11,398 results on '"Wood, R."'
Search Results
2. Quantifying risk of a noise-induced AMOC collapse from northern and tropical Atlantic Ocean variability
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Chapman, R., Ashwin, P., Baker, J., and Wood, R. A.
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Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) exerts a major influence on global climate. There is much debate about whether the current strong AMOC may collapse as a result of anthropogenic forcing and/or internal variability. Increasing the noise in simple salt-advection models can change the apparent AMOC tipping threshold. However, it's not clear if 'present-day' variability is strong enough to induce a collapse. Here, we investigate how internal variability affects the likelihood of AMOC collapse. We examine internal variability of basin-scale salinities and temperatures in four CMIP6 pre-industrial simulations. We fit this to an empirical, process-based AMOC box model, and find that noise-induced AMOC collapse (defined as a decade in which the mean AMOC strength falls below 5 Sv) is unlikely for pre-industrial CMIP6 variability unless external forcing shifts the AMOC closer to a threshold. However, CMIP6 models seem to underestimate present-day Atlantic Ocean variability, and stronger variability substantially increases the likelihood of noise-induced collapse, especially if forcing brings the AMOC close to a stability threshold. Surprisingly, we find a case where forcing temporarily overshoots a stability threshold but noise decreases the probability of collapse. Accurately modelling internal decadal variability is essential for understanding the increased uncertainty in AMOC projections.
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- 2024
3. Florida
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Lane, Megan, Morgan, Jolande, and Wood, R. Craig
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- 2018
4. The Charter School Movement in the United States: Financial and Achievement Evidence from Ohio
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De Luca, Barbara M. and Wood, R. Craig
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- 2016
5. Florida
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Morgan, Jolande, Lane, Megan, and Wood, R. Craig
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- 2017
6. Reflecting on the Science of Climate Tipping Points to Inform and Assist Policy Making and Address the Risks they Pose to Society
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Stocker, T. F., Jones, R. G., Hegglin, M. I., Lenton, T. M., Hegerl, G. C., Seneviratne, S. I., van der Wel, N., and Wood, R. A.
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- 2024
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7. Florida
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Larkin, Brittany, Ulmer, Jasmine, and Wood, R. Craig
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- 2015
8. Maternal stress and early childhood BMI among US children from the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program
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Alshawabkeh, AN, Teitelbaum, SL, Stroustrup, A, Deoni, S, Gern, J, Bacharier, L, O’Connor, G, Kattan, M, Wood, R, Rivera-Spoljaric, K, Weiss, S, Permanente, Kaiser, Zeiger, R, Schmidt, R, Simhan, H, Schantz, S, Woodruff, T, and Bosquet-Enlow, M
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Infant ,Humans ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,United States ,Body Mass Index ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Birth Weight ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,program collaborators for Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Pediatrics - Abstract
BackgroundWe aimed to understand the association between maternal stress in the first year of life and childhood body mass index (BMI) from 2 to 4 years of age in a large, prospective United States-based consortium of cohorts.MethodsWe used data from the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes program. The main exposure was maternal stress in the first year of life measured with the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). The main outcome was the first childhood BMI percentile after age 2 until age 4 years. We used an adjusted linear mixed effects model to examine associations between BMI and PSS quartile.ResultsThe mean BMI percentile in children was 59.8 (SD 30) measured at 3.0 years (SD 1) on average. In both crude models and models adjusted for maternal BMI, age, race, ethnicity, infant birthweight, and health insurance status, no linear associations were observed between maternal stress and child BMI.ConclusionsAmong 1694 maternal-infant dyads, we found no statistically significant relationships between maternal perceived stress in the first year of life and child BMI after 2 through 4 years.ImpactAlthough existing literature suggests relationships between parental stress and childhood BMI, we found no linear associations between maternal stress in the first year of life and childhood BMI at 2-4 years of age among participants in ECHO cohorts. Higher maternal stress was significantly associated with Hispanic ethnicity, Black race, and public health insurance. Our analysis of a large, nationally representative sample challenges assumptions that maternal stress in the first year of life, as measured by a widely used scale, is associated with offspring BMI.
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- 2023
9. The Crown Minerals Amendment Bill – a triumph for conservation or pointless destruction by ideology?
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Wood, R. A.
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- 2019
10. Florida
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Lane, Megan, Morgan, Jolande, and Wood, R. Craig
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- 2015
11. Implementation of the WHO core components of an infection prevention and control programme in two sub-saharan African acute health-care facilities: a mixed methods study
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Wood, R., Tembele, W., Hema, A., Somé, A., Kinganda-Lusamaki, E., Basilubo, C., Lumembe, R., Alama, N., Mbunsu, G., Zongo, A., Ahuka, S., Muyembe, J. J., Leendertz, F., Eckmanns, T., Schubert, G., Kagoné, T., Makiala, S., and Tomczyk, S.
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- 2024
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12. Florida
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Larkin, Brittany, Ulmer, Jasmine, and Wood, R. Craig
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- 2014
13. Wear Mechanisms of Cold-Sprayed Stellite-6 During Reciprocated Dry Sliding Under Different Sliding Speeds
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Magarò, P., Furgiuele, F., Maletta, C., Tului, M., and Wood, R. J. K.
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- 2023
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14. Just a number? Donor age and (lack of) associated reasons for heart offer refusal
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Bhowmik, Aprotim C., Wayda, Brian, Luikart, Helen, Weng, Yingjie, Zhang, Shiqi, Wood, R. Patrick, Nieto, Javier, Groat, Tahnee, Neidlinger, Nikole, Zaroff, Jonathan, Malinoski, Darren, and Khush, Kiran K.
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- 2024
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15. Deceased Donors With HIV in the Era of the HOPE Act: Referrals and Procurement
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Liang, Tao, Salas, Jordan H., Bowring, Mary G., Kusemiju, Oyinkan, Barnaba, Brittany, Wingler, Matthew, McRann, Deborah, Salama, Alghidak, Wood, R. Patrick, Massie, Allan, Werbel, William, Tobian, Aaron A. R., Segev, Dorry L., and Durand, Christine M.
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- 2024
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16. The lake
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Wood, R. P.
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- 2014
17. Autobiography
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Wood, R. P.
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- 2014
18. National Landscape of Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Positive Deceased Organ Donors in the United States.
