314 results on '"Severe P"'
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2. Exploring the impact of establishment mode on intangible strategic asset creation in Chinese MNEs: springboard cross-border strategic asset-seeking M&As versus greenfield R&D-related FDI projects
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Sutherland, Dylan, Anderson, John, Wu, Ludan, and Severe, Sean
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- 2024
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3. Persistent mucus plugs in proximal airways are consequential for airflow limitation in asthma
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Huang, Brendan K, Elicker, Brett M, Henry, Travis S, Kallianos, Kimberly G, Hahn, Lewis D, Tang, Monica, Heng, Franklin, McCulloch, Charles E, Bhakta, Nirav R, Majumdar, Sharmila, Choi, Jiwoong, Denlinger, Loren C, Fain, Sean B, Hastie, Annette T, Hoffman, Eric A, Israel, Elliot, Jarjour, Nizar N, Levy, Bruce D, Mauger, Dave T, Sumino, Kaharu, Wenzel, Sally E, Castro, Mario, Woodruff, Prescott G, Fahy, John V, and Program, for the NHLBI Severe Asthma Research
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Lung ,Rare Diseases ,Asthma ,Respiratory ,Humans ,Bronchoscopy ,Mucus ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Clinical practice ,Diagnostic imaging ,Pulmonology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BACKGROUNDInformation about the size, airway location, and longitudinal behavior of mucus plugs in asthma is needed to understand their role in mechanisms of airflow obstruction and to rationally design muco-active treatments.METHODSCT lung scans from 57 patients with asthma were analyzed to quantify mucus plug size and airway location, and paired CT scans obtained 3 years apart were analyzed to determine plug behavior over time. Radiologist annotations of mucus plugs were incorporated in an image-processing pipeline to generate size and location information that was related to measures of airflow.RESULTSThe length distribution of 778 annotated mucus plugs was multimodal, and a 12 mm length defined short ("stubby", ≤12 mm) and long ("stringy", >12 mm) plug phenotypes. High mucus plug burden was disproportionately attributable to stringy mucus plugs. Mucus plugs localized predominantly to airway generations 6-9, and 47% of plugs in baseline scans persisted in the same airway for 3 years and fluctuated in length and volume. Mucus plugs in larger proximal generations had greater effects on spirometry measures than plugs in smaller distal generations, and a model of airflow that estimates the increased airway resistance attributable to plugs predicted a greater effect for proximal generations and more numerous mucus plugs.CONCLUSIONPersistent mucus plugs in proximal airway generations occur in asthma and demonstrate a stochastic process of formation and resolution over time. Proximal airway mucus plugs are consequential for airflow and are in locations amenable to treatment by inhaled muco-active drugs or bronchoscopy.TRIAL REGISTRATIONClinicaltrials.gov; NCT01718197, NCT01606826, NCT01750411, NCT01761058, NCT01761630, NCT01716494, and NCT01760915.FUNDINGAstraZeneca, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi-Genzyme-Regeneron, and TEVA provided financial support for study activities at the Coordinating and Clinical Centers beyond the third year of patient follow-up. These companies had no role in study design or data analysis, and the only restriction on the funds was that they be used to support the SARP initiative.
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- 2024
4. Factors That Determine Student Persistence in Information Technology Programs
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Nancy Severe-Barnett
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There was a recognized high rate of students enrolled in technology programs who did not graduate college. Scholars who had studied predictors of college completion surmised there were several behavioral traits associated with a student achieving their college objectives through graduation; one of those factors was persistence. Persistence, the unyielding continuance to succeed despite any challenge, was one of the major factors in college completion. Traditionally, research on student persistence focused on the predictors of dropout, with less emphasis on why students changed programs to non-technology programs or why they left the technology program or college entirely. This study was conducted at a community college to examine personal and institutional factors that caused the continual decrease of program completion and graduation rate in postsecondary technology programs. This research explored coping mechanisms that technology students 18-years and older indicated were methods to help them persist in school. In addition, this study examined factors such as motivation, emotion, and economic variables that may have accounted for a lack of persistence. The methodology was a qualitative format which examined the persistence factors such as gender, age, economics, educational status, and many other factors that may have contributed to why students were not completing their technology program and not progressing in their studies, thereby stagnating their personal and financial growth. The findings of this research can be used to develop strategic initiatives that might improve student persistence. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2024
5. The Impact of Gender Roles and Previous Exposure on Major Choice, Perceived Competence, and Belonging: A Qualitative Study of Students in Computer Science and Bioinformatics Classes
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Amanda A. Barrett, Colin T. Smith, Courtni H. Hafen, Emilee Severe, and Elizabeth G. Bailey
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Background and Context: While biology has strong female representation, computer science is the least gender equitable of the STEM fields. A better understanding of the barriers that keep women out of computational fields will help overcome those barriers to create a more diverse workforce. Objective: We investigated the complexities that influence students' major choice and their sense of belonging. We were particularly interested in students adjacent to computer science and differences by gender. Method: We conducted semi-structured interviews of nineteen students from computer science or bioinformatics courses. We used inductive thematic analysis that included iterative readings of interview transcripts, line-by-line coding, and final theme selection. Findings: Most students described pressures stemming from traditional gender roles as they chose their major, but specific pressures differed by gender. Men were more likely to report early exposure to their major field, and women noted feeling behind without those early experiences. This hurt the women's sense of belonging, as did having few female peers. Implications: Increasing early exposure to coding may increase women's representation and sense of belonging in computational fields. Women from contexts with emphasis on traditional gender roles may be drawn to computational fields if they see opportunities for flexible positions.
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- 2024
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6. Enhancing Resident Education and Expanding Care with Group Medical Visits/Shared Medical Appointments
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Parikh, Sagar V., Taubman, Danielle S., Severe, Jennifer, and Thompson, Stephen
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- 2024
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7. Severe malaria intervention status in Nigeria: workshop meeting report
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Emmanuel Shekarau, Miriam Uzoanya, Nnenna Ogbulafor, and Severe Malaria Working Group
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Severe malaria ,Pre-referral intervention ,Guidelines ,Referral system ,Nigeria ,Arctic medicine. Tropical medicine ,RC955-962 ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Nigeria accounts for 39% of global malaria deaths in children under 5 years of age and the effective management of severe malaria is a health priority. The Annual Nigeria Severe Malaria Stakeholders Workshop, held on the 5–6th of July 2023 in Abuja, Nigeria brought together representatives from 36 States, the Federal Capital Territory, and other key stakeholders to address the management of severe malaria across all levels of the health service. Aims were to provide updates and review progress on severe malaria activities, the burden of disease, commodity logistics management, and pre-referral national policy implementation as well as to disseminate research findings. Two roundtable discussions were conducted to identify the challenges, barriers, and facilitators to the effective management of severe malaria in Nigeria. A key challenge was the limited awareness of updated guidelines and strategic documents among frontline health workers, leading to the misuse of non-recommended medications, like α-β-arteether. Further to this, the need to ensure appropriate treatments during pregnancy and the adoption of the WHO directive on the use of rectal artesunate were highlighted. To address these issues, innovative dissemination channels for guideline awareness were recommended and collaboration with professional organizations to enrich training materials emphasized. Other areas for improvement considered the processes involved in severe malaria management, with insufficient coordination among government agencies, inadequate referral linkages, and inadequate human resources identified as barriers. Recommendations focused on practical measures to minimize wastage of injectable artesunate, enhance data management through scaling up electronic medical records, and strengthen referral systems. The extension of severe malaria surveillance to patients older than 5 years was also proposed. To deliver these changes, actionable plans for sustained recruitment and training are needed, as well as committed advocacy at all levels to ensure timely fund disbursement and institutional support. A key overarching theme from the workshop was that a multifaceted approach was needed to address severe malaria in Nigeria, emphasizing collaborative efforts, evidence-based practices, and strategic resource allocation. With the largest malaria burden globally, the potential impact of addressing the challenges of severe malaria management in Nigeria cannot be understated and must be urgently addressed.
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- 2024
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8. Same-day testing with initiation of antiretroviral therapy or tuberculosis treatment versus standard care for persons presenting with tuberculosis symptoms at HIV diagnosis: A randomized open-label trial from Haiti.
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Dorvil, Nancy, Rivera, Vanessa R, Riviere, Cynthia, Berman, Richard, Severe, Patrice, Bang, Heejung, Lavoile, Kerlyne, Devieux, Jessy G, Faustin, Mikerlyne, Saintyl, Giovanni, Mendicuti, Maria Duran, Pierre, Samuel, Apollon, Alexandra, Dumond, Emelyne, Forestal, Guyrlaine Pierre Louis, Rouzier, Vanessa, Marcelin, Adias, McNairy, Margaret L, Walsh, Kathleen F, Dupnik, Kathryn, Reif, Lindsey K, Byrne, Anthony L, Bousleiman, Stephanie, Orvis, Eli, Joseph, Patrice, Cremieux, Pierre-Yves, Pape, Jean William, and Koenig, Serena P
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Humans ,Tuberculosis ,HIV Infections ,RNA ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Adult ,Haiti ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Infectious Diseases ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Mental Health ,Pediatric AIDS ,Behavioral and Social Science ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundSame-day HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation is being widely implemented. However, the optimal timing of ART among patients with tuberculosis (TB) symptoms is unknown. We hypothesized that same-day treatment (TB treatment for those diagnosed with TB; ART for those not diagnosed with TB) would be superior to standard care in this population.Methods and findingsWe conducted an open-label trial among adults with TB symptoms at initial HIV diagnosis at GHESKIO in Haiti; participants were recruited and randomized on the same day. Participants were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to same-day treatment (same-day TB testing with same-day TB treatment if TB diagnosed; same-day ART if TB not diagnosed) versus standard care (initiating TB treatment within 7 days and delaying ART to day 7 if TB not diagnosed). In both groups, ART was initiated 2 weeks after TB treatment. The primary outcome was retention in care with 48-week HIV-1 RNA
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- 2023
9. Continuity of care during severe civil unrest with a model of community-based HIV care: a retrospective cohort study from HaitiResearch in context
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Patrice Joseph, Rochelle Sun, Colette Guiteau, Marc Antoine Jean Juste, Nancy Dorvil, Stalz Vilbrun, Rode Secours, Karine Severe, Parnel Raymond, Fernande Cetoute, Wilnide Jean Baptiste, Guyrlaine Forestal, Stanley Cadet, Adias Marcelin, Marie Marcelle Deschamps, Margaret L. McNairy, Akanksha Dua, Hoi Ching Cheung, Jean William Pape, and Serena P. Koenig
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Community-based HIV care ,HIV service delivery in civil unrest ,Differentiated service delivery models ,Health service provision during conflict ,Health systems resilience ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: There are limited data on the effectiveness of differentiated service delivery (DSD) for HIV care during sociopolitical turmoil. We assessed outcomes with a DSD model of care that includes patient choice between community-based antiretroviral therapy (ART) centres, home-based ART dispensing, or facility-based care at GHESKIO clinic during a period of severe civil unrest in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Methods: This retrospective analysis included data on patients with at least one HIV visit at GHESKIO between May 1, 2019, and December 31, 2021. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to assess predictors of attending ≥1 community visit during the study period, and failure to attend timely visits. HIV-1 RNA test results were reported among patients who had been ART for ≥3 months at last visit. Findings: Of the 18,625 patients included in the analysis, 9659 (51.9%) attended at least one community visit. The proportion of community visits ranged from 0.3% (2019) to 44.1% (2021). Predictors of ≥1 community visit included male sex (aOR: 1.13; 95% CI: 1.06, 1.20), secondary education (aOR: 1.07; 95% CI: 1.01, 1.14), income > $USD 1.00/day (aOR: 1.24; 95% CI: 1.14, 1.35), longer duration on ART (aOR: 1.08 per additional year; 95% CI: 1.07, 1.09), and residence in Carrefour/Gressier (p
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- 2024
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10. Treating asthma in the time of COVID
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Carr, Tara F, Fajt, Merritt L, Kraft, Monica, Phipatanakul, Wanda, Szefler, Stanley J, Zeki, Amir A, Peden, David B, White, Steven R, and Group, Precision Interventions for Severe and or Exacerbation-Prone Asthma Network Research
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Patient Safety ,Asthma ,Lung ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Pandemics ,COVID-19 ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,ritonavir ,salmeterol ,cytochrome P450 ,interaction ,long-acting beta-adrenergic agonist ,corticosteroids ,Precision Interventions for Severe and/or Exacerbation-Prone Asthma Network Research Group ,CYP3A4 ,Immunology ,Allergy - Abstract
The Precision Interventions for Severe and/or Exacerbation-Prone Asthma clinical trials network is actively assessing novel treatments for severe asthma during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic and has needed to adapt to various clinical dilemmas posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Pharmacologic interactions between established asthma therapies and novel drug interventions for COVID-19 infection, including antivirals, biologics, and vaccines, have emerged as a critical and unanticipated issue in the clinical care of asthma. In particular, impaired metabolism of some long-acting beta-2 agonists by the cytochrome P4503A4 enzyme in the setting of antiviral treatment using ritonavir-boosted nirmatrelvir (NVM/r, brand name Paxlovid) may increase risk for adverse cardiovascular events. Although available data have documented the potential for such interactions, these issues are largely unappreciated by clinicians who treat asthma, or those dispensing COVID-19 interventions in patients who happen to have asthma. Because these drug-drug interactions have not previously been relevant to patient care, clinicians have had no guidance on management strategies to reduce potentially serious interactions between treatments for asthma and COVID-19. The Precision Interventions for Severe and/or Exacerbation-Prone Asthma network considered the available literature and product information, and herein share our considerations and plans for treating asthma within the context of these novel COVID-19-related therapies.
