443 results on '"Seabury, Seth A."'
Search Results
2. Geographic Variation in Health Care: The Role of Private Markets
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Philipson, Tomas J., Seabury, Seth A., Lockwood, Lee M., Goldman, Dana P., and Lakdawalla, Darius N.
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- 2010
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3. Genetic vulnerability and adverse mental health outcomes following mild traumatic brain injury: a meta-analysis of CENTER-TBI and TRACK-TBI cohorts
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Ackerlund, Cecilia, Adams, Hadie, Amrein, Krisztina, Andelic, Nada, Andreassen, Lasse, Anke, Audny, Antoni, Anna, Audibert, Gérard, Azouvi, Philippe, Azzolini, Maria Luisa, Bartels, Ronald, Barzó, Pál, Beauvais, Romuald, Beer, Ronny, Bellander, Bo-Michael, Belli, Antonio, Benali, Habib, Berardino, Maurizio, Beretta, Luigi, Blaabjerg, Morten, Bragge, Peter, Brazinova, Alexandra, Brinck, Vibeke, Brooker, Joanne, Brorsson, Camilla, Buki, Andras, Bullinger, Monika, Cabeleira, Manuel, Caccioppola, Alessio, Calappi, Emiliana, Calvi, Maria Rosa, Cameron, Peter, Lozano, Guillermo Carbayo, Carbonara, Marco, Castaño-León, Ana M., Cavallo, Simona, Chevallard, Giorgio, Chieregato, Arturo, Citerio, Giuseppe, Clusmann, Hans, Coburn, Mark Steven, Coles, Jonathan, Cooper, Jamie D., Correia, Marta, Čović, Amra, Curry, Nicola, Czeiter, Endre, Czosnyka, Marek, Dahyot-Fizelier, Claire, Dark, Paul, Dawes, Helen, De Keyser, Véronique, Degos, Vincent, Della Corte, Francesco, Boogert, Hugo den, Depreitere, Bart, Đilvesi, Đula, Dixit, Abhishek, Donoghue, Emma, Dreier, Jens, Dulière, Guy-Loup, Ercole, Ari, Esser, Patrick, Ezer, Erzsébet, Fabricius, Martin, Feigin, Valery L., Foks, Kelly, Frisvold, Shirin, Furmanov, Alex, Gagliardo, Pablo, Galanaud, Damien, Gantner, Dashiell, Gao, Guoyi, George, Pradeep, Ghuysen, Alexandre, Giga, Lelde, Glocker, Ben, Golubović, Jagoš, Gomez, Pedro A., Gratz, Johannes, Gravesteijn, Benjamin, Grossi, Francesca, Gruen, Russell L., Gupta, Deepak, Haagsma, Juanita A., Haitsma, Iain, Helbok, Raimund, Helseth, Eirik, Horton, Lindsay, Huijben, Jilske, Hutchinson, Peter J., Jacobs, Bram, Jankowski, Stefan, Jarrett, Mike, Jiang, Ji-yao, Johnson, Faye, Jones, Kelly, Karan, Mladen, Kolias, Angelos G., Kompanje, Erwin, Kondziella, Daniel, Koskinen, Lars-Owe, Kovács, Noémi, Kowark, Ana, Lagares, Alfonso, Lanyon, Linda, Laureys, Steven, Lecky, Fiona, Ledoux, Didier, Lefering, Rolf, Legrand, Valerie, Lejeune, Aurelie, Levi, Leon, Lightfoot, Roger, Lingsma, Hester, Maegele, Marc, Majdan, Marek, Manara, Alex, Maréchal, Hugues, Martino, Costanza, Mattern, Julia, McFadyen, Charles, McMahon, Catherine, Melegh, Béla, Menovsky, Tomas, Mikolic, Ana, Misset, Benoit, Muraleedharan, Visakh, Murray, Lynnette, Negru, Ancuta, Nelson, David, Newcombe, Virginia, Nieboer, Daan, Nyirádi, József, Oresic, Matej, Ortolano, Fabrizio, Otesile, Olubukola, Parizel, Paul M., Payen, Jean-François, Perera, Natascha, Perlbarg, Vincent, Persona, Paolo, Peul, Wilco, Piippo-Karjalainen, Anna, Pirinen, Matti, Pisica, Dana, Ples, Horia, Polinder, Suzanne, Pomposo, Inigo, Posti, Jussi P., Puybasset, Louis, Rădoi, Andreea, Ragauskas, Arminas, Raj, Rahul, Rambadagalla, Malinka, Rehorčíková, Veronika, Helmrich, Isabel Retel, Rhodes, Jonathan, Richter, Sophie, Rocka, Saulius, Roe, Cecilie, Roise, Olav, Rosenfeld, Jeffrey, Rosenlund, Christina, Rosenthal, Guy, Rossaint, Rolf, Rossi, Sandra, Rueckert, Daniel, Rusnák, Martin, Sahuquillo, Juan, Sakowitz, Oliver, Sanchez-Porras, Renan, Sandor, Janos, Schäfer, Nadine, Schmidt, Silke, Schoechl, Herbert, Schoonman, Guus, Schou, Rico Frederik, Schwendenwein, Elisabeth, Sewalt, Charlie, Singh, Ranjit D., Skandsen, Toril, Smielewski, Peter, Sorinola, Abayomi, Stamatakis, Emmanuel, Stanworth, Simon, Stevens, Robert, Stewart, William, Stocchetti, Nino, Sundström, Nina, Takala, Riikka, Tamás, Viktória, Tamosuitis, Tomas, Taylor, Mark Steven, Te Ao, Braden, Tenovuo, Olli, Theadom, Alice, Thibaut, Aurore, Thomas, Matt, Tibboel, Dick, Timmers, Marjolijn, Tolias, Christos, Trapani, Tony, Tudora, Cristina Maria, Unterberg, Andreas, Vajkoczy, Peter, Valeinis, Egils, Vallance, Shirley, Vámos, Zoltán, van der Jagt, Mathieu, van der Naalt, Joukje, Van der Steen, Gregory, van Dijck, Jeroen T.J.M., van Erp, Inge A., van Essen, Thomas A., Van Hecke, Wim, van Heugten, Caroline, Van Praag, Dominique, van Veen, Ernest, van Wijk, Roel, Vyvere, Thijs Vande, Vargiolu, Alessia, Vega, Emmanuel, Velt, Kimberley, Verheyden, Jan, Vespa, Paul M., Vik, Anne, Vilcinis, Rimantas, Volovici, Victor, von Steinbüchel, Nicole, Voormolen, Daphne, Vulekovic, Peter, Whitehouse, Daniel, Wiegers, Eveline, Williams, Guy, Wolf, Stefan, Yang, Zhihui, Ylén, Peter, Younsi, Alexander, Zeiler, Frederick A., Ziverte, Agate, Zoerle, Tommaso, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Barber, Jason, Bergin, Michael, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, Venkata, Ferguson, Adam R., Foreman, Brandon, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Grandhi, Ramesh, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Huie, Russell, Jha, Ruchira, Keene, Dirk C., Kitagawa, Ryan, Korley, Frederick, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B., Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Ben Rodgers, Richard, Rosenthal, Eric, Sander, Angelle, Sandsmark, Danielle, Schneider, Andrea, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Sugar, Gabriella, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Torres-Espin, Abel, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Wang, Kevin, Wang, Vincent, Yue, John K., Yuh, Esther, Zafonte, Ross, Kals, Mart, Wilson, Lindsay, Levey, Daniel F., Parodi, Livia, Steyerberg, Ewout W., Richardson, Sylvia, He, Feng, Sun, Xiaoying, Jain, Sonia, Palotie, Aarno, Ripatti, Samuli, Rosand, Jonathan, Manley, Geoff T., Maas, Andrew I.R., Stein, Murray B., and Menon, David K.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
4. Diffusion Tensor Imaging Reveals Elevated Diffusivity of White Matter Microstructure that Is Independently Associated with Long-Term Outcome after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A TRACK-TBI Study
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Palacios, Eva M, Yuh, Esther L, Donald, Christine L Mac, Bourla, Ioanna, Wren-Jarvis, Jamie, Sun, Xiaoying, Vassar, Mary J, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Giacino, Joseph T, Okonkwo, David O, Robertson, Claudia S, Stein, Murray B, Temkin, Nancy, McCrea, Michael A, Levin, Harvey S, Markowitz, Amy J, Jain, Sonia, Manley, Geoffrey T, Mukherjee, Pratik, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Keene, C Dirk, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Taylor, Sabrina, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, and Zafonte, Ross
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Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Disorders ,Biomedical Imaging ,Injuries and accidents ,Neurological ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Brain ,Brain Concussion ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Cohort Studies ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,White Matter ,Young Adult ,concussion ,diffusion tensor imaging ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,MRI ,traumatic brain injury ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) literature on single-center studies contains conflicting results regarding acute effects of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) on white matter (WM) microstructure and the prognostic significance. This larger-scale multi-center DTI study aimed to determine how acute mTBI affects WM microstructure over time and how early WM changes affect long-term outcome. From Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI), a cohort study at 11 United States level 1 trauma centers, a total of 391 patients with acute mTBI ages 17 to 60 years were included and studied at two weeks and six months post-injury. Demographically matched friends or family of the participants were the control group (n = 148). Axial diffusivity (AD), fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), and radial diffusivity (RD) were the measures of WM microstructure. The primary outcome was the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) score of injury-related functional limitations across broad life domains at six months post-injury. The AD, MD, and RD were higher and FA was lower in mTBI versus friend control (FC) at both two weeks and six months post-injury throughout most major WM tracts of the cerebral hemispheres. In the mTBI group, AD and, to a lesser extent, MD decreased in WM from two weeks to six months post-injury. At two weeks post-injury, global WM AD and MD were both independently associated with six-month incomplete recovery (GOSE
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- 2022
5. Comparing the Quality of Life after Brain Injury-Overall Scale and Satisfaction with Life Scale as Outcome Measures for Traumatic Brain Injury Research
