Real-World Tolerability and Efficacy of Evolocumab among Patients with a History of Statin-Associated Muscle Symptoms (SAMS)

2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (5) ◽  
pp. S59
Author(s):  
Simone Mendel ◽  
Tisha Joy
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Stephen Verderber

The interdisciplinary field of person-environment relations has, from its origins, addressed the transactional relationship between human behavior and the built environment. This body of knowledge has been based upon qualitative and quantitative assessment of phenomena in the “real world.” This knowledge base has been instrumental in advancing the quality of real, physical environments globally at various scales of inquiry and with myriad user/client constituencies. By contrast, scant attention has been devoted to using simulation as a means to examine and represent person-environment transactions and how what is learned can be applied. The present discussion posits that press-competency theory, with related aspects drawn from functionalist-evolutionary theory, can together function to help us learn of how the medium of film can yield further insights to person-environment (P-E) transactions in the real world. Sampling, combined with extemporary behavior setting analysis, provide the basis for this analysis of healthcare settings as expressed throughout the history of cinema. This method can be of significant aid in examining P-E transactions across diverse historical periods, building types and places, healthcare and otherwise, otherwise logistically, geographically, or temporally unattainable in real time and space.


2006 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl S. McWatters ◽  
Yannick Lemarchand

The Guide du commerce occupies a distinctive place in the French-language literature on accounting. Passed over by most specialists in the history of maritime trade and the slave trade, the manual has never been the subject of a documented historical study. The apparent realism of the examples, the luxury of details and their precision, all bear witness to a deep concern to go beyond a simple apprenticeship in bookkeeping. Promoting itself essentially as “un guide du commerce,” the volume offers strategic examples for small local businesses, as well as for those engaged in international trade. Yet, the realism also demonstrated the expertise of the author in the eyes of potential purchasers. Inspired by the work of Bottin [2001], we investigate the extent to which the manual reflects real-world practices and provides a faithful glimpse into the socio-economic context of the period. Two additional questions are discussed briefly in our conclusion. First, can the work of Gaignat constitute a source document for the history of la traite négrière? The second entails our early deliberations about the place of this volume in the history of the slave trade itself.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-22
Author(s):  
Bruce Grant

If our knowledge of shamanism has been so abidingly partial, so impressively uneven, so deeply varied by history, and so enduringly skeptical for so long, how has its study come to occupy such pride of place in the anthropological canon? One answer comes in a history of social relations where shamans both are cast as translators of the unseen and are themselves sites of anxiety in a very real world, one of encounters across lines of gender, class, and colonial incursions often defined by race. This article contends that as anthropologists have cultivated a long and growing library of shamanic practice, many appear to have found, in a globally diverse range of spirit practitioners, translators across social worlds who are not unlike themselves, suggesting that in the shaman we find a remarkable history of anthropology.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 202-210
Author(s):  
Malti Bansal ◽  
Raaghav Raj Maiya

