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  1. Article ; Online: Clinical Research in the Time of COVID-19.

    Felix, Carol

    International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics

    2020  Volume 108, Issue 2, Page(s) 489–490

    MeSH term(s) Betacoronavirus ; COVID-19 ; Clinical Trials as Topic ; Coronavirus Infections/epidemiology ; Coronavirus Infections/prevention & control ; Humans ; Pandemics/prevention & control ; Pneumonia, Viral/epidemiology ; Pneumonia, Viral/prevention & control ; SARS-CoV-2 ; Telemedicine ; User-Computer Interface
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-09-03
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Editorial
    ZDB-ID 197614-x
    ISSN 1879-355X ; 0360-3016
    ISSN (online) 1879-355X
    ISSN 0360-3016
    DOI 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2020.06.059
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Clinical Research in the Time of COVID-19

    Felix, Carol

    International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics

    2020  Volume 108, Issue 2, Page(s) 489–490

    Keywords Cancer Research ; Oncology ; Radiation ; Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging ; covid19
    Language English
    Publisher Elsevier BV
    Publishing country us
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 197614-x
    ISSN 1879-355X ; 0360-3016
    ISSN (online) 1879-355X
    ISSN 0360-3016
    DOI 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2020.06.059
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article: Bioclimatic and Landscape Factors drive the Potential Distribution of

    Gallego, Diego / Sabah, Sandra Carol / Lencina, José Luísis / Carrillo, Antonio Félix

    Insects

    2023  Volume 14, Issue 7

    Abstract: Philaenus ... ...

    Abstract Philaenus spumarius
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-30
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2662247-6
    ISSN 2075-4450
    ISSN 2075-4450
    DOI 10.3390/insects14070592
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Bioclimatic and Landscape Factors drive the Potential Distribution of Philaenus spumarius, Neophilaenus campestris and N. lineatus (Hemiptera, Aphrophoridae) in Southeastern Iberian Peninsula

    Gallego, Diego / Sabah, Sandra Carol / Lencina, José Luísis / Carrillo, Antonio Félix

    Insects. 2023 June 30, v. 14, no. 7

    2023  

    Abstract: Philaenus spumarius and Neophilaenus campestris are the main vectors of the invasive bacteria Xylella fastidiosa and key threats to European plant health. Previous studies of the potential distribution of P. spumarius reveal that climatic factors are the ...

    Abstract Philaenus spumarius and Neophilaenus campestris are the main vectors of the invasive bacteria Xylella fastidiosa and key threats to European plant health. Previous studies of the potential distribution of P. spumarius reveal that climatic factors are the main drivers of its distribution on the Mediterranean Basin scale. Other local studies reveal that the landscape could also have a role in the distribution of both species of P. spumarius and N. campestris. Our work is aimed at understanding the role and importance of bioclimatic and landscape environmental factors in the distributions of the vector and potential vector species P. spumarius, N. campestris, N. lineatus and L. coleoptrata on a regional scale across the Autonomous Community of Murcia (SE Spain), a region with relevant environmental gradients of thermality and crop intensity. We used sweeping nets for sampling 100 points during eight months in 2020. Using bioclimatic landscape composition and topographical variables, we carried out habitat suitability models for each species using the maximum entropy algorithm (MaxEnt). Distribution results for P. spumarius, N. campestris and N. lineatus indicate a gradient in habitat suitability, with the optimum in the coldest and wettest areas in landscapes with a high proportion of forest. All three species are absent from the southern third of the study region, the hottest, driest and most intensively cultivated area. These results are useful and should be considered in contingency plans against possible invasions of X. fastidiosa in Mediterranean regions.
    Keywords Neophilaenus ; Philaenus spumarius ; Xylella fastidiosa ; algorithms ; cultivation area ; forests ; habitats ; landscapes ; plant health ; Iberian Peninsula ; Mediterranean region ; Spain
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-0630
    Publishing place Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2662247-6
    ISSN 2075-4450
    ISSN 2075-4450
    DOI 10.3390/insects14070592
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  5. Article ; Online: Acute type A intramural hematoma: The less-deadly acute aortic syndrome?