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Kreitzer, Natalie, Jain, Sonia, Young, Jacob S, Sun, Xiaoying, Stein, Murray B, McCrea, Michael A, Levin, Harvey S, Giacino, Joseph T, Markowitz, Amy J, Manley, Geoffrey T, Nelson, Lindsay D, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Keene, C Dirk, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Taylor, Sabrina, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, Yuh, Esther, and Zafonte, Ross
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Pediatric ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Clinical Research ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Childhood Injury ,Injuries and accidents ,Adult ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Patient Acuity ,Personal Satisfaction ,Psychometrics ,Quality of Life ,common data elements ,friend controls ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,health related quality of life ,orthopedic trauma controls ,Quality of Life after Brain Injury Overall Score ,Satisfaction with Life Survey ,traumatic brain injury ,Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
It is important to measure quality of life (QoL) after traumatic brain injury (TBI), yet limited studies have compared QoL inventories. In 2579 TBI patients, orthopedic trauma controls, and healthy friend control participants, we compared the Quality of Life After Brain Injury-Overall Scale (QOLIBRI-OS), developed for TBI patients, to the Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS), an index of generic life satisfaction. We tested the hypothesis that group differences (TBI and orthopedic trauma vs. healthy friend controls) would be larger for the QOLIBRI-OS than the SWLS and that the QOLIBRI-OS would manifest more substantial changes over time in the injured groups, demonstrating more relevance of the QOLIBRI-OS to traumatic injury recovery. (1) We compared the group differences (TBI vs. orthopedic trauma control vs. friend control) in QoL as indexed by the SWLS versus the QOLIBRI-OS and (2) characterized changes across time in these two inventories across 1 year in these three groups. Our secondary objective was to characterize the relationship between TBI severity and QoL. As compared with healthy friend controls, the QOLIBRI reflected greater reductions in QoL than the SWLS for both the TBI group (all time points) and the orthopedic trauma control group (2 weeks and 3 months). The QOLIBRI-OS better captured expected improvements in QoL during the injury recovery course in injured groups than the SWLS, which demonstrated smaller changes over time. TBI severity was not consistently or robustly associated with self-reported QoL. The findings imply that, as compared with the SWLS, the QOLIBRI-OS appears to identify QoL issues more specifically relevant to traumatically injured patients and may be a more appropriate primary QoL outcome measure for research focused on the sequelae of traumatic injuries.
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- 2021
6. Statistical Guidelines for Handling Missing Data in Traumatic Brain Injury Clinical Research
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Nielson, Jessica L, Cooper, Shelly R, Seabury, Seth A, Luciani, Davide, Fabio, Anthony, Temkin, Nancy R, Ferguson, Adam R, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Manley, Geoffrey T, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Sherer, Mark, Stein, Murray, Taylor, Sabrina, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, Yuh, Esther, and Zafonte, Ross
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Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Neurological ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Child ,Data Interpretation ,Statistical ,Databases ,Factual ,Guidelines as Topic ,Humans ,assessment tools ,missing data ,statistical guidelines ,TBI ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Missing data is a persistent and unavoidable problem in even the most carefully designed traumatic brain injury (TBI) clinical research. Missing data patterns may result from participant dropout, non-compliance, technical issues, or even death. This review describes the types of missing data that are common in TBI research, and assesses the strengths and weaknesses of the statistical approaches used to draw conclusions and make clinical decisions from these data. We review recent innovations in missing values analysis (MVA), a relatively new branch of statistics, as applied to clinical TBI data. Our discussion focuses on studies from the International Traumatic Brain Injury Research (InTBIR) initiative project: Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI (TRACK-TBI), Collaborative Research on Acute TBI in Intensive Care Medicine in Europe (CREACTIVE), and Approaches and Decisions in Acute Pediatric TBI Trial (ADAPT). In addition, using data from the TRACK-TBI pilot study (n = 586) and the completed clinical trial assessing valproate (VPA) for the treatment of post-traumatic epilepsy (n = 379) we present real-world examples of typical missing data patterns and the application of statistical techniques to mitigate the impact of missing data in order to draw sound conclusions from ongoing clinical studies.
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- 2021
7. Biomarkers for Traumatic Brain Injury: Data Standards and Statistical Considerations
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Huie, J Russell, Mondello, Stefania, Lindsell, Christopher J, Antiga, Luca, Yuh, Esther L, Zanier, Elisa R, Masson, Serge, Rosario, Bedda L, Ferguson, Adam R, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Korley, Frederick, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Manley, Geoffrey T, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Stein, Murray, Taylor, Sabrina, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, Zafonte, Ross, Ackerlund, Cecilia, Adams, Hadie, Agnoletti, Vanni, Allanson, Judith, Amrein, Krisztina, Andaluz, Norberto, Andelic, Nada, Andreassen, Lasse, Anke, Audny, Antun, Azasevac, Antoni, Anna, Ardon, Hilko, Auslands, Kaspars, Azouvi, Philippe, Luisa Azzolini, Maria, Baciu, Camelia, Badenes, Rafael, Bartels, Ronald, Barzó, Pál, Bauerfeind, Ursula, Beauvais, Romuald, Beer, Ronny, Belda, Francisco Javier, Bellander, Bo Michael, Belli, Antonio, Bellier, Rémy, Benali, Habib, Benard, Thierry, Berardino, Maurizio, Beretta, Luigi, Beynon, Christopher, Bilotta, Federico, and Binder, Harald
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Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Neurosciences ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Disorders ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being ,Biomarkers ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Common Data Elements ,Data Interpretation ,Statistical ,Humans ,Information Dissemination ,Reference Standards ,biomarkers ,data sharing ,traumatic brain injury ,Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) Investigators ,The Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) Investigators ,Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) Participants and Investigators ,Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) Participants and Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Recent biomarker innovations hold potential for transforming diagnosis, prognostic modeling, and precision therapeutic targeting of traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, many biomarkers, including brain imaging, genomics, and proteomics, involve vast quantities of high-throughput and high-content data. Management, curation, analysis, and evidence synthesis of these data are not trivial tasks. In this review, we discuss data management concepts and statistical and data sharing strategies when dealing with biomarker data in the context of TBI research. We propose that application of biomarkers involves three distinct steps-discovery, evaluation, and evidence synthesis. First, complex/big data has to be reduced to useful data elements at the stage of biomarker discovery. Second, inferential statistical approaches must be applied to these biomarker data elements for assessment of biomarker clinical utility and validity. Last, synthesis of relevant research is required to support practice guidelines and enable health decisions informed by the highest quality, up-to-date evidence available. We focus our discussion around recent experiences from the International Traumatic Brain Injury Research (InTBIR) initiative, with a specific focus on four major clinical projects (Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI, Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in TBI, Collaborative Research on Acute Traumatic Brain Injury in Intensive Care Medicine in Europe, and Approaches and Decisions in Acute Pediatric TBI Trial), which are currently enrolling subjects in North America and Europe. We discuss common data elements, data collection efforts, data-sharing opportunities, and challenges, as well as examine the statistical techniques required to realize successful adoption and use of biomarkers in the clinic as a foundation for precision medicine in TBI.