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Werbel, William A, Brown, Diane M, Kusemiju, Oyinkansola T, Doby, Brianna L, Seaman, Shanti M, Redd, Andrew D, Eby, Yolanda, Fernandez, Reinaldo E, Desai, Niraj M, Miller, Jernelle, Bismut, Gilad A, Kirby, Charles S, Schmidt, Haley A, Clarke, William A, Seisa, Michael, Petropoulos, Christos J, Quinn, Thomas C, Florman, Sander S, Huprikar, Shirish, Rana, Meenakshi M, Friedman-Moraco, Rachel J, Mehta, Aneesh K, Stock, Peter G, Price, Jennifer C, Stosor, Valentina, Mehta, Shikha G, Gilbert, Alexander J, Elias, Nahel, Morris, Michele I, Mehta, Sapna A, Small, Catherine B, Haidar, Ghady, Malinis, Maricar, Husson, Jennifer S, Pereira, Marcus R, Gupta, Gaurav, Hand, Jonathan, Kirchner, Varvara A, Agarwal, Avinash, Aslam, Saima, Blumberg, Emily A, Wolfe, Cameron R, Myer, Kevin, Wood, R Patrick, Neidlinger, Nikole, Strell, Sara, Shuck, Marion, Wilkins, Harry, Wadsworth, Matthew, Motter, Jennifer D, Odim, Jonah, Segev, Dorry L, Durand, Christine M, Tobian, Aaron AR, Piquant, Dominque, Link, Katherine, Hemmersbach-Miller, Marion, Pearson, Thomas, Turgeon, Nicole, Lyon, G Marshall, Kitchens, William, Huckaby, Jeryl, Lasseter, A Francie, Elbein, Rivka, Roberson, April, Ferry, Elizabeth, Klock, Ethan, Cochran, Willa V, Morrison, Michelle, Rasmussen, Sarah, Bollinger, Juli, Sugarman, Jeremy, Smith, Angela R, Thomas, Margaret, Coakley, Margaret, Timpone, Joseph, Stucke, Alyssa, Haydel, Brandy, Dieter, Rebecca, Klein, Elizabeth J, Neumann, Henry, Gallon, Lorenzo, Goudy, Leah, Callegari, Michelle, Marrazzo, Ilise, Jackson, Towanda, Pruett, Timothy, Farnsworth, Mary, Locke, Jayme E, Mompoint-Williams, Darnell, Basinger, Katherine, Mekeel, Kristin, Nguyen, Phirum, Kwan, Joanne, Srisengfa, Tab, Chin-Hong, Peter, Rogers, Rodney, Simkins, Jacques, Munoz, Carlos, and Dunn, Ty
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Pediatric Research Initiative ,HIV/AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Anti-Retroviral Agents ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,HIV Seropositivity ,Humans ,Integrases ,Prospective Studies ,Tissue Donors ,United States ,Viral Load ,transplant ,organ donation ,drug resistance ,HOPE in Action Investigators ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
BackgroundOrgan transplantation from donors with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to recipients with HIV (HIV D+/R+) presents risks of donor-derived infections. Understanding clinical, immunologic, and virologic characteristics of HIV-positive donors is critical for safety.MethodsWe performed a prospective study of donors with HIV-positive and HIV false-positive (FP) test results within the HIV Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act in Action studies of HIV D+/R+ transplantation (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02602262, NCT03500315, and NCT03734393). We compared clinical characteristics in HIV-positive versus FP donors. We measured CD4 T cells, HIV viral load (VL), drug resistance mutations (DRMs), coreceptor tropism, and serum antiretroviral therapy (ART) detection, using mass spectrometry in HIV-positive donors.ResultsBetween March 2016 and March 2020, 92 donors (58 HIV positive, 34 FP), representing 98.9% of all US HOPE donors during this period, donated 177 organs (131 kidneys and 46 livers). Each year the number of donors increased. The prevalence of hepatitis B (16% vs 0%), syphilis (16% vs 0%), and cytomegalovirus (CMV; 91% vs 58%) was higher in HIV-positive versus FP donors; the prevalences of hepatitis C viremia were similar (2% vs 6%). Most HIV-positive donors (71%) had a known HIV diagnosis, of whom 90% were prescribed ART and 68% had a VL
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- 2022
19. Comparative Effectiveness of Umeclidinium/Vilanterol versus Indacaterol/Glycopyrronium on Moderate-to-Severe Exacerbations in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in Clinical Practice in England
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Requena G, Czira A, Banks V, Wood R, Tritton T, Castillo C, Yeap J, Wild R, Compton C, Rothnie KJ, Herth FJ, Quint JK, and Ismaila AS
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copd dual therapy ,laba/lama new users ,healthcare resource utilization ,exacerbations ,comparative effectiveness ,single-inhaler dual therapy ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Gema Requena,1 Alexandrosz Czira,1 Victoria Banks,2 Robert Wood,2 Theo Tritton,2 Catherine Castillo,2 Jie Yeap,2 Rosie Wild,2 Chris Compton,1 Kieran J Rothnie,1 Felix JF Herth,3 Jennifer K Quint,4 Afisi S Ismaila5,6 1GSK, R&D Global Medical, Brentford, Middlesex, UK; 2Real-World Evidence, Adelphi Real World, Bollington, Cheshire, UK; 3Department of Pneumology and Critical Care Medicine, Thoraxklinik, University of Heidelberg and Translational Lung Research Center Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany; 4National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, UK; 5Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, Collegeville, PA, USA; 6Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CanadaCorrespondence: Gema Requena, Epidemiology, Value Evidence and Outcomes, R&D Global Medical, GSK, Brentford, Middlesex, UK, Tel +44 20 80476893, Email gema.x.requena@gsk.comPurpose: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbations are associated with significant morbidity and mortality and increased economic healthcare burden for patients with COPD. Long-acting muscarinic antagonist (LAMA)/long-acting β2-agonist (LABA) dual therapy is recommended for patients receiving mono-bronchodilator therapy who experience exacerbations or ongoing breathlessness. This study compared two single-inhaler LAMA/LABA dual therapies, umeclidinium/vilanterol (UMEC/VI) and indacaterol/glycopyrronium (IND/GLY), on moderate-to-severe exacerbation rates in patients with COPD in England.Patients and Methods: This retrospective cohort study used linked primary care electronic health record data (Clinical Practice Research Datalink-Aurum) and secondary care data (Hospital Episode Statistics) to assess outcomes for patients with COPD who had a first prescription for single-inhaler UMEC/VI or IND/GLY (index date) between 1 January 2015 and 30 September 2019 (indexing period). Analyses compared UMEC/VI and IND/GLY on moderate-to-severe, moderate, and severe exacerbations, healthcare resource utilization (HCRU), and direct costs at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months, and time-to-first on-treatment exacerbation up to 24 months post-index date. Following inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW), non-inferiority and superiority of UMEC/VI versus IND/GLY were assessed.Results: In total, 12,031 patients were included, of whom 8753 (72.8%) were prescribed UMEC/VI and 3278 (27.2%) IND/GLY. After IPTW, for moderate-to-severe exacerbations, weighted rate ratios were < 1 at 6, 12, and 18 months and equal to 1 at 24 months for UMEC/VI; around the null value for moderate exacerbations and < 1 at all timepoints for severe exacerbations. UMEC/VI showed lower HCRU incidence rates than IND/GLY for all-cause Accident and Emergency visits and COPD-related inpatient stays and associated all-cause costs at 6 months post-indexing. Time-to-triple therapy was similar for both treatments.Conclusion: UMEC/VI demonstrated non-inferiority to IND/GLY in moderate-to-severe exacerbation reduction at 6, 12 and 18 months. These results support previous findings demonstrating similarity between UMEC/VI and IND/GLY on reduction of moderate-to-severe exacerbations.Plain Language Summary: Sudden exacerbations, or flare-ups, of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are linked with worsening health and increased risk of death, as well as increased healthcare costs for people with COPD. Long-acting muscarinic antagonist (LAMA)/long-acting β2-agonist (LABA) dual therapy is recommended for patients with COPD who take LAMA or LABA monotherapy but continue to experience flare-ups or ongoing breathlessness. This study compared two single-inhaler LAMA/LABA dual therapies, umeclidinium/vilanterol (UMEC/VI) and indacaterol/glycopyrronium (IND/GLY), in terms of flare-ups in patients with COPD in England.We used two linked databases of de-identified medical records from general practitioners and hospitals for patients with COPD who had a first prescription for UMEC/VI or IND/GLY between 1 January 2015 and 30 September 2019. We compared the two treatments on COPD flare-ups, healthcare resource utilization and related costs, and changes in medication over the 2 years following starting treatment.We found that the treatments were comparable for moderate-to-severe flare-ups. Patients taking UMEC/VI had less Accident and Emergency (A&E) visits in total and less inpatient stays related to their COPD, and had a lower overall cost of healthcare for A&E visits and inpatient stays than patients taking IND/GLY. Changes to treatment and time before their first flare-up were similar for all patients, regardless of their prescribed treatment.This study showed that UMEC/VI is as effective as IND/GLY at preventing moderate-to-severe flare-ups. These results support previous findings demonstrating similarity between UMEC/VI and IND/GLY in reducing the rate of moderate-to-severe exacerbations after starting treatment.Keywords: COPD dual therapy, LABA/LAMA new users, healthcare resource utilization, exacerbations, comparative effectiveness, single-inhaler dual therapy