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- 2023
11. COVID-19 Across Pandemic Variant Periods: The Severe Acute Respiratory Infection-Preparedness (SARI-PREP) Study
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Vikramjit Mukherjee, MD, FRCP, Radu Postelnicu, MD, Chelsie Parker, MS, Patrick S. Rivers, PhD, George L. Anesi, MD, MSCE, MBE, Adair Andrews, RN, MATD, Erin Ables, MA, Eric D. Morrell, MD, MA, David M. Brett-Major, MD, MPH, M. Jana Broadhurst, MD, PhD, J. Perren Cobb, MD, Amy Irwin, DNP, RN, Christopher J. Kratochvil, MD, Kelsey Krolikowski, BA, Vishakha K. Kumar, MD, MBA, Douglas P. Landsittel, PhD, Richard A. Lee, MD, Janice M. Liebler, MD, Leopoldo N. Segal, MD, Jonathan E. Sevransky, MD, MHS, Avantika Srivastava, MS, Timothy M. Uyeki, MD, MPH, Mark M. Wurfel, MD, PhD, David Wyles, MD, Laura E. Evans, MD, MSc, Karen Lutrick, PhD, Pavan K. Bhatraju, MD, MSc, and on behalf of the Severe Acute Respiratory Infection-Preparedness (SARI-PREP) Study Group
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Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
IMPORTANCE:. The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic has evolved through multiple phases in the United States, with significant differences in patient centered outcomes with improvements in hospital strain, medical countermeasures, and overall understanding of the disease. We describe how patient characteristics changed and care progressed over the various pandemic phases; we also emphasize the need for an ongoing clinical network to improve the understanding of known and novel respiratory viral diseases. OBJECTIVES:. To describe how patient characteristics and care evolved across the various COVID-19 pandemic periods in those hospitalized with viral severe acute respiratory infection (SARI). DESIGN:. Severe Acute Respiratory Infection-Preparedness (SARI-PREP) is a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Foundation-funded, Society of Critical Care Medicine Discovery-housed, longitudinal multicenter cohort study of viral pneumonia. We defined SARI patients as those hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed respiratory viral infection and an acute syndrome of fever, cough, and radiographic infiltrates or hypoxemia. We collected patient-level data including demographic characteristics, comorbidities, acute physiologic measures, serum and respiratory specimens, therapeutics, and outcomes. Outcomes were described across four pandemic variant periods based on a SARS-CoV-2 sequenced subsample: pre-Delta, Delta, Omicron BA.1, and Omicron post-BA.1. SETTING:. Multicenter cohort of adult patients admitted to an acute care ward or ICU from seven hospitals representing diverse geographic regions across the United States. PARTICIPANTS:. Patients with SARI caused by infection with respiratory viruses. MAIN OUTCOMES AND RESULTS:. Eight hundred seventy-four adult patients with SARI were enrolled at seven study hospitals between March 2020 and April 2023. Most patients (780, 89%) had SARS-CoV-2 infection. Across the COVID-19 cohort, median age was 60 years (interquartile range, 48.0–71.0 yr) and 66% were male. Almost half (430, 49%) of the study population belonged to underserved communities. Most patients (76.5%) were admitted to the ICU, 52.5% received mechanical ventilation, and observed hospital mortality was 25.5%. As the pandemic progressed, we observed decreases in ICU utilization (94% to 58%), hospital length of stay (median, 26.0 to 8.5 d), and hospital mortality (32% to 12%), while the number of comorbid conditions increased. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE:. We describe increasing comorbidities but improved outcomes across pandemic variant periods, in the setting of multiple factors, including evolving care delivery, countermeasures, and viral variants. An understanding of patient-level factors may inform treatment options for subsequent variants and future novel pathogens.
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- 2024
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12. The impact of earthquakes in Latin America on the continuity of HIV care: A retrospective observational cohort study
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Chelsea A. Gorsline, Sarah C. Lotspeich, Pablo F. Belaunzarán-Zamudio, Fernando Mejia, Claudia P. Cortes, Brenda Crabtree-Ramírez, Damocles Patrice Severe, Vanessa Rouzier, Catherine C. McGowan, and Peter F. Rebeiro
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AIDS ,Earthquake ,GIS ,HIV ,Natural disaster ,Spatial analysis ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Objectives: As earthquakes occur frequently in Latin America and can cause significant disruptions in HIV care, we sought to analyze patterns of HIV care for adults at Latin American clinical sites experiencing a significant earthquake within the past two decades. Study design: Retrospective clinical cohort study. Methods: Adults receiving HIV care at sites experiencing at least a “moderate intensity” (Modified Mercalli scale) earthquake in the Caribbean, Central and South America network for HIV epidemiology (CCASAnet) contributed data from 2003 to 2017. Interrupted Time Series models were fit with discontinuities at site-specific earthquake dates (Sept. 16, 2015 in Chile; Apr. 18, 2014 and Sept. 19, 2017 in Mexico; and Aug. 15, 2007 in Peru) to assess clinical visit, CD4 measure, viral load lab, and ART initiation rates 3- and 6-months after versus before earthquakes. Results: Comparing post-to pre-earthquake periods, there was a sharp drop in median visit (incidence rate ratio [IRR] = 0.79, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.68–0.91) and viral load lab (IRR = 0.78, 95% CI: 0.62–0.99) rates per week, using a 3-month window. CD4 measurement rates also decreased (IRR = 0.43; 95% CI: 0.37–0.51), though only using a 6-month window. Conclusions: Given that earthquakes occur frequently in Latin America, disaster preparedness plans must be more broadly implemented to avoid disruptions in HIV care and attendant poor outcomes.
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- 2024
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13. Implementation of NUDT15 Genotyping to Prevent Azathioprine‐Induced Leukopenia for Patients With Autoimmune Disorders in Chinese Population
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Wang, Chuang‐Wei, Chi, Min‐Hui, Tsai, Tsen‐Fang, Yu, Kuang‐Hui, Kao, Hsiao‐Wen, Chen, Hsiang‐Cheng, Chen, Chun‐Bing, Lu, Chun‐Wei, Chen, Wei‐Ti, Chang, Ya‐Ching, Chang, Chih‐Jung, Chang, Yun‐Ting, Wu, Yeong‐Jian Jan, Chang, Chee‐Jen, Huang, Yu Huei, Ng, Chau‐Yee, Huang, Po‐Wei, Lin, Yu‐Jr, Hui, Rosaline Chung‐Yee, Chung, Wen‐Hung, and Consortium, Taiwan Asian Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reaction
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Human Genome ,Prevention ,Genetics ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Azathioprine ,Prospective Studies ,Genotype ,Pyrophosphatases ,Leukopenia ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,Autoimmune Diseases ,Thrombocytopenia ,Methyltransferases ,Taiwan/Asian Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reaction Consortium ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Pharmacology & Pharmacy ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
Azathioprine (AZA) is commonly used for many autoimmune disorders; however, the limitation of its clinical use is due to potential toxicities, including severe leukopenia. Recent studies have identified genetic NUDT15 variants strongly associated with AZA-induced leukopenia in Asian patients. This study aimed to investigate the strength of above genetic association and evaluate the usefulness of prospective screening of the NUDT15 variants to prevent AZA-induced leukopenia in Chinese patients. AZA-induced leukopenia in patients with autoimmune disorders were enrolled from multiple medical centers in Taiwan/China between 2012 and 2017 to determine the strength of genetic association of NUDT15 or TPMT variants by whole exome sequencing (WES). Furthermore, a prospective study was conducted between 2018 and 2021 to investigate the incidence of AZA-induced leukopenia with and without genetic screening. The WES result showed the genetic variants of NUDT15 R139C (rs116855232) (P = 3.7 × 10-25 , odds ratio (OR) = 21.7, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) = 12.1-38.8) and NUDT15 rs746071566 (P = 4.2 × 10-9 , OR = 7.1, 95% CI = 3.7-13.7), but not TPMT, were associated with AZA-induced leukopenia and NUDT15 R139C variant shows the highest sensitivity with 92.5%. Furthermore, the targeted screening of 1,013 participants for NUDT15 R139C enabled those identified as carriers to use alternative immunosuppressants. This strategy resulted in a significant decrease in the incidence of AZA-induced leukopenia compared with historical incidence (incidence rate = from 7.6% decreased to 0.4%; P = 9.3 × 10-20 ). In conclusion, the NUDT15 R139C variant was strongly associated with AZA-induced leukopenia in Chinese patients. The genetic screening of NUDT15 R139C followed by use of alternative immunosuppressants in identified carriers effectively decreased the incidence of AZA leukopenia for patients with autoimmune disorders.
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- 2022
14. Risk factors for prolonged mechanical ventilation in critically ill patients with influenza-related acute respiratory distress syndrome
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Pai-Chi Hsu, Yi-Tsung Lin, Kuo-Chin Kao, Chung-Kan Peng, Chau-Chyun Sheu, Shinn-Jye Liang, Ming-Cheng Chan, Hao-Chien Wang, Yu-Mu Chen, Wei-Chih Chen, Kuang-Yao Yang, and TSIRC (Taiwan Severe Influenza Research Consortium)
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Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Patients with influenza-related acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are critically ill and require mechanical ventilation (MV) support. Prolonged mechanical ventilation (PMV) is often seen in these cases and the optimal management strategy is not established. This study aimed to investigate risk factors for PMV and factors related to weaning failure in these patients. Methods This retrospective cohort study was conducted by eight medical centers in Taiwan. All patients in the intensive care unit with virology-proven influenza-related ARDS requiring invasive MV from January 1 to March 31, 2016, were included. Demographic data, critical illness data and clinical outcomes were collected and analyzed. PMV is defined as mechanical ventilation use for more than 21 days. Results There were 263 patients with influenza-related ARDS requiring invasive MV enrolled during the study period. Seventy-eight patients had PMV. The final weaning rate was 68.8% during 60 days of observation. The mortality rate in PMV group was 39.7%. Risk factors for PMV were body mass index (BMI) > 25 (kg/m2) [odds ratio (OR) 2.087; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.006–4.329], extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) use (OR 6.181; 95% CI 2.338–16.336), combined bacterial pneumonia (OR 4.115; 95% CI 2.002–8.456) and neuromuscular blockade use over 48 h (OR 2.8; 95% CI 1.334–5.879). In addition, risk factors for weaning failure in PMV patients were ECMO (OR 5.05; 95% CI 1.75–14.58) use and bacteremia (OR 3.91; 95% CI 1.20–12.69). Conclusions Patients with influenza-related ARDS and PMV have a high mortality rate. Risk factors for PMV include BMI > 25, ECMO use, combined bacterial pneumonia and neuromuscular blockade use over 48 h. In addition, ECMO use and bacteremia predict unsuccessful weaning in PMV patients.