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- 2021
8. Central Curation of Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended Data: Lessons Learned from TRACK-TBI
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Boase, Kim, Machamer, Joan, Temkin, Nancy R, Dikmen, Sureyya, Wilson, Lindsay, Nelson, Lindsay D, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena G, Giacino, Joseph T, Markowitz, Amy J, McCrea, Michael A, Satris, Gabriela, Stein, Murray B, Taylor, Sabrina R, Manley, Geoffrey T, Adeoye, Opeolu, Bullock, M Ross, Corrigan, John D, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Gardner, Raquel, Goldman, Dana, Gopinath, Shankar, Hemphill, J Claude, Keene, C Dirk, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, MS, RN, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, Yuh, Esther, and Zafonte, Ross
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Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Neurosciences ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Disorders ,Quality Education ,Adult ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Disability Evaluation ,Female ,Functional Status ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Recovery of Function ,Reproducibility of Results ,United States ,Young Adult ,central review ,clinical outcome assessments ,data curation ,GOSE ,traumatic brain injury ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
The Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS) in its original or extended (GOSE) form is the most widely used assessment of global disability in traumatic brain injury (TBI) research. Several publications have reported concerns about assessor scoring inconsistencies, but without documentation of contributing factors. We reviewed 6801 GOSE assessments collected longitudinally, across 18 sites in the 5-year, observational Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI (TRACK-TBI) study. We recorded error rates (i.e., corrections to a section or an overall rating) based on site assessor documentation and categorized scoring issues, which then informed further training. In cohort 1 (n = 1261; February 2014 to May 2016), 24% of GOSEs had errors identified by central review. In cohort 2 (n = 1130; June 2016 to July 2018), acquired after curation of cohort 1 data, feedback, and further training of site assessors, the error rate was reduced to 10%. GOSE sections associated with the most frequent interpretation and scoring difficulties included whether current functioning represented a change from pre-injury (466 corrected ratings in cohort 1; 62 in cohort 2), defining dependency in the home and community (163 corrections in cohort 1; three in cohort 2) and return to work/school (72 corrections in cohort 1; 35 in cohort 2). These results highlight the importance of central review in improving consistency across sites and over time. Establishing clear scoring criteria, coupled with ongoing guidance and feedback to data collectors, is essential to avoid scoring errors and resultant misclassification, which carry potential to result in "failure" of clinical trials that rely on the GOSE as their primary outcome measure.
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- 2021
9. Invariance of the Bifactor Structure of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI) Symptoms on the Rivermead Postconcussion Symptoms Questionnaire Across Time, Demographic Characteristics, and Clinical Groups: A TRACK-TBI Study
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Agtarap, Stephanie, Kramer, Mark D, Campbell-Sills, Laura, Yuh, Esther, Mukherjee, Pratik, Manley, Geoffrey T, McCrea, Michael A, Dikmen, Sureyya, Giacino, Joseph T, Stein, Murray B, Nelson, Lindsay D, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Taylor, Sabrina, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, and Zafonte, Ross
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Neurosciences ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Concussion ,Demography ,Emotions ,Humans ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,mild TBI ,bifactor ,invariance ,postconcussive symptoms ,Rivermead Postconcussion Symptoms Questionnaire ,traumatic brain injury ,TRACK-TBI Investigators * ,Psychology ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
This study aimed to elucidate the structure of the Rivermead Postconcussion Symptoms Questionnaire (RPQ) and evaluate its longitudinal and group variance. Factor structures were developed and compared in 1,011 patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI; i.e., Glasgow Coma Scale score 13-15) from the Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI study, using RPQ data collected at 2 weeks, and 3, 6, and 12 months postinjury. A bifactor model specifying a general factor and emotional, cognitive, and visual symptom factors best represented the latent structure of the RPQ. The model evinced strict measurement invariance over time and across sex, age, race, psychiatric history, and mTBI severity groups, indicating that differences in symptom endorsement were completely accounted for by these latent dimensions. While highly unidimensional, the RPQ has multidimensional features observable through a bifactor model, which may help differentiate symptom expression patterns in the future.
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- 2021
10. Pathological Computed Tomography Features Associated With Adverse Outcomes After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: A TRACK-TBI Study With External Validation in CENTER-TBI.
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Yuh, Esther L, Jain, Sonia, Sun, Xiaoying, Pisica, Dana, Harris, Mark H, Taylor, Sabrina R, Markowitz, Amy J, Mukherjee, Pratik, Verheyden, Jan, Giacino, Joseph T, Levin, Harvey S, McCrea, Michael, Stein, Murray B, Temkin, Nancy R, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Robertson, Claudia S, Lingsma, Hester F, Okonkwo, David O, Maas, Andrew IR, Manley, Geoffrey T, TRACK-TBI Investigators for the CENTER-TBI Investigators, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Keene, C Dirk, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Rabinowitz, Miri, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, and Zafonte, Ross
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TRACK-TBI Investigators for the CENTER-TBI Investigators - Abstract
ImportanceA head computed tomography (CT) with positive results for acute intracranial hemorrhage is the gold-standard diagnostic biomarker for acute traumatic brain injury (TBI). In moderate to severe TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] scores 3-12), some CT features have been shown to be associated with outcomes. In mild TBI (mTBI; GCS scores 13-15), distribution and co-occurrence of pathological CT features and their prognostic importance are not well understood.ObjectiveTo identify pathological CT features associated with adverse outcomes after mTBI.Design, setting, and participantsThe longitudinal, observational Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) study enrolled patients with TBI, including those 17 years and older with GCS scores of 13 to 15 who presented to emergency departments at 18 US level 1 trauma centers between February 26, 2014, and August 8, 2018, and underwent head CT imaging within 24 hours of TBI. Evaluations of CT imaging used TBI Common Data Elements. Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended (GOSE) scores were assessed at 2 weeks and 3, 6, and 12 months postinjury. External validation of results was performed via the Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) study. Data analyses were completed from February 2020 to February 2021.ExposuresAcute nonpenetrating head trauma.Main outcomes and measuresFrequency, co-occurrence, and clustering of CT features; incomplete recovery (GOSE scores
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- 2021
11. Tractography-Pathology Correlations in Traumatic Brain Injury: A TRACK-TBI Study
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Nolan, Amber L, Petersen, Cathrine, Iacono, Diego, Mac Donald, Christine L, Mukherjee, Pratik, van der Kouwe, Andre, Jain, Sonia, Stevens, Allison, Diamond, Bram R, Wang, Ruopeng, Markowitz, Amy J, Fischl, Bruce, Perl, Daniel P, Manley, Geoffrey T, Keene, C Dirk, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Edlow, Brian L, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Stein, Murray, Taylor, Sabrina, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, Yuh, Esther, and Zafonte, Ross
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Biomedical Imaging ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Neurosciences ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Brain Disorders ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Neurological ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Connectome ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neural Pathways ,contusion ,MRI ,neuropathology ,tractography ,traumatic axonal injury ,traumatic brain injury ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Diffusion tractography magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can infer changes in network connectivity in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), but the pathological substrates of disconnected tracts have not been well defined because of a lack of high-resolution imaging with histopathological validation. We developed an ex vivo MRI protocol to analyze tract terminations at 750-μm isotropic resolution, followed by histopathological evaluation of white matter pathology, and applied these methods to a 60-year-old man who died 26 days after TBI. Analysis of 74 cerebral hemispheric white matter regions revealed a heterogeneous distribution of tract disruptions. Associated histopathology identified variable white matter injury with patchy deposition of amyloid precursor protein (APP), loss of neurofilament-positive axonal processes, myelin dissolution, astrogliosis, microgliosis, and perivascular hemosiderin-laden macrophages. Multiple linear regression revealed that tract disruption strongly correlated with the density of APP-positive axonal swellings and neurofilament loss. Ex vivo diffusion MRI can detect tract disruptions in the human brain that reflect axonal injury.