The research paper prospects the theory of phototransistor ranging from the history of the device to its application in the real world. The research paper deep dives into the characteristics of the phototransistor while discussing its dependence on bias drive, bias voltage, and illumination intensity. The research paper includes a comparative study between the various types of phototransistors based on optical gain, spectral range, and efficiency. It also concludes the best illumination method for the phototransistor based on the optical gain parameter.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3255-3255
Author(s):  
Selina J Chavda ◽  
Rachael Pocock ◽  
Simon Cheesman ◽  
Emma Dowling ◽  
Puneet Verma ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Carfilzomib (CFZ) is a potent, irreversible proteasome inhibitor (PI) licenced in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) demonstrating improved progression free and overall survival (OS) to standard of care therapies. However, CFZ is also associated with hypertension (HTN) and rarely cardiac toxicity. The exact mechanism is unclear but may be due to a disturbance of endothelial nitric oxide synthase and nitric oxide. Incidence of HTN in a pooled analysis of CFZ trials (Chari et al, Blood 2018, n=2044) showed all grade (G): 18.5%, ≥G3 5.9%. There is less data in the real world setting. Methods: This was a single centre retrospective analysis of all patients treated with CFZ between 2015-2018. BP was recorded in routine nursing records prior to each CFZ infusion in triplicate at each visit 10 minutes apart and the median recorded. HTN was graded by CTCAE criteria V4 (note: G1=pre-HTN (120-139/ 80-89)) and pulmonary hypertension as mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAsp) >25mmHg (American College of Cardiology criteria). Baseline demographics were obtained from medical records. OS was estimated using Kaplan Meier Curves and correlative analysis by Cox regression models. Results: 86 patients and 1976 consecutive BP recordings were evaluated with a mean of 23 BP assessments per patient (1-74). Demographics are shown in Table 1. 32 patients (37.2%) had prior history of HTN and 14 (16.3%) had prior cardiac co-morbidity (ischaemic heart disease, dysrhythmias and cardiac amyloidosis). Initial dosing of CFZ was 20mg/m2, increasing to 27mg/m2 (n=30 (34.9%)), 36mg/m2 (n=18 (20.9%)), 45mg/m2 (n=2 (2.3%)), 56mg/m2 (n=35 (40.7%)), 70mg/m2 weekly (n=1(1.2%)). Median time on therapy was 5.3 months (0-26) with a median of 6 (1-27) cycles. The overall incidence of all grade HTN was 60 (69.8%), predominantly G1-2 and was similar in those with and without pre-existing HTN (Chi squared test p=0.4) (Table 2). 11(13%) required intervention with anti-HTN medications for ≥G2 HTN which then returned the BP to baseline. Those treated at ≥45mg/m2 of CFZ had more episodes of HTN compared to those treated at 27-36mg/m2 (OR 3.65, 95% CI: 1.39-9.21, p<0.01) despite similar co-morbidities per group. Age >65 years was not associated with increased risk of HTN (OR 1.32, 95% CI 0.45-3.73, p=0.63) nor was ethnicity (Chi squared test p=0.1). 25 patients required treatment interruption for any cause, of which 12 were due to HTN (median 7 days (1-23)).13 patients required dose reduction for any cause, and 9(10%) required reductions due to HTN, mainly at 56mg/m2 (27 n=1(1.2%), 36 n=2(2.3%), 56 n=7(8.1%)). The planned median cumulative dose for the number of cycles received was 1264mg/m2 overall (36-5772) however, the actual median cumulative dose delivered was 784 mg/m2 (36-3248). The difference was the greatest with higher carfilzomib doses (≥56mg/m2 vs 27-45mg/m2 (Chi squared test, p<0.01)). Planned vs actual dose delivered for number of cycles of CFZ received was: 27mg/m2, 634 vs 472; 36mg/m2, 1219 vs 722; 45mg/m2, 785 vs 744; 56mg/m2, 2514 vs 1282; 70mg/m2, 1210 vs 770. 15(17%) patients developed cardiac complications including pulmonary HTN n=10(12%) and cardiac failure n=8(9%). Unlike HTN, cardiac complications were not associated with CFZ dose (<36mg/m2 vs ≥36mg/m2 OR 1.2, 95% CI 0.42-3.51, p=0.75) and were not related to development of HTN (OR 2.40, 95% CI 0.80-6.60, p=0.12) or prior history of HTN (OR 1.79, 95%CI 0.53-5.50, p=0.35). 1(1.2%) death was observed in a patient due to cardiac failure and progressive disease. OS was unaffected by HTN, cardiac toxicity, pulmonary HTN or HTN related treatment delays (median OS not reached regardless of developing cardiovascular adverse events, HR 1.45 95% CI 0.39-5.37, p=0.57; median follow up 17 vs 31 months respectively). Conclusions: This real world data demonstrated a higher incidence of HTN compared to clinical trials, however most were low grade toxicities. This may be partly due to under-reporting of G1 events which may not be clinically significant. Dose reductions were more frequent at CFZ doses ≥45, leading to a reduction in total cumulative dose received. Close monitoring and early intervention for HTN is therefore required to prevent further complications and to maintain cumulative dosing. In this dataset, cardiac complications did not appear to be related to HTN. Disclosures Cheesman: Celltrion: Other: Speaker Fee; Roche: Other: Advisory board. Wechalekar:Janssen: Honoraria. Rabin:Janssen: Consultancy, Other: Travel support, Speakers Bureau; Takeda: Consultancy, Other: Travel support , Speakers Bureau; Celgene: Speakers Bureau; Amgen: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Novartis: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau. Yong:Janssen: Honoraria, Speakers Bureau; Celgene: Honoraria; Takeda: Speakers Bureau; Amgen: Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau. Popat:Amgen: Honoraria.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (6_suppl) ◽  
pp. 287-287
Author(s):  
Diana Maslov ◽  
Karine Tawagi ◽  
Madhav KC ◽  
Richa Goel ◽  
Helen Yuan ◽  
...  

