with worse extrapulmonary Pediatric Logistic Organ Dysfunction score during ICU stay (day 3; p < 0.01) and positively correlated with plasma levels of interleukin-6 (p < 0.01), tumor necrosis factor-α (p < 0.01), and angiopoietin-2 (p < 0.01). Among children with indirect lung injury, plasma soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products was associated with mortality independent of age, sex, race, cancer/bone marrow transplant, and Pediatric Risk of Mortality score (day 3; odds ratio, 3.14; 95% CI, 1.46-6.75; p < 0.01).ConclusionsUnlike surfactant protein-D, which is primarily localized to the alveolar epithelium plasma soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products is systemically expressed and correlates with markers of inflammation, extrapulmonary multiple organ dysfunction, and death in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome with indirect lung injury. This suggests that unlike surfactant protein-D, soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products is a multifaceted marker of alveolar injury and increased inflammation and that receptor for advanced glycation end products activation may contribute to the pathogenesis of multiple organ failure among children with indirect acute respiratory distress syndrome.
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- 2022
21. Lower respiratory tract infections in children requiring mechanical ventilation: a multicentre prospective surveillance study incorporating airway metagenomics
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Tsitsiklis, Alexandra, Osborne, Christina M, Kamm, Jack, Williamson, Kayla, Kalantar, Katrina, Dudas, Gytis, Caldera, Saharai, Lyden, Amy, Tan, Michelle, Neff, Norma, Soesanto, Victoria, Harris, J Kirk, Ambroggio, Lilliam, Maddux, Aline B, Carpenter, Todd C, Reeder, Ron W, Locandro, Chris, Simões, Eric AF, Leroue, Matthew K, Hall, Mark W, Zuppa, Athena F, Carcillo, Joseph, Meert, Kathleen L, Sapru, Anil, Pollack, Murray M, McQuillen, Patrick S, Notterman, Daniel A, Dean, J Michael, Zinter, Matt S, Wagner, Brandie D, DeRisi, Joseph L, Mourani, Peter M, and Langelier, Charles R
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Immunization ,Clinical Research ,Lung ,Infectious Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Bacteria ,Child ,Cohort Studies ,Critical Illness ,Haemophilus influenzae ,Humans ,Metagenomics ,Moraxella catarrhalis ,Prospective Studies ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Respiratory Syncytial Virus ,Human ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,United States ,Microbiology ,Immunology ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundLower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) are a leading cause of critical illness and mortality in mechanically ventilated children; however, the pathogenic microbes frequently remain unknown. We combined traditional diagnostics with metagenomic next generation sequencing (mNGS) to evaluate the cause of LRTI in critically ill children.MethodsWe conducted a prospective, multicentre cohort study of critically ill children aged 31 days to 17 years with respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation (>72 h) in the USA. By combining bacterial culture and upper respiratory viral PCR testing with mNGS of tracheal aspirate collected from all patients within 24 h of intubation, we determined the prevalence, age distribution, and seasonal variation of viral and bacterial respiratory pathogens detected by either method in children with or without LRTI.FindingsBetween Feb 26, 2015, and Dec 31, 2017, of the 514 enrolled patients, 397 were eligible and included in the study (276 children with LRTI and 121 with no evidence of LRTI). A presumptive microbiological cause was identified in 255 (92%) children with LRTI, with respiratory syncytial virus (127 [46%]), Haemophilus influenzae (70 [25%]), and Moraxella catarrhalis (65 [24%]) being most prevalent. mNGS identified uncommon pathogens including Ureaplasma parvum and Bocavirus. Co-detection of viral and bacterial pathogens occurred in 144 (52%) patients. Incidental carriage of potentially pathogenic microbes occurred in 82 (68%) children without LRTI, with rhinovirus (30 [25%]) being most prevalent. Respiratory syncytial virus (p
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- 2022
22. Identification of phenotypes in paediatric patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome: a latent class analysis
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Dahmer, Mary K, Yang, Guangyu, Zhang, Min, Quasney, Michael W, Sapru, Anil, Weeks, Heidi M, Sinha, Pratik, Curley, Martha AQ, Delucchi, Kevin L, Calfee, Carolyn S, Flori, Heidi, investigators, RESTORE and BALI study, Matthay, Michael A, Bateman, Scot T, Berg, Marc D, Borasino, Santiago, Bysani, Gokul K, Cowl, Allison S, Bowens, Cindy D, Faustino, Vincent S, Fineman, Lori D, Godshall, Aaron J, Hirshberg, Eliotte L, Kirby, Aileen L, McLaughlin, Gwenn E, Medar, Shivanand S, Oren, Phineas P, Schneider, James B, Schwarz, Adam J, Shanley, Thomas P, Source, Lauren R, Truemper, Edward J, Heyden, Michele A Vender, Wittmayer, Kimberly, Zuppa, Athena F, Wypij, David, and Network, Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Orphan Drug ,Clinical Research ,Rare Diseases ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Lung ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Respiratory ,Area Under Curve ,Child ,Humans ,Latent Class Analysis ,Phenotype ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,RESTORE and BALI study investigators ,Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators (PALISI) Network ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPrevious latent class analysis of adults with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) identified two phenotypes, distinguished by the degree of inflammation. We aimed to identify phenotypes in children with ARDS in whom developmental differences might be important, using a latent class analysis approach similar to that used in adults.MethodsThis study was a secondary analysis of data aggregated from the Randomized Evaluation of Sedation Titration for Respiratory Failure (RESTORE) clinical trial and the Genetic Variation and Biomarkers in Children with Acute Lung Injury (BALI) ancillary study. We used latent class analysis, which included demographic, clinical, and plasma biomarker variables, to identify paediatric ARDS (PARDS) phenotypes within a cohort of children included in the RESTORE and BALI studies. The association of phenotypes with clinically relevant outcomes and the performance of paediatric data in adult ARDS classification algorithms were also assessed.Findings304 children with PARDS were included in this secondary analysis. Using latent class analysis, a two-class model was a better fit for the cohort than a one-class model (p