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- 2021
12. Validity of the Brief Test of Adult Cognition by Telephone in Level 1 Trauma Center Patients Six Months Post-Traumatic Brain Injury: A TRACK-TBI Study
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Nelson, Lindsay D, Barber, Jason K, Temkin, Nancy R, Dams-O'Connor, Kristen, Dikmen, Sureyya, Giacino, Joseph T, Kramer, Mark D, Levin, Harvey S, McCrea, Michael A, Whyte, John, Bodien, Yelena G, Yue, John K, Manley, Geoffrey T, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Keene, C Dirk, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Ngwenya, Laura B, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Stein, Murray, Taylor, Sabrina, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, and Zafonte, Ross
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Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Clinical Research ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Mental health ,Injuries and accidents ,Adult ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Cognition ,Cognition Disorders ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Mental Recall ,Middle Aged ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Prospective Studies ,Reproducibility of Results ,Telephone ,Time Factors ,Trauma Centers ,Brief Test of Adult Cognition by Telephone ,BTACT ,phone-based cognitive assessment ,telemedicine ,traumatic brain injury ,British Neurosurgical Trainee Research Collaborative ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Our objective was to examine the construct validity of the Brief Test of Adult Cognition by Telephone (BTACT) and its relationship to traumatic brain injury (TBI) of differing severities. Data were analyzed on 1422 patients with TBI and 170 orthopedic trauma controls (OTC) from the multi-center Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI (TRACK-TBI) study. Participants were assessed at 6 months post-injury with the BTACT and an in-person neuropsychological battery. We examined the BTACT's factor structure, factorial group invariance, convergent and discriminant validity, and relationship to TBI and TBI severity. Confirmatory factor analysis supported both a 1-factor model and a 2-factor model comprising correlated Episodic Memory and Executive Function (EF) factors. Both models demonstrated strict invariance across TBI severity and OTC groups. Correlations between BTACT and criterion measures suggested that the BTACT memory indices predominantly reflect verbal episodic memory, whereas the BTACT EF factor correlated with a diverse range of cognitive tests. Although the EF factor and other BTACT indices showed significant relationships with TBI and TBI severity, some group effect sizes were larger for more comprehensive in-person cognitive tests than the BTACT. The BTACT is a promising, brief, phone-based cognitive screening tool for patients with TBI. Although the BTACT's memory items appear to index verbal Episodic Memory, items that purport to assess EFs may reflect a broader array of cognitive domains. The sensitivity of the BTACT to TBI severity is lower than domain-specific neuropsychological measures, suggesting it should not be used as a substitute for comprehensive, in-person cognitive testing at 6 months post-TBI.
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- 2021
13. High-Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein is a Prognostic Biomarker of Six-Month Disability after Traumatic Brain Injury: Results from the TRACK-TBI Study
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Xu, Linda B, Yue, John K, Korley, Frederick, Puccio, Ava M, Yuh, Esther L, Sun, Xiaoying, Rabinowitz, Miri, Vassar, Mary J, Taylor, Sabrina R, Winkler, Ethan A, Puffer, Ross C, Deng, Hansen, McCrea, Michael, Stein, Murray B, Robertson, Claudia S, Levin, Harvey S, Dikmen, Sureyya, Temkin, Nancy R, Giacino, Joseph T, Mukherjee, Pratik, Wang, Kevin KW, Okonkwo, David O, Markowitz, Amy J, Jain, Sonia, Manley, Geoffrey T, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Toga, Arthur, and Adeoye, Alex VaOpeolu
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Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Injuries and accidents ,Adult ,Biomarkers ,Biomedical Research ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,C-Reactive Protein ,Disabled Persons ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Time Factors ,Young Adult ,biomarkers ,head trauma ,traumatic brain injury ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Systemic inflammation impacts outcome after traumatic brain injury (TBI), but most TBI biomarker studies have focused on brain-specific proteins. C-reactive protein (CRP) is a widely used biomarker of inflammation with potential as a prognostic biomarker after TBI. The Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) study prospectively enrolled TBI patients within 24 h of injury, as well as orthopedic injury and uninjured controls; biospecimens were collected at enrollment. A subset of hospitalized participants had blood collected on day 3, day 5, and 2 weeks. High-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) were measured. Receiver operating characteristic analysis was used to evaluate the prognostic ability of hsCRP for 6-month outcome, using the Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended (GOSE). We included 1206 TBI subjects, 122 orthopedic trauma controls (OTCs), and 209 healthy controls (HCs). Longitudinal biomarker sampling was performed in 254 hospitalized TBI subjects and 19 OTCs. hsCRP rose between days 1 and 5 for TBI and OTC subjects, and fell by 2 weeks, but remained elevated compared with HCs (p
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- 2021
14. Smaller Regional Brain Volumes Predict Posttraumatic Stress Disorder at 3 Months After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
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Stein, Murray B, Yuh, Esther, Jain, Sonia, Okonkwo, David O, Donald, Christine L Mac, Levin, Harvey, Giacino, Joseph T, Dikmen, Sureyya, Vassar, Mary J, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Robertson, Claudia S, Nelson, Lindsay D, McCrea, Michael, Sun, Xiaoying, Temkin, Nancy, Taylor, Sabrina R, Markowitz, Amy J, Manley, Geoffrey T, Mukherjee, Pratik, Investigators, TRACK-TBI, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Keene, C Dirk, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, and Zafonte, Ross
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Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Anxiety Disorders ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Mental health ,Neurological ,Amygdala ,Brain ,Brain Concussion ,Hippocampus ,Humans ,Stress Disorders ,Post-Traumatic ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Cingulate ,Insula ,PTSD ,Posttraumatic stress disorder ,TBI ,Traumatic brain injury - Abstract
BackgroundBrain volumes in regions such as the hippocampus and amygdala have been associated with risk for the development of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The objective of this study was to determine whether a set of regional brain volumes, measured by magnetic resonance imaging at 2 weeks following mild traumatic brain injury, were predictive of PTSD at 3 and 6 months after injury.MethodsUsing data from TRACK-TBI (Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI), we included patients (N = 421) with Glasgow Coma Scale scores 13-15 assessed after evaluation in the emergency department and at 2 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months after injury. Probable PTSD diagnosis (PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 score, ≥33) was the outcome. FreeSurfer 6.0 was used to perform volumetric analysis of three-dimensional T1-weighted magnetic resonance images at 3T obtained 2 weeks post injury. Brain regions selected a priori for volumetric analyses were insula, hippocampus, amygdala, superior frontal cortex, rostral and caudal anterior cingulate, and lateral and medial orbitofrontal cortices.ResultsOverall, 77 (18.3%) and 70 (16.6%) patients had probable PTSD at 3 and 6 months. A composite volume derived as the first principal component incorporating 73.8% of the variance in insula, superior frontal cortex, and rostral and caudal cingulate contributed to the prediction of 3-month (but not 6-month) PTSD in multivariable models incorporating other established risk factors.ConclusionsResults, while needing replication, provide support for a brain reserve hypothesis of PTSD and proof of principle for how prediction of at-risk individuals might be accomplished to enhance prognostic accuracy and enrich clinical prevention trials for individuals at the highest risk of PTSD following mild traumatic brain injury.
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- 2021
15. Assessing the Use of Data Systems to Estimate Return-on-Investment of Behavioral Healthcare Interventions: Opportunities and Barriers
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Heun-Johnson, Hanke, Zuluaga, Katiri V., Menchine, Michael, Starkey, Shelley, David, Rebecca Farley, and Seabury, Seth
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- 2023
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16. Life After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Widespread Structural Brain Changes Associated With Psychological Distress Revealed With Multimodal Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M. Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D., Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V. Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R., Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J. Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Korley, Frederick K., Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Ngwenya, Laura B., Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Taylor, Sabrina, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K., Zafonte, Ross, Sibilia, Francesca, Custer, Rachel M., Irimia, Andrei, Sepehrband, Farshid, Toga, Arthur W., and Cabeen, Ryan P.