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- 2023
20. Birth outcomes in relation to neighborhood food access and individual food insecurity during pregnancy in the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO)-wide cohort study
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Smith, P.B., Newby, L.K., Jacobson, L.P., Catellier, D.J., Fuselier, G, Gershon, R, Cella, D, Teitelbaum, S.L., Stroustrup, A, Merhar, S, Lampland, A, Reynolds, A, Hudak, M, Pryhuber, G, Moore, P, Washburn, L, Gatzke-Kopp, L, Swingler, M, Laham, F.R., Mansbach, J.M., Wu, S, Spergel, J.M., Celedón, J.C., Puls, H.T., Teach, S.J., Porter, S.C., Waynik, I.Y., Iyer, S.S., Samuels-Kalow, M.E., Thompson, A.D., Stevenson, M.D., Bauer, C.S., Inhofe, N.R., Boos, M, Macias, C.G., Koinis Mitchell, D, Duarte, C.S., Monk, C, Posner, J, Canino, G, Croen, L, Gern, J, Zoratti, E, Seroogy, C, Bendixsen, C, Jackson, D, Bacharier, L, O’Connor, G, Kattan, M, Wood, R, Rivera-Spoljaric, K, Hershey, G, Johnson, C, Bastain, T, Farzan, S, Habre, R, Hertz-Picciotto, I, Hipwell, A, Keenan, K, Karr, C, Tylavsky, F, Mason, A, Zhao, Q, Sathyanarayana, S, Bush, N, LeWinn, K.Z., Carter, B, Pastyrnak, S, Neal, C, Smith, L, Helderman, J, Leve, L, Neiderhiser, J, Weiss, S.T., Litonjua, A, Zeiger, R, McEvoy, C, Tepper, R, Lyall, K, Volk, H, Landa, R, Ozonoff, S, Schmidt, R, Dager, S, Schultz, R, Piven, J, O’Shea, M, Vaidya, R, Obeid, R, Rollins, C, Bear, K, Lenski, M, Singh, R, Msall, M, Frazier, J, Gogcu, S, Montgomery, A, Kuban, K, Douglass, L, Jara, H, Joseph, R, Kerver, J.M., Barone, C, Fussman, C, Paneth, N, Elliott, M, Ruden, D, Herbstman, J, Schantz, S, Woodruff, T, Stanford, J, Porucznik, C, Giardino, A, Wright, R.J., Bosquet-Enlow, M, Huddleston, K, Nguyen, R, Barrett, E, Swan, S, Miller, R, Aris, Izzuddin M, Lin, Pi-I D, Wu, Allison J, Dabelea, Dana, Lester, Barry M, Wright, Rosalind J, Karagas, Margaret R, Kerver, Jean M, Dunlop, Anne L, Joseph, Christine LM, Camargo, Carlos A, Jr., Ganiban, Jody M, Schmidt, Rebecca J, Strakovsky, Rita S, McEvoy, Cindy T, Hipwell, Alison E, O’Shea, Thomas Michael, McCormack, Lacey A, Maldonado, Luis E, Niu, Zhongzheng, Ferrara, Assiamira, Zhu, Yeyi, Chehab, Rana F, Kinsey, Eliza W, Bush, Nicole R, Nguyen, Ruby HN., Carroll, Kecia N, Barrett, Emily S, Lyall, Kristen, Sims-Taylor, Lauren M, Trasande, Leonardo, Biagini, Jocelyn M, Breton, Carrie V, Patti, Marisa A, Coull, Brent, Amutah-Onukagha, Ndidiamaka, Hacker, Michele R, James-Todd, Tamarra, and Oken, Emily
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- 2024
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21. Donor Electrocardiogram Associations With Cardiac Dysfunction, Heart Transplant Use, and Survival: The Donor Heart Study
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Tapaskar, Natalie, Wayda, Brian, Malinoski, Darren, Luikart, Helen, Groat, Tahnee, Nguyen, John, Belcher, John, Nieto, Javier, Neidlinger, Nikole, Salehi, Ahmad, Geraghty, P.J., Nicely, Bruce, Jendrisak, Martin, Pearson, Thomas, Wood, R. Patrick, Zhang, Shiqi, Weng, Yingjie, Zaroff, Jonathan, and Khush, Kiran K.
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- 2024
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22. Creating Inclusive Materials and Methods for Co-designing Health Information Technologies with People Who Have Down Syndrome
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Wood, R. E., Lazar, J., Feng, J. H., Forsythe-Korzeniewicz, A., Goodman-Deane, Joy, editor, Dong, Hua, editor, Heylighen, Ann, editor, Lazar, Jonathan, editor, and Clarkson, John, editor
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- 2023
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23. Comparison of Rescue Medication Prescriptions in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Receiving Umeclidinium/Vilanterol versus Tiotropium Bromide/Olodaterol in Routine Clinical Practice in England
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Requena G, Czira A, Banks V, Wood R, Tritton T, Castillo CM, Yeap J, Wild R, Compton C, Rothnie KJ, Herth F, Quint JK, and Ismaila AS
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copd treatment ,laba/lama ,primary care setting ,rescue medication ,treatment escalation ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Gema Requena,1 Alexandrosz Czira,1 Victoria Banks,2 Robert Wood,2 Theo Tritton,2 Catherine M Castillo,2 Jie Yeap,2 Rosie Wild,2 Chris Compton,1 Kieran J Rothnie,1 Felix Herth,3,4 Jennifer K Quint,5 Afisi S Ismaila6,7 1GSK, R&D Global Medical, Brentford, Middlesex, UK; 2Real-World Evidence, Adelphi Real World, Bollington, Cheshire, UK; 3Department of Pulmonology and Respiratory Care Medicine, Thoraxklinik at the University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany; 4Translational Lung Research Center Heidelberg, Member of the German Center for Lung Research DZL, Heidelberg, Germany; 5National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, UK; 6Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, Collegeville, PA, USA; 7Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CanadaCorrespondence: Gema Requena, GSK, R&D Global Medical, Brentford, Middlesex, UK, Tel +44 20 80476893, Email gema.x.requena@gsk.comPurpose: Routinely collected healthcare data on the comparative effectiveness of the long-acting muscarinic antagonist/long-acting β2-agonist combination umeclidinium/vilanterol (UMEC/VI) versus tiotropium bromide/olodaterol (TIO/OLO) for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is limited. This study compared rescue medication prescriptions in patients with COPD in England receiving UMEC/VI versus TIO/OLO.Patients and Methods: This retrospective cohort study used primary care data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink Aurum database linked with secondary care administrative data from Hospital Episode Statistics. Patients with a COPD diagnosis at age ≥ 35 years were included (indexed) following initiation of single-inhaler UMEC/VI or TIO/OLO between July 1, 2015, and September 30, 2019. Outcomes included the number of rescue medication prescriptions at 12-months (primary), and at 6-, 18- and 24-months (secondary), adherence at 6-, 12-, 18- and 24-months post-index, defined as proportion of days covered ≥ 80% (secondary), and time-to-initiation of triple therapy (exploratory). Inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to balance potential confounding baseline characteristics. Superiority of UMEC/VI versus TIO/OLO for the primary outcome of rescue medication prescriptions was assessed using an intention-to-treat analysis with a p-value < 0.05.Results: In total, 8603 patients were eligible (UMEC/VI: n = 6536; TIO/OLO: n = 2067). Following IPTW, covariates were well balanced across groups. Patients initiating UMEC/VI had statistically significantly fewer (mean [standard deviation]; p-value) rescue medication prescriptions versus TIO/OLO in both the unweighted (4.84 [4.78] vs 5.68 [5.00]; p < 0.001) and weighted comparison (4.91 [4.81] vs 5.48 [5.02]; p = 0.0032) at 12 months; consistent results were seen at all timepoints. Adherence was numerically higher for TIO/OLO versus UMEC/VI at all timepoints. Time-to-triple therapy was similar between treatment groups.Conclusion: UMEC/VI was superior to TIO/OLO in reducing rescue medication prescriptions at 12 months after treatment initiation in a primary care cohort in England, potentially suggesting improvements in symptom control with UMEC/VI compared with TIO/OLO.Keywords: COPD treatment, LABA/LAMA, primary care setting, rescue medication, treatment escalation
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- 2023
24. Parenteral support and micronutrient deficiencies in children with short bowel syndrome: A comprehensive retrospective study
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Chatzidaki, V., Wood, R., Alegakis, A., Lawson, M., and Fagbemi, A.
