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Institution

Beaumont Health

NonprofitRoyal Oak, Michigan, United States
About: Beaumont Health is a nonprofit organization based out in Royal Oak, Michigan, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Medicine & Population. The organization has 1483 authors who have published 1448 publications receiving 15407 citations. The organization is also known as: William Beaumont Health System & Beaumont Hospitals.


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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2020-BJUI
TL;DR: To evaluate the long‐term bowel‐associated quality of life (QOL) in men after radiotherapy for prostate cancer with and without the use of rectal hydrogel spacer, a cohort study is conducted.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE To evaluate the long-term bowel-associated quality of life (QOL) in men after radiotherapy (RT) for prostate cancer with and without the use of rectal hydrogel spacer. PATIENTS AND METHODS The patients' QOL was examined using the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC) and mean changes from baseline in EPIC domains were evaluated. A total of 215 patients from a randomised multi-institutional trial of RT, with or without hydrogel spacer, with a QOL endpoint were pooled with 165 non-randomised patients from a single institution with prospective QOL collection in patients with or without hydrogel spacer. The proportions of men with minimally important differences (MIDs) relative to pre-treatment baseline in the bowel domain were tested using repeated measure logistic models with a pre-specified threshold for clinically significant declines (≥5 equivalent to MIDx1 and ≥10 equivalent to MIDx2). RESULTS A total of 380 men were evaluated (64% with spacer and 36% without) with QOL data being available for 199 men with >24 months of follow-up [median (range) 39.5 (31-71.4) months]. Treatment with spacer was associated with less decline in average long-term bowel QOL (89.4 for control and 94.7 for spacer) with differences at >24 months meeting the threshold of a MID difference between cohorts (bowel score difference from baseline: control = -5.1, spacer = 0.3, difference = -5.4; P < 0.001). When evaluated over time men without spacer were more likely to have MIDx1 (5 points) declines in bowel QOL (P = 0.01). At long-term follow-up MIDx1 was 36% without spacer vs 14% with spacer (P <0.001; odds ratio [OR] 3.5, 95% CI 1.7-6.9) while MIDx2 was seen in 19% vs 6% (P = 0.008; OR 3.6, 95% CI 1.4-9.1). The use of spacer was associated with less urgency with bowel movements (P = 0.002) and fewer loose stools (P = 0.009), as well as less bother with urgency (P = 0.007) and frequency of bowel movements (P = 0.009). CONCLUSIONS In this pooled analysis of QOL after prostate RT with up to 5 years of follow-up, use of a rectal spacer was associated with preservation of bowel QOL. This QOL benefit was preserved with long-term follow-up.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In RAS patients, eGFR demonstrate poor sensitivity and reliability for detecting meaningful changes in iGFR after renal artery stenting, and should be abandoned as primary endpoints in major clinical trials assessing the impact of renal revascularization on renal function.
Abstract: Objectives The purpose of this study was to evaluate the validity of estimates of glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) for assessing serial changes in renal function after renal artery stenting. Background eGFR are unreliable for assessing serial renal function in patients with atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis (RAS). eGFR have not been validated for assessment of serial renal function after renal artery stenting. Methods Serum creatinine (SCr) and 125I-iothalamate GFR (iGFR) were measured in RAS patients before and after renal artery stenting. eGFR were calculated from Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD), Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI), and Cockcroft-Gault (CG) formulas. Using iGFR as the reference standard, the sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC) were determined for MDRD, CKD-EPI, and CG for assessing changes in GFR before and after intervention. Results Between 1998 and 2007, 84 patients underwent iGFR and eGFR before and after renal artery stenting. All eGFR demonstrated poor sensitivity and reliability for detecting ≥20% changes in iGFR, and poor agreement in the magnitude and direction of change in iGFR, before and after renal stenting. Conclusions In RAS patients, eGFR demonstrate poor sensitivity and reliability for detecting meaningful changes in iGFR after renal artery stenting. eGFR should be abandoned as primary endpoints in major clinical trials assessing the impact of renal revascularization on renal function.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Young age, bilateral cancer, BRCA1/2‐positive results, and preoperative genetic testing were significant predictors of bilateral mastectomy at first surgery.