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- 2023
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17. Point-of-Care Platform Blood Biomarker Testing of Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein versus S100 Calcium-Binding Protein B for Prediction of Traumatic Brain Injuries: A Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury Study
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Okonkwo, David O, Puffer, Ross C, Puccio, Ava M, Yuh, Esther L, Yue, John K, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Korley, Frederick K, Wang, Kevin KW, Sun, Xiaoying, Taylor, Sabrina R, Mukherjee, Pratik, Markowitz, Amy J, Jain, Sonia, Manley, Geoffrey T, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John, Crawford, Karen, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, Venkata, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Stein, Murray, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, and Zafonte, Ross
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Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Neurosciences ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Point-of-Care Systems ,S100 Calcium Binding Protein beta Subunit ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,biomarkers ,glial fibrillary acidic protein ,S100 calcium-binding protein B ,traumatic brain injury ,Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) is cleared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to determine need for head computed tomography (CT) within 12 h after mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) (Glasgow Coma Score [GCS] 13-15); S100 calcium-binding protein B (S100B) serves this function in Europe. This phase 1 biomarker cohort analysis of the multi-center, observational Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) study compares GFAP's diagnostic performance, measured on a rapid point-of-care platform, against protein S100B to predict intracranial abnormalities on CT within 24 h post-injury across the spectrum of TBI (GCS 3-15). Head CT scan performed in TBI subjects and blood was collected for all consenting subjects presenting to 18 United States level 1 trauma centers. Plasma was analyzed on a point-of-care device prototype assay for GFAP and serum was analyzed for S100B. In 1359 patients with TBI (GCS 3-15), mean (standard deviation [SD]) age = 40.1 (17.0) years; 68% were male. Plasma GFAP levels were significantly higher in CT+ TBI subjects (median = 1358 pg/mL, interquartile range [IQR]: 472-3803) than in CT- TBI subjects (median = 116 pg/mL, IQR: 26-397) or orthopedic trauma controls (n = 122; median = 13 pg/mL, IQR: 7-20), p
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- 2020
18. Monitoring Outcome after Hospital-Presenting Milder Spectrum Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury Using the Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended, Pediatric Revision
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Evans, Emily, Cook, Nathan E, Iverson, Grant L, Townsend, Elise L, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Korley, Frederick K, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Manley, Geoffrey T, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Taylor, Sabrina, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K, Yuh, Esther, and Zafonte, Ross
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Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Childhood Injury ,Unintentional Childhood Injury ,Brain Disorders ,Injuries and accidents ,Adolescent ,Brain Concussion ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Glasgow Outcome Scale ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Recovery of Function ,Treatment Outcome ,brain concussion ,brain injuries ,traumatic ,head injuries ,closed ,outcome assessment ,pediatrics ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,brain injuries ,traumatic ,head injuries ,closed ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
The Glasgow Outcome Scale, Pediatric Revision (GOSE-P) is an assessment of "global outcome" designed as a developmentally appropriate version of the Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended for use in clinical trials of children with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Initial testing describes validity across a wide age and injury severity spectrum, yet the GOSE-P's utility for monitoring children with milder injuries is less clear. We examined the level of agreement between the GOSE-P and the Health and Behavior Inventory (HBI), a TBI-related symptom checklist used to assess children with mild TBI for clinical and research purposes. Participants included children and adolescents 3-16 years of age (n = 50) who presented to two level 1 trauma centers within 24 h of injury, with a GCS of 13-15, who underwent clinical neuroimaging. Outcome was assessed 2 weeks and 3 months following injury. We examined the severity of TBI-related symptoms across disability categories identified using the GOSE-P, and the level of agreement between the two measures in identifying deficits 2 weeks following injury and improvement from 2 weeks to 3 months. Using the GOSE-P, 62% had deficits at 2 weeks, and 42% improved from 2 weeks to 3 months. Agreement between the GOSE-P and HBI was fair 2 weeks after TBI (k = 0.24-0.33), and poor for identifying subsequent improvement (k = 0.10-0.16). Modest agreement between the GOSE-P and the HBI may reflect restricted participation from diverse causes, including TBI, other bodily injuries, and prescribed activity restrictions, and highlights the need for multi-dimensional outcome batteries.
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- 2020
19. Abstract 13233: Disparities in Speed of Diagnosis of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in the United States
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Masri, Ahmad, Stevens, Warren, Buessing, Marric, Zuk, Eric, Lam, Jenny, Zhang, Yuanhui, Maksabedian Hernandez, Ervant J, and Seabury, Seth A
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- 2023
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20. Diagnostic performance of point-of-care ubiquitin carboxy-terminal Hydrolase-L1 assay in distinguishing imaging abnormalities in traumatic brain injury: A TRACK-TBI cohort study
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Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M. Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D., Crawford, Karen, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R., Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Rabinowitz, Miri, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Zafonte, Ross, Wang, Kevin K., Munoz-Pareja, Jennifer C., Lautenslager, Lauren A., Tyndall, J. Adrian, Yang, Zhihui, Kerrigan, Maria R., Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Korley, Frederick K., Okonkwo, David, Puccio, Ava M., Yue, John K., Taylor, Sabrina R., Mukherjee, Pratik, Yuh, Esther L., Temkin, Nancy R., Robertson, Claudia S., Sun, Xiaoying, Jain, Sonia, Markowitz, Amy J., and Manley, Geoffrey T.
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- 2023
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21. The Temporal Relationship of Mental Health Problems and Functional Limitations following mTBI: A TRACK-TBI and TED Study
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Zahniser, Evan, Nelson, Lindsay D, Dikmen, Sureyya S, Machamer, Joan E, Stein, Murray B, Yuh, Esther, Manley, Geoffrey T, Temkin, Nancy R, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Ross Bullock, M, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V Ramana, Ferguson, Adam, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Claude Hemphill, J, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Korley, Frederick, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Noel, Florence, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Taylor, Sabrina, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John, and Zafonte, Ross
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Biomedical Imaging ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Neurosciences ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Clinical Research ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Mental health ,Injuries and accidents ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Anxiety ,Brain Concussion ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Recovery of Function ,Time Factors ,Young Adult ,brain injuries ,mental health ,patient outcome assessment ,traumatic ,TRACK-TBI Investigators ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Mental health problems, such as depression and anxiety, are often associated with functional limitations after traumatic brain injury (TBI), prompting researchers to explore which of these TBI-related sequelae tends to precede the other. Past studies among patients with injuries ranging in severity have predominantly reported that functional impairments predict subsequent psychological concerns, rather than the other way around; however, it remains unclear whether this directionality holds for individuals with mild TBI (mTBI). The present study utilized a cross-lagged panel design within a structural equation modeling analytical framework to explore the longitudinal relationships of symptoms of depression and anxiety to functional status among 717 adult mTBI patients, with assessments occurring at 2 weeks and 3 months post-injury. Symptoms of both depression and anxiety significantly predicted subsequent functional limitations (λs = -0.21 and -0.25), whereas the reverse effects were nonsignificant (λs = -0.05 and -0.03); thus, psychological concerns appeared to function as a precursor to functional impairment. This pattern was particularly pronounced among patients with normal head computed tomography (CT) results; however, results were less clear cut among those subjects whose injuries were accompanied by intracranial abnormalities detected on CT imaging, suggesting the possibility of a more reciprocal relationship in the case of CT-positive mTBI. These results may serve to partially explain the incidence of persistent functional limitations observed among subsets of mTBI patients in past studies. Findings likewise highlight the importance of assessment and treatment for mental health problems after mTBI as an important factor to promote psychological well-being and functional recovery.
