Identification of diverticulitis patients at high risk for recurrence and poor outcomes

2020 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. e18-e19
Author(s):  
Adel Elkbuli ◽  
Sarah Zajd ◽  
Brandon Diaz ◽  
Mark McKenney
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (23) ◽  
pp. 2516-2522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carla Casulo ◽  
Michelle Byrtek ◽  
Keith L. Dawson ◽  
Xiaolei Zhou ◽  
Charles M. Farber ◽  
...  

Purpose Twenty percent of patients with follicular lymphoma (FL) experience progression of disease (POD) within 2 years of initial chemoimmunotherapy. We analyzed data from the National LymphoCare Study to identify whether prognostic FL factors are associated with early POD and whether patients with early POD are at high risk for death. Patients and Methods In total, 588 patients with stage 2 to 4 FL received first-line rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP). Two groups were defined: patients with early POD 2 years or less after diagnosis and those without POD within 2 years, the reference group. An independent validation set, 147 patients with FL who received first-line R-CHOP, was analyzed for reproducibility. Results Of 588 patients, 19% (n = 110) had early POD, 71% (n = 420) were in the reference group, 8% (n = 46) were lost to follow-up, and 2% (n = 12) died without POD less than 2 years after diagnosis. Five-year overall survival was lower in the early-POD group than in the reference group (50% v 90%). This trend was maintained after we adjusted for FL International Prognostic Index (hazard ratio, 6.44; 95% CI, 4.33 to 9.58). Results were similar for the validation set (FL International Prognostic Index–adjusted hazard ratio, 19.8). Conclusion In patients with FL who received first-line R-CHOP, POD within 2 years after diagnosis was associated with poor outcomes and should be further validated as a standard end point of chemoimmunotherapy trials of untreated FL. This high-risk FL population warrants further study in directed prospective clinical trials.


Author(s):  
Julie Gosselin ◽  
Claudine Amiel-Tison

Abstract As early as possible, neonatologists try to identify neonates at risk of unfavorable neurodevelopmental outcomes. They are fairly reliable in predicting very poor outcomes as well as optimal outcomes. However, within these two extremes, the prediction still remains a challenge. Immaturity of the neonatal brain constitutes a limit in itself. During decades with the growing knowledge of brain development, many methods have been developed for neurological assessment of the neonate. Neither of them applied alone was perfect in terms of clinical applicability, sensitivity, reproducibility and specificity. The motor function is the first to provide the clinician with clues. Higher functions, in particular language and other cognitive functions, will develop later. However, recent researchers give credit to the brainstem for controlling exceedingly rudimentary learning-related cognitive-like activity. At present, the anticipation of late emerging developmental disabilities remains difficult even though early motor dysfunction has repeatedly been associated with a higher risk of intellectual or other learning disabilities. Despite our modest recent contribution to the domain of prediction, further studies on welldefined high risk populations with rigorous methodology that aim to demonstrate these links are still needed. Besides neurological observations, research is in process of including behavioral and stress/ reactivity measures; feasibility and benefits have to be demonstrated. At present, fetal neurology is supported by neonatal neurology. Obstetricians are wise enough to take from both methods described above the elements they are able to transpose to fetal life. A comparative table of neonatal and fetal assessment is to be found elsewhere. As for neonatal neurology, the future of fetal neurology will have to rely on short- and long-term follow-up studies to define the predictive value of the chosen items. Obstetricians will have to be as patient as pediatricians, to work, step by step, towards defining optimality and impairment. They will have to be very careful when deciding to interrupt pregnancies; at the time being, such decisions are restricted to cases of very severe impairment. In line with the spectrum described above, they can expect to find more cases with moderate to mild abnormalities than cases with severe ones. However the most pleasant aspect for the echographer is to check fetal optimality. Just as a newborn infant categorized as at risk of brain damage is competent enough to demonstrate CNS integrity from birth, a high risk fetus will soon be competent enough to demonstrate CNS integrity before birth.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (9) ◽  
pp. 948-961 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Branford ◽  
Paul Wang ◽  
David T. Yeung ◽  
Daniel Thomson ◽  
Adrian Purins ◽  
...  

Key Points Next-generation sequencing revealed variants in cancer-associated genes at diagnosis of CML more frequently in patients with poor outcomes. All patients at BC had mutated cancer genes, including fusions, that predated BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutations in a majority.


