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  1. Article: Transient Hyperkalemia Following Treatment of Chronic Hypokalemia: A Case Report and Review of Distal Tubule Physiology.

    Breeggemann, Matthew C / Gluck, Stephen L

    Case reports in nephrology and dialysis

    2022  Volume 12, Issue 1, Page(s) 1–4

    Abstract: ... L on the day of admission. Four days later, with a creatinine at baseline (0.9 mg/dL), potassium abruptly ... increased to 6.7 mEq/L. He did not have evidence of hyperaldosteronism. In cases of chronic hypokalemia ...

    Abstract Hypokalemia is a relatively common electrolyte disorder usually resulting from gastrointestinal wasting. Transient hyperkalemia in those treated for hypokalemia has been previously described to occur in 16% of hospitalized patients. The majority of those patients had acute, hospital-acquired hypokalemia. Here, we report a case of a young man with alcohol use disorder and chronic hypokalemia who was hospitalized for muscle weakness, abdominal pain, and intractable emesis. His potassium was 2.5 mEq/L on the day of admission. Four days later, with a creatinine at baseline (0.9 mg/dL), potassium abruptly increased to 6.7 mEq/L. He did not have evidence of hyperaldosteronism. In cases of chronic hypokalemia, we propose that the adaptive mechanisms of the distal tubule with total body potassium deficits require time to revert back to a nonactive state and that transient hyperkalemia may be observed during these "refractory" periods during which potassium supplementation is continued. The time required for disassembly of with no lysine kinases following resolution of hypokalemia is unknown. Hyperkalemia is an important consideration when treating patients with chronic hypokalemia.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-01-31
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Case Reports
    ZDB-ID 2809879-1
    ISSN 2296-9705
    ISSN 2296-9705
    DOI 10.1159/000521477
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article: A Case Report of Kidney-Only Transplantation in Primary Hyperoxaluria Type 1: A Novel Approach with the Use of Nedosiran.

    Breeggemann, Matthew C / Gluck, Stephen L / Stoller, Marshall L / Lee, Marsha M

    Case reports in nephrology and dialysis

    2023  Volume 13, Issue 1, Page(s) 63–69

    Abstract: The primary hyperoxalurias (PHs) are a group of diseases characterized by kidney stones, nephrocalcinosis, and chronic kidney disease. At stages of advanced kidney disease, glomerular filtration of oxalate becomes insufficient, plasma levels increase, ... ...

    Abstract The primary hyperoxalurias (PHs) are a group of diseases characterized by kidney stones, nephrocalcinosis, and chronic kidney disease. At stages of advanced kidney disease, glomerular filtration of oxalate becomes insufficient, plasma levels increase, and tissue deposition may occur. Hemodialysis is often unable to overcome the excess hepatic oxalate production. The current surgical management of primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1) is combined liver kidney transplantation. In a subset of PH1 patients who respond to pyridoxine, kidney-only transplantation has been successfully performed. Recently, kidney-only transplantation has also been performed in PH1 patients receiving a small interfering RNA therapy called lumasiran. This drug targets the hepatic overproduction of oxalate, making kidney-only transplantation a potentially practical novel approach for managing PH1 patients with advanced kidney disease. It is unknown if similar effects could be seen with a different small interfering RNA agent called nedosiran. This article will briefly review PH1, describe the small interfering RNA therapies being used to treat PH, summarize the reported cases of kidney-only transplantation performed with lumasiran, and detail a case of kidney-only transplantation performed in a PH1 patient receiving nedosiran.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-07-07
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Case Reports
    ZDB-ID 2809879-1
    ISSN 2296-9705
    ISSN 2296-9705
    DOI 10.1159/000531053
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  3. Article ; Online: Vital sign measurements demonstrate terminal digit bias and boundary effects.

    Kleinig, Oliver / To, Minh-Son / Ovenden, Christopher D / Kovoor, Joshua G / Goh, Rudy / Lam, Lydia / Wenzel, Tara / Tan, Yiran / Harish, Hrishikesh / Gupta, Aashray K / Gluck, Sam / Gilbert, Toby / Bacchi, Stephen

    Emergency medicine Australasia : EMA

    2024  

    Abstract: Objective: The measurement and recording of vital signs may be impacted by biases, including preferences for even and round numbers. However, other biases, such as variation due to defined numerical boundaries (also known as boundary effects), may be ... ...