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- 2023
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25. Comparative Effectiveness of Umeclidinium/Vilanterol versus Inhaled Corticosteroid/Long-Acting β2-Agonist in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in a Primary Care Setting in England
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Czira A, Requena G, Banks V, Wood R, Tritton T, Castillo CM, Yeap J, Wild R, Compton C, Rothnie KJ, Herth F, Quint JK, and Ismaila AS
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adherence ,comparative effectiveness ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (copd) treatment ,inhaled corticosteroid/long-acting β2-agonist (ics/laba) dual therapy ,long-acting muscarinic antagonist (lama)/laba dual therapy ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Alexandrosz Czira,1 Gema Requena,1 Victoria Banks,2 Robert Wood,2 Theo Tritton,2 Catherine M Castillo,2 Jie Yeap,2 Rosie Wild,2 Chris Compton,1 Kieran J Rothnie,1 Felix Herth,3,4 Jennifer K Quint,5 Afisi S Ismaila6,7 1R&D Global Medical, GSK, Brentford, Middlesex, UK; 2Real-World Evidence, Adelphi Real World, Bollington, Cheshire, UK; 3Department of Pulmonology and Respiratory Care Medicine, Thoraxklinik at the University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany; 4Translational Lung Research Center Heidelberg, Member of the German Center for Lung Research DZL, Heidelberg, Germany; 5National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, UK; 6Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, Collegeville, PA, USA; 7Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CanadaCorrespondence: Alexandrosz Czira, Value Evidence and Outcomes, R&D Global Medical, GSK, Brentford, Middlesex, UK, Tel +44 7788 351610, Email alexandrosz.x.czira@gsk.comPurpose: To compare adherence to once-daily umeclidinium/vilanterol (UMEC/VI), a long-acting muscarinic antagonist/long-acting β2-agonist (LAMA/LABA), and twice-daily inhaled corticosteroids (ICS)/LABA single-inhaler dual therapy in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in a primary care cohort in England.Patients and Methods: Active comparator, new-user, retrospective cohort study using CPRD-Aurum primary care data and linked Hospital Episode Statistics secondary care administrative data. Patients without exacerbations in the previous year were indexed on first/earliest prescription date of once-daily UMEC/VI or twice-daily ICS/LABA as initial maintenance therapy between July 2014-September 2019. Primary outcome: medication adherence at 12 months post-index, defined as proportion of days covered (PDC) ≥ 80%. PDC represented proportion of time over the treatment duration that the patient was theoretically in possession of the medication. Secondary outcomes: adherence at 6, 18, and 24 months post-index, time-to-triple therapy, time-to-first on-treatment COPD exacerbation, COPD-related and all-cause healthcare resource utilization (HCRU), and direct health-care costs. A propensity score was generated and inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) was used to balance potential confounders. Superiority was defined as > 0% difference between treatment groups.Results: In total, 6815 eligible patients were included (UMEC/VI:1623; ICS/LABA:5192). At 12 months post-index, weighted odds of a patient being adherent were significantly greater with UMEC/VI versus ICS/LABA (odds ratio [95% CI]: 1.71 [1.09, 2.66]; p=0.0185), demonstrating superiority of UMEC/VI. Patients taking UMEC/VI were statistically significantly more adherent than those taking ICS/LABA at 6, 18, and 24 months post-index (p< 0.05). Differences in time-to-triple therapy, time-to-moderate COPD exacerbations, HCRU, and direct medical costs were not statistically significant between treatments after IPTW was applied.Conclusion: At 12 months post-treatment initiation, once-daily UMEC/VI was superior to twice-daily ICS/LABA in medication adherence among patients with COPD without exacerbations in the previous year, newly initiating dual maintenance therapy in England. The finding was consistent at 6, 18, and 24 months.Keywords: adherence, comparative effectiveness, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) treatment, inhaled corticosteroid/long-actingβ2-agonist (ICS/LABA) dual therapy, long-acting muscarinic antagonist (LAMA)/LABA dual therapy
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- 2023
26. Treatment Patterns, Healthcare Utilization and Clinical Outcomes of Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Initiating Single-Inhaler Long-Acting β2-Agonist/Long-Acting Muscarinic Antagonist Dual Therapy in Primary Care in England
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Requena G, Banks V, Czira A, Wood R, Tritton T, Wild R, Compton C, and Ismaila AS
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copd ,single-inhaler lama/laba dual therapy ,primary care setting ,treatment patterns ,clinical outcomes ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Gema Requena,1 Victoria Banks,2,* Alexandrosz Czira,1 Robert Wood,2 Theo Tritton,2 Rosie Wild,2 Chris Compton,1 Afisi S Ismaila3,4 1Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, R&D Global Medical, Brentford, Middlesex, UK; 2Real-World Evidence, Adelphi Real World, Bollington, Cheshire, UK; 3Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, Collegeville, PA, USA; 4Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada*At the time of the studyCorrespondence: Gema Requena, Epidemiology, Value Evidence and Outcomes, R&D Global Medical, GSK, Middlesex, UK, Tel +44 20 80476893, Email gema.x.requena@gsk.comPurpose: Selection of treatments for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) may impact clinical outcomes, healthcare resource use (HCRU) and direct healthcare costs. We aimed to characterize these outcomes along with treatment patterns, for patients with COPD following initiation of single-inhaler long-acting muscarinic antagonist/long-acting β2-agonist (LAMA/LABA) dual therapy in the primary care setting in England.Patients and Methods: This retrospective cohort study used linked primary care electronic medical record data (Clinical Practice Research Datalink-Aurum) and secondary care administrative data (Hospital Episode Statistics) in England to assess outcomes for patients with COPD who had a prescription for one of four single-inhaler LAMA/LABA dual therapies between 1st June 2015– 31st December 2018 (indexing period). Outcomes were assessed during a 12-month follow-up period from the index date (date of earliest prescription of a single-inhaler LAMA/LABA within the indexing period). Incident users were those without previous LAMA/LABA dual therapy prescriptions prior to index; this manuscript focuses on a subset of incident users: non-triple therapy users (patients without concomitant inhaled corticosteroid use at index).Results: Of 10,991 incident users included, 9888 (90.0%) were non-triple therapy users, indexed on umeclidinium/vilanterol (n=4805), aclidinium/formoterol (n=2109), indacaterol/glycopyrronium (n=1785) and tiotropium/olodaterol (n=1189). At 3 months post-index, 63.3% of non-triple therapy users remained on a single-inhaler LAMA/LABA, and 22.1% had discontinued inhaled therapy. Most patients (86.9%) required general practitioner consultations in the first 3 months post-index. Inpatient stays were the biggest contributor to healthcare costs. Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPDs), adherence, time-to-triple therapy, time-to-first on-treatment moderate-to-severe AECOPD, time-to-index treatment discontinuation, HCRU and healthcare costs were similar across indexed therapies.Conclusion: Patients initiating treatment with single-inhaler LAMA/LABA in primary care in England were unlikely to switch treatments in the first three months following initiation, but some may discontinue respiratory medication. Outcomes were similar across indexed treatments.Keywords: COPD, single-inhaler LAMA/LABA dual therapy, primary care setting, treatment patterns, clinical outcomes
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- 2023
27. Incidence rates of childhood asthma with recurrent exacerbations in the US Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program
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Smith, P.B., Newby, K.L., Jacobson, L.P., Catellier, D.J., Gershon, R., Cella, D., Alshawabkeh, A., Aschner, J., Merhar, S., Ren, C., Reynolds, A., Keller, R., Pryhuber, G., Duncan, A., Lampland, A., Wadhawan, R., Wagner, C., Hudak, M., Mayock, D., Walshburn, L., Teitelbaum, S.L., Stroustrup, A., Trasande, L., Blair, C., Gatzke-Kopp, L., Swingler, M., Mansbach, J., Spergel, J., Puls, H., Stevenson, M., Bauer, C., Deoni, S., Duarte, C., Dunlop, A., Elliott, A., Croen, L., Bacharier, L., O’Connor, G., Kattan, M., Wood, R., Hershey, G., Ownby, D., Hertz-Picciotto, I., Hipwell, A., Karagas, M., Karr, C., Mason, A., Sathyanarayana, S., Lester, B., Carter, B., Neal, C., Smith, L., Helderman, J., Leve, L., Ganiban, J., Neiderhiser, J., Weiss, S., Zeiger, R., Tepper, R., Lyall, K., Landa, R., Ozonoff, S., Schmidt, R., Dager, S., Schultz, R., Piven, J., Volk, H., Vaidya, R., Obeid, R., Rollins, C., Bear, K., Pastyrnak, S., Lenski, M., Msall, M., Frazier, J., Washburn, L., Montgomery, A., Barone, C., McKane, P., Paneth, N., Elliott, M., Herbstman, J., Schantz, S., Porucznik, C., Silver, R., Conradt, E., Bosquet-Enlow, M., Huddleston, K., Bush, N., Nguyen, R., O'Connor, T., Samuels-Kalow, M., Miller, Rachel L., Schuh, Holly, Chandran, Aruna, Aris, Izzuddin M., Bendixsen, Casper, Blossom, Jeffrey, Breton, Carrie, Camargo, Carlos A., Jr., Canino, Glorisa, Carroll, Kecia N., Commodore, Sarah, Cordero, José F., Dabelea, Dana M., Ferrara, Assiamira, Fry, Rebecca C., Ganiban, Jody M., Gern, James E., Gilliland, Frank D., Gold, Diane R., Habre, Rima, Hare, Marion E., Harte, Robyn N., Hartert, Tina, Hasegawa, Kohei, Khurana Hershey, Gurjit K., Jackson, Daniel J., Joseph, Christine, Kerver, Jean M., Kim, Haejin, Litonjua, Augusto A., Marsit, Carmen J., McEvoy, Cindy, Mendonça, Eneida A., Moore, Paul E., Nkoy, Flory L., O’Connor, Thomas G., Oken, Emily, Ownby, Dennis, Perzanowski, Matthew, Rivera-Spoljaric, Katherine, Ryan, Patrick H., Singh, Anne Marie, Stanford, Joseph B., Wright, Rosalind J., Wright, Robert O., Zanobetti, Antonella, Zoratti, Edward, and Johnson, Christine C.
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- 2023
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28. Trends in donation after circulatory determination of death donor utilization: Lessons from Houston
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Barboza, Andrew B., Dhanani, Naila H, Browning, Kristine, Wood, R. Patrick, and Hall, David R
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- 2023
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29. The plasma lipidome of the Quaker parrot (Myiopsitta monachus)
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Beaufrère, Hugues, Gardhouse, Sara M, Wood, R Darren, and Stark, Ken D
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Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Analytical Chemistry ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Chemical Sciences ,Digestive Diseases ,Animals ,Biomarkers ,Bird Diseases ,Chromatography ,High Pressure Liquid ,Dyslipidemias ,Female ,Glycerophospholipids ,Lipid Metabolism ,Lipidomics ,Male ,Parrots ,Sterols ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Dyslipidemias and lipid-accumulation disorders are common in captive parrots, in particular in Quaker parrots. Currently available diagnostic tests only measure a fraction of blood lipids and have overall problematic cross-species applicability. Comprehensively analyzing lipids in the plasma of parrots is the first step to better understand their lipid metabolism in health and disease, as well as to explore new lipid biomarkers. The plasma lipidome of 12 Quaker parrots was investigated using UHPLC-MS/MS with both targeted and untargeted methods. Targeted methods on 6 replicates measured 432 lipids comprised of sterol, cholesterol ester, bile acid, fatty acid, acylcarnitine, glycerolipid, glycerophospholipid, and sphingolipid panels. For untargeted lipidomics, precursor ion mass-to-charge ratios were matched to corresponding lipids using the LIPIDMAPS structure database and LipidBlast at the sum composition or acyl species level of information. Sterol lipids and glycerophospholipids constituted the majority of plasma lipids on a molar basis. The most common lipids detected with the targeted methods included free cholesterol, CE(18:2), CE(20:4) for sterol lipids; PC(36:2), PC(34:2), PC(34:1) for glycerophospholipids; TG(52:3), TG(54:4), TG(54:5), TG(52:2) for glycerolipids; SM(d18:1/16:0) for sphingolipids; and palmitic acid for fatty acyls. Over a thousand different lipid species were detected by untargeted lipidomics. Sex differences in the plasma lipidome were observed using heatmaps, principal component analysis, and discriminant analysis. This report presents the first comprehensive database of plasma lipid species in psittacine birds and paves the way for further research into blood lipid diagnostics and the impact of diet, diseases, and drugs on the parrot plasma lipidome.