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- 2022
23. Combination of image-guided IMRT and IGBT in locally advanced carcinoma cervix: Prospective evaluation of toxicities and clinical outcomes from a tertiary cancer center in India
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Vachaspati Kumar Mishra, Madhup Rastogi, Ajeet Gandhi, Rohini Khurana, Rahat Hadi, Shantanu Sapru, Surendra Mishra, Anoop Kumar Srivastava, and Neetu Singh
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lacc ,ig-imrt ,daily kv-cbct ,mri-igbt ,Medicine - Published
- 2023
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24. Impact of concomitant surgical interventions on outcomes of septal myectomy in obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
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Altibi, Ahmed M., Sapru, Abharika, Ghanem, Fares, Zhao, Yuanzi, Alani, Ahmad, Cigarroa, Joaquin, Nazer, Babak, Song, Howard K., and Masri, Ahmad
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- 2024
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25. Understanding the effects of manganese and zinc promoters on ferrite catalysts for CO2 hydrogenation to hydrocarbons through colloidal nanocrystals
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Chen, Chih-Jung, Oh, Jinwon, Yang, An-Chih, Zhou, Chengshuang, Liccardo, Gennaro, Sapru, Shradha, and Cargnello, Matteo
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- 2024
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26. The prognostic value of early measures of the ventilatory ratio in the ARDS ROSE trial
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Monteiro, Ana Carolina Costa, Vangala, Sitaram, Wick, Katherine D, Delucchi, Kevin L, Siegel, Emily R, Thompson, B Taylor, Liu, Kathleen D, Sapru, Anil, Sinha, Pratik, and Matthay, Michael A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,APACHE ,Humans ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Neuromuscular Blockade ,Prognosis ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Ventilatory ratio ,VR ,ARDS ,Neuromuscular blockade ,APACHE-III ,ROSE trial ,NHLBI PETAL Network ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe ventilatory ratio (VR, [minute ventilation × PaCO2]/[predicted body weight × 100 × 37.5]) is associated with mortality in ARDS. The aims of this study were to test whether baseline disease severity or neuromuscular blockade (NMB) modified the relationship between VR and mortality.MethodsThis was a post hoc analysis of the PETAL-ROSE trial, which randomized moderate-to-severe ARDS patients to NMB or control. Survival among patients with different VR trajectories or VR cutoff above and below the median was assessed by Kaplan-Meier analysis. The relationships between single-day or 48-h VR trajectories with 28- or 90-day mortality were tested by logistic regression. Randomization allocation to NMB and markers of disease severity were tested as confounders by multivariable regression and interaction term analyses.ResultsPatients with worsening VR trajectories had significantly lower survival compared to those with improving VR (n = 602, p 2 (median) at day 1 had a significantly lower 90-day survival compared to patients with VR ≤ 2 (HR 1.36, 95% CI 1.10-1.69). VR at day 1 was significantly associated with 28-day mortality (OR = 1.40, 95% CI 1.15-1.72). There was no interaction between NMB and VR for 28-day mortality. APACHE-III had a significant interaction with VR at baseline for the outcome of 28-day mortality, such that the relationship between VR and mortality was stronger among patients with lower APACHE-III. There was a significant association between rising VR trajectory and mortality that was independent of NMB, baseline PaO2/FiO2 ratio and generalized markers of disease severity (Adjusted OR 1.81, 95% CI 1.28-2.84 for 28-day and OR 2.07 95% CI 1.41-3.10 for 90-day mortality). APACHE-III and NMB were not effect modifiers in the relationship between VR trajectory and mortality.ConclusionsElevated baseline and day 1 VR were associated with higher 28-day mortality. The relationship between baseline VR and mortality was stronger among patients with lower APACHE-III. APACHE-III was not an effect modifier for the relationship between VR trajectory and mortality, so that the VR trajectory may be optimally suited for prognostication and predictive enrichment. VR was not different between patients randomized to NMB or control, indicating that VR can be utilized without correcting for NMB.
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- 2022
27. A novel miRNA biomarker panel associated with mortality in pediatric patients with ARDS
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Lee, Lisa K, Eghbali, Mansoureh, and Sapru, Anil
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Lung ,Genetics ,Biotechnology ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Biomarkers ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,MicroRNAs ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Survival Rate ,miRNA ,ARDS ,Pediatrics ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
We identified a novel microRNA biomarker panel consisting of 6 microRNAs predicting mortality in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome patients. Each of the identified mRNA have potential mechanistic importance in acute respiratory distress syndrome and may lead to the development of pharmacologic targets.
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- 2021
28. Immunocompromised-Associated Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome: Experience From the 2016/2017 Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Incidence and Epidemiology Prospective Cohort Study*