    Abstract Objective: The measurement and recording of vital signs may be impacted by biases, including preferences for even and round numbers. However, other biases, such as variation due to defined numerical boundaries (also known as boundary effects), may be present in vital signs data and have not yet been investigated in a medical setting. We aimed to assess vital signs data for such biases. These parameters are clinically significant as they influence care escalation.
    Methods: Vital signs data (heart rate, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation and systolic blood pressure) were collected from a tertiary hospital electronic medical record over a 2-year period. These data were analysed using polynomial regression with additional terms to assess for underreporting of out-of-range observations and overreporting numbers with terminal digits of 0 (round numbers), 2 (even numbers) and 5.
    Results: It was found that heart rate, oxygen saturation and systolic blood pressure demonstrated 'boundary effects', with values inside the 'normal' range disproportionately more likely to be recorded. Even number bias was observed in systolic heart rate, respiratory rate and blood pressure. Preference for multiples of 5 was observed for heart rate and blood pressure. Independent overrepresentation of multiples of 10 was demonstrated in heart rate data.
    Conclusion: Although often considered objective, vital signs data are affected by bias. These biases may impact the care patients receive. Additionally, it may have implications for creating and training machine learning models that utilise vital signs data.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-02-27
    Publishing country Australia
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2161824-0
    ISSN 1742-6723 ; 1742-6731 ; 1035-6851
    ISSN (online) 1742-6723
    ISSN 1742-6731 ; 1035-6851
    DOI 10.1111/1742-6723.14395
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Sociocultural and Demographic Factors Predict Readmissions for General Surgery Patients.

    Kovoor, Joshua G / Bacchi, Stephen / Gupta, Aashray K / Nann, Silas D / Stretton, Brandon / Chong, Esther H L / Hewitt, Joseph N / Bhanushali, Ameya / Nathin, Kayla / Aujayeb, Nidhi / Lu, Amy / Ovenden, Christopher D / John, Athul / Reid, Jessica L / Gluck, Samuel / Liew, Danny / Reddi, Benjamin A / Hugh, Thomas J / Dobbins, Christopher /
    Padbury, Robert T / Hewett, Peter J / Trochsler, Markus I / Maddern, Guy J

    World journal of surgery

    2023  Volume 47, Issue 12, Page(s) 3124–3130

    Abstract: Introduction: Readmission is a poor outcome for both patients and healthcare systems. The association of certain sociocultural and demographic characteristics with likelihood of readmission is uncertain in general surgical patients.: Method: A multi- ... ...

    Abstract Introduction: Readmission is a poor outcome for both patients and healthcare systems. The association of certain sociocultural and demographic characteristics with likelihood of readmission is uncertain in general surgical patients.
    Method: A multi-centre retrospective cohort study of consecutive unique individuals who survived to discharge during general surgical admissions was conducted. Sociocultural and demographic variables were evaluated alongside clinical parameters (considered both as raw values and their proportion of change in the 1-2 days prior to admission) for their association with 7 and 30 days readmission using logistic regression.
    Results: There were 12,701 individuals included, with 304 (2.4%) individuals readmitted within 7 days, and 921 (7.3%) readmitted within 30 days. When incorporating absolute values of clinical parameters in the model, age was the only variable significantly associated with 7-day readmission, and primary language and presence of religion were the only variables significantly associated with 30-day readmission. When incorporating change in clinical parameters between the 1-2 days prior to discharge, primary language and religion were predictive of 30-day readmission. When controlling for changes in clinical parameters, only higher comorbidity burden (represented by higher Charlson comorbidity index score) was associated with increased likelihood of 30-day readmission.
    Conclusions: Sociocultural and demographic patient factors such as primary language, presence of religion, age, and comorbidity burden predict the likelihood of 7 and 30-day hospital readmission after general surgery. These findings support early implementation a postoperative care model that integrates all biopsychosocial domains across multiple disciplines of healthcare.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Patient Readmission ; Retrospective Studies ; Risk Factors ; Hospitalization ; Demography
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 224043-9
    ISSN 1432-2323 ; 0364-2313
    ISSN (online) 1432-2323
    ISSN 0364-2313
    DOI 10.1007/s00268-023-07177-0
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: Vital signs and medical emergency response (MER) activation predict in-hospital mortality in general surgery patients: a study of 15 969 admissions.