Abstract: The utility and benefit of integrating germ-line genetic testing into the management of newly diagnosed breast cancer is not fully understood. This study evaluates the impact of preoperative genetic testing on surgical decision making in patients with newly diagnosed breast cancer. Women with newly diagnosed breast cancer were classified into preoperative or postoperative genetic testing group, depending on whether they received their genetic testing results prior to or after their first surgery. Demographics, tumor characteristics, surgical treatment, and results of genetic testing were retrospectively collected. A total of 997 patients were evaluated, 531 (53.3%) in the preoperative genetic testing group and 466 (46.7%) in the postoperative group. Majority (87.2%) of BRCA-positive women in the preoperative group underwent bilateral mastectomy as first surgery. Majority (70.6%) of BRCA-positive women in postoperative group underwent partial mastectomy as first surgery prior to receiving their genetic testing result. Nearly half (41.2%) of these women in the postoperative group with partial mastectomy underwent bilateral mastectomy after receiving their BRCA-positive result. Time from diagnosis to first surgery was longer in the preoperative genetic testing group. Younger age, bilateral cancer, BRCA1/2-positive results, and preoperative genetic testing were significant predictors of bilateral mastectomy at first surgery. Preoperative genetic testing impacts initial surgical treatment in BRCA1/2-positive patients and reduces the need for additional surgeries.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The characteristics of atherosclerotic plaque in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) using near‐infrared spectroscopy‐intravascular ultrasound (NIRS‐IVUS) are described.
Abstract: Objectives We describe the characteristics of atherosclerotic plaque in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) using near-infrared spectroscopy-intravascular ultrasound (NIRS-IVUS) Background Imaging and autopsy studies have described atherosclerotic plaque in different vascular beds, including varying degrees of lipid, fibrosis, and calcification. Recently, NIRS has been validated as an accurate method for detecting lipid-core plaque (LCP) in the coronary circulation. Invasive evaluation of plaque composition using NIRS-IVUS has not been reported in different peripheral arterial circulations. Methods We performed invasive angiography and NIRS-IVUS in consecutive PAD patients prior to percutaneous revascularization. Imaging evaluation included parameters from angiography, IVUS, and NIRS. NIRS-IVUS findings were compared among different vascular beds with regard to the presence and extent of calcification and LCP. Results One hundred and forty-nine lesions in 126 PAD patients were enrolled, including the internal carotid (n = 10), subclavian/axillary (n = 9), renal (n = 14), iliac (n = 35), femoropopliteal (n = 69), and infrapopliteal (n = 12) arteries. Plaque morphology was calcified in 132 lesions (89%) and fibrous in 17 lesions (11%). Calcification varied from 100% of renal artery stenoses to 55% of subclavian/axillary artery stenoses. LCP was present in 48 lesions (32%) and prevalence varied from 60% in carotid artery stenoses to 0% in renal artery stenoses (P < 0.005). LCP was only observed in fibrocalcific plaque, and was longitudinally and circumferentially surrounded by a more extensive degree of calcium. Conclusions NIRS-IVUS in stable PAD patients demonstrates a high frequency of calcific plaque and statistically significant differences in the frequency of LCP in different arterial beds. LCP, when present in the peripheral circulation, is always associated with calcified plaque. The strong co-localization of calcified plaque and LCP in severe PAD lesions may provide plaque-stabilizing effects; further studies are needed. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A systematic search and review of the published literature on EBM curricula for physicians in training and barriers during curriculum implementation is presented in this paper, where the authors focus on the time and resources needed to develop and implement an EBM curriculum.
Abstract: Objectives To describe the published literature on EBM curricula for physicians in training and barriers during curriculum implementation. Methods We performed a systematic search and review of the medical literature on PubMed, Embase, ERIC, Scopus and Web of Science from the earliest available date until September 4, 2019. Results We screened 9,042 references and included 29 full-text studies and 14 meeting abstracts. Eighteen studies had moderate validity, and 6 had high validity. The EBM curricular structure proved highly variable in between studies. The majority of the EBM curricula was longitudinal with different lengths. Only five studies reported using Kern's six-step approach for curriculum development. Twenty-one articles reported on EBM skills and knowledge, and only 5/29 full-text articles used a validated assessment tool. Time was the main barrier to EBM curriculum implementation. All the included studies and abstracts, independent of the EBM curriculum structure or evaluation method used, found an improvement in the residents' attitudes and/or EBM skills and knowledge. Conclusions The current body of literature available to guide educators in EBM curriculum development is enough to constitute a strong scaffold for developing any EBM curriculum. Given the amount of time and resources needed to develop and implement an EBM curriculum, it is very important to follow the curriculum development steps and use validated assessment tools.

11 citations


Authors

Showing all 1494 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Barry P. Rosen10252936258
Praveen Kumar88133935718
George S. Wilson8871633034
Ahmed Ali6172815197
Di Yan6129511437
David P. Wood5924312154
Brian D. Kavanagh5832215865
James A. Goldstein4919312312
Kenneth M. Peters461976513
James M. Robbins451578489
Bin Nan441395321
Inga S. Grills432176343
Sachin Kheterpal431698545
Craig W. Stevens421646598
Thomas Guerrero41935018
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20232
202220
2021253
2020210
2019166
2018161