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Gertz, Shira J., Bhalla, Anoopindar, Chima, Ranjit S., Emeriaud, Guillaume, Fitzgerald, Julie C., Hsing, Deyin D., Jeyapalan, Asumthia S., Pike, Francis, Sallee, Colin J., Thomas, Neal J., Yehya, Nadir, Rowan, Courtney M., Sforza, Jesica, Poterala, Rossana, Fernandez, Analia, Avila Vera, Antonio, Orqueda, Daniel, Agueda Vidal, Nilda, Rosemary, Deheza, Turon, Gonzalo, Monjes, Cecilia, Fernando Espanol, Segundo, Siaba Serrate, Alejandro, Iolster, Thomas, Torres, Silvio, Cinquegrani, Karina, Jose Montes, Maria, Capocasa, Patricia, Ferreyra, Marcela, Castellani, Pablo, Giampieri, Martin, Pedraza, Claudia, Martin Landry, Luis, Althabe, Maria, Vanesa Fortini, Yanina, Botta, Priscila, Paziencia, Fernando, Erickson, Simon, Barr, Samantha, Shea, Sara, Butt, Warwick, Delzoppo, Carmel, Pintimalla, Alyssa, Martinez Leon, Alejandro Fabio, Guzman Rivera, Gustavo Alfredo, Jouvet, Philippe, Emeriaud, Guillaume, Dumitrascu, Mariana, Ellen French, Mary, Caro, Daniel, Castillo, I, Andres, E., Cruces Romero, Pablo, Medina, Tania, Pavez Madrid, Paula, Cortez, Ambar, Alvear, Jimena, Acuna, Carlos, Diaz, Franco, Jose Nunez, Maria, Wegner Araya, Adriana, Godoy Mundaca, Loreto, Chen, Yang, Perez Lozano, German, Pardo Carrero, Rosalba, Lopez Alarcon, Yurika Paola, Mazzillo Vega, Liliana, Maria Izquierdo, Ledys, Piñeres Olave, Byron Enrique, Zuluaga Orrego, Cesar, Quinonez Lopez, Deyanira, Vasquez Hoyos, Pablo, Vavrina, Martin, Zurek, Jiri, Campos-Miño, Santiago, Yerovi, Rocio, Bridier, Armelle, Payen, Valerie, Milesi, Christophe, Bourgoin, Pierre, Travert, Brendan, Genuini, Mathieu, Starck, Julie, Maria, Matthieu, Guichoux, Julie, Baudin, Florent, Briassoulis, George, Ilia, Stavroula, Di Nardo, Matteo, Camporesi, Anna, Chiusolo, Fabrizio, Shime, Nobuaki, Ohshimo, Shinichiro, Kida, Yoshiko, Kyo, Michihito, Tabata, Yuichi, Fong Tang, Swee, Wern Tai, Chian, See Lum, Lucy Chai, Elghuwael, Ismail, Jimenez Rivera, Nestor Javier, Jarillo Quijada, Alberto E, Kneyber, Martin, Dijkstra, Sandra, Beca, John, Sherring, Claire, Miriam, Rea, Vargas G, Sonia I, Vasquez Miranda, Daniel, Ramirez Cortez, Grimaldo, Tantalean, Jose, Pagowska-Klimek, Izabela, Gil Escobar, Carlos, Sousa Moniz, Marta, Camilo, Cristina, Hazwani, Tarek, Aldairi, Nedaa, Al Amoudi, Ahmed, Alahmadti, Ahmad, Taylor, Ryan, Mendizabal, Mikel, Goni Orayen, Concepcion, Lopez Fernandez, Yolanda, Ramon Valle, Juan, Martinez, Lidia, Pilar Orive, Javier, Brezmes, Marta, Lopez-Herce, Jesus, Parrilla, Julio, Gaboli, Mirella, Gonzalez Gomez, Jose Manuel, Morales Martinez, Antonio, Alapont, Vicent Modesto I, Sanchez Diaz, Juan Ignacio, Llorente de la Fuente, Ana M., Palanca Arias, Daniel, Madurga Revilla, Paula, Martinez de Azagra, Amelia, Garcia Gonzalez, Maria, Arjona Villanueva, David, Garcia Casas, Paula, Brio Sanagustin, Sonia, Pons Odena, Marti, Medina, Alberto, Onate Vergara, Eider, Rodriguez Campoy, Patricia, Reyes Dominguez, Susana, Dursun, Oguz, Atike Ongun, Ebru, Kamit Can, Fulya, Berna Anil, Ayse, Baines, Paul, Walsh, Laura, Jones, Dawn, Sadasivam, Kalaimaran, Mildner, Reinout, Plunkett, Adrian, Lillie, Jon, Tibby, Shane, Wellman, Paul, Belfield, Holly, Brierley, Joe, Dominguez, Troy E., Abaleke, Eugenia, Feinstein, Yael, Deep, Akash, Sundararajan, Santosh, Oruganti, Siva, Silvestre, Catarina, Weitz, James, Sheward, Victoria, Macrae, Duncan, Aramburo, Angela, Fortune, Peter-Marc, Subramanian, Gayathri, Jennings, Claire, Dwarakanathan, Buvana, Inwald, David, Feather, Calandra, Agbeko, Rachel, Lawton-Woodhall, Angela, McIntyre, Karen, Sykes, Kim, Pappachan, Jon, Gale, Helen, Mellish, Christie, McCorkell, Jenni, Torero, Luis, Nofziger, Ryan, Latifi, Samir, Anthony, Heather, Sanders, Ron, Hefley, Glenda, Virk, Manpreet, Jaimon, Nancy, Maddux, Aline B., Mourani, Peter M., Ralston, Kimberly, Sierra, Yamila, Khemani, Robinder, Newth, Christopher, Bhalla, Anoopindar, Kwok, Jeni, Morzov, Rica, Mahapatra, Sidharth, Truemper, Edward, Kustka, Lucinda, Nett, Sholeen T., Singleton, Marcy, Dean Jarvis, J., Yehya, Nadir, Napolitano, Natalie, Murphy, Marie, Ronan, Laurie, Morgan, Ryan, Kubis, Sherri, Broden, Elizabeth, Willson, Douglas, Henderson, Grace, Gedeit, Rainer, Murkowski, Kathy, Woods, Katherine, Kasch, Mary, Han, Yong Y, Affolter, Jeremy T, Tieves, Kelly S, Hughes-Schalk, Amber, Chima, Ranjit S., Krallman, Kelli, Stoneman, Erin, Benken, Laura, Yunger, Toni, Schneider, James, Sweberg, Todd, Kessel, Aaron, Carroll, Christopher L., Santanelli, James, Ackerman, Kate G, Cullimore, Melissa, Rowan, Courtney, Bales, Melissa, Keith Dockery, W., Jafari-Namin, Shirin, Barry, Dana, Jane’t, Keary, Alibrahim, Omar, Patankar, Nikhil, Qiao, Haiping, Gertz, Shira, Su, Felice, Haileselassie, Bereketeab, Song, Hanqiu, Bysani, Kris, Monjure, Tracey, Beltramo, Fernando, Totapally, Balagangadhar, Govantes, Beatriz, Coates, Bria, Wellisch, Lawren, Allen, Kiona, Shukla, Avani, Thomas, Neal J., Spear, Debbie, Shein, Steven L., Gertz, Shira, Parker, Margaret M., Sloniewsky, Daniel, Allen, Christine, Harrell, Amy, Pinto, Neethi, Kniola, Allison, Rodgers, Chiara, Cvijanovich, Natalie, Typpo, Katri, Kelley, Connor, King, Caroline, Sapru, Anil, Ratiu, Anna, Ashtari, Neda, Sikora, Lindsay, Jeyapalan, Asumthia S., Coronado-Munoz, Alvaro, Flori, Heidi, Dahmer, Mary K., Jayachandran, Chaandini, Hume, Janet, Nerheim, Dan, Smith, Rebecca, Spaeder, Michael, Adu-Darko, Michelle, Smith, Lincoln, Hartmann, Silvia, Sullivan, Erin, Merritt, Courtney, Al-Subu, Awni, Blom, Andrea, Lin, John C., Spinella, Philip, Hsing, Deyin D., Pon, Steve, Brian Estil, Jim, Gautam, Richa, Giuliano, John S., Jr, and Tala, Joana
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- 2024
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29. Early Cardiac Arrest Hemodynamics, End-Tidal CO2, and Outcome in Pediatric Extracorporeal Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: Secondary Analysis of the ICU-RESUScitation Project Dataset (2016–2021)*
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Yates, Andrew R., Naim, Maryam Y., Reeder, Ron W., Ahmed, Tageldin, Banks, Russell K., Bell, Michael J., Berg, Robert A., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Dean, J. Michael, Diddle, J. Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L., Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Morgan, Ryan W., Mourani, Peter M., Nadkarni, Vinay M., Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A., Yeh, Justin, Zuppa, Athena F., Sutton, Robert M., and Meert, Kathleen L.