    Kovoor, Joshua G / Bacchi, Stephen / Stretton, Brandon / Gupta, Aashray K / Lam, Lydia / Jiang, Melinda / Lee, Shane / To, Minh-Son / Ovenden, Christopher D / Hewitt, Joseph N / Goh, Rudy / Gluck, Samuel / Reid, Jessica L / Hugh, Thomas J / Dobbins, Christopher / Padbury, Robert T / Hewett, Peter J / Trochsler, Markus I / Flabouris, Arthas /
    Maddern, Guy J

    ANZ journal of surgery

    2023  Volume 93, Issue 10, Page(s) 2426–2432

    Abstract: Background: The applicability of the vital signs prompting medical emergency response (MER) activation has not previously been examined specifically in a large general surgical cohort. This study aimed to characterize the distribution, and predictive ... ...

    Abstract Background: The applicability of the vital signs prompting medical emergency response (MER) activation has not previously been examined specifically in a large general surgical cohort. This study aimed to characterize the distribution, and predictive performance, of four vital signs selected based on Australian guidelines (oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, systolic blood pressure and heart rate); with those of the MER activation criteria.
    Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted including patients admitted under general surgical services of two hospitals in South Australia over 2 years. Likelihood ratios for patients meeting MER activation criteria, or a vital sign in the most extreme 1% for general surgery inpatients (<0.5th percentile or > 99.5th percentile), were calculated to predict in-hospital mortality.
    Results: 15 969 inpatient admissions were included comprising 2 254 617 total vital sign observations. The 0.5th and 99.5th centile for heart rate was 48 and 133, systolic blood pressure 85 and 184, respiratory rate 10 and 31, and oxygen saturations 89% and 100%, respectively. MER activation criteria with the highest positive likelihood ratio for in-hospital mortality were heart rate ≤ 39 (37.65, 95% CI 27.71-49.51), respiratory rate ≥ 31 (15.79, 95% CI 12.82-19.07), and respiratory rate ≤ 7 (10.53, 95% CI 6.79-14.84). These MER activation criteria likelihood ratios were similar to those derived when applying a threshold of the most extreme 1% of vital signs.
    Conclusions: This study demonstrated that vital signs within Australian guidelines, and escalation to MER activation, appropriately predict in-hospital mortality in a large cohort of patients admitted to general surgical services in South Australia.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Retrospective Studies ; Hospital Mortality ; Australia/epidemiology ; Vital Signs ; Hospitalization
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-08-13
    Publishing country Australia
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2050749-5
    ISSN 1445-2197 ; 1445-1433 ; 0004-8682
    ISSN (online) 1445-2197
    ISSN 1445-1433 ; 0004-8682
    DOI 10.1111/ans.18648
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  6. Article ; Online: Surgery's Rosetta Stone: Natural language processing to predict discharge and readmission after general surgery.

    Kovoor, Joshua G / Bacchi, Stephen / Gupta, Aashray K / Stretton, Brandon / Nann, Silas D / Aujayeb, Nidhi / Lu, Amy / Nathin, Kayla / Lam, Lydia / Jiang, Melinda / Lee, Shane / To, Minh-Son / Ovenden, Christopher D / Hewitt, Joseph N / Goh, Rudy / Gluck, Samuel / Reid, Jessica L / Khurana, Sanjeev / Dobbins, Christopher /
    Hewett, Peter J / Padbury, Robert T / Malycha, James / Trochsler, Markus I / Hugh, Thomas J / Maddern, Guy J

    Surgery

    2023  Volume 174, Issue 6, Page(s) 1309–1314

    Abstract: Background: This study aimed to examine the accuracy with which multiple natural language processing artificial intelligence models could predict discharge and readmissions after general surgery.: Methods: Natural language processing models were ... ...

