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  1. Article ; Online: Conversion to Open Radical or Partial Nephrectomy Associated with Unplanned Hospital Readmission After Attempted Minimally Invasive Approach.

    Razdan, Shirin / Okhawere, Kennedy / Wilson, Michael / Nkemdirim, William / Korn, Talia / Meilika, Kirolos / Badani, Ketan

    Journal of laparoendoscopic & advanced surgical techniques. Part A

    2021  Volume 32, Issue 8, Page(s) 823–831

    Abstract: Introduction/Objectives: ...

    Abstract Introduction/Objectives:
    MeSH term(s) Conversion to Open Surgery ; Humans ; Kidney Neoplasms/pathology ; Kidney Neoplasms/surgery ; Laparoscopy ; Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures/adverse effects ; Nephrectomy/adverse effects ; Patient Readmission ; Retrospective Studies ; Robotic Surgical Procedures
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-12-28
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1381909-4
    ISSN 1557-9034 ; 1092-6429
    ISSN (online) 1557-9034
    ISSN 1092-6429
    DOI 10.1089/lap.2021.0537
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Association between chronic kidney disease and COVID-19-related mortality in New York.

    Mohamed, Nihal E / Benn, Emma K T / Astha, Varuna / Okhawere, Kennedy E / Korn, Talia G / Nkemdirim, William / Rambhia, Ami / Ige, Olajumoke A / Funchess, Hassan / Mihalopoulos, Meredith / Meilika, Kirolos N / Kyprianou, Natasha / Badani, Ketan K

    World journal of urology

    2021  Volume 39, Issue 8, Page(s) 2987–2993

    Abstract: Purpose: To evaluate mortality risk of CKD patients infected with COVID-19, and assess shared characteristics associated with health disparities in CKD outcome.: Methods: We extracted the data from a case series of 7624 patients presented at Mount ... ...

    Abstract Purpose: To evaluate mortality risk of CKD patients infected with COVID-19, and assess shared characteristics associated with health disparities in CKD outcome.
    Methods: We extracted the data from a case series of 7624 patients presented at Mount Sinai Health System, in New York for testing between 3/28/2020 and 4/16/2020. De-identified patient data set is being produced by the Scientific Computing department and made available to the Mount Sinai research community at the following website: https://msdw.mountsinai.org/ .
    Results: Of 7624 COVID-19 patients, 7.8% (n = 597) had CKD on hospital admission, and 11.2% (n = 856) died of COVID-19 infection. CKD patients were older, more likely to have diabetes, hypertension, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), were current or former smokers, had a longer time to discharge, and had worse survival compared to non-CKD patients (p < 0.05). COVID-19 mortality rate was significantly higher in CKD patients (23.1% vs 10.2%) with a 1.51 greater odds of dying (95% CI: 1.19-1.90). Controlling for demographic, behavioral, and clinical covariates, the logistic regression analysis showed significant and consistent effects of CKD, older age, male gender, and hypertension with mortality (p < 0.05).
    Conclusion: CKD was a significant independent predictor of COVID-19 mortality, along with older age, male gender, and hypertension. Future research will investigate the effects of COVID-19 on long-term renal function.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Age Factors ; Aged ; COVID-19/epidemiology ; COVID-19/mortality ; Comorbidity ; Diabetes Mellitus/epidemiology ; Female ; Humans ; Hypertension/epidemiology ; Male ; Middle Aged ; New York ; Prognosis ; Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/epidemiology ; Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/epidemiology ; SARS-CoV-2 ; Sex Factors ; Smoking/epidemiology
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-01-22
    Publishing country Germany
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 380333-8
    ISSN 1433-8726 ; 0724-4983
    ISSN (online) 1433-8726
    ISSN 0724-4983
    DOI 10.1007/s00345-020-03567-4
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Symptoms and Impaired Quality of Life After COVID-19 Hospitalization: Effect of Therapeutic Heparin in Non-ICU Patients in the Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines 4 Acute Trial: Effect on 3-Month Symptoms and Quality of Life.