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- 2024
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30. Chest compressions for pediatric organized rhythms: A hemodynamic and outcomes analysis
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Zinna, Shairbanu S., Morgan, Ryan W., Reeder, Ron W., Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Cooper, Kellimarie K., Michael Dean, J., Wesley Diddle, J., Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L., Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Harding, Monica L., Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Landis, William P., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Meert, Kathleen L., Mourani, Peter M, Nadkarni, Vinay M., Naim, Maryam Y., Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A., Yates, Andrew R., Zuppa, Athena F., Berg, Robert A., and Sutton, Robert M.
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- 2024
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31. In Situ Synthesis of Keratin and Melanin Chromophoric Submicron Particles
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Chen Nowogrodski, Yaniv Damatov, Sunaina Sapru, and Oded Shoseyov
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Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2023
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32. Whole‐breast irradiation with lumpectomy cavity boost and regional nodal irradiation: Dosimetric comparison of 3D‐CRT using sequential boost and dual partial‐arc VMAT using simultaneous integrated boost
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Avinash Poojari, Shantanu Sapru, Rohini Khurana, Madhup Rastogi, Rahat Hadi, Ajeet Kumar Gandhi, Surendra Mishra, Anoop Srivastava, and Avinav Bharati
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Breast cancer ,breast conservation therapy ,dosimetry ,sequential boost ,three‐dimensional conformal radiotherapy ,volumetric modulated arc therapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Objective To compare volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) with simultaneous tumor bed boost (dpSIB‐VMAT) to the whole breast and regional nodal irradiation (RNI) against standard three‐dimensional conformal radiotherapy plus RNI with sequential tumor bed boost (3D‐CRT‐seqB). Methods Thirty patients who underwent breast cancer surgery (BCS) with axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) were enrolled. Two plans were generated for each case: (1) dpSIB‐VMAT, and (2) 3D‐CRT‐seqB plans. Planning target volume (PTV)‐Breast and PTV‐Nodes were prescribed at a dose of 50 Gy in 25 fractions in both plans. PTV‐Boost was prescribed at a dose of 60 Gy in 25 fractions simultaneously in the dpSIB‐VMAT plans, whereas it was planned sequentially in the 3D‐CRT‐seqB plans at 10 Gy in 5 fractions. Dosimetric parameters were compared between the two plans. Results Both plans achieved the target coverage. Dmean of the heart was lower with dpSIB‐VMAT in left‐sided cases (7.17 ± 0.66 Gy vs. 10.12 ± 2.91 Gy; t = 4.02; p = 0.001). Ipsilateral mean lung dose (15.87 ± 1.40 Gy vs. 19.82 ± 3.20 Gy; t = 6.30; p
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- 2023
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33. Knowledge Distillation and Data Selection for Semi-Supervised Learning in CTC Acoustic Models
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Swarup, Prakhar, Chakrabarty, Debmalya, Sapru, Ashtosh, Tulsiani, Hitesh, Arsikere, Harish, and Garimella, Sri
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing - Abstract
Semi-supervised learning (SSL) is an active area of research which aims to utilize unlabelled data in order to improve the accuracy of speech recognition systems. The current study proposes a methodology for integration of two key ideas: 1) SSL using connectionist temporal classification (CTC) objective and teacher-student based learning 2) Designing effective data-selection mechanisms for leveraging unlabelled data to boost performance of student models. Our aim is to establish the importance of good criteria in selecting samples from a large pool of unlabelled data based on attributes like confidence measure, speaker and content variability. The question we try to answer is: Is it possible to design a data selection mechanism which reduces dependence on a large set of randomly selected unlabelled samples without compromising on Word Error Rate (WER)? We perform empirical investigations of different data selection methods to answer this question and quantify the effect of different sampling strategies. On a semi-supervised ASR setting with 40000 hours of carefully selected unlabelled data, our CTC-SSL approach gives 17% relative WER improvement over a baseline CTC system trained with labelled data. It also achieves on-par performance with CTC-SSL system trained on order of magnitude larger unlabeled data based on random sampling.
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- 2020
34. Temporal airway microbiome changes related to ventilator-associated pneumonia in children.
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Mourani, Peter M, Sontag, Marci K, Williamson, Kayla M, Harris, J Kirk, Reeder, Ron, Locandro, Chris, Carpenter, Todd C, Maddux, Aline B, Ziegler, Katherine, Simões, Eric AF, Osborne, Christina M, Ambroggio, Lilliam, Leroue, Matthew K, Robertson, Charles E, Langelier, Charles, DeRisi, Joseph L, Kamm, Jack, Hall, Mark W, Zuppa, Athena F, Carcillo, Joseph, Meert, Kathleen, Sapru, Anil, Pollack, Murray M, McQuillen, Patrick, Notterman, Daniel A, Dean, J Michael, Wagner, Brandie D, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN), and Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN) members are as follows:
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network ,Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN) members are as follows: ,Humans ,RNA ,Ribosomal ,16S ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Intensive Care Units ,Pneumonia ,Ventilator-Associated ,Microbiota ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Lung ,Pneumonia ,Assistive Technology ,Bioengineering ,Patient Safety ,Infection ,Respiratory ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
We sought to determine whether temporal changes in the lower airway microbiome are associated with ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) in children.Using a multicentre prospective study of children aged 31 days to 18 years requiring mechanical ventilation support for >72 h, daily tracheal aspirates were collected and analysed by sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. VAP was assessed using 2008 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention paediatric criteria. The association between microbial factors and VAP was evaluated using joint longitudinal time-to-event modelling, matched case-control comparisons and unsupervised clustering.Out of 366 eligible subjects, 66 (15%) developed VAP at a median of 5 (interquartile range 3-5) days post intubation. At intubation, there was no difference in total bacterial load (TBL), but Shannon diversity and the relative abundance of Streptococcus, Lactobacillales and Prevotella were lower for VAP subjects versus non-VAP subjects. However, higher TBL on each sequential day was associated with a lower hazard (hazard ratio 0.39, 95% CI 0.23-0.64) for developing VAP, but sequential values of diversity were not associated with VAP. Similar findings were observed from the matched analysis and unsupervised clustering. The most common dominant VAP pathogens included Prevotella species (19%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (14%) and Streptococcus mitis/pneumoniae (10%). Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma were also identified as dominant organisms in several subjects.In mechanically ventilated children, changes over time in microbial factors were marginally associated with VAP risk, although these changes were not suitable for predicting VAP in individual patients. These findings suggest that focusing exclusively on pathogen burden may not adequately inform VAP diagnosis.