287 Background: There are many clinical trials that demonstrate the benefits of immunotherapies and targeted therapies in patients (pts) with advanced or metastatic RCC (mRCC). Most of these studies specifically exclude many real-world pts with comorbidities such as autoimmune disease, heart failure, and hypertension. Data on treatment efficacy and adverse events in patients with a history of uncontrolled hypertension is lacking, as there have been few studies analyzing more recently approved RCC drug regimens in real-world practice. Methods: We retrospectively collected data from pts with mRCC treated with immunotherapy and/or targeted therapies. Patient characteristics, performance status, treatment type, reason for treatment discontinuation, treatment response/progression per RECIST v1.1, survival, and presence of clinical trial exclusion criteria such as hypertension, heart failure, presence of autoimmune disease, renal or liver failure, and International Metastatic RCC Database Consortium (IMDC) Risk score were collected. Results: A total of 198 pts were included. The majority of patients received Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs) (42.42% pazopanib (n = 84), 21.71% sunitinib (n = 43), 13.64% cabozantinib (n = 27)), whereas 10.61% were on combination of axitinib + pembrolizumab (n = 21) and 11.62% received ipilimumab + nivolumab (n = 23), and. 71.72% of patients who qualified for systemic therapy had a history of uncontrolled hypertension, whereas 28.28 % of total patients had no history of uncontrolled hypertension. The median time on first-line treatment was 5.17 months. A history of hypertension did not significantly affect Overall Survival (OS), 15.90 months median OS for those with hypertension vs 27.80 median OS for those with no hypertension (p = 0.38). Median OS for all patients was 22.80 months. There was also no difference in response rate between those with a history of hypertension vs those with no history of uncontrolled hypertension (p = 0.65) or in Progression Free Survival (PFS) (p = 0.97) Data on how many patients developed exacerbations of hypertension on therapy will be available at time of presentation. Conclusions: Uncontrolled hypertension typically excludes patients from clinical trial enrollment. We found no difference in median OS in those with a history of hypertension compared to those with normal blood pressures. Further large-scale studies are needed to further determine outcomes in patients with hypertension on systemic therapy for mRCC.


Author(s):  
Zouhaier Brahmia ◽  
Fabio Grandi ◽  
Abir Zekri ◽  
Rafik Bouaziz

Like other components of Semantic Web-based applications, ontologies are evolving over time to reflect changes in the real world. Several of these applications require keeping a full-fledged history of ontology changes so that both ontology instance versions and their corresponding ontology schema versions are maintained. Updates to an ontology instance could be non-conservative that is leading to a new ontology instance version no longer conforming to the current ontology schema version. If, for some reasons, a non-conservative update has to be executed, in spite of its consequence, it requires the production of a new ontology schema version to which the new ontology instance version is conformant so that the new ontology version produced by the update is globally consistent. In this paper, we first propose an approach that supports ontology schema changes which are triggered by non-conservative updates to ontology instances and, thus, gives rise to an ontology schema versioning driven by instance updates. Note that in an engineering perspective, such an approach can be used as an incremental ontology construction method driven by the modification of instance data, whose exact structure may not be completely known at the initial design time. After that, we apply our proposal to the already established [Formula: see text]OWL (Temporal OWL 2) framework, which allows defining and evolving temporal OWL 2 ontologies in an environment that supports temporal versioning of both ontology instances and ontology schemas, by extending it to also support the management of non-conservative updates to ontology instance versions. Last, we show the feasibility of our approach by dealing with its implementation within a new release of the [Formula: see text] OWL-Manager tool.