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- 2019
22. A genome-wide association study of outcome from traumatic brain injury
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Åkerlund, Cecilia, Amrein, Krisztina, Andelic, Nada, Andreassen, Lasse, Anke, Audny, Antoni, Anna, Audibert, Gérard, Azouvi, Philippe, Azzolini, Maria Luisa, Bartels, Ronald, Barzó, Pál, Beauvais, Romuald, Beer, Ronny, Bellander, Bo-Michael, Belli, Antonio, Benali, Habib, Berardino, Maurizio, Beretta, Luigi, Blaabjerg, Morten, Bragge, Peter, Brazinova, Alexandra, Brinck, Vibeke, Brooker, Joanne, Brorsson, Camilla, Buki, Andras, Bullinger, Monika, Cabeleira, Manuel, Caccioppola, Alessio, Calappi, Emiliana, Calvi, Maria Rosa, Cameron, Peter, Lozano, Guillermo Carbayo, Carbonara, Marco, Cavallo, Simona, Chevallard, Giorgio, Chieregato, Arturo, Citerio, Giuseppe, Clusmann, Hans, Coburn, Mark, Coles, Jonathan P., Cooper, Jamie D., Correia, Marta, Čović, Amra, Curry, Nicola, Czeiter, Endre, Czosnyka, Marek, DahyotFizelier, Claire, Dark, Paul, Dawes, Helen, De Keyser, Véronique, Degos, Vincent, Corte, Francesco Della, Boogert, Hugo den, Depreitere, Bart, Đilvesi, Đula, Dixit, Abhishek, Donoghue, Emma, Dreier, Jens, Dulière, GuyLoup, Ercole, Ari, Esser, Patrick, Ezer, Erzsébet, Fabricius, Martin, Feigin, Valery L., Foks, Kelly, Frisvold, Shirin, Furmanov, Alex, Gagliardo, Pablo, Galanaud, Damien, Gantner, Dashiell, Gao, Guoyi, George, Pradeep, Ghuysen, Alexandre, Giga, Lelde, Glocker, Ben, Golubovic, Jagoš, Gomez, Pedro A., Gratz, Johannes, Gravesteijn, Benjamin, Grossi, Francesca, Gruen, Russell L., Gupta, Deepak, Haagsma, Juanita A., Haitsma, Iain, Helbok, Raimund, Helseth, Eirik, Horton, Lindsay, Huijben, Jilske, Hutchinson, Peter J.A., Jacobs, Bram, Jankowski, Stefan, Jarrett, Mike, Jiang, Jiyao, Johnson, Faye, Jones, Kelly, Karan, Mladen, Kolias, Angelos G., Kompanje, Erwin, Kondziella, Daniel, Kornaropoulos, Evgenios, Koskinen, LarsOwe, Kovács, Noémi, Kowark, Ana, Lagares, Alfonso, Lanyon, Linda, Laureys, Steven, Lecky, Fiona, Ledoux, Didier, Lefering, Rolf, Legrand, Valerie, Lejeune, Aurelie, Levi, Leon, Lightfoot, Roger, Lingsma, Hester, Maas, Andrew I.R., CastañoLeón, Ana M., Maegele, Marc, Majdan, Marek, Manara, Alex, Martino, Costanza, Maréchal, Hugues, Mattern, Julia, McMahon, Catherine, Melegh, Béla, Menon, David K., Menovsky, Tomas, Mikolic, Ana, Misset, Benoit, Muraleedharan, Visakh, Murray, Lynnette, Negru, Ancuta, Nelson, David, Newcombe, Virginia F.J., Nieboer, Daan, Nyirádi, József, Olubukola, Otesile, Oresic, Matej, Ortolano, Fabrizio, Palotie, Aarno, Parizel, Paul M., Payen, JeanFrançois, Perera, Natascha, Perlbarg, Vincent, Persona, Paolo, Peul, Wilco, Piippo-Karjalainen, Anna, Pirinen, Matti, Pisica, Dana, Ples, Horia, Polinder, Suzanne, Pomposo, Inigo, Posti, Jussi P., Puybasset, Louis, Radoi, Andreea, Ragauskas, Arminas, Raj, Rahul, Rambadagalla, Malinka, Helmrich, Isabel Retel, Rhodes, Jonathan, Richardson, Sylvia, Richter, Sophie, Ripatti, Samuli, Rocka, Saulius, Roe, Cecilie, Roise, Olav, Rosenfeld, Jeffrey V., Rosenlund, Christina, Rosenthal, Guy, Rossaint, Rolf, Rossi, Sandra, Rueckert, Daniel, Rusnák, Martin, Sahuquillo, Juan, Sakowitz, Oliver, SanchezPorras, Renan, Sandor, Janos, Schäfer, Nadine, Schmidt, Silke, Schoechl, Herbert, Schoonman, Guus, Schou, Rico Frederik, Schwendenwein, Elisabeth, Sewalt, Charlie, Skandsen, Toril, Smielewski, Peter, Sorinola, Abayomi, Stamatakis, Emmanuel, Stanworth, Simon, Stevens, Robert, Stewart, William, Steyerberg, Ewout W., Stocchetti, Nino, Sundström, Nina, Takala, Riikka, Tamás, Viktória, Tamosuitis, Tomas, Taylor, Mark Steven, Ao, Braden Te, Tenovuo, Olli, Theadom, Alice, Thomas, Matt, Tibboel, Dick, Timmers, Marjolein, Tolias, Christos, Trapani, Tony, Tudora, Cristina Maria, Unterberg, Andreas, Vajkoczy, Peter, Vallance, Shirley, Valeinis, Egils, Vámos, Zoltán, van der Jagt, Mathieu, van der Steen, Gregory, van der Naalt, Joukje, van Dijck, Jeroen T.J.M., van Essen, Thomas A., Van Hecke, Wim, van Heugten, Caroline, Van Praag, Dominique, van Veen, Ernest, Vyvere, Thijs Vande, van Wijk, Roel P.J., Vargiolu, Alessia, Vega, Emmanuel, Velt, Kimberley, Verheyden, Jan, Vespa, Paul M., Vik, Anne, Vilcinis, Rimantas, Volovici, Victor, von Steinbüchel, Nicole, Voormolen, Daphne, Vulekovic, Petar, Wang, Kevin K.W., Wiegers, Eveline, Williams, Guy, Wilson, Lindsay, Winzeck, Stefan, Wolf, Stefan, Yang, Zhihui, Ylén, Peter, Younsi, Alexander, Zeiler, Frederick A., Zelinkova, Veronika, Ziverte, Agate, Zoerle, Tommaso, Izzy, Saef, Radmanesh, Farid, Frantzén, Janek, Katila, Ari, Maanpää, Henna-Rikka, Tallus, Jussi, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D., Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R., Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Keene, Dirk, Korley, Frederick K., Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Manley, Geoffrey T., Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B, Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Stein, Murray, Taylor, Sabrina, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Yue, John K., Yuh, Esther, Zafonte, Ross, Kals, Mart, Kunzmann, Kevin, Parodi, Livia, Anderson, Christopher D., Puccio, Ava M., Okonkwo, David O., Stein, Murray B., and Manley, Geoff T.
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- 2022
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23. Effect of frailty on 6-month outcome after traumatic brain injury: a multicentre cohort study with external validation
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Ackerlund, Cecilia, Adams, Hadie, Amrein, Krisztina, Andelic, Nada, Andreassen, Lasse, Anke, Audny, Antoni, Anna, Audibert, Gérard, Azouvi, Philippe, Azzolini, Maria Luisa, Bartels, Ronald, Barzó, Pál, Beauvais, Romuald, Beer, Ronny, Bellander, Bo-Michael, Belli, Antonio, Benali, Habib, Berardino, Maurizio, Beretta, Luigi, Blaabjerg, Morten, Bragge, Peter, Brazinova, Alexandra, Brinck, Vibeke, Brooker, Joanne, Brorsson, Camilla, Buki, Andras, Bullinger, Monika, Cabeleira, Manuel, Caccioppola, Alessio, Calappi, Emiliana, Calvi, Maria Rosa, Cameron, Peter, Carbayo Lozano, Guillermo, Carbonara, Marco, Castaño-León, Ana M., Cavallo, Simona, Chevallard, Giorgio, Chieregato, Arturo, Clusmann, Hans, Coburn, Mark Steven, Coles, Jonathan, Cooper, Jamie D., Correia, Marta, Covic, Amra, Curry, Nicola, Czeiter, Endre, Czosnyka, Marek, Dahyot-Fizelier, Claire, Dark, Paul, Dawes, Helen, De Keyser, Véronique, Degos, Vincent, Della Corte, Francesco, den Boogert, Hugo, Depreitere, Bart, Đilvesi, Đula, Dixit, Abhishek, Donoghue, Emma, Dreier, Jens, Dulière, Guy-Loup, Ercole, Ari, Esser, Patrick, Ezer, Erzsébet, Fabricius, Martin, Feigin, Valery L., Foks, Kelly, Frisvold, Shirin, Furmanov, Alex, Gagliardo, Pablo, Galanaud, Damien, Gantner, Dashiell, Gao, Guoyi, George, Pradeep, Ghuysen, Alexandre, Giga, Lelde, Glocker, Ben, Golubovic, Jagoš, Gomez, Pedro A., Gratz, Johannes, Gravesteijn, Benjamin, Grossi, Francesca, Gruen, Russell L., Gupta, Deepak, Haagsma, Juanita A., Haitsma, Iain, Helbok, Raimund, Helseth, Eirik, Horton, Lindsay, Huijben, Jilske, Hutchinson, Peter J., Jacobs, Bram, Jankowski, Stefan, Jarrett, Mike, Jiang, Ji-yao, Johnson, Faye, Jones, Kelly, Karan, Mladen, Kolias, Angelos G., Kompanje, Erwin, Kondziella, Daniel, Koskinen, Lars-Owe, Kovács, Noémi, Kowark, Ana, Lagares, Alfonso, Lanyon, Linda, Laureys, Steven, Ledoux, Didier, Lefering, Rolf, Legrand, Valerie, Lejeune, Aurelie, Levi, Leon, Lightfoot, Roger, Lingsma, Hester, Maegele, Marc, Majdan, Marek, Manara, Alex, Maréchal, Hugues, Martino, Costanza, Mattern, Julia, McFadyen, Charles, McMahon, Catherine, Melegh, Béla, Menon, David, Menovsky, Tomas, Mikolic, Ana, Misset, Benoit, Muraleedharan, Visakh, Murray, Lynnette, Negru, Ancuta, Nelson, David, Newcombe, Virginia, Nieboer, Daan, Nyirádi, József, Oresic, Matej, Ortolano, Fabrizio, Otesile, Olubukola, Palotie, Aarno, Parizel, Paul M., Payen, Jean-François, Perera, Natascha, Perlbarg, Vincent, Persona, Paolo, Peul, Wilco, Piippo-Karjalainen, Anna, Pirinen, Matti, Pisica, Dana, Ples, Horia, Polinder, Suzanne, Pomposo, Inigo, Posti, Jussi P., Puybasset, Louis, Radoi, Andreea, Ragauskas, Arminas, Raj, Rahul, Rambadagalla, Malinka, Rehorčíková, Veronika, Retel Helmrich, Isabel, Rhodes, Jonathan, Richardson, Sylvia, Richter, Sophie, Ripatti, Samuli, Rocka, Saulius, Roe, Cecilie, Roise, Olav, Rosenfeld, Jeffrey, Rosenlund, Christina, Rosenthal, Guy, Rossaint, Rolf, Rossi, Sandra, Rueckert, Daniel, Rusnák, Martin, Sahuquillo, Juan, Sakowitz, Oliver, Sanchez-Porras, Renan, Sandor, Janos, Schäfer, Nadine, Schmidt, Silke, Schoechl, Herbert, Schoonman, Guus, Schou, Rico Frederik, Schwendenwein, Elisabeth, Sewalt, Charlie, Singh, Ranjit D., Skandsen, Toril, Smielewski, Peter, Sorinola, Abayomi, Stamatakis, Emmanuel, Stanworth, Simon, Stevens, Robert, Stewart, William, Steyerberg, Ewout