    Ahmad, Rana-Armaghan / Orelaru, Felix / Arora, Akul / Ling, Carol / Kim, Karen M / Fukuhara, Shinichi / Patel, Himanshu / Deeb, G Michael / Yang, Bo

    The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery

    2024  

    Abstract: Objective: To evaluate the short- and midterm outcomes of surgically managed acute type A intramural hematoma (IMH) versus classic acute type A aortic dissection (ATAAD).: Methods: From 1996 to February 2023, a total of 106 patients with acute type A ...

    Abstract Objective: To evaluate the short- and midterm outcomes of surgically managed acute type A intramural hematoma (IMH) versus classic acute type A aortic dissection (ATAAD).
    Methods: From 1996 to February 2023, a total of 106 patients with acute type A IMH and 795 patients with classic ATAAD presented for open aortic repair at our institution. Data were obtained from the local Society of Thoracic Surgeons' Data Warehouse and medical chart review.
    Results: Compared with the classic ATAAD group, the IMH group was older (65 vs 59 years, P < .001) and more likely to be female (45% vs 32%, P = .005), with fewer comorbidities such as severe aortic insufficiency (5.0% vs 25%, P < .001), acute stroke (2.8% vs 8.3%, P = .05), acute renal failure (5.7% vs 13%, P = .04), and malperfusion syndrome (8.5% vs 26%, P < .001) but more cardiac tamponade (18% vs 11%, P = .03). The IMH group had less aortic root replacement (15% vs 33%, P < .001), zone 2 arch replacements (9.4% vs 18%, P = .02), and shorter crossclamp times (120 minutes vs 150 minutes, P < .001). The operative mortality was significantly lower in the IMH group (0.9% vs 8.8%, P = .005) and a multivariable regression model showed IMH to be protective, odds ratio of 0.11, P = .03. The 10-year survival was similar between the 2 groups (65% vs 61%, P = .35). The hazard ratio of IMH for midterm mortality after surgery was 0.73, P = .12.
    Conclusions: Acute type A IMH could be treated with emergency open aortic repair with excellent short- and midterm outcomes.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-25
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 3104-5
    ISSN 1097-685X ; 0022-5223
    ISSN (online) 1097-685X
    ISSN 0022-5223
    DOI 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2024.01.032
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: Accelerated Hypofractionated Chemoradiation Followed by Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy Boost for Locally Advanced, Unresectable Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Nonrandomized Controlled Trial.

    Wu, Trudy C / Luterstein, Elaine / Neilsen, Beth K / Goldman, Jonathan W / Garon, Edward B / Lee, Jay M / Felix, Carol / Cao, Minsong / Tenn, Stephen E / Low, Daniel A / Kupelian, Patrick A / Steinberg, Michael L / Lee, Percy

    JAMA oncology

    2024  Volume 10, Issue 3, Page(s) 352–359

    Abstract: Importance: Intrathoracic progression remains the predominant pattern of failure in patients treated with concurrent chemoradiation followed by a consolidation immune checkpoint inhibitor for locally advanced, unresectable non-small cell lung cancer ( ... ...