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- 2020
30. Left Ventricular Dysfunction Associated With Brain Death: Results From the Donor Heart Study
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Khush, Kiran K., Malinoski, Darren, Luikart, Helen, Wayda, Brian, Groat, Tahnee, Nguyen, John, Belcher, John, Nieto, Javier, Neidlinger, Nikole, Salehi, Ahmad, Geraghty, P.J., Nicely, Bruce, Jendrisak, Martin, Pearson, Thomas, Patrick Wood, R., Zhang, Shiqi, Weng, Yingjie, and Zaroff, Jonathan
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- 2023
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31. Comparative Adherence and Persistence of Single- and Multiple-Inhaler Triple Therapies Among Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in an English Real-World Primary Care Setting
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Halpin DM, Rothnie KJ, Banks V, Czira A, Compton C, Wood R, Tritton T, Massey O, Wild R, Snowise N, Nikitin K, Sharma R, Ismaila AS, and Vogelmeier CF
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copd ,clinical practice research datalink ,hospital episode statistics ,mitt ,proportion of days covered ,sitt. ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
David MG Halpin,1 Kieran J Rothnie,2 Victoria Banks,3 Alexandrosz Czira,2 Chris Compton,4 Robert Wood,3 Theo Tritton,3 Olivia Massey,3 Rosie Wild,3 Neil Snowise,5 Kirill Nikitin,2 Raj Sharma,4 Afisi S Ismaila,6,7 Claus F Vogelmeier8 1University of Exeter Medical School, College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK; 2Value Evidence and Outcomes, R&D Global Medical, GSK, Brentford, UK; 3Real-World Evidence, Adelphi Real World, Bollington, UK; 4Global Medical, GSK, London, UK; 5Institute of Pharmaceutical Science, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, King’s College, London, UK; 6Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, Collegeville, PA, USA; 7Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada; 8Department of Medicine, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Marburg, Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL), Marburg, GermanyCorrespondence: David MG Halpin, University of Exeter Medical School, College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter, Exeter, EX1 2LU, UK, Tel +44 (0)1392 201178, Email d.halpin@nhs.netPurpose: Triple therapy comprising a long-acting muscarinic antagonist, long-acting β2-agonist and inhaled corticosteroid is recommended for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who continue to experience frequent exacerbations or symptoms whilst receiving dual therapy. Adherence and persistence to multiple-inhaler triple therapy (MITT) is known to be poor. This study assessed comparative adherence to single-inhaler triple therapy (SITT) versus MITT in a real-world setting in England.Patients and Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study using linked primary care (Clinical Practice Research Datalink Aurum) and secondary care (Hospital Episode Statistics [HES] Admitted Patient Care) data to identify patients with COPD who were newly initiated on SITT or MITT between November 2017 and June 2019. Eligible patients were aged ≥ 35 years and had a forced expiratory volume in 1 second/forced vital capacity < 0.7, linkage to HES and continuous registration with a general practitioner for 12 months pre- and 6 months post-initiation. Inverse probability of treatment weighting was used to balance baseline characteristics between cohorts. Adherence was measured using the proportion of days covered by days’ supply of SITT or MITT prescriptions. Persistence was measured with a gap of > 30 days between the end of a prescription and the following refill used to determine non-persistence.Results: Overall, 4080 SITT and 6579 MITT users comprised the study cohort. After weighting, the baseline characteristics between the cohorts were comparable (absolute standardized mean difference < 10%). SITT users had significantly higher adherence than MITT users at 6, 12, and 18 months post-initiation (p< 0.001 for all comparisons). Median persistence was higher among SITT users than MITT users (5.09 months vs 0.99 months).Conclusion: Patients with COPD in England initiating SITT had significantly better adherence and persistence compared with MITT initiators. These improvements continued at least 18 months following treatment initiation.Keywords: COPD, Clinical Practice Research Datalink, Hospital Episode Statistics, MITT, proportion of days covered, SITT
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- 2022
32. MicroRNA profiling in canine multicentric lymphoma
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Craig, Karlee KL, Wood, Geoffrey A, Keller, Stefan M, Mutsaers, Anthony J, and Wood, R Darren
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Hematology ,Biotechnology ,Orphan Drug ,Genetics ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Lymphoma ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Animals ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Cyclophosphamide ,Dog Diseases ,Dogs ,Doxorubicin ,Female ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Neoplastic ,Immunophenotyping ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Lymph Nodes ,Lymphoma ,B-Cell ,Lymphoma ,T-Cell ,Male ,MicroRNAs ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Prednisone ,Progression-Free Survival ,Treatment Outcome ,Vincristine ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Lymphoma is the most common hematopoietic tumour in dogs and is remarkably similar to the human disease. Tumour biomarker discovery is providing new tools for diagnostics and predicting therapeutic response and clinical outcome. MicroRNAs are small non-coding RNAs that participate in post-transcriptional gene regulation and their aberrant expression can impact genes involved in cancer. The aim of this study was to characterize microRNA expression in lymph nodes and plasma from dogs with multicentric B or T cell lymphoma compared to healthy control dogs. We further compared expression between lymph nodes and corresponding plasma samples and assessed changes in expression at relapse compared to time of diagnosis. Lastly, we investigated microRNAs for association with clinical outcome in patients treated with CHOP chemotherapy. A customized PCR array was utilized to profile 38 canine target microRNAs. Quantification was performed using real time RT-qPCR and relative expression was determined by the delta-delta Ct method. In lymph nodes, there were 16 microRNAs with significantly altered expression for B cell lymphoma and 9 for T cell lymphoma. In plasma, there were 15 microRNAs altered for B cell lymphoma and 3 for T cell lymphoma. The majority of microRNAs did not have correlated expression between lymph node and plasma and only 8 microRNAs were significantly different between diagnosis and relapse. For B cell lymphoma, 8 microRNAs had differential expression in the non-remission group compared to dogs that completed CHOP in complete remission. Four of these microRNAs were also altered in patients that died prior to one-year. Kaplan-Meier survival curves for high versus low microRNA expression revealed that 10 microRNAs were correlated with progression-free survival and 3 with overall survival. This study highlights microRNAs of interest for canine multicentric lymphoma. Future goals include development of microRNA panels that may be useful as biomarkers with the intent to provide improved outcome prediction to veterinary cancer patients.
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- 2019
33. Characterization of Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Initiating Single-Inhaler Long-Acting Muscarinic Antagonist/Long-Acting β2-Agonist Dual Therapy in a Primary Care Setting in England
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Requena G, Banks V, Czira A, Wood R, Tritton T, Wild R, Compton C, Duarte M, and Ismaila AS
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copd ,initial maintenance therapy ,primary care setting ,patient characteristics ,single-inhaler lama/laba dual therapy ,treatment patterns ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Gema Requena,1 Victoria Banks,2 Alexandrosz Czira,1 Robert Wood,2 Theo Tritton,2 Rosie Wild,2 Chris Compton,1 Maria Duarte,1 Afisi S Ismaila3,4 1Value Evidence and Outcomes, Epidemiology, GSK, R&D Global Medical, Brentford, Middlesex, UK; 2Real-world Evidence, Adelphi Real World, Bollington, Cheshire, UK; 3Value Evidence and Outcomes, GSK, Collegeville, PA, USA; 4Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, CanadaCorrespondence: Gema Requena, Epidemiology, Value Evidence and Outcomes, R&D Global Medical, GSK, Brentford, Middlesex, UK, Tel +44 20 80476893, Email gema.x.requena@gsk.comPurpose: Treatment pathways of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) receiving single-inhaler dual therapies remain unclear. We aimed to describe characteristics, prescribed treatments, healthcare resource use (HCRU) and costs of patients with COPD who initiated single-inhaler long-acting muscarinic antagonist/long-acting β2-agonist (LAMA/LABA) dual therapy in primary care in England.Patients and Methods: Retrospective study using linked data from Clinical Practice Research Datalink Aurum and Hospital Episode Statistics datasets. Patients with COPD with ≥ 1 single-inhaler LAMA/LABA prescription between June 2015 and December 2018 (index) were included. Demographic and clinical characteristics, prescribed treatments, HCRU and costs were evaluated in the 12 months pre-index. Data are presented for patients not receiving concomitant inhaled corticosteroids at index (non-triple users).Results: Of 10,991 patients initiating LAMA/LABA, 9888 were non-triple users, of whom 21.3% (n=2109) received aclidinium bromide/formoterol, 18.1% (n=1785) received indacaterol/glycopyrronium, 12.0% (n=1189) received tiotropium bromide/olodaterol and 48.6% (n=4805) received umeclidinium/vilanterol. Demographic and clinical characteristics were similar across indexed therapies. LAMA monotherapy was the most frequently prescribed respiratory therapy at 12 (18.4– 25.8% of patients) and 3 months (23.9– 33.7% of patients) pre-index across indexed therapies; 42.5– 59.0% of patients were prescribed no respiratory therapy at these time points. COPD-related HCRU during the 12 months pre-index was similar across indexed therapies (general practitioner consultations: 62.0– 68.6% patients; inpatient stays: 19.3– 26.1% patients). Pre-index COPD-related costs were similar across indexed therapies, with inpatient stays representing the highest contribution. Mean total direct annual COPD-related costs ranged from £ 805–£ 1187.Conclusion: Characteristics of patients newly initiating single-inhaler LAMA/LABA dual therapy were highly consistent across indexed therapies. As half of non-triple users were not receiving respiratory therapy one year prior to LAMA/LABA initiation, there may be an opportunity for early optimization of treatment to relieve clinical burden versus current prescribing patterns in primary care in England.Keywords: COPD, initial maintenance therapy, primary care setting, patient characteristics, single-inhaler LAMA/LABA dual therapy, treatment patterns
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- 2022
34. A Cost-Benefit Analysis of a Teen Pregnancy Program Employed as a High School Dropout Intervention
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Macchia, Susan E., Therriault, David J., and Wood, R. Craig
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The purpose of this study was to evaluate a state-wide teen pregnancy dropout prevention program using cost-benefit analysis. Data analyzed from five high schools covering a decade compared three student populations: teens from the general population, teens who were enrolled in the fully online program, and teens who selected out of the full program but made use of daycare services. Graduation outcomes and the cost per student for administering each version of the program were examined. Results revealed that students in the full program (over the 10 years) experienced a graduation rate of 1.6% with a negative rate of return of $-8,989,736; whereas, student continuing their face-to-face courses (but making use of daycare services) experienced a graduation rate of 64.5% and rate of return of $293,370. These findings demonstrate the utility of employing a cost-benefit analysis, encouraging school districts to collect more data regarding educational outcomes of pregnant and parenting teenagers to guide the efficient allocation of resources. This methodology could be adopted to inform future policy decisions aimed at increasing high school graduation rates while judiciously evaluating the investment for those interventions.