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- 2024
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15. Spectrum of prevalent cardiovascular diseases in urban Port-au-Prince, Haiti: a population-based cross-sectional studyResearch in context
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Lily D. Yan, Rodney Sufra, Reichling St Sauveur, Marie Christine Jean-Pierre, Alexandra Apollon, Rodolphe Malebranche, Michel Théard, Gerard Pierre, Jessy Dévieux, Jennifer Lau, Nour Mourra, Nicholas L.S. Roberts, Rehana Rasul, Denis Nash, Altaf M. Pirmohamed, Richard B. Devereux, Myung Hee Lee, Gene F. Kwan, Monika M. Safford, Lauré Adrien, Jean Patrick Alfred, Marie Deschamps, Patrice Severe, Daniel W. Fitzgerald, Jean W. Pape, Vanessa Rouzier, Margaret L. McNairy, Jean Lookens Pierre, Miranda Metz, Caleigh Smith, Shalom Sabwa, Adrienne Clermont, and Monika Safford
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Cardiovascular disease ,Hypertension ,Heart failure ,Stroke ,Myocardial infarction ,Cohort ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Eighty percent of global cardiovascular disease (CVD) is projected to occur in low- and middle -income countries (LMICs), yet local epidemiological data are scarce. We provide the first population-based, adjudicated CVD prevalence estimates in Port-au-Prince, Haiti to describe the spectrum of heart disease and investigate associated risk factors. Methods: Demographic, medical history, clinical, imaging and laboratory data were collected among adults recruited using multistage random sampling from 2019 to 2021. Prevalent CVD (heart failure, stroke, ischemic disease) were adjudicated using epidemiological criteria similar to international cohorts. Multivariable Poisson regressions assessed relationships between risk factors and prevalent CVD. Findings: Among 3003 participants, median age was 40 years, 58.1% were female, 70.2% reported income
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- 2024
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16. Variation in Early Management Practices in Moderate-to-Severe ARDS in the United States The Severe ARDS: Generating Evidence Study
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Qadir, Nida, Bartz, Raquel R, Cooter, Mary L, Hough, Catherine L, Lanspa, Michael J, Banner-Goodspeed, Valerie M, Chen, Jen-Ting, Giovanni, Shewit, Gomaa, Dina, Sjoding, Michael W, Hajizadeh, Negin, Komisarow, Jordan, Duggal, Abhijit, Khanna, Ashish K, Kashyap, Rahul, Khan, Akram, Chang, Steven Y, Tonna, Joseph E, Anderson, Harry L, Liebler, Janice M, Mosier, Jarrod M, Morris, Peter E, Genthon, Alissa, Louh, Irene K, Tidswell, Mark, Stephens, R Scott, Esper, Annette M, Dries, David J, Martinez, Anthony, Schreyer, Kraftin E, Bender, William, Tiwari, Anupama, Guru, Pramod K, Hanna, Sinan, Gong, Michelle N, Park, Pauline K, Investigators, the Severe ARDS Generating Evidence Study, Steingrub, Jay S, Brierley, Kristin, Larson, Julia L, Mueller, Ariel, Pinkhasova, Tereza, Talmor, Daniel, Aisiku, Imoigele, Baron, Rebecca, Fredenburgh, Lauren, Hou, Peter, Massaro, Anthony, Seethala, Raghu, Hite, Duncan, Brodie, Daniel, Short, Briana, Bartz, Raquel, Komisarow, Jordan C, Blum, James, Esper, Annette, Martin, Greg S, Bulger, Eileen, Ungar, Anna, Brown, Samuel M, Grissom, Colin K, Hirshberg, Eliotte L, Peltan, Ithan D, Brower, Roy G, Sahetya, Sarina K, Bohman, John K, Coville, Hongchuan, Gajic, Ognjen, O’Horo, John C, Ataucuri-Vargas, Jorge-Bleik, Mastroianni, Fiore, Hirsch, Jamie, Qui, Michael, Stewart, Molly, Haq, Ebaad, Kamel, Makrina, Krol, Olivia, Lerner, Kimberly, Marini, John, and Amaral, Valentina Chiara Bistolfi
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Rare Diseases ,Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Lung ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Early Medical Intervention ,Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation ,Female ,Glucocorticoids ,Guideline Adherence ,Hospital Mortality ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neuromuscular Blockade ,Patient Positioning ,Positive-Pressure Respiration ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,Prone Position ,Quality of Health Care ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Severity of Illness Index ,United States ,Vasodilator Agents ,Ventilator-Induced Lung Injury ,ARDS ,corticosteroids ,extracorporeal membrane oxygenation ,mechanical ventilation ,neuromuscular blockade ,prone positioning ,Severe ARDS: Generating Evidence (SAGE) Study Investigators ,Society of Critical Care Medicine's Discovery Network ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough specific interventions previously demonstrated benefit in patients with ARDS, use of these interventions is inconsistent, and patient mortality remains high. The impact of variability in center management practices on ARDS mortality rates remains unknown.Research questionWhat is the impact of treatment variability on mortality in patients with moderate to severe ARDS in the United States?Study design and methodsWe conducted a multicenter, observational cohort study of mechanically ventilated adults with ARDS and Pao2 to Fio2 ratio of ≤ 150 with positive end-expiratory pressure of ≥ 5 cm H2O, who were admitted to 29 US centers between October 1, 2016, and April 30, 2017. The primary outcome was 28-day in-hospital mortality. Center variation in ventilator management, adjunctive therapy use, and mortality also were assessed.ResultsA total of 2,466 patients were enrolled. Median baseline Pao2 to Fio2 ratio was 105 (interquartile range, 78.0-129.0). In-hospital 28-day mortality was 40.7%. Initial adherence to lung protective ventilation (LPV; tidal volume, ≤ 6.5 mL/kg predicted body weight; plateau pressure, or when unavailable, peak inspiratory pressure, ≤ 30 mm H2O) was 31.4% and varied between centers (0%-65%), as did rates of adjunctive therapy use (27.1%-96.4%), methods used (neuromuscular blockade, prone positioning, systemic steroids, pulmonary vasodilators, and extracorporeal support), and mortality (16.7%-73.3%). Center standardized mortality ratios (SMRs), calculated using baseline patient-level characteristics to derive expected mortality rate, ranged from 0.33 to 1.98. Of the treatment-level factors explored, only center adherence to early LPV was correlated with SMR.InterpretationSubstantial center-to-center variability exists in ARDS management, suggesting that further opportunities for improving ARDS outcomes exist. Early adherence to LPV was associated with lower center mortality and may be a surrogate for overall quality of care processes. Future collaboration is needed to identify additional treatment-level factors influencing center-level outcomes.Trial registryClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT03021824; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.
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- 2021
17. Sero-Epidemiology of Rotavirus Gastroenteritis in Children in Ilorin, Kwara State
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Omosigho Omoruyi Pius, Izevbuwa Osazee Ekundayo, and Saheed Ibrahim DamilareRotavirus is responsible for the most severe dehydrating diarrhea among young children due to gastroenteritis. In this study, we aimed to ascertain the occurrence of childhood gastroenteritis caused by Rotavirus among infants and young children who are younger than 5 years of age in Ilorin, Kwara State and determined the risk factors posing the challenges to be susceptible to diarrhea associated with rotavirus in Ilorin, Kwara State. Diarrhea stool samples were collected from children who passed watery stools, who met predetermined inclusion criteria and who presented at the study hospitals Viz: General Hospital and Specialist Hospital Alagbado and Children Specialist Hospital, Igboro. All within Kwara State either on outpatient care basis or those admitted into the pediatric ward. Sample of stool habouring rotavirus antigens was detected by commercial Rotavirus IgM ELISA kit to target recent infections among the participants. Out of three hundred (300) stool samples that were collected from children suffering from acute diarrhea, a total number of eighty-six (86) were found to be Rotavirus positive (28.7 %) and two hundred and fourteen (214) were found to be negative (71.3%). The age group 3-5 years, showed the highest prevalence rate which is in line with some research findings that attribute this age range with certain feeding habits and cultural practices, predisposing them to gastroenteritis. It is therefore advised that parents and guardian alike should ensure that special care is given to children, with emphasis on their feeding habits and sanitation. Keywords: Rotavirus, gastroenteritis, children, diarrhea. INTRODUCTION Rotavirus is a non-enveloped double stranded RNA viruses belonging to Reoviridae, Rotavirus is one of them, other members of this family include orthoreoviruses, obiviruses, aquareoviruses etc. (Mertens 2005). Infants and young children are often affected by diarrhea caused by rotavirus infections. There are about 128,500 deaths associated with Rotavirus worldwide each year, with 70 % of cases occurring in Sub-Saharan Africa (Jonesteller et al., 2017). Approximately 258 million gastroenteritis cases are caused b
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rotavirus ,gastroenteritis ,children ,diarrhea. ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Rotavirus is responsible for the most severe dehydrating diarrhea among young children due to gastroenteritis. In this study, we aimed to ascertain the occurrence of childhood gastroenteritis caused by Rotavirus among infants and young children who are younger than 5 years of age in Ilorin, Kwara State and determined the risk factors posing the challenges to be susceptible to diarrhea associated with rotavirus in Ilorin, Kwara State. Diarrhea stool samples were collected from children who passed watery stools, who met predetermined inclusion criteria and who presented at the study hospitals Viz: General Hospital and Specialist Hospital Alagbado and Children Specialist Hospital, Igboro. All within Kwara State either on outpatient care basis or those admitted into the pediatric ward. Sample of stool habouring rotavirus antigens was detected by commercial Rotavirus IgM ELISA kit to target recent infections among the participants. Out of three hundred (300) stool samples that were collected from children suffering from acute diarrhea, a total number of eighty-six (86) were found to be Rotavirus positive (28.7 %) and two hundred and fourteen (214) were found to be negative (71.3%). The age group 3-5 years, showed the highest prevalence rate which is in line with some research findings that attribute this age range with certain feeding habits and cultural practices, predisposing them to gastroenteritis. It is therefore advised that parents and guardian alike should ensure that special care is given to children, with emphasis on their feeding habits and sanitation.
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- 2023
18. Correction: Risk factors associated with severe outcomes in adult hospitalized patients according to influenza type and subtype.
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Ana Martínez, Núria Soldevila, Arantxa Romero-Tamarit, Núria Torner, Pere Godoy, Cristina Rius, Mireia Jané, and Àngela Domínguez and the Surveillance of Hospitalized Cases of Severe Influenza in Catalonia Working Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210353.].
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- 2024
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19. To participate or not to participate? A qualitative investigation of students' complex motivations for verbal classroom participation.
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Emilee Severe, Jack Stalnaker, Anika Hubbard, Courtni H Hafen, and Elizabeth G Bailey
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Previous research has suggested that making classrooms more active and student centered improves learning, and this usually involves encouraging student talk in the classroom. However, the majority of students remain silent during whole-class discussions, and men's voices are more likely to be heard in science classrooms. Previous interview studies and quantitative studies have discussed the role instructors play in encouraging or discouraging participation, the weight students put into the fear of negative evaluation, and other factors. However, interview studies on the experiences of college students in the sciences, specifically, are lacking. Thus, we conducted a qualitative interview study to investigate students' experiences deciding whether to participate verbally in class, focusing on students recruited from science classrooms. We analyzed the data using an inductive approach and found three main themes: (1) A wide variety of external factors impact students' decision to participate, including instructor characteristics and choices, peer influences, and course material characteristics; (2) Students weigh these factors in complex ways, and this internal calculus varies by student; and (3) Women put greater emphasis on fearing peer judgment, and men may be more motivated by course material considerations. Most of the external factors we identified as important for student participation have been described previously, and we validate that previous literature. We add to the literature by a more complex discussion of how students weigh these different factors and how complex the classroom ecosystem can be. We end by framing our results within the Expectancy Value Theory of motivation, discussing limitations, and providing implications for science college instructors to promote broad and equitable participation.