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- 2021
35. Associations Between End-Tidal Carbon Dioxide During Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Quality, and Survival
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Morgan, Ryan W., Reeder, Ron W., Bender, Dieter, Cooper, Kellimarie K., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Meert, Kathleen L., Mourani, Peter M., Murray, Robert, Nadkarni, Vinay M., Nataraj, Chandrasekhar, Palmer, Chella A., Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Wolfe, Heather A., Yates, Andrew R., Berg, Robert A., Sutton, Robert M., Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carpenter, Todd C., Carcillo, Joseph A., Dean, J. Michael, Diddle, J. Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Naim, Maryam Y., Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Tabbutt, Sarah, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, and Zuppa, Athena F.
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- 2024
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36. Survival With Favorable Neurologic Outcome and Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Following In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in Children With Cardiac Disease Compared With Noncardiac Disease*
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Federman, Myke, Sutton, Robert M., Reeder, Ron W., Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J., Berg, Robert A., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Dean, J. Michael, Diddle, J. Wesley, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L., Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Kirkpatrick, Theresa, Maa, Tensing, Maitoza, Laura A., Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Meert, Kathleen L., Morgan, Ryan W., Mourani, Peter M., Nadkarni, Vinay M., Notterman, Daniel, Palmer, Chella A., Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A., Yates, Andrew R., Zuppa, Athena F., and Naim, Maryam Y.
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- 2024
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37. Semantic novelty modulates neural responses to visual change across the human brain
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Maximilian Nentwich, Marcin Leszczynski, Brian E. Russ, Lukas Hirsch, Noah Markowitz, Kaustubh Sapru, Charles E. Schroeder, Ashesh D. Mehta, Stephan Bickel, and Lucas C. Parra
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Our continuous visual experience in daily life is dominated by change. Previous research has focused on visual change due to stimulus motion, eye movements or unfolding events, but not their combined impact across the brain, or their interactions with semantic novelty. We investigate the neural responses to these sources of novelty during film viewing. We analyzed intracranial recordings in humans across 6328 electrodes from 23 individuals. Responses associated with saccades and film cuts were dominant across the entire brain. Film cuts at semantic event boundaries were particularly effective in the temporal and medial temporal lobe. Saccades to visual targets with high visual novelty were also associated with strong neural responses. Specific locations in higher-order association areas showed selectivity to either high or low-novelty saccades. We conclude that neural activity associated with film cuts and eye movements is widespread across the brain and is modulated by semantic novelty.
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- 2023
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38. Outcomes and characteristics of cardiac arrest in children with pulmonary hypertension: A secondary analysis of the ICU-RESUS clinical trial
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Morgan, Ryan W, Reeder, Ron W, Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J, Berger, John T, Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A, Carpenter, Todd C, Dean, J Michael, Diddle, J Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L, Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H, Friess, Stuart H, Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A, Himebauch, Adam S, Horvat, Christopher M, Huard, Leanna L, Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S, Meert, Kathleen L, Mourani, Peter M, Nadkarni, Vinay M, Naim, Maryam Y, Notterman, Daniel, Page, Kent, Pollack, Murray M, Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P, Srivastava, Neeraj, Tabbutt, Sarah, Tilford, Bradley, Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A, Yates, Andrew R, Zuppa, Athena F, Berg, Robert A, and Sutton, Robert M
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- 2023
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39. A Core Outcome Set for Pediatric Critical Care.
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Fink, Ericka L, Maddux, Aline B, Pinto, Neethi, Sorenson, Samuel, Notterman, Daniel, Dean, J Michael, Carcillo, Joseph A, Berg, Robert A, Zuppa, Athena, Pollack, Murray M, Meert, Kathleen L, Hall, Mark W, Sapru, Anil, McQuillen, Patrick S, Mourani, Peter M, Wessel, David, Amey, Deborah, Argent, Andrew, Brunow de Carvalho, Werther, Butt, Warwick, Choong, Karen, Curley, Martha AQ, Del Pilar Arias Lopez, Maria, Demirkol, Demet, Grosskreuz, Ruth, Houtrow, Amy J, Knoester, Hennie, Lee, Jan Hau, Long, Debbie, Manning, Joseph C, Morrow, Brenda, Sankar, Jhuma, Slomine, Beth S, Smith, McKenna, Olson, Lenora M, and Watson, R Scott
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Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Child ,Child Health ,Critical Care ,Critical Illness ,Delphi Technique ,Female ,Humans ,Intensive Care Units ,Pediatric ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Stakeholder Participation ,Treatment Outcome ,Young Adult ,child ,critical care ,family ,outcome assessment ,postintensive care syndrome ,Pediatric Outcomes STudies after PICU (POST-PICU) Investigators of the Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators (PALISI) Network and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network ,Clinical Sciences ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
ObjectivesMore children are surviving critical illness but are at risk of residual or new health conditions. An evidence-informed and stakeholder-recommended core outcome set is lacking for pediatric critical care outcomes. Our objective was to create a multinational, multistakeholder-recommended pediatric critical care core outcome set for inclusion in clinical and research programs.DesignA two-round modified Delphi electronic survey was conducted with 333 invited research, clinical, and family/advocate stakeholders. Stakeholders completing the first round were invited to participate in the second. Outcomes scoring greater than 69% "critical" and less than 15% "not important" advanced to round 2 with write-in outcomes considered. The Steering Committee held a virtual consensus conference to determine the final components.SettingMultinational survey.PatientsStakeholder participants from six continents representing clinicians, researchers, and family/advocates.Measurements and main resultsOverall response rates were 75% and 82% for each round. Participants voted on seven Global Domains and 45 Specific Outcomes in round 1, and six Global Domains and 30 Specific Outcomes in round 2. Using overall (three stakeholder groups combined) results, consensus was defined as outcomes scoring greater than 90% "critical" and less than 15% "not important" and were included in the final PICU core outcome set: four Global Domains (Cognitive, Emotional, Physical, and Overall Health) and four Specific Outcomes (Child Health-Related Quality of Life, Pain, Survival, and Communication). Families (n = 21) suggested additional critically important outcomes that did not meet consensus, which were included in the PICU core outcome set-extended.ConclusionsThe PICU core outcome set and PICU core outcome set-extended are multistakeholder-recommended resources for clinical and research programs that seek to improve outcomes for children with critical illness and their families.