    Abstract Importance: Intrathoracic progression remains the predominant pattern of failure in patients treated with concurrent chemoradiation followed by a consolidation immune checkpoint inhibitor for locally advanced, unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
    Objective: To determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and use of hypofractionated concurrent chemoradiation with an adaptive stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) boost.
    Design, setting, and participants: This was an early-phase, single-institution, radiation dose-escalation nonrandomized controlled trial with concurrent chemotherapy among patients with clinical stage II (inoperable/patient refusal of surgery) or III NSCLC (American Joint Committee on Cancer Staging Manual, seventh edition). Patients were enrolled and treated from May 2011 to May 2018, with a median patient follow-up of 18.2 months. Patients advanced to a higher SABR boost dose if dose-limiting toxic effects (any grade 3 or higher pulmonary, gastrointestinal, or cardiac toxic effects, or any nonhematologic grade 4 or higher toxic effects) occurred in fewer than 33% of the boost cohort within 90 days of follow-up. The current analyses were conducted from January to September 2023.
    Intervention: All patients first received 4 Gy × 10 fractions followed by an adaptive SABR boost to residual metabolically active disease, consisting of an additional 25 Gy (low, 5 Gy × 5 fractions), 30 Gy (intermediate, 6 Gy × 5 fractions), or 35 Gy (high, 7 Gy × 5 fractions) with concurrent weekly carboplatin/paclitaxel.
    Main outcome and measure: The primary outcome was to determine the MTD.
    Results: Data from 28 patients (median [range] age, 70 [51-88] years; 16 [57%] male; 24 [86%] with stage III disease) enrolled across the low- (n = 10), intermediate- (n = 9), and high- (n = 9) dose cohorts were evaluated. The protocol-specified MTD was not exceeded. The incidences of nonhematologic acute and late (>90 days) grade 3 or higher toxic effects were 11% and 7%, respectively. No grade 3 toxic effects were observed in the intermediate-dose boost cohort. Two deaths occurred in the high-dose cohort. Two-year local control was 74.1%, 85.7%, and 100.0% for the low-, intermediate-, and high-dose cohorts, respectively. Two-year overall survival was 30.0%, 76.2%, and 55.6% for the low-, intermediate-, and high-dose cohorts, respectively.
    Conclusions and relevance: This early-phase, dose-escalation nonrandomized controlled trial showed that concurrent chemoradiation with an adaptive SABR boost to 70 Gy in 15 fractions with concurrent chemotherapy is a safe and effective regimen for patients with locally advanced, unresectable NSCLC.
    Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01345851.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Male ; Aged ; Female ; Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/radiotherapy ; Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/drug therapy ; Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy ; Radiosurgery/adverse effects ; Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/therapeutic use ; Dose Fractionation, Radiation
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-02-02
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Comment
    ISSN 2374-2445
    ISSN (online) 2374-2445
    DOI 10.1001/jamaoncol.2023.6033
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article ; Online: Lymph node metastases detection in Whole Slide Images using prototypical patterns and transformer-guided multiple instance learning

    Heinlein Lukas / Benz Michaela / Kuritcyn Petr / Bruns Volker / Hartmann Arndt / Keil Felix / Geppert Carol / Evert Katja / Wittenberg Thomas

    Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 166-

    2023  Volume 169

    Abstract: Background: The examination of lymph nodes (LNs) regarding metastases is vital for the staging of cancer patients, which is necessary for diagnosis and adequate treatment selection. Advancements in digital pathology, utilizing Whole-Slide Images (WSIs) ... ...

    Abstract Background: The examination of lymph nodes (LNs) regarding metastases is vital for the staging of cancer patients, which is necessary for diagnosis and adequate treatment selection. Advancements in digital pathology, utilizing Whole-Slide Images (WSIs) and convolutional neural networks (CNNs), pose new opportunities to automate this procedure, thus reducing pathologists’ workload while simultaneously increasing the accuracy in metastases detection. Objective: To address the task of LN-metastases detection, the use of weakly supervised transformers are applied for the analysis of WSIs. Methods & Materials: As WSIs are too large to be processed as a whole, they are divided into non-overlapping patches, which are converted to feature vectors using a CNN network, pre-trained on HE-stained colon cancer resections. A subset of these patches serves as input for a transformer to predict if a LN contains a metastasis. Hence, selecting a representative subset is an important part of the pipeline. Hereby, a prototype based clustering is employed and different sampling strategies are tested. Finally, the chosen feature vectors are fed into a transformer-based multiple instance learning (MIL) architecture, classifying the LNs into healthy/negative (that is, containing no metastases), or metastatic/positive (that is, containing metastases). The proposed model is trained only on the Camelyon16 training data (LNs from breast cancer patients), and evaluated on the Camelyon16 test set. Results: The trained model achieves accuracies of up to 92.3% on the test data (from breast LNs). While the model struggles with smaller metastases, high specificities of up to 96.9% can be accomplished. Additionally, the model is evaluated on LNs from a different primary tumor (colon), where accuracies between 62.3% and 95.9% could be obtained. Conclusion: The investigated transformer-model performs very good on LN data from the public LN breast data, but the domain transfer to LNs from the colon needs more research.
    Keywords lymph node metastases ; transformer ; prototypical patterns ; whole slide image ; breast cancer ; colon cancer ; Medicine ; R
    Subject code 006
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher De Gruyter
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  8. Article ; Online: Ocular Pain Symptoms in Individuals With and Without a History of Refractive Surgery: Results From a Cross-Sectional Survey.

