7 research outputs found
Cardiac 123 I-MIBG Parameters at 4 Hours Derived from Earlier Acquisitions Times
Abstract Background: The clinical implementation of cardiac 123 Iodine-meta-iodobenzylguanidine ( 123 I-MIBG) scintigra
Randomized Phase IIb Study of Brimonidine Drug Delivery System Generation 2 for Geographic Atrophy in Age-Related Macular Degeneration
Purpose: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of repeat injections of Brimonidine Drug Delivery System (Brimo DDS) Generation 2 (Gen 2) containing 400-μg brimonidine in patients with geographic atrophy (GA) secondary to age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Design: A phase IIb, randomized, multicenter, double-masked, sham-controlled, 30-month study (BEACON). Participants: Patients diagnosed with GA secondary to AMD and multifocal lesions with total area of > 1.25 mm2 and ≤ 18 mm2 in the study eye. Methods: Enrolled patients were randomized to treatment with intravitreal injections of 400-μg Brimo DDS (n = 154) or sham procedure (n = 156) in the study eye every 3 months from day 1 to month 21. Main Outcome Measures: The primary efficacy endpoint was GA lesion area change from baseline in the study eye, assessed with fundus autofluorescence imaging, at month 24. Results: The study was terminated early, at the time of the planned interim analysis, because of a slow GA progression rate (∼ 1.6 mm2/year) in the enrolled population. Least squares mean (standard error) GA area change from baseline at month 24 (primary endpoint) was 3.24 (0.13) mm2 with Brimo DDS (n = 84) versus 3.48 (0.13) mm2 with sham (n = 91), a reduction of 0.25 mm2 (7%) with Brimo DDS compared with sham (P = 0.150). At month 30, GA area change from baseline was 4.09 (0.15) mm2 with Brimo DDS (n = 49) versus 4.52 (0.15) mm2 with sham (n = 46), a reduction of 0.43 mm2 (10%) with Brimo DDS compared with sham (P = 0.033). Exploratory analysis showed numerically smaller loss over time in retinal sensitivity assessed with scotopic microperimetry with Brimo DDS than with sham (P = 0.053 at month 24). Treatment-related adverse events were usually related to the injection procedure. No implant accumulation was observed. Conclusions: Multiple intravitreal administrations of Brimo DDS (Gen 2) were well tolerated. The primary efficacy endpoint at 24 months was not met, but there was a numeric trend for reduction in GA progression at 24 months compared with sham treatment. The study was terminated early because of the lower-than-expected GA progression rate in the sham/control group. Financial Disclosure(s): Proprietary or commercial disclosures may be found after the references
Biomarkers of dietary omega-6 fatty acids and incident cardiovascular disease and mortality: an individual-level pooled analysis of 30 cohort studies
Biomarkers of dietary omega-6 fatty acids and incident cardiovascular disease and mortality: an individual-level pooled analysis of 30 cohort studies
Enhanced interpretation of newborn screening results without analyte cutoff values
A collaboration among 157 newborn screening programs in 47 countries has lead to the
creation of a database of 705,333 discrete analyte concentrations from 11,462 cases affected with
57 metabolic disorders, and from 631 heterozygotes for 12 conditions. This evidence was first
applied to establish disease ranges for amino acids and acylcarnitines, and clinically validate 114
cutoff target ranges.
Objective: To improve quality and performance with an evidence-based approach, multivariate
pattern recognition software has been developed to aid in the interpretation of complex analyte
profiles. The software generates tools that convert multiple clinically significant results into a
single numerical score based on overlap between normal and disease ranges, penetration within
the disease range, differences between specific conditions, and weighted correction factors.
Design: Eighty-five on-line tools target either a single condition or the differential diagnosis
between two or more conditions. Scores are expressed as a numerical value and as the percentile
rank among all cases with the condition chosen as primary target, and are compared to
interpretation guidelines. Tools are updated automatically after any new data submission (2009-
2011: 5.2 new cases added per day on average).
Main outcome measures: Retrospective evaluation of past cases suggest that these tools could
have avoided at least half of 277 false positive outcomes caused by carrier status for fatty acid
oxidation disorders, and could have prevented 88% of false negative events caused by cutoff
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values set inappropriately. In Minnesota, their prospective application has been a major
contributing factor to the sustained achievement of a false positive rate below 0.1% and a
positive predictive value above 60%.
Conclusions: Application of this computational approach to raw data could make cutoff values
for single analytes effectively obsolete. This paradigm is not limited to newborn screening and is
applicable to the interpretation of diverse multi-analyte profiles utilized in laboratory medicine.
Abstract wor