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- 2024
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20. Long‐term mortality after tuberculosis treatment among persons living with HIV in Haiti
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Joseph, Yvetot, Yao, Zhiwen, Dua, Akanksha, Severe, Patrice, Collins, Sean E, Bang, Heejung, Jean‐Juste, Marc Antoine, Ocheretina, Oksana, Apollon, Alexandra, McNairy, Margaret L, Dupnik, Kathryn, Cremieux, Etienne, Byrne, Anthony, Pape, Jean W, and Koenig, Serena P
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HIV/AIDS ,Tuberculosis ,Rare Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cohort Studies ,HIV Infections ,Haiti ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,HIV ,AIDS ,tuberculosis ,long-term mortality ,opportunistic infections ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
IntroductionLong-term mortality among TB survivors appears to be higher than control populations without TB in many settings. However, data are limited among persons with HIV (PWH). We assessed the association between cured TB and long-term mortality among persons with PWH in Haiti.MethodsA prospective cohort of PWH from the CIPRA HT-001 trial was followed from study enrolment (August 2005 to July 2008) to study closure (December 2018) to compare mortality between participants with and without TB. The index date for the survival analysis was defined as 240 days after TB diagnosis or randomization date. Time to death was described using Kaplan-Meier curves, and log-rank tests were used to compare time to death between the TB and no-TB cohorts. The association between TB and long-term mortality was estimated with multivariable Cox models.ResultsOf the 816 participants in the CIPRA HT-001 trial, 77 were excluded for a history of TB prior to study enrolment and 31 were excluded due to death or attrition prior to the index date, leaving 574 in the no-TB and 134 in the TB cohort. Twenty-four (17.9%) participants in the TB and 48 (8.4%) in the no-TB cohort died during follow-up. Five and 10-year mortality rates were 14.2% and 17.9% respectively, in the TB cohort, and 6.1% and 8.4% in the no-TB cohort. In Kaplan-Meier analysis, participants in the TB cohort had a significantly shorter time to death (log-rank p
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- 2021
21. Genetic analyses identify GSDMB associated with asthma severity, exacerbations, and antiviral pathways
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Li, Xingnan, Christenson, Stephanie A, Modena, Brian, Li, Huashi, Busse, William W, Castro, Mario, Denlinger, Loren C, Erzurum, Serpil C, Fahy, John V, Gaston, Benjamin, Hastie, Annette T, Israel, Elliot, Jarjour, Nizar N, Levy, Bruce D, Moore, Wendy C, Woodruff, Prescott G, Kaminski, Naftali, Wenzel, Sally E, Bleecker, Eugene R, Meyers, Deborah A, and Program, NHLBI Severe Asthma Research
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Biotechnology ,Genetics ,Lung ,Human Genome ,Asthma ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Respiratory ,Adult ,Chromosomes ,Human ,Pair 17 ,Disease Progression ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genotype ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Respiratory Mucosa ,Sequence Analysis ,RNA ,Severity of Illness Index ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Antiviral pathways ,asthma exacerbations ,asthma severity ,eQTL ,genetics ,GSDMA ,GSDMB ,PGAP3 ,whole-genome sequence ,RNAseq ,NHLBI Severe Asthma Research Program ,Allergy - Abstract
BackgroundThe Chr17q12-21.2 region is the strongest and most consistently associated region with asthma susceptibility. The functional genes or single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are not obvious due to linkage disequilibrium.ObjectivesWe sought to comprehensively investigate whole-genome sequence and RNA sequence from human bronchial epithelial cells to dissect functional genes/SNPs for asthma severity in the Severe Asthma Research Program.MethodsExpression quantitative trait loci analysis (n = 114), correlation analysis (n = 156) of gene expression and asthma phenotypes, and pathway analysis were performed in bronchial epithelial cells and replicated. Genetic association for asthma severity (426 severe vs 531 nonsevere asthma) and longitudinal asthma exacerbations (n = 273) was performed.ResultsMultiple SNPs in gasdermin B (GSDMB) associated with asthma severity (odds ratio, >1.25) and longitudinal asthma exacerbations (P < .05). Expression quantitative trait loci analyses identified multiple SNPs associated with expression levels of post-GPI attachment to proteins 3, GSDMB, or gasdermin A (3.1 × 10-9 -4). Higher expression levels of GSDMB correlated with asthma and greater number of exacerbations (P < .05). Expression levels of GSDMB correlated with genes involved in IFN signaling, MHC class I antigen presentation, and immune system pathways (false-discovery rate-adjusted P < .05). rs1031458 and rs3902920 in GSDMB colocalized with IFN regulatory factor binding sites and associated with GSDMB expression, asthma severity, and asthma exacerbations (P < .05).ConclusionsBy using a unique set of gene expression data from lung cells obtained using bronchoscopy from comprehensively characterized subjects with asthma, we show that SNPs in GSDMB associated with asthma severity, exacerbations, and GSDMB expression levels. Furthermore, its expression levels correlated with asthma exacerbations and antiviral pathways. Thus, GSDMB is a functional gene for both asthma susceptibility and severity.
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- 2021
22. The cost of antiretroviral therapy in Haiti
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Fitzgerald Daniel W, Atwood Sidney, Severe Patrice, Leger Paul, Riviere Cynthia, Koenig Serena P, Pape Jean W, and Schackman Bruce R
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background We determined direct medical costs, overhead costs, societal costs, and personnel requirements for the provision of antiretroviral therapy (ART) to patients with AIDS in Haiti. Methods We examined data from 218 treatment-naïve adults who were consecutively initiated on ART at the GHESKIO Center in Port-au-Prince, Haiti between December 23, 2003 and May 20, 2004 and calculated costs and personnel requirements for the first year of ART. Results The mean total cost of treatment per patient was $US 982 including $US 846 in direct costs, $US 114 for overhead, and $US 22 for societal costs. The direct cost per patient included generic ART medications $US 355, lab tests $US 130, nutrition $US 117, hospitalizations $US 62, pre-ART evaluation $US 58, labor $US 51, non-ART medications $US 39, outside referrals $US 31, and telephone cards for patient retention $US 3. Higher treatment costs were associated with hospitalization, change in ART regimen, TB treatment, and survival for one year. We estimate that 1.5 doctors and 2.5 nurses are required to treat 1000 patients in the first year after initiating ART. Conclusion Initial ART treatment in Haiti costs approximately $US 1,000 per patient per year. With generic first-line antiretroviral drugs, only 36% of the cost is for medications. Patients who change regimens are significantly more expensive to treat, highlighting the need for less-expensive second-line drugs. There may be sufficient health care personnel to treat all HIV-infected patients in urban areas of Haiti, but not in rural areas. New models of HIV care are needed for rural areas using assistant medical officers and community health workers.
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- 2008
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23. Decoding the Human Genetic and Immunological Basis of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine-Induced Myocarditis
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Bolze, Alexandre, Mogensen, Trine H., Zhang, Shen-Ying, Abel, Laurent, Andreakos, Evangelos, Arkin, Lisa M., Borghesi, Alessandro, Brodin, Petter, Hagin, David, Novelli, Giuseppe, Okada, Satoshi, Peter, Jonny, Renia, Laurent, Severe, Karine, Tiberghien, Pierre, Vinh, Donald C., Cirulli, Elizabeth T., Casanova, Jean-Laurent, and Hsieh, Elena W. Y.
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- 2022
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24. Clinical Predictors of Engagement in Teleintegrated Care and Telereferral Care for Complex Psychiatric Disorders in Primary Care: a Randomized Trial
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Severe, Jennifer, Pfeiffer, Paul N., Palm-Cruz, Katherine, Hoeft, Theresa, Sripada, Rebecca, Hawrilenko, Matthew, Chen, Shiyu, and Fortney, John
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- 2022
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25. Improving sustainable agriculture promotion: an explorative analysis of NRCS assistance programs and farmer perspectives
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Carson D. Thompson, Emilee Severe, Adam J. Norris, Jacob Gudmundsen, Mary Lewis, Elisabeth Currit, Nicholas Newbold, and Benjamin W. Abbott
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sustainable agriculture ,assistance programmes ,nrcs ,farmer perspectives ,survey ,Agriculture - Abstract
Unsustainable agriculture practices are undermining the world's future ability to reliably produce food. Assistance programmes, such as those offered by the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) of the United States, can increase the uptake of sustainable practices, yet implementation of these alternatives in the US remains discouragingly limited. In this context, we used an interdisciplinary approach involving quantitative and qualitative data to assess the current efficacy of NRCS assistance programmes and identify areas for improvement. To do so, we first analyzed national reports of NRCS expenditures and acres treated over the last 15 years and then distributed an explorative survey to farmers and ranchers throughout Utah state. Our NRCS programme analysis suggested that historical increases in expenditures have been ineffective at increasing the number of acres treated. The survey responses indicated that both financial and non-financial factors were influential in farmer decisions. Farmers that assigned a high importance to sustainable practices were motivated by public perception and environmental stewardship while those that assigned a moderate importance were motivated by the potential return on investment. Overall, participants in NRCS programs reported more positive outcomes than expected by non-participants. We hope the findings from this study can guide future research and inform efforts to improve NRCS assistance programmes in Utah and other regions in the US and elsewhere.
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- 2022
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26. A brief and comprehensive history of the development and use of feed analysis: A review
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Severe Jerald H.
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chemistry ,evaluation ,laboratory ,nutrition ,sustainability ,Agriculture ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Abstract
Currently, there are no general reviews that focus on feed analysis and its development from early to modern use. An objective of this review was to create a brief chronology of people, discoveries, and activities that were part of the development of modern feed analysis. Peer-reviewed, extension, and trade literature were used as resources in this review. Conference and symposia proceedings were also referenced. Some textbooks and PhD dissertations were cited. Finally, historic agricultural and other scientific literature dating from 1725 to 1936 were all used as sources. In modern society, feed analysis is more widely used than ever before in history, and interest in and utilization of feed analysis steadily increases. The history of feed analysis is not a simple chronological construct, since feed analysis has developed in conjunction with advancements and discoveries in chemistry, nutrition, and agricultural sciences. Using different systems of analysis, the evaluation of feeds has been practiced for millennia. Feed analysis, its categories, systems, methods, and applications are topics of universal interest among extension, education, and agricultural professionals. This review of people, practices, and events leading to the development of feed analyses can be a useful resource for anyone who wants to convey unique information about feed analysis and its history.
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- 2022
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27. Same-day testing with initiation of antiretroviral therapy or tuberculosis treatment versus standard care for persons presenting with tuberculosis symptoms at HIV diagnosis: A randomized open-label trial from Haiti.