Author(s):  
Kelli Thomas ◽  
Douglas Huffman

This chapter shares a brief history of the STEM to STEAM movement, shares two case descriptions drawn from the perspectives of leaders in two school districts in which schools adopted a STEAM focus, describes challenges and opportunities associated with implementation of a STEAM initiative, and proposes five features to consider when implementing models to becoming a STEAM-focused school or school district. The five features drawn from analysis of the two cases are intentional efforts by school districts to gain buy-in; adequate time for teacher learning and planning through authentic and relevant professional development; community connections, real-world and problem-based or project-based; mutual decision-making and support between teachers and administrators; and budget planning and allocation.


Author(s):  
Ka-Chun Wong

Inspired from nature, evolutionary algorithms have been proven effective and unique in different real world applications. Comparing to traditional algorithms, its parallel search capability and stochastic nature enable it to excel in search performance in a unique way. In this chapter, evolutionary algorithms are reviewed and discussed from concepts and designs to applications in bioinformatics. The history of evolutionary algorithms is first discussed at the beginning. An overview on the state-of-the-art evolutionary algorithm concepts is then provided. Following that, the related design and implementation details are discussed on different aspects: representation, parent selection, reproductive operators, survival selection, and fitness function. At the end of this chapter, real world evolutionary algorithm applications in bioinformatics are reviewed and discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J Germain ◽  
Subir K Paul ◽  
Varshasb Broumand ◽  
George Fadda ◽  
Andy Nguyen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aims Extended-release calcifediol (ERC), active vitamin D analogs (VDA), and nutritional vitamin D (NVD) are the predominant vitamin D therapies (VDTs) commonly used for treatment (Tx) of secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) in adults with stage 3 or 4 non-dialysis chronic kidney disease (ND-CKD) and vitamin D insufficiency (VDI). Clinical trials have demonstrated varying efficacy on serum total 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25D) and intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH) across VDTs. This study aimed to descriptively assess the real-world experience of various VDTs in increasing 25D, reducing iPTH, and modifying serum calcium (Ca). Method Medical records of the first 376 adult patients with stage 3 or 4 CKD and a history of SHPT and VDI who met study criteria from 18 geographically representative United States nephrology clinics were reviewed from 1 year before through 1 year after initiation of VDT. Key study variables included patient demographics, medication usage, and laboratory results. The study population had a mean age of 69.5 years with gender and racial distributions representative of the US ND-CKD population. Patients were stratified into cohorts based on their index therapy at index date: ERC (n=174), VDA (n=55) and NVD (n=147). Results Patients treated with NVD were predominantly CKD Stage 3 (69.4%), while CKD Stage 4 were the majority of those treated with ERC (53.4%) and VDA (61.8%). The ERC Tx’ed subjects demonstrated an increase in 25D by 23.7 ± 1.6 ng/mL (p&lt;0.001) and a decrease iPTH by 35 ± 6.2 pg/mL (p&lt;0.001) without statistically significant impact on serum calcium (Ca) and phosphorus (P) levels. The VDA Tx’ed group demonstrated an increase in 25D by 5.5 ± 1.3 ng/mL (p&lt;0.001) without statistically significant impact on iPTH and serum phosphorus levels. Additionally, serum Ca increased by 0.2 ± 0.1 pg/mL (p&lt;0.001) among VDA recipients. The NVD Tx’ed group demonstrated an increase in 25D by 9.7 ± 1.6 ng/mL (p&lt;0.001) without statistically significant impact on iPTH and serum Ca and P levels (Table 1). Conclusion Clinical effectiveness and safety varied across VDTs. ERC was the only VDT which significantly reduced mean iPTH in the real world setting despite highest mean levels at baseline among the three cohorts. Additionally, subjects treated with ERC demonstrated the largest mean increase in 25D and ERC was the only VDT which raised mean 25D to the normal range (&gt;30 ng/mL). Patients treated with ERC and NVD saw no statistically significant impact on serum Ca and P levels; however, those treated with VDAs saw a small, but statistically significant increase in serum Ca levels.


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