W., Stocchetti, Nino, Sundström, Nina, Takala, Riikka, Tamás, Viktória, Tamosuitis, Tomas, Taylor, Mark Steven, Te Ao, Braden, Tenovuo, Olli, Theadom, Alice, Thomas, Matt, Tibboel, Dick, Timmers, Marjolijn, Tolias, Christos, Trapani, Tony, Tudora, Cristina Maria, Unterberg, Andreas, Vajkoczy, Peter, Valeinis, Egils, Vallance, Shirley, Vámos, Zoltán, van der Jagt, Mathieu, van der Naalt, Joukje, Van der Steen, Gregory, van Dijck, Jeroen T.J.M., van Erp, Inge A., van Essen, Thomas A., Van Hecke, Wim, van Heugten, Caroline, Van Praag, Dominique, van Veen, Ernest, van Wijk, Roel, Vande Vyvere, Thijs, Vargiolu, Alessia, Vega, Emmanuel, Velt, Kimberley, Verheyden, Jan, Vespa, Paul M., Vik, Anne, Vilcinis, Rimantas, Volovici, Victor, von Steinbüchel, Nicole, Voormolen, Daphne, Vulekovic, Peter, Wang, Kevin K.W., Wiegers, Eveline, Williams, Guy, Wilson, Lindsay, Wolf, Stefan, Yang, Zhihui, Ylén, Peter, Younsi, Alexander, Zeiler, Frederick A., Ziverte, Agate, Zoerle, Tommaso, Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Barber, Jason, Bergin, Michael, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John, Crawford, Karen, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Dikmen, Sureyya, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, Venkata, Ferguson, Adam R, Foreman, Brandon, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Grandhi, Ramesh, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Huie, Russell, Jha, Ruchira, Keene, C. Dirk, Kitagawa, Ryan, Korley, Frederick, Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Levin, Harvey, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Mukherjee, Pratik, Nelson, Lindsay, Ngwenya, Laura B., Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Okonkwo, David, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rodgers, Richard Ben, Rosand, Jonathan, Rosenthal, Eric, Sander, Angelle, Sandsmark, Danielle, Sugar, Gabriella, Schneider, Andrea, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Sherer, Mark, Stein, Murray, Temkin, Nancy, Toga, Arthur, Torres-Espin, Abel, Valadka, Alex, Vassar, Mary, Wang, Kevin, Wang, Vincent, Yue, John K., Yuh, Esther, Zafonte, Ross, Galimberti, Stefania, Graziano, Francesca, Maas, Andrew I R, Isernia, Giulia, Lecky, Fiona, Jain, Sonia, Sun, Xiaoying, Gardner, Raquel C, Taylor, Sabrina R, Markowitz, Amy J, Manley, Geoffrey T, Valsecchi, Maria Grazia, Bellelli, Giuseppe, and Citerio, Giuseppe
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- 2022
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24. Smaller Regional Brain Volumes Predict Posttraumatic Stress Disorder at 3 Months After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
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Adeoye, Opeolu, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Barber, Jason, Bodien, Yelena, Bullock, M. Ross, Chesnut, Randall, Corrigan, John D., Crawford, Karen, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard, Feeser, V. Ramana, Ferguson, Adam R., Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel, Gaudette, Etienne, Goldman, Dana, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J. Claude, Hotz, Gillian, Jain, Sonia, Keene, C. Dirk, Korley, Frederick K., Kramer, Joel, Kreitzer, Natalie, Lindsell, Chris, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher, Martin, Alastair, McAllister, Thomas, Merchant, Randall, Ngwenya, Laura B., Noel, Florence, Nolan, Amber, Palacios, Eva, Perl, Daniel, Puccio, Ava, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle, Satris, Gabriella, Schnyer, David, Seabury, Seth, Toga, Arthur, Valadka, Alex, Vespa, Paul, Wang, Kevin, Yue, John K., Zafonte, Ross, Stein, Murray B., Yuh, Esther, Okonkwo, David O., Mac Donald, Christine L., Levin, Harvey, Giacino, Joseph T., Dikmen, Sureyya, Vassar, Mary J., Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Robertson, Claudia S., Nelson, Lindsay D., McCrea, Michael, Sun, Xiaoying, Temkin, Nancy, Taylor, Sabrina R., Markowitz, Amy J., Manley, Geoffrey T., and Mukherjee, Pratik
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- 2021
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25. Rates of Eye Care and Diabetic Eye Disease among Insured Patients with Newly Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetes
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Gange, William S., Xu, Benjamin Y., Lung, Khristina, Toy, Brian C., and Seabury, Seth A.
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- 2021
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26. Lifetime Economic Burden of Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis by Age at Diagnosis
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Lichtenstein, Gary R., Shahabi, Ahva, Seabury, Seth A., Lakdawalla, Darius N., Espinosa, Oliver Díaz, Green, Sarah, Brauer, Michelle, and Baldassano, Robert N.
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- 2020
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27. The effect of malpractice law on physician supply: Evidence from negligence-standard reforms
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Frakes, Michael D., Frank, Matthew B., and Seabury, Seth A.
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- 2020
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28. 922 Temporal, regional and hospital-type variation in EMTALA violations involving obstetric emergencies, 2018-2023
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Ahmed, Sameer, primary, Sangara, Rauvynne N., additional, Toomer, Carmen, additional, Sison, Olivia, additional, Reichert, Zach, additional, Nguyen, Brian, additional, Menchine, Michael, additional, Seabury, Seth A., additional, Terp, Sophie, additional, and Axeen, Sarah, additional
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- 2024
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29. Association between plasma GFAP concentrations and MRI abnormalities in patients with CT-negative traumatic brain injury in the TRACK-TBI cohort: a prospective multicentre study
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Adeoye, Opeolu M, Badjatia, Neeraj, Boase, Kim, Bodien, Yelena G, Bullock, Malcom R, Chesnut, Randall M, Corrigan, John D, Crawford, Karen, Dikmen, Sureyya S, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, Ellenbogen, Richard G, Feeser, Venkata, Foreman, Brandon, Gardner, Raquel C, Gaudette, Etienne, Giacino, Joseph T, Goldman, Dana P, Gonzalez, Luis, Gopinath, Shankar, Gullapalli, Rao, Hemphill, J C, Hotz, Gillian, Kramer, Joel H, Kreitzer, Natalie P, Levin, Harvey S, Lindsell, Christopher J, Machamer, Joan, Madden, Christopher J, Martin, Alastair J, McAllister, Thomas W, McCrea, Michael, Merchant, Randall, Nelson, Lindsay D, Noel, Florence, Palacios, Eva M, Perl, Daniel P, Puccio, Ava M, Rabinowitz, Miri, Robertson, Claudia S, Rosand, Jonathan, Sander, Angelle M, Satris, Gabriela G, Schnyer, David M, Seabury, Seth A, Sherer, Mark, Stein, Murray B, Temkin, Nancy R, Toga, Arthur W, Valadka, Alex B, Vassar, Mary J, Vespa, Paul M, Yuh, Esther L, Zafonte, Ross, Yue, John K, Korley, Frederick K, Winkler, Ethan A, Sun, Xiaoying, Puffer, Ross C, Deng, Hansen, Choy, Winward, Chandra, Ankush, Taylor, Sabrina R, Ferguson, Adam R, Huie, J Russell, Mukherjee, Pratik, Wang, Kevin K W, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, Okonkwo, David O, Jain, Sonia, and Manley, Geoffrey T
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- 2019
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30. Association of Intensive Lifestyle Intervention for Type 2 Diabetes With Labor Market Outcomes
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Huckfeldt, Peter J., primary, Yu, Jeffrey C., additional, O’Leary, Paul K., additional, Harada, Ann S. M., additional, Pajewski, Nicholas M., additional, Frenier, Chris, additional, Espeland, Mark A., additional, Peters, Anne, additional, Bancks, Michael P., additional, Seabury, Seth A., additional, and Goldman, Dana P., additional
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- 2023
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31. Medical Care Spending and Labor Market Outcomes : Evidence from Workers’ Compensation Reforms
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Powell, David and Seabury, Seth
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- 2018
32. The Frequency and Economic Impact of Musculoskeletal Disorders for California Firefighters: Trends and Outcomes over the Past Decade
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Dworsky, Michael, primary, Seabury, Seth, primary, and Broten, Nicholas, primary
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- 2020
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33. Emergency Department Contribution to the Prescription Opioid Epidemic
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Axeen, Sarah, Seabury, Seth A., and Menchine, Michael
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- 2018
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34. The impact of self- and physician-administered cancer treatment on work productivity and healthcare utilization
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Seabury, Seth A., Frasco, Melissa A., van Eijndhoven, Emma, Sison, Steve, and Zacker, Christopher
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- 2018
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35. Quality of Care for Work-Associated Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
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Nuckols, Teryl, Conlon, Craig, Robbins, Michael, Dworsky, Michael, Lai, Julie, Roth, Carol P., Levitan, Barbara, Seabury, Seth, Seelam, Rachana, and Asch, Steven M.