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Nancy Dorvil, Vanessa R Rivera, Cynthia Riviere, Richard Berman, Patrice Severe, Heejung Bang, Kerlyne Lavoile, Jessy G Devieux, Mikerlyne Faustin, Giovanni Saintyl, Maria Duran Mendicuti, Samuel Pierre, Alexandra Apollon, Emelyne Dumond, Guyrlaine Pierre Louis Forestal, Vanessa Rouzier, Adias Marcelin, Margaret L McNairy, Kathleen F Walsh, Kathryn Dupnik, Lindsey K Reif, Anthony L Byrne, Stephanie Bousleiman, Eli Orvis, Patrice Joseph, Pierre-Yves Cremieux, Jean William Pape, and Serena P Koenig
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Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundSame-day HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation is being widely implemented. However, the optimal timing of ART among patients with tuberculosis (TB) symptoms is unknown. We hypothesized that same-day treatment (TB treatment for those diagnosed with TB; ART for those not diagnosed with TB) would be superior to standard care in this population.Methods and findingsWe conducted an open-label trial among adults with TB symptoms at initial HIV diagnosis at GHESKIO in Haiti; participants were recruited and randomized on the same day. Participants were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to same-day treatment (same-day TB testing with same-day TB treatment if TB diagnosed; same-day ART if TB not diagnosed) versus standard care (initiating TB treatment within 7 days and delaying ART to day 7 if TB not diagnosed). In both groups, ART was initiated 2 weeks after TB treatment. The primary outcome was retention in care with 48-week HIV-1 RNA ConclusionsIn patients with TB symptoms at HIV diagnosis, we found that same-day treatment was not associated with superior retention and viral suppression. In this study, a short delay in ART initiation did not appear to compromise outcomes.Trial registrationThis study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03154320.
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- 2023
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28. Effect of the relationship between anaemia and systemic inflammation on the risk of incident tuberculosis and death in people with advanced HIV: a sub-analysis of the REMEMBER trialResearch in context
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Mariana Araújo-Pereira, Sonya Krishnan, Padmini Salgame, Yukari C. Manabe, Mina C. Hosseinipour, Gregory Bisson, Damocles Patrice Severe, Vanessa Rouzier, Samantha Leong, Vidya Mave, Fredrick Kipyego Sawe, Abraham M. Siika, Cecilia Kanyama, Sufia S. Dadabhai, Javier R. Lama, Javier Valencia-Huamani, Sharlaa Badal-Faesen, Umesh Gangaram Lalloo, Kogieleum Naidoo, Lerato Mohapi, Cissy Kityo, Bruno B. Andrade, and Amita Gupta
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Tuberculosis ,Haemoglobin ,Systemic inflammation ,HIV ,Incident TB ,Anaemia ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious morbidity that commonly occurs in people living with HIV (PWH) and increases the progression of HIV disease, as well as the risk of death. Simple markers of progression are much needed to identify those at highest risk for poor outcome. This study aimed to assess how baseline severity of anaemia and associated inflammatory profiles impact death and the incidence of TB in a cohort of PWH who received TB preventive therapy (TPT). Methods: This study is a secondary posthoc analysis of the AIDS Clinical Trials Group A5274 REMEMBER clinical trial (NCT0138008), an open-label randomised clinical trial of antiretroviral-naïve PWH with CD4
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- 2023
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29. Does Chinese Investment into Europe Facilitate Strategic Asset Growth in the Chinese Parent Company? The Role of Entry Mode
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John Anderson, Dylan Sutherland, and Sean Severe
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Chinese outward FDI ,innovation ,event study ,strategic asset seeking ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
Strategic asset seeking foreign direct investment has undergone tremendous growth over the past decade. This paper first attempts to evaluate the location choice of such investments in Europe. We find that Chinese companies target strategic assets in Europe. The paper then moves to understand the efficacy of these investments in terms of the creation of strategic assets in the Chinese parent company. Our results show the intangible assets of Chinese domestic parent firms significantly increase in the wake of their investments. For greenfield investments, there is a longer time-lag in creation of intangible strategic assets than for acquisitions. However, greenfield investments result in a larger increase in intangible asset creation than acquisition investments.
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- 2024
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30. Effectiveness of Influenza Vaccination and Early Antiviral Treatment in Reducing Pneumonia Risk in Severe Influenza Cases
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Pere Godoy, Núria Soldevila, Ana Martínez, Sofia Godoy, Mireia Jané, Nuria Torner, Lesly Acosta, Cristina Rius, Àngela Domínguez, and The Surveillance of Hospitalized Cases of Severe Influenza in Catalonia Working Group
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influenza ,vaccination ,pneumonia ,antiviral treatment ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Influenza vaccination may be effective in preventing influenza infection and may reduce the risk of influenza-associated pneumonia. The study aim was to evaluate the effect of influenza vaccination in preventing pneumonia when it failed to prevent influenza hospitalization. Methods: This was a case–control study comparing hospitalized cases of influenza with and without pneumonia in patients aged ≥18 years in 16 hospitals in Catalonia over 10 influenza seasons (2010–11 to 2019–20). Data on sociodemographic, virological characteristics, comorbidities, vaccination history, and antiviral treatment were collected and analysed. The crude odds ratio (OR) and adjusted OR (aOR) with the corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI) values were calculated. Results: In total, 5080 patients hospitalized for severe influenza were included, 63.5% (3224/5080) of whom had pneumonia—mostly men (56.8%; 1830/3224) and mostly in the ≥75 age group (39.3%; 1267/3224)—and of whom 14.0% died (451/3224). Virus A and virus B accounted for 78.1% (2518/3224) and 21.9% (705/3224) of influenza types, respectively. Starting antiviral treatment ≤48 h after symptom onset (aOR = 0.69; 95%CI: 0.53–0.90) and a history of seasonal influenza vaccination (aOR = 0.85; 95%CI: 0.72–0.98) were protective factors in developing pneumonia. Conclusions: Adherence to seasonal influenza vaccination and starting antiviral treatment within 48 h of symptom onset can reduce pneumonia risk in severe influenza cases.
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- 2024
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31. Refractory airway type 2 inflammation in a large subgroup of asthmatic patients treated with inhaled corticosteroids
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Peters, Michael C, Kerr, Sheena, Dunican, Eleanor M, Woodruff, Prescott G, Fajt, Merritt L, Levy, Bruce D, Israel, Elliot, Phillips, Brenda R, Mauger, David T, Comhair, Suzy A, Erzurum, Serpil C, Johansson, Mats W, Jarjour, Nizar N, Coverstone, Andrea M, Castro, Mario, Hastie, Annette T, Bleecker, Eugene R, Wenzel, Sally E, Fahy, John V, and Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Severe Asthma Research Program 3 National
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Lung ,Asthma ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory ,Administration ,Inhalation ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Adult ,Biomarkers ,Cytokines ,Eosinophils ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Humans ,Immunoglobulin E ,Inflammation ,Leukocyte Count ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Th2 Cells ,Severe asthma ,type 2 inflammation ,steroid resistance ,biomarkers ,National Heart ,Lung and Blood Institute Severe Asthma Research Program 3 ,Immunology ,Allergy - Abstract
BackgroundAirway type 2 inflammation is usually corticosteroid sensitive, but the role of type 2 inflammation as a mechanism of asthma in patients receiving high-dose inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs) is uncertain.ObjectiveWe sought to determine whether airway type 2 inflammation persists in patients treated with ICSs and to evaluate the clinical features of patients with steroid-resistant airway type 2 inflammation.MethodsWe used quantitative PCR to generate a composite metric of type 2 cytokine gene expression (type 2 gene mean [T2GM]) in induced sputum cells from healthy control subjects, patients with severe asthma receiving ICSs (n = 174), and patients with nonsevere asthma receiving ICSs (n = 85). We explored relationships between asthma outcomes and T2GM values and the utility of noninvasive biomarkers of airway T2GM.ResultsSputum cell T2GM values in asthmatic patients were significantly increased and remained high after treatment with intramuscular triamcinolone. We used the median T2GM value as a cutoff to classify steroid-treated type 2-low and steroid-resistant type 2-high (srT2-high) subgroups. Compared with patients with steroid-treated type 2-low asthma, those with srT2-high asthma were older and had more severe asthma. Blood eosinophil cell counts predicted srT2-high asthma when body mass index was less than 40 kg/m2 but not when it was 40 kg/m2 or greater, whereas blood IgE levels strongly predicted srT2-high asthma when age was less than 34 years but not when it was 34 years or greater.ConclusionDespite ICS therapy, many asthmatic patients have persistent airway type 2 inflammation (srT2-high asthma), and these patients are older and have more severe disease. Body weight and age modify the performance of blood-based biomarkers of airway type 2 inflammation.
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- 2019
32. Current understanding of genetic associations with delayed hypersensitivity reactions induced by antibiotics and anti-osteoporotic drugs
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Chih-Hsuan Wung, Chuang-Wei Wang, Kuo-Chu Lai, Chun-Bing Chen, Wei-Ti Chen, Shuen-Iu Hung, Wen-Hung Chung, and Taiwan Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reaction Consortium
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delayed hypersensitivity reactions ,human leukocyte antigens ,Stevens-Johnson syndrome ,toxic epidermal necrosis ,drug reactions with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Drug-induced delayed hypersensitivity reactions (DHRs) is still a clinical and healthcare burden in every country. Increasing reports of DHRs have caught our attention to explore the genetic relationship, especially life-threatening severe cutaneous adverse drug reactions (SCARs), including acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP), drug reactions with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS), Stevens–Johnson syndrome (SJS), and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN). In recent years, many studies have investigated the immune mechanism and genetic markers of DHRs. Besides, several studies have stated the associations between antibiotics-as well as anti-osteoporotic drugs (AOD)-induced SCARs and specific human leukocyte antigens (HLA) alleles. Strong associations between drugs and HLA alleles such as co-trimoxazole-induced DRESS and HLA-B*13:01 (Odds ratio (OR) = 45), dapsone-DRESS and HLA-B*13:01 (OR = 122.1), vancomycin-DRESS and HLA-A*32:01 (OR = 403), clindamycin-DHRs and HLA-B*15:27 (OR = 55.6), and strontium ranelate (SR)-SJS/TEN and HLA-A*33:03 (OR = 25.97) are listed. We summarized the immune mechanism of SCARs, update the latest knowledge of pharmacogenomics of antibiotics- and AOD-induced SCARs, and indicate the potential clinical use of these genetic markers for SCARs prevention in this mini review article.
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- 2023
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33. B lymphocyte-derived acetylcholine limits steady-state and emergency hematopoiesis
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Schloss, Maximilian J., Hulsmans, Maarten, Rohde, David, Lee, I-Hsiu, Severe, Nicolas, Foy, Brody H., Pulous, Fadi E., Zhang, Shuang, Kokkaliaris, Konstantinos D., Frodermann, Vanessa, Courties, Gabriel, Yang, Chongbo, Iwamoto, Yoshiko, Knudsen, Anders Steen, McAlpine, Cameron S., Yamazoe, Masahiro, Schmidt, Stephen P., Wojtkiewicz, Gregory R., Masson, Gustavo Santos, Gustafsson, Karin, Capen, Diane, Brown, Dennis, Higgins, John M., Scadden, David T., Libby, Peter, Swirski, Filip K., Naxerova, Kamila, and Nahrendorf, Matthias
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- 2022
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34. An examination of factorial invariance of the Asthma Control Questionnaire among adults with severe asthma.
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Ronald McDowell, Liam Heaney, Thomas Brown, Brendan Bunting, Hassan Burhan, Rekha Chaudhuri, Paddy Dennison, Shoaib Faruqi, Robin Gore, David J Jackson, Andrew Menzies-Gow, Thomas Pantin, Mitesh Patel, Paul Pfeffer, Salman Siddiqui, John Busby, and UK Severe Asthma Registry
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundThe Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ) is used to assess asthma symptom control. The relationship between the questionnaire items and symptom control has not been fully studied in severe asthmatic patients, and its validity for making comparisons between subgroups of patients is unknown.MethodsData was obtained from patients in the United Kingdom Severe Asthma Registry whose symptom control was assessed using the five-item ACQ (ACQ5) (n = 2,951). Confirmatory factor analysis determined whether a latent factor for asthma symptom control, as measured by the ACQ5, was consistent with the data. Measurement invariance was examined in relation to ethnicity, sex and age; this included testing for approximate measurement invariance using Bayesian Structural Equation Modelling (BSEM). The fitted models were used to estimate the internal consistency reliability of the ACQ5. Invariance of factor means across subgroups was assessed.ResultsA one-factor construct with residual correlations for the ACQ5 was an excellent fit to the data in all subgroups (Root Mean Square Error Approximation 0.03 [90%CI 0.02,0.05], p-close fit 0.93, Comparative Fit Index 1.00, Tucker Lewis Index 1.00}. Expected item responses were consistent for Caucasian and non-Caucasian patients with the same absolute level of symptom control. There was some evidence that females and younger adults reported wakening more frequently during the night than males and older adults respectively with the same absolute level of symptom control (pConclusionThe ACQ5 is informative in comparing levels of symptom control between severe asthmatic patients of different ethnicities, sexes and ages. It is important that analyses are replicated in other severe asthma registries to determine whether measurement invariance is observed.