    Greenstein, Yonatan Y / Hubel, Kinsley / Froess, Joshua / Wisniewski, Stephen R / Venugopal, Vidya / Lai, Yu-Hsuan / Berger, Jeff S / Chang, Steven Y / Colovos, Christos / Shah, Faraaz / Kornblith, Lucy Z / Lawler, Patrick R / Gaddh, Manila / Guerrero, Raquel Morillo / Nkemdirim, William / Lopes, Renato D / Reynolds, Harmony R / Amigo, Jose Seijas / Wahid, Lana /
    Zahra, Ajani / Goligher, Ewan C / Zarychanski, Ryan / Leifer, Eric / Huang, David T / Neal, Matthew D / Hochman, Judith S / Cushman, Mary / Gong, Michelle N

    Chest

    2023  Volume 165, Issue 4, Page(s) 785–799

    Abstract: Background: Therapeutic-dose heparin decreased days requiring organ support in noncritically ill patients hospitalized for COVID-19, but its impact on persistent symptoms or quality of life (QOL) is unclear.: Research question: In the Accelerating ... ...

    Abstract Background: Therapeutic-dose heparin decreased days requiring organ support in noncritically ill patients hospitalized for COVID-19, but its impact on persistent symptoms or quality of life (QOL) is unclear.
    Research question: In the Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines 4 ACUTE (ACTIV-4a) trial, was randomization of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 illness to therapeutic-dose vs prophylactic heparin associated with fewer symptoms and better QOL at 90 days?
    Study design and methods: This was an open-label randomized controlled trial at 34 hospitals in the United States and Spain. A total of 727 noncritically ill patients hospitalized for COVID-19 from September 2020 to June 2021 were randomized to therapeutic-dose vs prophylactic heparin. Only patients with 90-day data on symptoms and QOL were analyzed. We ascertained symptoms and QOL by the EQ-5D-5L at 90-day follow-up in a preplanned analysis for the ACTIV-4a trial. Individual domains assessed by the EQ-5D-5L included mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed.
    Results: Among 571 patients, 288 (50.4%) reported at least one symptom. Among 410 patients, 148 (36.1%) reported moderate to severe impairment in one or more domains of the EQ-5D-5L. The presence of 90-day symptoms was associated with moderate-severe impairment in the EQ-5D-5L domains of mobility (adjusted OR [aOR], 2.37; 95% CI, 1.22-4.59), usual activities (aOR, 3.66; 95% CI, 1.75-7.65), pain (aOR, 2.43; 95% CI, 1.43-4.12), and anxiety (aOR, 4.32; 95% CI, 2.06-9.02), compared with patients reporting no symptoms There were no differences in symptoms or in the overall EQ-5D-5L index score between treatment groups. Therapeutic-dose heparin was associated with less moderate-severe impairment in all physical functioning domains (mobility, self-care, usual activities) but was independently significant only in the self-care domain (aOR, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.11-0.96).
    Interpretation: In a randomized controlled trial of hospitalized noncritically ill patients with COVID-19, therapeutic-dose heparin was associated with less severe impairment in the self-care domain of EQ-5D-5L. However, this type of impairment was uncommon, affecting 23 individuals.
    Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT04505774; URL: www.
    Clinicaltrials: gov.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; COVID-19/therapy ; Quality of Life ; Heparin/therapeutic use ; Hospitalization ; Pain ; Surveys and Questionnaires
    Chemical Substances Heparin (9005-49-6)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-11-17
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Randomized Controlled Trial ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1032552-9
    ISSN 1931-3543 ; 0012-3692
    ISSN (online) 1931-3543
    ISSN 0012-3692
    DOI 10.1016/j.chest.2023.11.019
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article: Repurposing of α1-Adrenoceptor Antagonists: Impact in Renal Cancer.

    Mihalopoulos, Meredith / Dovey, Zachary / Archer, Maddison / Korn, Talia G / Okhawere, Kennedy E / Nkemdirim, William / Funchess, Hassan / Rambhia, Ami / Mohamed, Nihal / Kaplan, Steven A / Mehrazin, Reza / Lundon, Dara / Tsao, Che-Kai / Badani, Ketan K / Kyprianou, Natasha

    Cancers

    2020  Volume 12, Issue 9

    Abstract: Renal cancer ranks twelfth in incidence among cancers worldwide. Despite improving outcomes due to better therapeutic options and strategies, prognosis for those with metastatic disease remains poor. Current systemic therapeutic approaches include ... ...