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- 2021
35. Quantifying fish otolith mineralogy for trace-element chemistry studies
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Wood, R. Seth, Chakoumakos, Bryan C., Fortner, Allison M., Gillies-Rector, Kat, Frontzek, Matthias D., Ivanov, Ilia N., Kah, Linda C., Kennedy, Brian, and Pracheil, Brenda M.
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- 2022
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36. Budgeting for School Infrastructure
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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37. Budgeting for Instruction
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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38. School Funds: Accountability, Performance, and Professionalism
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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39. Schools, Values, and Money
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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40. Budgeting for Legal Liability and Risk Management
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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41. Trends and the Future of School Funding
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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42. Funding Schools: A Policy Perspective
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Wood, R. Craig, primary, Thompson, David C., additional, and Maiden, Jeffrey, additional
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- 2022
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43. The Infall of the Virgo Elliptical Galaxy M60 toward M87 and the Gaseous Structures Produced by Kelvin-Helmholtz Instabilities
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Wood, R. A., Jones, C., Machacek, M. E., Forman, W. R., Bogdan, A., Andrade-Santos, F., Kraft, R. P., Paggi, A., and Roediger, E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Chandra observations of hot gas structures, characteristic of gas stripping during infall, in the Virgo cluster elliptical galaxy M60 (NGC4649) located $1$ Mpc east of M87. $0.5-2$ keV Chandra X-ray images show a sharp leading edge in the surface brightness $12.4 \pm 0.1$ kpc north and west of the galaxy center in the direction of M87 characteristic of a merger cold front due to M60's motion through the Virgo ICM. We measured a temperature of $1.00 \pm 0.02$ keV for abundance $0.5 Z_\odot$ inside the edge and $1.37^{+0.35}_{-0.19}$ keV for abundance $0.1 Z_\odot$ in the Virgo ICM free stream region. We find that the observed jump in surface brightness yields a density ratio of $6.44^{+1.04}_{-0.67}$ between gas inside the edge and in the cluster free stream region. If the edge is a cold front due solely to the infall of M60 in the direction of M87, we find a pressure ratio of $4.7^{+1.7}_{-1.4}$ and Mach number $1.7 \pm 0.3$. For 1.37 keV Virgo gas we find a total infall velocity for M60 of $1030 \pm 180$ kms$^{-1}$. We calculate the motion in the plane of the sky to be $1012^{+183}_{-192}$ km$^{-1}$ implying an inclination angle $\xi = 11 \pm 3$ degrees. Surface brightness profiles show the presence of a faint diffuse gaseous tail. We identify filamentary, gaseous wing structures caused by the galaxy's motion through the ICM. The structure and dimensions of these wings are consistent with simulations of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities as expected if the gas stripping is close to inviscid., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, added references, discussion of magnetic fields and other minor text changes to conform to published version, results unchanged
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- 2017
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44. $\beta$-decay half-lives and $\beta$-delayed neutron emission probabilities for several isotopes of Au, Hg, Tl, Pb and Bi, beyond N=126
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Caballero-Folch, R., Domingo-Pardo, C., Agramunt, J., Algora, A., Ameil, F., Ayyad, Y., Benlliure, J., Bowry, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Cortès, G., Davinson, T., Dillmann, I., Estrade, A., Evdokimov, A., Faestermann, T., Farinon, F., Galaviz, D., García, A. R., Geissel, H., Gelletly, W., Gernhäuser, R., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Guerrero, C., Heil, M., Hinke, C., Knöbel, R., Kojouharov, I., Kurcewicz, J., Kurz, N., Litvinov, Yu. A., Maier, L., Marganiec, J., Marta, M., Martínez, T., Montes, F., Mukha, I., Napoli, D. R., Nociforo, C., Paradela, C., Pietri, S., Podolyák, Zs., Prochazka, A., Rice, S., Riego, A., Rubio, B., Schaffner, H., Scheidenberger, Ch., Smith, K., Sokol, E., Steiger, K., Sun, B., Taín, J. L., Takechi, M., Testov, D., Weick, H., Wilson, E., Winfield, J. S., Wood, R., Woods, P. J., and Yeremin, A.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
$Background:$ Previous measurements of $\beta$-delayed neutron emitters comprise around 230 nuclei, spanning from the $^{8}$He up to $^{150}$La. Apart from $^{210}$Tl, with a minuscule branching ratio of 0.007\%, no other neutron emitter is measured yet beyond $A=150$. Therefore new data are needed, particularly in the heavy mass region around N=126, in order to guide theoretical models and to understand the formation of the third r-process peak at $A\sim195$. $Purpose:$ To measure both, $\beta$-decay half-lives and neutron branching ratios of several neutron-rich Au, Hg, Tl, Pb and Bi isotopes beyond $N=126$. $Method:$ Ions of interest are produced by fragmentation of a $^{238}$U beam, selected and identified via the GSI-FRS fragment separator. A stack of segmented silicon detectors (SIMBA) is used to measure ion-implants and $\beta$-decays. An array of 30 $^3$He tubes embedded in a polyethylene matrix (BELEN) is used to detect neutrons with high efficiency and selectivity. A self-triggered digital system is employed to acquire data and to enable time-correlations. The latter are analyzed with an analytical model and results for the half-lives and neutron-branching ratios are derived using the binned Maximum-Likelihood method. $Results:$ Twenty new $\beta$-decay half-lives are reported for $^{204-206}$Au, $^{208-211}$Hg,$^{211-216}$Tl,$^{215-218}$Pb and $^{218-220}$Bi, nine of them for the first time. Neutron emission probabilities are reported for $^{210,211}$Hg and $^{211-216}$Tl. $Conclusions:$ The new $\beta$-decay half-lives are in good agreement with previous measurements in this region. The measured neutron emission probabilities are comparable or smaller than values predicted by global models like RHB+RQRPA., Comment: 17 pages, 21 figures, will be submitted at PRC
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- 2017
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45. Mechatronics for a LiDAR-Based Mobile Robotic Platform for Pasture Biomass Measurement
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Sharifi, M., Sevier, S., Zhang, H., Wood, R., Jessep, B., Gebbie, S., Irie, K., Hagedorn, M., Barret, B., Ghamkhar, K., Billingsley, John, editor, and Brett, Peter, editor
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- 2021
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46. Evaluation of PD-1 and PD-L1 expression in canine urothelial carcinoma cell lines
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Pinard, Christopher J., Hocker, Samuel E., Poon, Andrew C., Inkol, Jordon M., Matsuyama, Arata, Wood, R. Darren, Wood, Geoffrey A., Woods, J. Paul, and Mutsaers, Anthony J.