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- 2023
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35. Prevalence of stressful life events and their association with post-traumatic stress disorder among youth attending secondary school in Haiti
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Grelotti, David J, Gerbasi, Margaret E, Eustache, Eddy, Fils-Aimé, J Reginald, Thérosmé, Tatiana, Severe, Jennifer, Raviola, Giuseppe J, Darghouth, Sarah, Legha, Rupinder, Pierre, Ermaze L, Affricot, Emmeline, Alcindor, Yoldie, Boyd, Katherine, Becker, Anne E, and Fawzi, Mary C Smith
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) ,Mental Health ,Anxiety Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Adolescent ,Earthquakes ,Exposure to Violence ,Female ,Haiti ,Humans ,Life Change Events ,Male ,Prevalence ,Schools ,Stress Disorders ,Post-Traumatic ,Students ,Young Adult ,Exposure to violence ,Disasters ,PTSD ,Trauma ,Anxiety disorders ,Sexual abuse ,Sexual assault ,Caribbean region ,Transitional-aged youth ,High school ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
The association between earthquakes and youth post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been well described, but little is known about the relationship between other stressful life events (SLEs) and PTSD among earthquake-affected youth. This study examines a variety of SLEs, including earthquake, and their association with PTSD among school-going Haitian youth following a major earthquake in 2010. In 2013, we assessed 120 students ages 18-22 for PTSD and other SLEs using a modified Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID)-based interview and the Stressful Life Events Checklist (SLE Checklist). Only 51.7% of participants on the SLE Checklist and 31.7% in the interview endorsed being affected by the earthquake or another disaster. Sexual assault showed the strongest association with PTSD in multivariable logistic regression. Contrary to our hypothesis, exposure to earthquake or another disaster was not significantly associated with current PTSD. In this population, exposure to interpersonal violence may have had a greater impact on PTSD risk than exposure to natural disaster. These data underscore the need to examine and reduce both acute and chronic stressors among disaster-affected youth.
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- 2018
36. Neutrophil cytoplasts induce TH17 differentiation and skew inflammation toward neutrophilia in severe asthma
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Krishnamoorthy, Nandini, Douda, David N, Brüggemann, Thayse R, Ricklefs, Isabell, Duvall, Melody G, Abdulnour, Raja-Elie E, Martinod, Kimberly, Tavares, Luciana, Wang, Xiao, Cernadas, Manuela, Israel, Elliot, Mauger, David T, Bleecker, Eugene R, Castro, Mario, Erzurum, Serpil C, Gaston, Benjamin M, Jarjour, Nizar N, Wenzel, Sally, Dunican, Eleanor, Fahy, John V, Irimia, Daniel, Wagner, Denisa D, Levy, Bruce D, and Investigators, Heart Lung and Blood Institute Severe Asthma Research Program-3
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Asthma ,Lung ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Respiratory ,National Heart ,Lung ,and Blood Institute Severe Asthma Research Program-3 Investigators - Abstract
Severe asthma is a debilitating and treatment refractory disease. As many as half of these patients have complex neutrophil-predominant lung inflammation that is distinct from milder asthma with type 2 eosinophilic inflammation. New insights into severe asthma pathogenesis are needed. Concomitant exposure of mice to an aeroallergen and endotoxin during sensitization resulted in complex neutrophilic immune responses to allergen alone during later airway challenge. Unlike allergen alone, sensitization with allergen and endotoxin led to NETosis. In addition to neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), enucleated neutrophil cytoplasts were evident in the lungs. Surprisingly, allergen-driven airway neutrophilia was decreased in peptidyl arginine deiminase 4-deficient mice with defective NETosis but not by deoxyribonuclease treatment, implicating the cytoplasts for the non-type 2 immune responses to allergen. Neutrophil cytoplasts were also present in mediastinal lymph nodes, and the cytoplasts activated lung dendritic cells in vitro to trigger antigen-specific interleukin-17 (IL-17) production from naïve CD4+ T cells. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from patients with severe asthma and high neutrophil counts had detectable NETs and cytoplasts that were positively correlated with IL-17 levels. Together, these translational findings have identified neutrophil cytoplast formation in asthmatic lung inflammation and linked the cytoplasts to T helper 17-mediated neutrophilic inflammation in severe asthma.
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- 2018
37. Internet-Based Monitoring in the Severe Asthma Research Program Identifies a Subgroup of Patients With Labile Asthma Control
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Wong-McGrath, Kelly, Denlinger, Loren C, Bleecker, Eugene R, Castro, Mario, Gaston, Ben, Israel, Elliot, Jarjour, Nizar N, Mauger, David T, Peters, Stephen, Phillips, Brenda R, Wenzel, Sally E, Fahy, John V, Peters, Michael C, and Investigators, Heart Lung and Blood Institute’s Severe Asthma Research Program-3
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Asthma ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Respiratory ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Internet ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Prospective Studies ,Self Care ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Young Adult ,asthma control ,Internet-based monitoring ,labile asthma ,metabolic dysfunction ,obesity ,National Heart Lung and Blood Institute’s Severe Asthma Research Program-3 Investigators ,Respiratory System ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundWe designed an Internet-Based Monitoring Systems (IBS) survey to facilitate monitoring of asthma symptoms and asthma exacerbations in the Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP). Our objective was to evaluate compliance with the IBS survey tool and to explore how data from an IBS tool can inform understanding of asthma phenotypes.MethodsWe invited adult subjects in the SARP III cohort (N = 528) to complete a monthly IBS asthma control survey. We compared the characteristics of subjects who did and those who did not participate in the IBS survey tool. Among subjects who participated in the IBS (IBS+), we identified participants with low, medium, and high Asthma Control Test (ACT) score variability, and we explored asthma morbidity in these three participant subgroups.ResultsTwo hundred fifty-nine subjects participated in the IBS (IBS+) survey. Compared with subjects who did not engage with the IBS (IBS-) survey, IBS+ subjects were older and more likely to be white, college educated, and have an annual household income > $25,000, and have controlled asthma. Among IBS+ participants, the subgroup with the highest ACT score variability was more likely to have severe asthma, with a lower ACT score at baseline and increased asthma-related health-care use (often precipitated by cold and flulike illnesses). Participants with high ACT variability were also characterized by metabolic dysfunction, as evidenced by obesity and hypertension.ConclusionsActive participation with an Internet-based symptom survey tool in patients with severe asthma is influenced by race, socioeconomic status, and asthma control. Among survey participants, a group with highly variable (labile) asthma control is identifiable as a specific subgroup with unmet treatment needs. The association of asthma lability, increased susceptibility to adverse asthma effects of cold and flulike illnesses, and metabolic dysfunction provides clues for potentially effective intervention strategies.
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- 2018
38. A mobile clinic approach to the delivery of community-based mental health services in rural Haiti.
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Fils-Aimé, J Reginald, Grelotti, David J, Thérosmé, Tatiana, Kaiser, Bonnie N, Raviola, Giuseppe, Alcindor, Yoldie, Severe, Jennifer, Affricot, Emmeline, Boyd, Katherine, Legha, Rupinder, Daimyo, Shin, Engel, Stephanie, and Eustache, Eddy
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Humans ,Treatment Outcome ,Follow-Up Studies ,Mental Health Services ,Rural Population ,Educational Status ,Community Health Services ,Mobile Health Units ,Delivery of Health Care ,Haiti ,Female ,Male ,MD Multidisciplinary ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
This study evaluates the use of a mental health mobile clinic to overcome two major challenges to the provision of mental healthcare in resource-limited settings: the shortage of trained specialists; and the need to improve access to safe, effective, and culturally sound care in community settings. Employing task-shifting and supervision, mental healthcare was largely delivered by trained, non-specialist health workers instead of specialists. A retrospective chart review of 318 unduplicated patients assessed and treated during the mobile clinic's first two years (January 2012 to November 2013) was conducted to explore outcomes. These data were supplemented by a quality improvement questionnaire, illustrative case reports, and a qualitative interview with the mobile clinic's lead community health worker. The team evaluated an average of 42 patients per clinic session. The most common mental, neurological, or substance abuse (MNS) disorders were depression and epilepsy. Higher follow-up rates were seen among those with diagnoses of bipolar disorder and neurological conditions, while those with depression or anxiety had lower follow-up rates. Persons with mood disorders who were evaluated on at least two separate occasions using a locally developed depression screening tool experienced a significant reduction in depressive symptoms. The mental health mobile clinic successfully treated a wide range of MNS disorders in rural Haiti and provided care to individuals who previously had no consistent access to mental healthcare. Efforts to address these common barriers to the provision of mental healthcare in resource-limited settings should consider supplementing clinic-based with mobile services.
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- 2018
39. Consistency checks to improve measurement with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS)
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Rabinowitz, Jonathan, Schooler, Nina R, Anderson, Ariana, Ayearst, Lindsay, Daniel, David, Davidson, Michael, Khan, Anzalee, Kinon, Bruce, Menard, Francois, Opler, Lewis, Opler, Mark, Severe, Joanne B, Williamson, David, Yavorsky, Christian, Zhao, Jun, and members, ISCTM ALGORITHMS FLAGS TO IDENTIFY CLINICAL INCONSISTENCY IN THE USE OF RATING SCALES IN CNS RCTs working group
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Databases as Topic ,Humans ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Quality Improvement ,Reproducibility of Results ,Schizophrenia ,ISCTM ALGORITHMS/FLAGS TO IDENTIFY CLINICAL INCONSISTENCY IN THE USE OF RATING SCALES IN CNS RCTs working group members ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
International Society for CNS Clinical Trials and Methodology convened an expert working-group that assembled consistency/inconsistency flags for the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS). Twenty-four flags were identified and divided based on extent to which they represent error (Possibly, Probably, Very probably or definitely). The flags were applied to assessments derived from the NEWMEDS data repository and the CATIE clinical trial data. Almost 40% of ratings had at least one inconsistency flag raised and 10% had two. Application of flags to clinical rating can improve reliability and validity of trials.