    Abstract Background: This study aimed to examine the accuracy with which multiple natural language processing artificial intelligence models could predict discharge and readmissions after general surgery.
    Methods: Natural language processing models were derived and validated to predict discharge within the next 48 hours and 7 days and readmission within 30 days (based on daily ward round notes and discharge summaries, respectively) for general surgery inpatients at 2 South Australian hospitals. Natural language processing models included logistic regression, artificial neural networks, and Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers.
    Results: For discharge prediction analyses, 14,690 admissions were included. For readmission prediction analyses, 12,457 patients were included. For prediction of discharge within 48 hours, derivation and validation data set area under the receiver operator characteristic curves were, respectively: 0.86 and 0.86 for Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers, 0.82 and 0.81 for logistic regression, and 0.82 and 0.81 for artificial neural networks. For prediction of discharge within 7 days, derivation and validation data set area under the receiver operator characteristic curves were, respectively: 0.82 and 0.81 for Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers, 0.75 and 0.72 for logistic regression, and 0.68 and 0.67 for artificial neural networks. For readmission prediction within 30 days, derivation and validation data set area under the receiver operator characteristic curves were, respectively: 0.55 and 0.59 for Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers and 0.77 and 0.62 for logistic regression.
    Conclusion: Modern natural language processing models, particularly Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers, can effectively and accurately identify general surgery patients who will be discharged in the next 48 hours. However, these approaches are less capable of identifying general surgery patients who will be discharged within the next 7 days or who will experience readmission within 30 days of discharge.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Patient Discharge ; Artificial Intelligence ; Patient Readmission ; Natural Language Processing ; Australia
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-29
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 202467-6
    ISSN 1532-7361 ; 0039-6060
    ISSN (online) 1532-7361
    ISSN 0039-6060
    DOI 10.1016/j.surg.2023.08.021
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  7. Article: Acid sensing in renal epithelial cells.

    Gluck, Stephen L

    The Journal of clinical investigation

    2004  Volume 114, Issue 12, Page(s) 1696–1699

    Abstract: The kidney adjusts net acid excretion to match production with exquisite precision, despite little or no change in the plasma bicarbonate concentration. The acid-sensing pathway that signals the kidney to increase acid secretion involves activation of ... ...

    Abstract The kidney adjusts net acid excretion to match production with exquisite precision, despite little or no change in the plasma bicarbonate concentration. The acid-sensing pathway that signals the kidney to increase acid secretion involves activation of the proto-oncogene c-Src. A new study in this issue shows that proline-rich tyrosine kinase 2 (Pyk2) is responsible for acid-induced activation of c-Src and is essential for acid sensing in renal epithelial cells. The findings implicate a broader role for Pyk2 in acid-base homeostasis in bone and other tissues beyond the kidney.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Cell Line ; Cytosol/metabolism ; Enzyme Activation ; Epithelial Cells/metabolism ; Focal Adhesion Kinase 2 ; Humans ; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ; Kidney/cytology ; Kidney/metabolism ; Kinetics ; Models, Biological ; Phosphorylation ; Protein Binding ; Protein Conformation ; Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism ; Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/physiology ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchanger 3 ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchangers/chemistry ; src-Family Kinases/metabolism
    Chemical Substances Sodium-Hydrogen Exchanger 3 ; Sodium-Hydrogen Exchangers ; Protein-Tyrosine Kinases (EC 2.7.10.1) ; Focal Adhesion Kinase 2 (EC 2.7.10.2) ; src-Family Kinases (EC 2.7.10.2)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2004-12
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Review ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 3067-3
    ISSN 1558-8238 ; 0021-9738
    ISSN (online) 1558-8238
    ISSN 0021-9738
    DOI 10.1172/JCI23864
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  8. Article ; Online: Antibiotic Prescribing Practices Differ between Patients with Penicillin Intolerance and Penicillin Allergy Labels.

    Jiang, Melinda / Bacchi, Stephen / Lam, Lydia / Inglis, Joshua M / Gluck, Samuel / Smith, William / Gilbert, Toby

    International archives of allergy and immunology

    2022  Volume 184, Issue 2, Page(s) 171–175

    Abstract: Introduction: Penicillin allergy labels are common. However, many penicillin allergy labels have been applied incorrectly and in fact represent penicillin intolerance. Patients with penicillin intolerance can receive penicillin antibiotics. The effect ... ...