Author(s):  
Karl G Reis ◽  
Raymond Wilson ◽  
Fredrick Kalokola ◽  
Bahati Wajanga ◽  
Myung-Hee Lee ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Hypertensive urgency is associated with a high risk for cardiovascular events and mortality in the United States and Europe, but data from low-income countries and interventions to improve outcomes are lacking. METHODS We conducted a 1-year prospective study of the prevalence and outcomes of hypertensive urgency (blood pressure (BP) ≥180 mm Hg/120 mm Hg without end-organ damage) in a busy outpatient clinic in Tanzania. RESULTS Of 7,600 consecutive adult outpatients screened with 3 unattended automated BP measurements according to standard protocol, the prevalence of hypertensive crisis was 199/7,600 (2.6%) (BP ≥180 mm Hg/120 mm Hg) and the prevalence of hypertensive urgency was 164/7,600 (2.2%). Among 150 enrolled patients with hypertensive urgency, median age was 62 years (54–68), 101 (67.3%) were women, and 53 (35%) were either hospitalized or died within 1 year. In a multivariate model, the strongest predictor of hospitalization/death was self-reported medication adherence on a 3 question scale (hazard ratio: 0.06, P < 0.001); 90% of participants with poor adherence were hospitalized or died within 1 year. CONCLUSIONS Patients with hypertensive urgency in Africa are at high risk of poor outcomes. Clinicians can identify the patients at highest risk for poor outcomes with simple questions related treatment adherence. New interventions are needed to improve medication adherence in patients with hypertensive urgency.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison R. Yung ◽  
Stephen J. Wood ◽  
Ashok Malla ◽  
Barnaby Nelson ◽  
Patrick McGorry ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundIn the 1990s criteria were developed to detect individuals at high and imminent risk of developing a psychotic disorder. These are known as the at risk mental state, ultra high risk or clinical high risk criteria. Individuals meeting these criteria are symptomatic and help-seeking. Services for such individuals are now found worldwide. Recently Psychological Medicine published two articles that criticise these services and suggest that they should be dismantled or restructured. One paper also provides recommendations on how ARMS services should be operate.MethodsIn this paper we draw on the existing literature in the field and present the perspective of some ARMS clinicians and researchers.ResultsMany of the critics' arguments are refuted. Most of the recommendations included in the Moritz et al. paper are already occurring.ConclusionsARMS services provide management of current problems, treatment to reduce risk of onset of psychotic disorder and monitoring of mental state, including attenuated psychotic symptoms. These symptoms are associated with a range of poor outcomes. It is important to assess them and track their trajectory over time. A new approach to detection of ARMS individuals can be considered that harnesses broad youth mental health services, such as headspace in Australia, Jigsaw in Ireland and ACCESS Open Minds in Canada. Attention should also be paid to the physical health of ARMS individuals. Far from needing to be dismantled we feel that the ARMS approach has much to offer to improve the health of young people.


2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 485-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muezz Uddin ◽  
Shantu Bundhoo ◽  
Rito Mitra ◽  
Nicholas Ossei-Gerning ◽  
Keith Morris ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (7_suppl4) ◽  
pp. 2325967118S0010
Author(s):  
Gregory B. Maletis ◽  
Tadashi Ted Funahashi ◽  
Rebecca Love ◽  
Ronald Wyatt ◽  
Heather A. Prentice ◽  
...  

Objectives: One purpose of a registry is to identify procedures or devices that have either good or poor outcomes and improve treatment outcomes through feedback to surgeons. In 2010 we initially reported the influence of graft choice on the risk of early revision after ACL Reconstruction (ACLR). In 2012 we reported a three times higher risk of revision if allograft was used rather than bone-patellar tendon-bone (BPTB) autograft. In subsequent studies of allografts, we have identified poorer results with BPTB allografts compared to soft tissue allografts and with soft tissue allografts irradiated with > 1.8 Mrads or processed with chemical methods. Patients < 21 years of age were also identified to be at particularly high-risk for revision if allograft tissue was employed. These registry findings were disseminated to surgeons within and outside our integrated healthcare system. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of registry feedback on surgeon graft type selection. Methods: Feedback to surgeons on graft performance was presented through a variety of mechanisms including (1) peer-reviewed publications, (2) internal and external meetings and conferences (3) newsletters of study findings, (4) Risk calculators and (5) confidential individualized reports of surgeon’s outcomes. In addition, surgeon champions set a quality improvement goal to reduce allograft usage overall and specifically to decrease the use of high risk grafts and usage in high-risk patient groups. Allograft usage was monitored on a quarterly basis to determine if the target was achieved. Annual graft utilization from 2008-2015 is reported here as proportions, for the overall cohort and for high-risk subgroups. Results: Our integrated healthcare system’s ACLR registry currently includes over 35,000 patients. Beginning in 2008, the annual proportion of ACLR cases using an allograft increased with a peak of 45% in 2010. Allograft use has decreased in the ensuing years and was 33% in 2015, a decrease of 27%. High-risk graft usage decreased from 8% in 2011 to 5% in 2015 which is a 38% decrease. Allograft use in patients < 21 years of age decreased 68% from a high of 28% in 2009 to 9% in 2015. (see Figure) Conclusion: Translating registry findings into evidence-based clinical practice is the goal of a registry. In this study, we found that information derived from an ACL Registry and disseminated to the participants can directly influence the use of specific procedures or implants that are associated with poor outcomes. Registries can provide useful information that may ultimately be used to improve patient care.


Author(s):  
Olga Yu. Tkachenko ◽  
Margarita Yu. Pervakova ◽  
Sergey V. Lapin ◽  
Aleksandra V. Mazing ◽  
Darya A. Kuznetsova ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is often complicated by cytokine storm syndrome. Although many interleukins (IL) have predictive value, the sensitivity and specificity of a single marker is limited. AIM: The purpose of the study is to develop an objective and informative cytokine storm scale for assessing the risk of developing a critical course in patients with COVID-19 associated pneumonia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 226 cases of COVID-19 were investigated, 36 (16 %) of which were with poor outcomes. The cytokines IL-1b, IL-2, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-18, TNF-, IFN, IFN- were studied by enzyme immunoassay, commercial kits manufactured by Vector-Best, RF. RESULTS: Since IL-6, IL-10, IL-18, and procalcitonin were associated with disease severity and death, these indicators were integrated into a 12-point scale called the cytokine storm scale. The patients who scored more than 6 points had a high risk of a poor outcome of the disease. According to ROC analysis, the area under the curve for the cytokine storm scale was larger than for each of the four markers separately [AUC 0.90 (95% CI 0.84550.9592), p 0.001]. CONCLUSIONS: Thus, the cytokine storm scale system presents superior performance in determining patients with favorable and fatal outcomes to each individual cytokine.


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