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- 2017
40. Academic and Community ICUs Participating in a Critical Care Randomized Trial: A Comparison of Patient Characteristics and Trial Metrics
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Jennifer L. Y. Tsang, MD, PhD, Alexandra Binnie, MD, DPhil, Erick H. Duan, MD, MSc, Jennie Johnstone, MD, PhD, Diane Heels-Ansdell, MSc, Brenda Reeve, MD, Sebastien Trop, MD, PhD, Paul Hosek, MD, Joanna C. Dionne, MD, PhD, Patrick Archambault, MD, MSc, Paul Lysecki, MD, Robert Cirone, MD, Nicole L. Zytaruk, RN, William Dechert, MSc, Mercedes Peñuela Camargo, MSc, Rebecca Jesso, MN, NP, Elliot McMillan, RN, PhD, Zaynab Panchbhaya, MSN, Tracy Campbell, MSc, Lois Saunders, Mary Copland, BA, Kanthi Kavikondala, BSc, Deborah J. Cook, MD, MSc, and for the Probiotics: Prevention of Severe Pneumonia and Endotracheal Colonization Trial (PROSPECT) Investigators and the Canadian Critical Care Trials Group
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Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
OBJECTIVES:. Clinical research in Canada is conducted primarily in “academic” hospitals, whereas most clinical care is provided in “community” hospitals. The objective of this nested observational study was to compare patient characteristics, outcomes, process-of-care variables, and trial metrics for patients enrolled in a large randomized controlled trial who were admitted to academic and community hospitals in Canada. DESIGN:. We conducted a preplanned observational study nested within the Probiotics: Prevention of Severe Pneumonia and Endotracheal Colonization Trial (PROSPECT, a randomized controlled trial comparing probiotics to placebo in mechanically ventilated patients) Research Program. SETTING:. ICUs. PATIENTS:. Mechanically ventilated patients. MEASUREMENTS:. We compared patient characteristics, interventions, outcomes, and trial metrics between patients enrolled in PROSPECT from academic and community hospitals. MAIN RESULTS:. Participating centers included 34 (82.9%) academic and seven (17.1%) community hospitals, which enrolled 2,203 (86.2%) and 352 (13.8%) patients, respectively. Compared with academic hospitals, patients enrolled in community hospitals were older (mean [sd] 62.7 yr [14.9 yr] vs 59.5 yr [16.4 yr]; p = 0.044), had longer ICU stays (median [interquartile range {IQR}], 13 d [8–23 d] vs 11 d [7–8 d]; p = 0.012) and higher mortality (percentage, [95% CI] in the ICU, 30.4% [25.8–35.4%]vs 20.5% [18.9–11.3%]; p = 0.002) and hospital (40.6% [35.6–45.8%] vs 26.1% [24.3–27.9%]; p < 0.001). Trial metrics, including informed consent rate (85.9% vs 76.3%; p = 0.149), mean (sd) monthly enrolment rate (2.1 [1.4] vs 1.1 [0.7]; p = 0.119), and protocol adherence (90.6% vs 91.6%; p = 0.207), were similar between community and academic ICUs. CONCLUSIONS:. Community hospitals can conduct high-quality research, with similar trial metrics to academic hospitals. Patient characteristics differed between community and academic hospitals, highlighting the need for broader engagement of community hospitals in clinical research to ensure generalizability of study results.
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- 2022
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41. Associations of HLA-A and HLA-B with vancomycin-induced drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms in the Han-Chinese population
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Chuang-Wei Wang, Wei-Chen Lin, Wei-Ti Chen, Chun-Bing Chen, Chun-Wei Lu, Hsin-Han Hou, Rosaline Chung-Yee Hui, Jennifer Wu, Chih-Jung Chang, Ya-Ching Chang, Wen-Hung Chung, and Taiwan Severe Cutaneous Adverse Reaction Consortium
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severe cutaneous adverse drug reactions ,drug reaction with eosinophilia and systematic symptoms ,HLA ,vancomycin ,delayed-type drug hypersensitivity reactions ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Vancomycin is a commonly used antibiotic; however, it can cause life-threatening severe cutaneous adverse reactions, such as drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS). A previous study has reported a strong association between HLA-A*32:01 and vancomycin-induced DRESS in European ethnicity. Herein, we aim to investigate the genetic predisposition of vancomycin-induced DRESS in the Han-Chinese population. In this study, we enrolled a total of 26 patients with vancomycin-induced DRESS, 1,616 general population controls, and 51 subjects tolerant to vancomycin. In vitro granulysin-based lymphocyte activation tests (LAT) were conducted among 6 vancomycin-induced DRESS patients who were concomitantly receiving other medicines. HLA-A and HLA-B genotypes were determined by sequencing-based typing. Our results found that vancomycin-induced DRESS was associated with HLA-A*32:01 [odds ratio (OR) = 7.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.7–35.8; p-value = 0.035], HLA-B*07:05 (OR = 32.3, 95% CI = 2.8–367.7; p-value = 0.047), HLA-B*40:06 (OR = 4.7, 95% CI = 1.3–16.1; p-value = 0.036) and HLA-B*67:01 (OR = 44.8, 95% CI = 7.2–280.4; p-value = 0.002) when comparing the vancomycin-induced DRESS patients with the general population controls. LAT results showed that granulysin significantly increased in the vancomycin-induced DRESS patients upon vancomycin stimulation (4.7 ± 3.7 fold increased), but not upon other co-medicines. This study identified that, in addition to HLA-A*32:01, HLA-B*07:05, HLA-B*40:06, and HLA-B*67:01 were also genetic markers for vancomycin-induced DRESS in the Han-Chinese population. Associations of ethnic variances in HLA with vancomycin-DRESS were observed.
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- 2022
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42. High prevalence of obesity among women in urban Haiti: Findings from a population-based cohort
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Eliezer Dade, Miranda Metz, Jean Lookens Pierre, Vanessa Rouzier, Rodney Sufra, Elizabeth Fox, Fabyola Preval, Stephano St-Preux, Jean Ronald Zephir, Wilson Ariste, Rehana Rasul, Shalom Sabwa, Nicholas Roberts, Marie Marcelle Deschamps, Patrice Severe, Daniel Fitzgerald, Jean William Pape, Lily Du Yan, and Margaret L. McNairy
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obesity ,nutrition transition ,cardiovascular disease ,food insecurity ,overweight ,Haiti ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionObesity is associated with increased risk of non-communicable diseases and death and is increasing rapidly in low- and middle-income countries, including Haiti. There is limited population-based data on body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) and associated risk factors in Haiti. This study describes BMI and WC, and factors associated with obesity using a population-based cohort from Port-au-Prince.MethodsBaseline sociodemographic and clinical data were collected from participants in the Haiti CVD Cohort Study between March 2019 and August 2021. Weight was categorized by BMI (kg/m2) with obesity defined as ≥30 kg/m2. Abdominal obesity was defined using WC cutoffs of ≥80 cm for women and ≥94 cm for men based on WHO guidelines. Sociodemographic and behavioral risk factors, including age, sex, educational attainment, income, smoking status, physical activity, fat/oil use, daily fruit/vegetable consumption, and frequency of fried food intake were assessed for their association with obesity using a Poisson multivariable regression.ResultsAmong 2,966 participants, median age was 41 years (IQR: 28–55) and 57.6% were women. Median BMI was 24.0 kg/m2 (IQR: 20.9–28.1) and 508 (17.1%) participants were obese. Women represented 89.2% of the population with BMI ≥30 kg/m2. A total of 1,167 (68.3%) women had WC ≥80 cm and 144 (11.4%) men had WC ≥94 cm. BMI ≥30 kg/m2 was significantly more prevalent among women than men [PR 5.7; 95% CI: (4.3–7.6)], those 40–49 years compared to 18–29 years [PR 3.3; 95% CI: (2.4–4.6)], and those with income >10 USD per day compared to ≤1 USD [PR 1.3; 95% CI: (1.0–1.6)]. There were no significant associations with other health and behavioral risk factors.DiscussionIn Haiti, women have an alarming 6-fold higher obesity prevalence compared to men (26.5 vs. 4.3%) and 89.2% of participants with obesity were women. Abdominal obesity was high, at 44.3%. Haiti faces a paradox of an ongoing national food insecurity crises and a burgeoning obesity epidemic. Individual, social, and environmental drivers of obesity, especially among women, need to be identified.
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- 2022
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43. Behavior of hospitalized severe influenza cases according to the outcome variable in Catalonia, Spain, during the 2017–2018 season
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Núria Soldevila, Lesly Acosta, Ana Martínez, Pere Godoy, Núria Torner, Cristina Rius, Mireia Jané, Angela Domínguez, and the Surveillance of Hospitalized Cases of Severe Influenza in Catalonia Working Group
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Influenza is an important cause of severe illness and death among patients with underlying medical conditions and in the elderly. The aim of this study was to investigate factors associated with ICU admission and death in patients hospitalized with severe laboratory-confirmed influenza during the 2017–2018 season in Catalonia. An observational epidemiological case-to-case study was carried out. Reported cases of severe laboratory-confirmed influenza requiring hospitalization in 2017–2018 influenza season were included. Mixed-effects regression analysis was used to estimate the factors associated with ICU admission and death. A total of 1306 cases of hospitalized severe influenza cases were included, of whom 175 (13.4%) died and 217 (16.6%) were ICU admitted. Age 65–74 years and ≥ 75 years and having ≥ 2 comorbidities were positively associated with death (aOR 3.19; 95%CI 1.19–8.50, aOR 6.95, 95%CI 2.76–1.80 and aOR 1.99; 95%CI 1.12–3.52, respectively). Neuraminidase inhibitor treatment and pneumonia were negatively associated with death. The 65–74 years and ≥ 75 years age groups were negatively associated with ICU admission (aOR 0.41; 95%CI 0.23–0.74 and aOR 0.30; 95%CI 0.17–0.53, respectively). A factor positively associated with ICU admission was neuraminidase inhibitor treatment. Our results support the need to investigate the worst outcomes of hospitalized severe cases, distinguishing between death and ICU admission.
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- 2021
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44. Childhood Predictors of Adult Functional Outcomes in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (MTA)
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Roy, Arunima, Hechtman, Lily, Arnold, L Eugene, Swanson, James M, Molina, Brooke SG, Sibley, Margaret H, Howard, Andrea L, Group, MTA Cooperative, Vitiello, Benedetto, Severe, Joanne B, Jensen, Peter S, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Richters, John, Vereen, Donald, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Elliott, Glen R, Wells, Karen C, Epstein, Jeffery N, Murray, Desiree W, Conners, C Keith, March, John, Swanson, James, Wigal, Timothy, Cantwell, Dennis P, Abikoff, Howard B, Greenhill, Laurence L, Newcorn, Jeffrey H, Molina, Brooke, Hoza, Betsy, Pelham, William E, Gibbons, Robert D, Marcus, Sue, Hur, Kwan, Kraemer, Helena C, Hanley, Thomas, and Stern, Karen
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Prevention ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Quality Education ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Educational Status ,Emotions ,Employment ,Family ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Income ,Intelligence ,Male ,Young Adult ,attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder ,adult outcomes ,functioning ,Multimodal Treatment Study of ADHD study ,childhood predictors ,MTA Cooperative Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Paediatrics ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveRecent results from the Multimodal Treatment Study of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD; MTA) have demonstrated impairments in several functioning domains in adults with childhood ADHD. The childhood predictors of these adult functional outcomes are not adequately understood. The objective of the present study was to determine the effects of childhood demographic, clinical, and family factors on adult functional outcomes in individuals with and without childhood ADHD from the MTA cohort.MethodRegressions were used to determine associations of childhood factors (age range 7-10 years) of family income, IQ, comorbidity (internalizing, externalizing, and total number of non-ADHD diagnoses), parenting styles, parental education, number of household members, parental marital problems, parent-child relationships, and ADHD symptom severity with adult outcomes (mean age 25 years) of occupational functioning, educational attainment, emotional functioning, sexual behavior, and justice involvement in participants with (n = 579) and without (n = 258) ADHD.ResultsPredictors of adult functional outcomes in ADHD included clinical factors such as baseline ADHD severity, IQ, and comorbidity; demographic factors such as family income, number of household members and parental education; and family factors such as parental monitoring and parental marital problems. Predictors of adult outcomes were generally comparable for children with and without ADHD.ConclusionChildhood ADHD symptoms, IQ, and household income levels are important predictors of adult functional outcomes. Management of these areas early on, through timely treatments for ADHD symptoms, and providing additional support to children with lower IQ and from households with low incomes, could assist in improving adult functioning.