    Abstract Introduction: Penicillin allergy labels are common. However, many penicillin allergy labels have been applied incorrectly and in fact represent penicillin intolerance. Patients with penicillin intolerance can receive penicillin antibiotics. The effect of penicillin intolerance labels on prescribing practices is uncertain.
    Methods: This multicenter retrospective cohort study included consecutive general medicine patients admitted to two tertiary hospitals over a 12-month period. Electronic medical records were reviewed for allergy and prescribing practices. Instances of penicillin prescription to patients with previously labeled penicillin allergies underwent case note review.
    Results: There were 12,134 individual hospital admissions included in the study. The number of admissions with a previous penicillin allergy label was 1,312 (10.8%) and with a penicillin intolerance label was 60 (0.5%). Penicillin allergy labels were associated with increased likelihood of being prescribed vancomycin (odds ratio 1.42, 95% confidence interval 1.16-1.75, p = 0.001) and moxifloxacin (odds ratio 20.0, 95% confidence interval 13.4-29.9, p < 0.001). Penicillin intolerance was not associated with increased likelihood of receiving these antibiotics. There were 75 admissions during which an individual with a penicillin allergy label was prescribed one of the specified penicillins and only one adverse reaction in this group. These cases included eight deliberate challenges and 15 cases in which allergy history clarification was sufficient to delabel the allergy.
    Conclusions: This study supports that prescribing practices differ between patients with penicillin allergy labels and intolerance labels. Penicillin challenges may be undertaken safely in the inpatient setting. Further studies are required to investigate how best to interrogate penicillin allergy labels in this cohort.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Anti-Bacterial Agents/adverse effects ; Retrospective Studies ; Penicillins/adverse effects ; Drug Hypersensitivity/diagnosis ; Hypersensitivity/drug therapy
    Chemical Substances Anti-Bacterial Agents ; Penicillins
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-11-11
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Multicenter Study ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1108932-5
    ISSN 1423-0097 ; 1018-2438
    ISSN (online) 1423-0097
    ISSN 1018-2438
    DOI 10.1159/000526424
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  9. Article: Impact of perioperative direct oral anticoagulant assays: a multicenter cohort study.

    Stretton, Brandon / Kovoor, Joshua / Bacchi, Stephen / Booth, Andrew / Gluck, Sam / Vanlint, Andrew / Afzal, Mohamed / Ovenden, Christopher / Gupta, Aashray / Mahajan, Rajiv / Edwards, Suzanne / Brennan, Yvonne / Boey, Jir Ping / Reddi, Benjamin / Maddern, Guy / Boyd, Mark

    Hospital practice (1995)

    2023  Volume 51, Issue 3, Page(s) 155–162

    Abstract: ... and Neurosurgery (19.4%). For every 10 ng/ml increase in titer, the hemoglobin decreases by 0.5066 g/L ...

    Abstract Background: There is little evidence to guide the perioperative management of patients on a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) in the absence of a last known dose. Quantitative serum titers may be ordered, but there is little evidence supporting this.
    Aims: This multi-center retrospective cohort study of consecutive surgical in-patients with a DOAC assay, performed over a five-year period, aimed to characterize preoperative DOAC assay orders and their impact on perioperative outcomes.
    Materials and methods: Patients prescribed regular DOAC (both prophylactic and therapeutic dosing) with a preoperative DOAC assay were included. The DOAC assay titer was evaluated against endpoints. Further, patients with an assay were compared against anticoagulated patients who did not receive a preoperative DOAC assay. The primary endpoint was major bleeding. Secondary endpoints included perioperative hemoglobin change, blood transfusions, idarucizumab or prothrombin complex concentrate administration, postoperative thrombosis, in-hospital mortality and reoperation. Adjusted and unadjusted linear regression models were used for continuous data. Binary logistic models were performed for dichotomous outcomes.
    Results: 1065 patients were included, 232 had preoperative assays. Assays were ordered most commonly by Spinal (11.9%), Orthopedics (15.4%), and Neurosurgery (19.4%). For every 10 ng/ml increase in titer, the hemoglobin decreases by 0.5066 g/L and the odds of a preoperative reversal increases by 13%. Compared to those without an assay, patients with preoperative DOAC assays had odds 1.44× higher for major bleeding, 2.98× higher for in-hospital mortality and 16.3× higher for receiving anticoagulant reversal.
    Conclusion: A preoperative DOAC assay order was associated with worse outcomes despite increased reversal administration. However, the DOAC assay titer can reflect the patient's likelihood of bleeding.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Anticoagulants ; Retrospective Studies ; Hemorrhage/chemically induced ; Hemorrhage/prevention & control ; Hemorrhage/drug therapy ; Administration, Oral
    Chemical Substances Anticoagulants
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-04-24
    Publishing country England
    Document type Multicenter Study ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2570453-9
    ISSN 2377-1003 ; 2154-8331 ; 8750-2836
    ISSN (online) 2377-1003
    ISSN 2154-8331 ; 8750-2836
    DOI 10.1080/21548331.2023.2206270
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  10. Article ; Online: Mortality by age, gene and gender in carriers of pathogenic mismatch repair gene variants receiving surveillance for early cancer diagnosis and treatment: a report from the prospective Lynch syndrome database.