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- 2020
40. FDA/M-CERSI Co-Processed API Workshop Proceedings
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Schenck, Luke, Patel, Paresma, Sood, Ramesh, Bonaga, Llorente, Capella, Peter, Dirat, Olivier, Erdemir, Deniz, Ferguson, Steven, Gazziola, Cinzia, Gorka, Lindsey Saunders, Graham, Laurie, Ho, Raimundo, Hoag, Stephen, Hunde, Ephrem, Kline, Billie, Lee, Sau (Larry), Madurawe, Rapti, Marziano, Ivan, Merritt, Jeremy Miles, Page, Sharon, Polli, James, Ramanadham, Mahesh, Sapru, Mohan, Stevens, Ben, Watson, Tim, and Zhang, Haitao
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- 2023
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41. Manhattan Vision Screening and Follow-up Study (NYC-SIGHT): Baseline Results and Costs of a Cluster-Randomized Trial
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Hark, Lisa A., Horowitz, Jason D., Gorroochurn, Prakash, Park, Lisa, Wang, Qing, Diamond, Daniel F., Harizman, Noga, Auran, James D., Maruri, Stefania C., Henriquez, Desiree R., Carrion, Jailine, Muhire, Remy S. Manzi, Kresch, Yocheved S., Pizzi, Laura T., Jutkowitz, Eric, Sapru, Saloni, Sharma, Tarun, De Moraes, C. Gustavo, Friedman, David S., Liebmann, Jeffrey M., and Cioffi, George A.
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- 2023
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42. Design and Rationale for Common Data Elements for Clinical Research in Pediatric Critical Care Medicine.
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Ward, Shan, Flori, Heidi, Bennett, Tellen, Sapru, Anil, Mourani, Peter, Thomas, Neal, and Khemani, Robinder
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Child ,Common Data Elements ,Consensus ,Critical Care ,Data Collection ,Delphi Technique ,Humans ,Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Common data elements are a combination of a precisely defined question paired with a specified set of responses. Common data elements contribute to the National Institutes of Health-supported principle of Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusableness of research data. Routine use of Common data elements and standardized definitions within pediatric critical care research are likely to promote collaboration, improve quality, and consistency of data collection, improve overall efficiency of study or trial setup, and facilitate cross-study comparisons, meta-analysis, and merging of study cohorts. The purpose of this Pediatric Critical Care Medicine Perspective is to establish a road map for the development of multinational, multidisciplinary consensus-based common data elements that could be adapted for use within any pediatric critical care subject area. METHODS: We describe a multistep process for the creation of core domains of research (e.g. patient outcomes, health-related conditions, or aspects of health) and the development of common data elements within each core domain. We define a tiered approach to data collection based on relevance of each common data element to future studies and clinical practice within the field of interest. Additionally, we describe the use of the Delphi methods to achieve consensus of these common data element documents using an international, multidisciplinary panel of experts.
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- 2020
43. Association of patient weight status with plasma surfactant protein D, a biomarker of alveolar epithelial injury, in children with acute respiratory failure.
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Ward, Shan L, Dahmer, Mary K, Weeks, Heidi M, Sapru, Anil, Quasney, Michael W, Curley, Martha AQ, Liu, Kathleen D, Matthay, Michael A, and Flori, Heidi R
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Humans ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,Obesity ,Body Weight ,Pulmonary Surfactant-Associated Protein D ,Body Mass Index ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Biomarkers ,acute respiratory distress syndrome ,acute respiratory failure ,alveolar epithelial injury ,body mass index ,children ,mechanical ventilation ,obesity ,pediatric ,surfactant protein D ,Nutrition ,Clinical Research ,Lung ,Rare Diseases ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Pediatric ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Respiratory ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Respiratory System - Abstract
Aims and objectivesAlveolar epithelial injury is a key determinant of acute respiratory failure (ARF) severity. Plasma surfactant protein D (SP-D), a biomarker of alveolar epithelial injury, is lower in obese adults with ARF compared to their lean peers. We aimed to determine if children with ARF have similar variance in plasma SP-D associated with their weight status on admission.MethodsPlasma SP-D was measured on days 0, 1, or 2 in children (1-18 years) with ARF enrolled in the genetic variation and biomarkers in children with acute lung injury and RESTORE studies. Weight classification (underweight, normal, overweight, and obese) was based on body mass index or weight-for-height z-scores. Associations between weight group and SP-D on each day were tested.ResultsInclusion criteria were met in 212 subjects, 24% were obese. There were no differences among weight groups in SP-D levels on days 0 and 1. However, on day 2, there was a statistically significant linear trend for lower SP-D levels as weight increased in both the univariate analysis (P = .02) and when adjusting for age, ethnicity, and diagnosis of pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (P = .05).ConclusionsObesity was associated with lower plasma SP-D levels on day 2 of ARF. This finding may be explained by altered ARF pathogenesis in obese individuals or a reduced incidence of ventilator-induced lung injury.