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- 2017
45. Natural killer cell–mediated inflammation resolution is disabled in severe asthma
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Duvall, Melody G, Barnig, Cindy, Cernadas, Manuela, Ricklefs, Isabell, Krishnamoorthy, Nandini, Grossman, Nicole L, Bhakta, Nirav R, Fahy, John V, Bleecker, Eugene R, Castro, Mario, Erzurum, Serpil C, Gaston, Benjamin M, Jarjour, Nizar N, Mauger, David T, Wenzel, Sally E, Comhair, Suzy A, Coverstone, Andrea M, Fajt, Merritt L, Hastie, Annette T, Johansson, Mats W, Peters, Michael C, Phillips, Brenda R, Israel, Elliot, Levy, Bruce D, and Investigators, Heart Lung and Blood Institute’s Severe Asthma Research Program-3
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Lung ,Asthma ,Clinical Research ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Respiratory ,National Heart ,Lung ,and Blood Institute’s Severe Asthma Research Program-3 Investigators - Abstract
Severe asthma is typically characterized by chronic airway inflammation that is refractory to corticosteroids and associated with excess morbidity. Patients were recruited into the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-sponsored Severe Asthma Research Program and comprehensively phenotyped by bronchoscopy. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells were analyzed by flow cytometry. Compared with healthy individuals (n = 21), patients with asthma (n = 53) had fewer BAL natural killer (NK) cells. Patients with severe asthma (n = 29) had a marked increase in the ratios of CD4+ T cells to NK cells and neutrophils to NK cells. BAL NK cells in severe asthma were skewed toward the cytotoxic CD56dim subset, with significantly increased BAL fluid levels of the cytotoxic mediator granzyme A. The numbers of BAL CD56dim NK cells and CCR6-CCR4- T helper 1-enriched CD4+ T cells correlated inversely with lung function [forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) % predicted] in asthma. Relative to cells from healthy controls, peripheral blood NK cells from asthmatic patients had impaired killing of K562 myeloid target cells despite releasing more cytotoxic mediators. Ex vivo exposure to dexamethasone markedly decreased blood NK cell lysis of target cells and cytotoxic mediator release. NK cells expressed airway lipoxin A4/formyl peptide receptor 2 receptors, and in contrast to dexamethasone, lipoxin A4-exposed NK cells had preserved functional responses. Together, our findings indicate that the immunology of the severe asthma airway is characterized by decreased NK cell cytotoxicity with increased numbers of target leukocytes, which is exacerbated by corticosteroids that further disable NK cell function. These failed resolution mechanisms likely contribute to persistent airway inflammation in severe asthma.
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- 2017
46. Attributes of diagnostic tests to increase uptake of dual testing for syphilis and HIV in Port-au-Prince, Haiti
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Bristow, Claire C, Lee, Sung-Jae, Severe, Linda, Pape, Jean William, Javanbakht, Marjan, Comulada, Warren Scott, and Klausner, Jeffrey D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Infectious Diseases ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Rare Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Diagnostic Tests ,Routine ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Haiti ,Health Care Surveys ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy Complications ,Infectious ,Syphilis ,Young Adult ,Conjoint analysis ,HIV ,syphilis ,diagnostics ,testing ,Medical Microbiology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health ,Clinical sciences ,Immunology - Abstract
Introduction Syphilis and HIV screening is highly recommended for pregnant women and those at risk for infection. We used conjoint analysis to identify factors associated with testing preferences for HIV and syphilis infection. Methods We recruited 298 men and women 18 years and over seeking testing or care at GHESKIO (Haitian Study Group for Kaposi's Sarcoma and Opportunistic Infections) clinics. We created eight hypothetical dual HIV-syphilis test profiles varying across six dichotomous attributes. Participants were asked to rate each profile using Likert preference scales. An impact score was generated for each attribute by taking the difference between the preference scores for the preferred and non-preferred level of each attribute. Two-sided one-sample t-test was used to generate p values. Results Of 298 study participants, 61 (20.5%) were male. Of 237 females, 49 (20.7%) were pregnant. Cost (free vs. US$4; p
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- 2017
47. Dual rapid lateral flow immunoassay fingerstick wholeblood testing for syphilis and HIV infections is acceptable and accurate, Port-au-Prince, Haiti
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Bristow, Claire C, Severe, Linda, Pape, Jean William, Javanbakht, Marjan, Lee, Sung-Jae, Comulada, Warren Scott, and Klausner, Jeffrey D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Adult ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Haiti ,Humans ,Immunoassay ,Male ,Mass Screening ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Point-of-Care Testing ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy Complications ,Infectious ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Syphilis ,Syphilis Serodiagnosis ,Point-of-care ,HIV ,Dual test ,Rapid test ,Dual elimination ,Diagnosis ,Point-of-care ,HIV ,Syphilis ,Haiti ,Dual test ,Rapid test ,Dual elimination ,Haiti ,Microbiology ,Medical Microbiology ,Clinical sciences ,Medical microbiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundDual rapid tests for HIV and syphilis infections allow for detection of HIV infection and syphilis at the point-of-care. Those tests have been evaluated in laboratory settings and show excellent performance but have not been evaluated in the field. We evaluated the field performance of the SD BIOLINE HIV/Syphilis Duo test in Port-au-Prince, Haiti using whole blood fingerprick specimens.MethodsGHESKIO (Haitian Study Group for Kaposi's Sarcoma and Opportunistic Infections) clinic attendees 18 years of age or older were invited to participate. Venipuncture blood specimens were used for reference testing with standard commercially available tests for HIV and syphilis in Haiti. The sensitivity and specificity of the Duo test compared to the reference standard were calculated. The exact binomial method was used to determine 95 % confidence intervals (CI).ResultsOf 298 study participants, 237 (79.5 %) were female, of which 49 (20.7 %) were pregnant. For the HIV test component, the sensitivity and specificity were 99.2 % (95 % CI: 95.8 %, 100 %) and 97.0 % (95 % CI: 93.2 %, 99.0 %), respectively; and for the syphilis component were 96.5 % (95 % CI: 91.2 %, 99.0 %) and 90.8 % (95 % CI: 85.7 %, 94.6 %), respectively. In pregnant women, the sensitivity and specificity of the HIV test component were 93.3 % (95 % CI: 68.0 %, 99.8 %) and 94.1 % (95 % CI: 80.3 %, 99.3 %), respectively; and for the syphilis component were 100 % (95 % CI:81.5 %, 100 %) and 96.8 % (95 % CI:83.3 %, 99.9 %), respectively.ConclusionThe Standard Diagnostics BIOLINE HIV/Syphilis Duo dual test performed well in a field setting in Haiti and should be considered for wider use.
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- 2016
48. Fatal COVID-19 outcomes are associated with an antibody response targeting epitopes shared with endemic coronaviruses
- Author
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Anna L. McNaughton, Robert S. Paton, Matthew Edmans, Jonathan Youngs, Judith Wellens, Prabhjeet Phalora, Alex Fyfe, Sandra Belij-Rammerstorfer, Jai S. Bolton, Jonathan Ball, George W. Carnell, Wanwisa Dejnirattisai, Christina Dold, David W. Eyre, Philip Hopkins, Alison Howarth, Kreepa Kooblall, Hannah Klim, Susannah Leaver, Lian Ni Lee, César López-Camacho, Sheila F. Lumley, Derek C. Macallan, Alexander J. Mentzer, Nicholas M. Provine, Jeremy Ratcliff, Jose Slon-Compos, Donal Skelly, Lucas Stolle, Piyada Supasa, Nigel Temperton, Chris Walker, Beibei Wang, Duncan Wyncoll, Oxford Protective T Cell Immunology for COVID-19 (OPTIC) consortium, Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service (SNBTS) consortium, Peter Simmonds, Teresa Lambe, John Kenneth Baillie, Malcolm G. Semple, Peter J.M. Openshaw, International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infection Consortium Coronavirus Clinical Characterisation Consortium (ISARIC4C) investigators, Uri Obolski, Marc Turner, Miles Carroll, Juthathip Mongkolsapaya, Gavin Screaton, Stephen H. Kennedy, Lisa Jarvis, Eleanor Barnes, Susanna Dunachie, José Lourenço, Philippa C. Matthews, Tihana Bicanic, Paul Klenerman, Sunetra Gupta, and Craig P. Thompson
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Immunology ,Infectious disease ,Medicine - Abstract
The role of immune responses to previously seen endemic coronavirus epitopes in severe acute respiratory coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection and disease progression has not yet been determined. Here, we show that a key characteristic of fatal outcomes with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is that the immune response to the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is enriched for antibodies directed against epitopes shared with endemic beta-coronaviruses and has a lower proportion of antibodies targeting the more protective variable regions of the spike. The magnitude of antibody responses to the SARS-CoV-2 full-length spike protein, its domains and subunits, and the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid also correlated strongly with responses to the endemic beta-coronavirus spike proteins in individuals admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) with fatal COVID-19 outcomes, but not in individuals with nonfatal outcomes. This correlation was found to be due to the antibody response directed at the S2 subunit of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which has the highest degree of conservation between the beta-coronavirus spike proteins. Intriguingly, antibody responses to the less cross-reactive SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid were not significantly different in individuals who were admitted to an ICU with fatal and nonfatal outcomes, suggesting an antibody profile in individuals with fatal outcomes consistent with an “original antigenic sin” type response.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Lifetime Burden of Incarceration and Violence, Internalized Homophobia, and HIV/STI Risk Among Black Men Who Have Sex with Men in the HPTN 061 Study
- Author
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Severe, MacRegga, Scheidell, Joy D., Dyer, Typhanye V., Brewer, Russell A., Negri, Alberta, Turpin, Rodman E., Young, Kailyn E., Hucks-Ortiz, Christopher, Cleland, Charles M., Mayer, Kenneth H., and Khan, Maria R.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Functional Adult Outcomes 16 Years After Childhood Diagnosis of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: MTA Results
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Hechtman, Lily, Swanson, James M, Sibley, Margaret H, Stehli, Annamarie, Owens, Elizabeth B, Mitchell, John T, Arnold, L Eugene, Molina, Brooke SG, Hinshaw, Stephen P, Jensen, Peter S, Abikoff, Howard B, Algorta, Guillermo Perez, Howard, Andrea L, Hoza, Betsy, Etcovitch, Joy, Houssais, Sylviane, Lakes, Kimberley D, Nichols, J Quyen, Group, MTA Cooperative, Vitiello, Benedetto, Severe, Joanne B, Hoagwood, Kimberly, Richters, John, Vereen, Donald, Elliott, Glen R, Wells, Karen C, Epstein, Jeffery N, Murray, Desiree W, Conners, C Keith, March, John, Swanson, James, Wigal, Timothy, Cantwell, Dennis P, Greenhill, Laurence L, Newcorn, Jeffrey H, Molina, Brooke, Pelham, William E, Gibbons, Robert D, Marcus, Sue, Hur, Kwan, Kraemer, Helena C, Hanley, Thomas, and Stern, Karen
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) ,Substance Misuse ,Pediatric ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aftercare ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Disease Progression ,Employment ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Young Adult ,ADHD ,adult outcomes ,follow-up ,MTA ,functional outcomes ,MTA Cooperative Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Paediatrics ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo compare educational, occupational, legal, emotional, substance use disorder, and sexual behavior outcomes in young adults with persistent and desistent attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms and a local normative comparison group (LNCG) in the Multimodal Treatment Study of Children with ADHD (MTA).MethodData were collected 12, 14, and 16 years postbaseline (mean age 24.7 years at 16 years postbaseline) from 476 participants with ADHD diagnosed at age 7 to 9 years, and 241 age- and sex-matched classmates. Probands were subgrouped on persistence versus desistence of DSM-5 symptom count. Orthogonal comparisons contrasted ADHD versus LNCG and symptom-persistent (50%) versus symptom-desistent (50%) subgroups. Functional outcomes were measured with standardized and demographic instruments.ResultsThree patterns of functional outcomes emerged. Post-secondary education, times fired/quit a job, current income, receiving public assistance, and risky sexual behavior showed the most common pattern: the LNCG group fared best, symptom-persistent ADHD group worst, and symptom-desistent ADHD group between, with the largest effect sizes between LNCG and symptom-persistent ADHD. In the second pattern, seen with emotional outcomes (emotional lability, neuroticism, anxiety disorder, mood disorder) and substance use outcomes, the LNCG and symptom-desistent ADHD group did not differ, but both fared better than the symptom-persistent ADHD group. In the third pattern, noted with jail time (rare), alcohol use disorder (common), and number of jobs held, group differences were not significant. The ADHD group had 10 deaths compared to one death in the LNCG.ConclusionAdult functioning after childhood ADHD varies by domain and is generally worse when ADHD symptoms persist. It is important to identify factors and interventions that promote better functional outcomes.
- Published
- 2016
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