    Dominguez-Valentin, Mev / Haupt, Saskia / Seppälä, Toni T / Sampson, Julian R / Sunde, Lone / Bernstein, Inge / Jenkins, Mark A / Engel, Christoph / Aretz, Stefan / Nielsen, Maartje / Capella, Gabriel / Balaguer, Francesc / Evans, Dafydd Gareth / Burn, John / Holinski-Feder, Elke / Bertario, Lucio / Bonanni, Bernardo / Lindblom, Annika / Levi, Zohar /
    Macrae, Finlay / Winship, Ingrid / Plazzer, John-Paul / Sijmons, Rolf / Laghi, Luigi / Della Valle, Adriana / Heinimann, Karl / Dębniak, Tadeusz / Fruscio, Robert / Lopez-Koestner, Francisco / Alvarez-Valenzuela, Karin / Katz, Lior H / Laish, Ido / Vainer, Elez / Vaccaro, Carlos / Carraro, Dirce Maria / Monahan, Kevin / Half, Elizabeth / Stakelum, Aine / Winter, Des / Kennelly, Rory / Gluck, Nathan / Sheth, Harsh / Abu-Freha, Naim / Greenblatt, Marc / Rossi, Benedito Mauro / Bohorquez, Mabel / Cavestro, Giulia Martina / Lino-Silva, Leonardo S / Horisberger, Karoline / Tibiletti, Maria Grazia / Nascimento, Ivana do / Thomas, Huw / Rossi, Norma Teresa / Apolinário da Silva, Leandro / Zaránd, Attila / Ruiz-Bañobre, Juan / Heuveline, Vincent / Mecklin, Jukka-Pekka / Pylvänäinen, Kirsi / Renkonen-Sinisalo, Laura / Lepistö, Anna / Peltomäki, Päivi / Therkildsen, Christina / Madsen, Mia Gebauer / Burgdorf, Stefan Kobbelgaard / Hopper, John L / Win, Aung Ko / Haile, Robert W / Lindor, Noralane / Gallinger, Steven / Le Marchand, Loïc / Newcomb, Polly A / Figueiredo, Jane / Buchanan, Daniel D / Thibodeau, Stephen N / von Knebel Doeberitz, Magnus / Loeffler, Markus / Rahner, Nils / Schröck, Evelin / Steinke-Lange, Verena / Schmiegel, Wolff / Vangala, Deepak / Perne, Claudia / Hüneburg, Robert / Redler, Silke / Büttner, Reinhard / Weitz, Jürgen / Pineda, Marta / Duenas, Nuria / Vidal, Joan Brunet / Moreira, Leticia / Sánchez, Ariadna / Hovig, Eivind / Nakken, Sigve / Green, Kate / Lalloo, Fiona / Hill, James / Crosbie, Emma / Mints, Miriam / Goldberg, Yael / Tjandra, Douglas / Ten Broeke, Sanne W / Kariv, Revital / Rosner, Guy / Advani, Suresh H / Thomas, Lidiya / Shah, Pankaj / Shah, Mithun / Neffa, Florencia / Esperon, Patricia / Pavicic, Walter / Torrezan, Giovana Tardin / Bassaneze, Thiago / Martin, Claudia Alejandra / Moslein, Gabriela / Moller, Pål

    EClinicalMedicine

    2023  Volume 58, Page(s) 101909

    Abstract: Background: The Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database (PLSD) collates information on carriers of pathogenic or likely pathogenic MMR variants (: Methods: The PLSD is a prospective observational study without a control group that was designed in 2012 ... ...

    Abstract Background: The Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database (PLSD) collates information on carriers of pathogenic or likely pathogenic MMR variants (
    Methods: The PLSD is a prospective observational study without a control group that was designed in 2012 and updated up to October 2022. Data for 8500 carriers of
    Findings: Gynaecological cancers were more frequent than colorectal cancers in
    Interpretation: In
    Funding: We acknowledge funding from the Norwegian Cancer Society, contract 194751-2017.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-20
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ISSN 2589-5370
    ISSN (online) 2589-5370
    DOI 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.101909
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