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- 2022
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47. The risks of contr act ing the acquisition and processing of the nation's weather and climate data to the private sector
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Serr, YL, Haase, JS, Adams, DK, Fu, Q, Ackerman, TP, Alexander, MJ, Arellano, A, Back, L, Emanuel, K, Kuang, Z, Mapes, B, Neelin, D, Raymond, D, Sobel, AH, Staten, PW, Subramanian, A, Thompson, DWJ, Vecchi, G, Wood, R, and Zuidema, P
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Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Published
- 2018
48. Use of cloud radar Doppler spectra to evaluate stratocumulus drizzle size distributions in large-eddy simulations with size-resolved microphysics
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Rémillard, J, Fridlind, AM, Ackerman, AS, Tselioudis, G, Kollias, P, Mechem, DB, Chandler, HE, Luke, E, Wood, R, Witte, MK, Chuang, PY, and Ayers, JK
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Earth Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Environmental Science and Management ,Agriculture ,Land and Farm Management ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,Climate change science - Abstract
A case study of persistent stratocumulus over the Azores is simulated using two independent large-eddy simulation (LES) models with bin microphysics, and forward-simulated cloud radar Doppler moments and spectra are compared with observations. Neither model is able to reproduce the monotonic increase of downward mean Doppler velocity with increasing reflectivity that is observed under a variety of conditions, but for differing reasons. To a varying degree, both models also exhibit a tendency to produce too many of the largest droplets, leading to excessive skewness in Doppler velocity distributions, especially below cloud base. Excessive skewness appears to be associated with an insufficiently sharp reduction in droplet number concentration at diameters larger than ~200 μm, where a pronounced shoulder is found for in situ observations and a sharp reduction in reflectivity size distribution is associated with relatively narrow observed Doppler spectra. Effectively using LES with bin microphysics to study drizzle formation and evolution in cloud Doppler radar data evidently requires reducing numerical diffusivity in the treatment of the stochastic collection equation; if that is accomplished sufficiently to reproduce typical spectra, progress toward understanding drizzle processes is likely.
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- 2017
49. Birth outcomes in relation to neighborhood food access and individual food insecurity during pregnancy in the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO)-wide cohort study
- Author
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Aris, Izzuddin M, primary, Lin, Pi-I D, additional, Wu, Allison J, additional, Dabelea, Dana, additional, Lester, Barry M, additional, Wright, Rosalind J, additional, Karagas, Margaret R, additional, Kerver, Jean M, additional, Dunlop, Anne L, additional, Joseph, Christine LM, additional, Camargo, Carlos A, additional, Ganiban, Jody M, additional, Schmidt, Rebecca J, additional, Strakovsky, Rita S, additional, McEvoy, Cindy T, additional, Hipwell, Alison E, additional, O’Shea, Thomas Michael, additional, McCormack, Lacey A, additional, Maldonado, Luis E, additional, Niu, Zhongzheng, additional, Ferrara, Assiamira, additional, Zhu, Yeyi, additional, Chehab, Rana F, additional, Kinsey, Eliza W, additional, Bush, Nicole R, additional, Nguyen, Ruby HN., additional, Carroll, Kecia N, additional, Barrett, Emily S, additional, Lyall, Kristen, additional, Sims-Taylor, Lauren M, additional, Trasande, Leonardo, additional, Biagini, Jocelyn M, additional, Breton, Carrie V, additional, Patti, Marisa A, additional, Coull, Brent, additional, Amutah-Onukagha, Ndidiamaka, additional, Hacker, Michele R, additional, James-Todd, Tamarra, additional, Oken, Emily, additional, Smith, P.B., additional, Newby, L.K., additional, Jacobson, L.P., additional, Catellier, D.J., additional, Fuselier, G, additional, Gershon, R, additional, Cella, D, additional, Teitelbaum, S.L., additional, Stroustrup, A, additional, Merhar, S, additional, Lampland, A, additional, Reynolds, A, additional, Hudak, M, additional, Pryhuber, G, additional, Moore, P, additional, Washburn, L, additional, Gatzke-Kopp, L, additional, Swingler, M, additional, Laham, F.R., additional, Mansbach, J.M., additional, Wu, S, additional, Spergel, J.M., additional, Celedón, J.C., additional, Puls, H.T., additional, Teach, S.J., additional, Porter, S.C., additional, Waynik, I.Y., additional, Iyer, S.S., additional, Samuels-Kalow, M.E., additional, Thompson, A.D., additional, Stevenson, M.D., additional, Bauer, C.S., additional, Inhofe, N.R., additional, Boos, M, additional, Macias, C.G., additional, Koinis Mitchell, D, additional, Duarte, C.S., additional, Monk, C, additional, Posner, J, additional, Canino, G, additional, Croen, L, additional, Gern, J, additional, Zoratti, E, additional, Seroogy, C, additional, Bendixsen, C, additional, Jackson, D, additional, Bacharier, L, additional, O’Connor, G, additional, Kattan, M, additional, Wood, R, additional, Rivera-Spoljaric, K, additional, Hershey, G, additional, Johnson, C, additional, Bastain, T, additional, Farzan, S, additional, Habre, R, additional, Hertz-Picciotto, I, additional, Hipwell, A, additional, Keenan, K, additional, Karr, C, additional, Tylavsky, F, additional, Mason, A, additional, Zhao, Q, additional, Sathyanarayana, S, additional, Bush, N, additional, LeWinn, K.Z., additional, Carter, B, additional, Pastyrnak, S, additional, Neal, C, additional, Smith, L, additional, Helderman, J, additional, Leve, L, additional, Neiderhiser, J, additional, Weiss, S.T., additional, Litonjua, A, additional, Zeiger, R, additional, McEvoy, C, additional, Tepper, R, additional, Lyall, K, additional, Volk, H, additional, Landa, R, additional, Ozonoff, S, additional, Schmidt, R, additional, Dager, S, additional, Schultz, R, additional, Piven, J, additional, O’Shea, M, additional, Vaidya, R, additional, Obeid, R, additional, Rollins, C, additional, Bear, K, additional, Lenski, M, additional, Singh, R, additional, Msall, M, additional, Frazier, J, additional, Gogcu, S, additional, Montgomery, A, additional, Kuban, K, additional, Douglass, L, additional, Jara, H, additional, Joseph, R, additional, Kerver, J.M., additional, Barone, C, additional, Fussman, C, additional, Paneth, N, additional, Elliott, M, additional, Ruden, D, additional, Herbstman, J, additional, Schantz, S, additional, Woodruff, T, additional, Stanford, J, additional, Porucznik, C, additional, Giardino, A, additional, Wright, R.J., additional, Bosquet-Enlow, M, additional, Huddleston, K, additional, Nguyen, R, additional, Barrett, E, additional, Swan, S, additional, and Miller, R, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Proteolytic Products of Infection (PPI) - A New Class of Proteoform Markers in Exhaled Breath for the Noninvasive Diagnosis of Lower Respiratory Tract Infections
- Author
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Chen, D., primary, Mirski, M.A., additional, Wood, R., additional, Chen, S., additional, Caton, E.R., additional, Kiser, K.M., additional, Haddaway, C.R., additional, Cetta, M.S., additional, Bryden, W.A., additional, and McLoughlin, M., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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