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- 2017
36. Life After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury: Widespread Structural Brain Changes Associated With Psychological Distress Revealed With Multimodal Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Sibilia, Francesca, primary, Custer, Rachel M., additional, Irimia, Andrei, additional, Sepehrband, Farshid, additional, Toga, Arthur W., additional, Cabeen, Ryan P., additional, Adeoye, Opeolu, additional, Badjatia, Neeraj, additional, Bodien, Yelena, additional, Bullock, M. Ross, additional, Chesnut, Randall, additional, Corrigan, John D., additional, Crawford, Karen, additional, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, additional, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, additional, Ellenbogen, Richard, additional, Feeser, V. Ramana, additional, Ferguson, Adam R., additional, Foreman, Brandon, additional, Gardner, Raquel, additional, Gaudette, Etienne, additional, Goldman, Dana, additional, Gonzalez, Luis, additional, Gopinath, Shankar, additional, Gullapalli, Rao, additional, Hemphill, J. Claude, additional, Hotz, Gillian, additional, Korley, Frederick K., additional, Kramer, Joel, additional, Kreitzer, Natalie, additional, Lindsell, Chris, additional, Machamer, Joan, additional, Madden, Christopher, additional, Martin, Alastair, additional, McAllister, Thomas, additional, Merchant, Randall, additional, Ngwenya, Laura B., additional, Noel, Florence, additional, Okonkwo, David, additional, Palacios, Eva, additional, Perl, Daniel, additional, Puccio, Ava, additional, Rabinowitz, Miri, additional, Robertson, Claudia, additional, Rosand, Jonathan, additional, Sander, Angelle, additional, Satris, Gabriella, additional, Schnyer, David, additional, Seabury, Seth, additional, Taylor, Sabrina, additional, Toga, Arthur, additional, Valadka, Alex, additional, Vassar, Mary, additional, Vespa, Paul, additional, Wang, Kevin, additional, Yue, John K., additional, and Zafonte, Ross, additional
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- 2023
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37. The Effect of Utilization Review on Emergency Department Operations
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Desai, Shoma, Gruber, Phillip F., Eiting, Erick, Seabury, Seth A., Mack, Wendy J., Voyageur, Christian, Vasquez, Veronica, Kim, Hyung T., and Terp, Sophie
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- 2017
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38. How effective are employer return to work programs?
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McLaren, Christopher F., Reville, Robert T., and Seabury, Seth A.
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- 2017
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39. Enforcement of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, 2005 to 2014
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Terp, Sophie, Seabury, Seth A., Arora, Sanjay, Eads, Andrew, Lam, Chun Nok, and Menchine, Michael
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- 2017
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40. The Association Between Hospital Characteristics and Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act Citation Events
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Terp, Sophie, Seabury, Seth A., Axeen, Sarah, Pines, Jesse M., Lam, Chun Nok, Arientyl, Vanessa, and Menchine, Michael
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- 2020
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41. Chemotherapy Treatment Costs and Clinical Outcomes of Colon Cancer in the U.S. Military Health System’s Direct and Private Sector Care Settings
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Eaglehouse, Yvonne L, primary, Seabury, Seth A, additional, Aljehani, Mayada, additional, Koehlmoos, Tracey, additional, Lee, Jerry S H, additional, Shriver, Craig D, additional, and Zhu, Kangmin, additional
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- 2023
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42. Diagnostic performance of point-of-care ubiquitin carboxy-terminal Hydrolase-L1 assay in distinguishing imaging abnormalities in traumatic brain injury: A TRACK-TBI cohort study
- Author
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Wang, Kevin K., primary, Munoz-Pareja, Jennifer C., additional, Lautenslager, Lauren A., additional, Tyndall, J. Adrian, additional, Yang, Zhihui, additional, Kerrigan, Maria R., additional, Diaz-Arrastia, Ramon, additional, Korley, Frederick K., additional, Okonkwo, David, additional, Puccio, Ava M., additional, Yue, John K., additional, Taylor, Sabrina R., additional, Mukherjee, Pratik, additional, Yuh, Esther L., additional, Temkin, Nancy R., additional, Robertson, Claudia S., additional, Sun, Xiaoying, additional, Jain, Sonia, additional, Markowitz, Amy J., additional, Manley, Geoffrey T., additional, Adeoye, Opeolu, additional, Badjatia, Neeraj, additional, Boase, Kim, additional, Bodien, Yelena, additional, Bullock, M. Ross, additional, Chesnut, Randall, additional, Corrigan, John D., additional, Crawford, Karen, additional, Dikmen, Sureyya, additional, Duhaime, Ann-Christine, additional, Ellenbogen, Richard, additional, Feeser, V Ramana, additional, Ferguson, Adam R., additional, Foreman, Brandon, additional, Gardner, Raquel, additional, Gaudette, Etienne, additional, Giacino, Joseph, additional, Gonzalez, Luis, additional, Gopinath, Shankar, additional, Gullapalli, Rao, additional, Hemphill, J Claude, additional, Hotz, Gillian, additional, Kramer, Joel, additional, Kreitzer, Natalie, additional, Levin, Harvey, additional, Lindsell, Chris, additional, Machamer, Joan, additional, Madden, Christopher, additional, Martin, Alastair, additional, McAllister, Thomas, additional, McCrea, Michael, additional, Merchant, Randall, additional, Nelson, Lindsay, additional, Ngwenya, Laura, additional, Palacios, Eva, additional, Perl, Daniel, additional, Rabinowitz, Miri, additional, Rosand, Jonathan, additional, Sander, Angelle, additional, Satris, Gabriella, additional, Schnyer, David, additional, Seabury, Seth, additional, Toga, Arthur, additional, Valadka, Alex, additional, Vassar, Mary, additional, Vespa, Paul, additional, and Zafonte, Ross, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Broader Economic Value of Treatment for Diabetic Macular Edema
- Author
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Mulligan, Karen, primary, Kim, Jaehong, additional, Tysinger, Bryan, additional, Blim, Jill, additional, Emerson, Geoffrey, additional, Ferrone, Philip J., additional, Kim, Judy E., additional, Seabury, Seth, additional, and Hahn, Paul, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Potentially Inappropriate Medication Use in Community-Dwelling Older Adults Living with Dementia
- Author
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Bae-Shaaw, Yuna H., primary, Shier, Victoria, additional, Sood, Neeraj, additional, Seabury, Seth A., additional, and Joyce, Geoffrey, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Evaluating the economic burden of psoriasis in the United States
- Author
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Vanderpuye-Orgle, Jacqueline, Zhao, Yang, Lu, Jackie, Shrestha, Anshu, Sexton, Alison, Seabury, Seth, and Lebwohl, Mark
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Tort reform and physician labor supply: A review of the evidence
- Author
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Helland, Eric and Seabury, Seth A.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Impact of the Use of Regional Poison Control Centers in an Urban EMS Dispatch System
- Author
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Levine, Michael, Flores, John, Seabury, Seth A., Sanko, Stephen, and Eckstein, Marc
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Authors’ reply to Barbieri and Kovarik, Mariani, and Waxman and Kanzaria
- Author
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Jena, Anupam B, Schoemaker, Lena, Bhattacharya, Jay, and Seabury, Seth A
- Published
- 2015
49. Physician spending and subsequent risk of malpractice claims : observational study
- Author
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Jena, Anupam B, Schoemaker, Lena, Bhattacharya, Jay, and Seabury, Seth A
- Published
- 2015
50. Do Physicians Respond to Liability Standards?
- Author
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Frakes, Michael, Frank, Matthew B., and Seabury, Seth
- Published
- 2015
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