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- 2020
44. Association between time of day and CPR quality as measured by CPR hemodynamics during pediatric in-hospital CPR
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Wolfe, Heather A, Morgan, Ryan W, Sutton, Robert M, Reeder, Ron W, Meert, Kathleen L, Pollack, Murray M, Yates, Andrew R, Berger, John T, Newth, Christopher J, Carcillo, Joseph A, McQuillen, Patrick S, Harrison, Rick E, Moler, Frank W, Carpenter, Todd C, Notterman, Daniel A, Dean, J Michael, Nadkarni, Vinay M, Berg, Robert A, investigators, for the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Zuppa, Athena F, Graham, Katherine, Twelves, Carolann, Diliberto, Mary Ann, Holubkov, Richard, Telford, Russell, Locandro, Christopher, Coleman, Whitney, Peterson, Alecia, Thelen, Julie, Heidemann, Sabrina, Pawluszka, Ann, Tomanio, Elyse, Bell, Michael J, Hall, Mark W, Steele, Lisa, Kwok, Jeni, Sapru, Anil, Abraham, Alan, Alkhouli, Mustafa F, Shanley, Thomas P, Weber, Monica, Dalton, Heidi J, La Bell, Aimee, Mourani, Peter M, Malone, Kathryn, and Doctor, Allan
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services and Systems ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Pediatric ,Blood Pressure ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Child ,Heart Arrest ,Hemodynamics ,Hospitals ,Pediatric ,Humans ,Infant ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Cardiac arrest ,In-Hospital ,Survival ,Outcomes ,Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (PICqCPR) investigators ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Public health - Abstract
IntroductionPatients who suffer in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) are less likely to survive if the arrest occurs during nighttime versus daytime. Diastolic blood pressure (DBP) as a measure of chest compression quality was associated with survival from pediatric IHCA. We hypothesized that DBP during CPR for IHCA is lower during nighttime versus daytime.MethodsThis is a secondary analysis of data collected from the Pediatric Intensive Care Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Study. Pediatric or Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Unit patients who received chest compressions for ≥1 min and who had invasive arterial BP monitoring were enrolled. Nighttime was defined as 11:00PM to 6:59AM and daytime as 7:00AM until 10:59PM. Primary outcome was attainment of DBP ≥ 25 mmHg in infants
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- 2020
45. Development of a core outcome set for pediatric critical care outcomes research
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Fink, Ericka L, Jarvis, Jessica M, Maddux, Aline B, Pinto, Neethi, Galyean, Patrick, Olson, Lenora M, Zickmund, Susan, Ringwood, Melissa, Sorenson, Samuel, Dean, J Michael, Carcillo, Joseph A, Berg, Robert A, Zuppa, Athena, Pollack, Murray M, Meert, Kathleen L, Hall, Mark W, Sapru, Anil, McQuillen, Patrick S, Mourani, Peter M, Watson, R Scott, Investigators, and the Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators Long-term Outcomes Subgroup, and Network, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Generic health relevance ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Critical Illness ,Delphi Technique ,Endpoint Determination ,Female ,Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,Infant ,Intensive Care Units ,Pediatric ,Male ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Research Design ,Stakeholder Participation ,Pediatrics ,Core outcomes set ,Clinical research ,Critical illness ,Morbidity ,Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators (PALISI) Long-term Outcomes Subgroup Investigators ,and ,Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General Clinical Medicine ,Public Health ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundPediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) teams provide care for critically ill children with diverse and often complex medical and surgical conditions. Researchers often lack guidance on an approach to select the best outcomes when evaluating this critically ill population. Studies would be enhanced by incorporating multi-stakeholder preferences to better evaluate clinical care. This manuscript outlines the methodology currently being used to develop a PICU Core Outcome Set (COS). This PICU COS utilizes mixed methods, an inclusive stakeholder approach, and a modified Delphi consensus process that will serve as a resource for PICU research programs.MethodsA Scoping Review of the PICU literature evaluating outcomes after pediatric critical illness, a qualitative study interviewing PICU survivors and their parents, and other relevant literature will serve to inform a modified, international Delphi consensus process. The Delphi process will derive a set of minimum domains for evaluation of outcomes of critically ill children and their families. Delphi respondents include researchers, multidisciplinary clinicians, families and former patients, research funding agencies, payors, and advocates. Consensus meetings will refine and finalize the domains of the COS, outline a battery instruments for use in future studies, and prepare for extensive dissemination for broad implementation.DiscussionThe PICU COS will be a guideline resource for investigators to assure that outcomes most important to all stakeholders are considered in PICU clinical research in addition to those deemed most important to individual scientists.Trial registrationCOMET database (http://www.comet-initiative.org/, Record ID 1131, 01/01/18).
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- 2020
46. Variability in chest compression rate calculations during pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
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Landis, William P, Morgan, Ryan W, Reeder, Ron W, Graham, Kathryn, Siems, Ashley, Diddle, J Wesley, Pollack, Murray M, Maa, Tensing, Fernandez, Richard P, Yates, Andrew R, Tilford, Bradley, Ahmed, Tageldin, Meert, Kathleen L, Schneiter, Carleen, Bishop, Robert, Mourani, Peter M, Naim, Maryam Y, Friess, Stuart, Burns, Candice, Manga, Arushi, Franzon, Deborah, Tabbutt, Sarah, McQuillen, Patrick S, Horvat, Christopher M, Bochkoris, Matthew, Carcillo, Joseph A, Huard, Leanna, Federman, Myke, Sapru, Anil, Viteri, Shirley, Hehir, David A, Notterman, Daniel A, Holubkov, Richard, Dean, J Michael, Nadkarni, Vinay M, Berg, Robert A, Wolfe, Heather A, Sutton, Robert M, and Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN) Investigators the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute ICU-RESUScitation Project Investigators
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Collaborative Pediatric Critical Care Research Network (CPCCRN) Investigators the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute ICU-RESUScitation Project Investigators ,Humans ,Heart Arrest ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Pressure ,Research Design ,Child ,American Heart Association ,American Heart Association Guideline ,Cardiopulmonary resuscitation ,Chest compression rate ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Sciences ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine - Abstract
AimThe mathematical method used to calculate chest compression (CC) rate during cardiopulmonary resuscitation varies in the literature and across device manufacturers. The objective of this study was to determine the variability in calculated CC rates by applying four published methods to the same dataset.MethodsThis study was a secondary investigation of the first 200 pediatric cardiac arrest events with invasive arterial line waveform data in the ICU-RESUScitation Project (NCT02837497). Instantaneous CC rates were calculated during periods of uninterrupted CCs. The defined minimum interruption length affects rate calculation (e.g., if an interruption is defined as a break in CCs ≥ 2 s, the lowest possible calculated rate is 30 CCs/min). Average rates were calculated by four methods: 1) rate with an interruption defined as ≥ 1 s; 2) interruption ≥ 2 s; 3) interruption ≥ 3 s; 4) method #3 excluding top and bottom quartiles of calculated rates. American Heart Association Guideline-compliant rate was defined as 100-120 CCs/min. A clinically important change was defined as ±5 CCs/min. The percentage of events and epochs (30 s periods) that changed Guideline-compliant status was calculated.ResultsAcross calculation methods, mean CC rates (118.7-119.5/min) were similar. Comparing all methods, 14 events (7%) and 114 epochs (6%) changed Guideline-compliant status.ConclusionUsing four published methods for calculating CC rate, average rates were similar, but 7% of events changed Guideline-compliant status. These data suggest that a uniform calculation method (interruption ≥ 1 s) should be adopted to decrease variability in resuscitation science.