    Baksh, Brandon S / Morkin, Melina / Felix, Elizabeth / Karp, Carol L / Galor, Anat

    Cornea

    2021  Volume 41, Issue 1, Page(s) 31–38

    Abstract: Purpose: This study characterized ocular pain symptoms in individuals with and without a history of refractive surgery (RS) using a cross-sectional survey of individuals with ocular pain.: Methods: A link to an anonymous survey was posted on a ... ...

    Abstract Purpose: This study characterized ocular pain symptoms in individuals with and without a history of refractive surgery (RS) using a cross-sectional survey of individuals with ocular pain.
    Methods: A link to an anonymous survey was posted on a corneal neuralgia Facebook group that included individuals with ocular pain from any etiology and sent to individuals seen in our clinic with ocular pain. The survey asked about medical history, ocular pain symptoms (using standardized questionnaires), and treatment responses. Respondents were split into 2 groups based on a history of RS.
    Results: One hundred one individuals responded to the survey. The mean age for all respondents was 41.6 ± 15.6 years, and 50% reported a history of RS. A total of 46% of individuals with a history of RS reported that their ocular pain started within 1 month of surgery, with median pain duration of 36 (interquartile range 22-84) months. The median Dry Eye Questionnaire-5 (range 0-22) scores were 16 and 15 for the RS and no-RS groups, respectively. Most individuals in both groups characterized their pain as burning (score ≥1: RS, 86%; no-RS, 80%) and reported evoked pain to wind, light, or temperature (score ≥1: RS, 97%; no-RS, 85%). Fifty-nine of 101 individuals responded to treatment questions. Individuals in both groups reported >30% improvement in pain symptoms with some topical and systemic approaches.
    Conclusions: Individuals with a history of RS developed ocular pain soon after surgery, which persisted for years. Symptom profiles were similar between those with and without RS. Topical and systemic approaches can treat pain in both groups.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Eye Pain/diagnosis ; Eye Pain/epidemiology ; Eye Pain/etiology ; Female ; Florida/epidemiology ; Humans ; Incidence ; Male ; Pain Measurement/methods ; Refractive Surgical Procedures ; Retrospective Studies ; Surveys and Questionnaires
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-01-15
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 604826-2
    ISSN 1536-4798 ; 0277-3740
    ISSN (online) 1536-4798
    ISSN 0277-3740
    DOI 10.1097/ICO.0000000000002675
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: LUNAR: a randomized Phase 2 study of

    Ma, Ting Martin / Czernin, Johannes / Felix, Carol / Alano, Rejah / Wilhalme, Holly / Valle, Luca / Steinberg, Michael L / Dahlbom, Magnus / Reiter, Robert E / Rettig, Matthew B / Cao, Minsong / Calais, Jeremie / Kishan, Amar U

    BJU international

    2023  Volume 132, Issue 1, Page(s) 65–74

    Abstract: Objective: To assess the efficacy of : Patients and methods: The : Results and conclusions: The addition ... ...

    Abstract Objective: To assess the efficacy of
    Patients and methods: The
    Results and conclusions: The addition of
    MeSH term(s) Male ; Humans ; Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology ; Lutetium/therapeutic use ; Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ; Quality of Life ; Neoadjuvant Therapy ; Androgen Antagonists/therapeutic use ; Prostate-Specific Antigen ; Prostatic Neoplasms, Castration-Resistant/pathology ; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ; Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic
    Chemical Substances Lutetium (5H0DOZ21UJ) ; Androgen Antagonists ; Prostate-Specific Antigen (EC 3.4.21.77)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-03-02
    Publishing country England
    Document type Clinical Trial Protocol ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 1462191-5
    ISSN 1464-410X ; 1464-4096 ; 1358-8672
    ISSN (online) 1464-410X
    ISSN 1464-4096 ; 1358-8672
    DOI 10.1111/bju.15988
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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