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- 2020
47. Comprehensive Prognostication in Critically Ill Pediatric Hematopoietic Cell Transplant Patients: Results from Merging the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR) and Virtual Pediatric Systems (VPS) Registries
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Zinter, Matt S, Logan, Brent R, Fretham, Caitrin, Sapru, Anil, Abraham, Allistair, Aljurf, Mahmoud D, Arnold, Staci D, Artz, Andrew, Auletta, Jeffery J, Chhabra, Saurabh, Copelan, Edward, Duncan, Christine, Gale, Robert P, Guinan, Eva, Hematti, Peiman, Keating, Amy K, Marks, David I, Olsson, Richard, Savani, Bipin N, Ustun, Celalettin, Williams, Kirsten M, Pasquini, Marcelo C, and Dvorak, Christopher C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Rare Diseases ,Cancer ,Hematology ,Transplantation ,Good Health and Well Being ,Child ,Critical Illness ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Humans ,Infant ,Intensive Care Units ,Pediatric ,Registries ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Intensive care units ,Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation ,Organ dysfunction scores ,Prognosis ,Survival analysis ,Immunology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Critically ill pediatric allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) patients may benefit from early and aggressive interventions aimed at reversing the progression of multiorgan dysfunction. Therefore, we evaluated 25 early risk factors for pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) mortality to improve mortality prognostication. We merged the Virtual Pediatric Systems and Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research databases and analyzed 936 critically ill patients ≤21 years of age who had undergone allogeneic HCT and subsequently required PICU admission between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2014. Of 1532 PICU admissions, the overall PICU mortality rate was 17.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 15.6% to 19.4%) but was significantly higher for patients requiring mechanical ventilation (44.0%), renal replacement therapy (56.1%), or extracorporeal life support (77.8%). Mortality estimates increased significantly the longer that patients remained in the PICU. Of 25 HCT- and PICU-specific characteristics available at or near the time of PICU admission, moderate/severe pre-HCT renal injury, pre-HCT recipient cytomegalovirus seropositivity,
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- 2020
48. Obesity and smoking as risk factors for invasive mechanical ventilation in COVID-19: A retrospective, observational cohort study
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Monteiro, Ana C, Suri, Rajat, Emeruwa, Iheanacho O, Stretch, Robert J, Cortes-Lopez, Roxana Y, Sherman, Alexander, Lindsay, Catherine C, Fulcher, Jennifer A, Goodman-Meza, David, Sapru, Anil, Buhr, Russell G, Chang, Steven Y, Wang, Tisha, and Qadir, Nida
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Lung ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,C-Reactive Protein ,COVID-19 ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Ferritins ,Hospital Mortality ,Humans ,Intensive Care Units ,Interleukin-6 ,L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ,Lymphocyte Count ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Obesity ,Procalcitonin ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Smoking ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
PurposeTo describe the trajectory of respiratory failure in COVID-19 and explore factors associated with risk of invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV).Materials and methodsA retrospective, observational cohort study of 112 inpatient adults diagnosed with COVID-19 between March 12 and April 16, 2020. Data were manually extracted from electronic medical records. Multivariable and Univariable regression were used to evaluate association between baseline characteristics, initial serum markers and the outcome of IMV.ResultsOur cohort had median age of 61 (IQR 45-74) and was 66% male. In-hospital mortality was 6% (7/112). ICU mortality was 12.8% (6/47), and 18% (5/28) for those requiring IMV. Obesity (OR 5.82, CI 1.74-19.48), former (OR 8.06, CI 1.51-43.06) and current smoking status (OR 10.33, CI 1.43-74.67) were associated with IMV after adjusting for age, sex, and high prevalence comorbidities by multivariable analysis. Initial absolute lymphocyte count (OR 0.33, CI 0.11-0.96), procalcitonin (OR 1.27, CI 1.02-1.57), IL-6 (OR 1.17, CI 1.03-1.33), ferritin (OR 1.05, CI 1.005-1.11), LDH (OR 1.57, 95% CI 1.13-2.17) and CRP (OR 1.13, CI 1.06-1.21), were associated with IMV by univariate analysis.ConclusionsObesity, smoking history, and elevated inflammatory markers were associated with increased need for IMV in patients with COVID-19.
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- 2020
49. A prospective investigation of interleukin-8 levels in pediatric acute respiratory failure and acute respiratory distress syndrome
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Flori, Heidi, Sapru, Anil, Quasney, Michael W, Gildengorin, Ginny, Curley, Martha AQ, Matthay, Michael A, and Dahmer, Mary K
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Genetics ,Rare Diseases ,Hematology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Aetiology ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Biomarkers ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Interleukin-8 ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Odds Ratio ,Pediatrics ,Prospective Studies ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Respiratory Insufficiency ,Risk Factors ,Acute respiratory distress syndrome ,Genetic variants ,Critical illness ,ARDS ,PARDS ,SNP ,BALI and RESTORE Study Investigators ,Pediatric Acute Lung Injury and Sepsis Investigators (PALISI) Network ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Adult ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe association of plasma interleukin-8 (IL-8), or IL-8 genetic variants, with pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS) in children with acute respiratory failure at risk for PARDS has not been examined. The purpose of this study was to examine the association of early and sequential measurement of plasma IL-8 and/or its genetic variants with development of PARDS and other clinical outcomes in mechanically ventilated children with acute respiratory failure.MethodsThis was a prospective cohort study of children 2 weeks to 17 years of age with acute airways and/or parenchymal lung disease done in 22 pediatric intensive care units participating in the multi-center clinical trial, Randomized Evaluation of Sedation Titration for Respiratory Failure (RESTORE). Plasma IL-8 levels were measured within 24 h of consent and 24 and 48 h later. DNA was purified from whole blood, and IL-8 single nucleotide polymorphisms, rs4073, rs2227306, and rs2227307, were genotyped.ResultsFive hundred forty-nine patients were enrolled; 480 had blood sampling. Plasma IL-8 levels ranged widely from 4 to 7373 pg/mL. Highest IL-8 levels were observed on the day of intubation with subsequent tapering. Levels of IL-8 varied significantly across primary diagnoses with the highest levels occurring in patients with sepsis and the lowest levels in those with asthma. Plasma IL-8 was strongly correlated with oxygenation defect and severity of illness. IL-8 was consistently higher in PARDS patients compared to those without PARDS; levels were 4-12 fold higher in non-survivors compared to survivors. On multivariable analysis, IL-8 was independently associated with death, duration of mechanical ventilation, and PICU length of stay on all days measured, but was not associated with PARDS development. There was no association between the IL-8 single nucleotide polymorphisms, rs4073, rs2227306, and rs2227307, and PARDS development or plasma IL-8 level.ConclusionsWhen measured sequentially, plasma IL-8 was robustly associated with multiple, relevant clinical outcomes including mortality, but was not associated with PARDS development. The wide range of plasma IL-8 levels exhibited in this cohort suggests that further study into the heterogeneity of this patient population and its impact on individual responses to PARDS treatment is warranted.
- Published
- 2019
50. Using Data Augmentation and Consistency Regularization to Improve Semi-supervised Speech Recognition.
- Author
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Ashtosh Sapru
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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