    Abstract Renal cancer ranks twelfth in incidence among cancers worldwide. Despite improving outcomes due to better therapeutic options and strategies, prognosis for those with metastatic disease remains poor. Current systemic therapeutic approaches include inhibiting pathways of angiogenesis, immune checkpoint blockade, and mTOR inhibition, but inevitably resistance develops for those with metastatic disease, and novel treatment strategies are urgently needed. Emerging molecular and epidemiological evidence suggests that quinazoline-based α1-adrenoceptor-antagonists may have both chemopreventive and direct therapeutic actions in the treatment of urological cancers, including renal cancer. In human renal cancer cell models, quinazoline-based α1-adrenoceptor antagonists were shown to significantly reduce the invasion and metastatic potential of renal tumors by targeting focal adhesion survival signaling to induce anoikis. Mechanistically these drugs overcome anoikis resistance in tumor cells by targeting cell survival regulators AKT and FAK, disrupting integrin adhesion (α5β1 and α2β1) and engaging extracellular matrix (ECM)-associated tumor suppressors. In this review, we discuss the current evidence for the use of quinazoline-based α1-adrenoceptor antagonists as novel therapies for renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and highlight their potential therapeutic action through overcoming anoikis resistance of tumor epithelial and endothelial cells in metastatic RCC. These findings provide a platform for future studies that will retrospectively and prospectively test repurposing of quinazoline-based α1-adrenoceptor-antagonists for the treatment of advanced RCC and the prevention of metastasis in neoadjuvant, adjuvant, salvage and metastatic settings.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-08-28
    Publishing country Switzerland
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2527080-1
    ISSN 2072-6694
    ISSN 2072-6694
    DOI 10.3390/cancers12092442
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: Intravenous aviptadil and remdesivir for treatment of COVID-19-associated hypoxaemic respiratory failure in the USA (TESICO): a randomised, placebo-controlled trial.

    Brown, Samuel M / Barkauskas, Christina E / Grund, Birgit / Sharma, Shweta / Phillips, Andrew N / Leither, Lindsay / Peltan, Ithan D / Lanspa, Michael / Gilstrap, Daniel L / Mourad, Ahmad / Lane, Kathleen / Beitler, Jeremy R / Serra, Alexis L / Garcia, Ivan / Almasri, Eyad / Fayed, Mohamed / Hubel, Kinsley / Harris, Estelle S / Middleton, Elizabeth A /
    Barrios, Macy A G / Mathews, Kusum S / Goel, Neha N / Acquah, Samuel / Mosier, Jarrod / Hypes, Cameron / Salvagio Campbell, Elizabeth / Khan, Akram / Hough, Catherine L / Wilson, Jennifer G / Levitt, Joseph E / Duggal, Abhijit / Dugar, Siddharth / Goodwin, Andrew J / Terry, Charles / Chen, Peter / Torbati, Sam / Iyer, Nithya / Sandkovsky, Uriel S / Johnson, Nicholas J / Robinson, Bryce R H / Matthay, Michael A / Aggarwal, Neil R / Douglas, Ivor S / Casey, Jonathan D / Hache-Marliere, Manuel / Georges Youssef, J / Nkemdirim, William / Leshnower, Brad / Awan, Omar / Pannu, Sonal / O'Mahony, Darragh Shane / Manian, Prasad / Awori Hayanga, J W / Wortmann, Glenn W / Tomazini, Bruno M / Miller, Robert F / Jensen, Jens-Ulrik / Murray, Daniel D / Bickell, Nina A / Zatakia, Jigna / Burris, Sarah / Higgs, Elizabeth S / Natarajan, Ven / Dewar, Robin L / Schechner, Adam / Kang, Nayon / Arenas-Pinto, Alejandro / Hudson, Fleur / Ginde, Adit A / Self, Wesley H / Rogers, Angela J / Oldmixon, Cathryn F / Morin, Haley / Sanchez, Adriana / Weintrob, Amy C / Cavalcanti, Alexandre Biasi / Davis-Karim, Anne / Engen, Nicole / Denning, Eileen / Taylor Thompson, B / Gelijns, Annetine C / Kan, Virginia / Davey, Victoria J / Lundgren, Jens D / Babiker, Abdel G / Neaton, James D / Lane, H Clifford

    The Lancet. Respiratory medicine

    2023  Volume 11, Issue 9, Page(s) 791–803

    Abstract: Background: There is a clinical need for therapeutics for COVID-19 patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure whose 60-day mortality remains at 30-50%. Aviptadil, a lung-protective neuropeptide, and remdesivir, a nucleotide prodrug of an ... ...

    Abstract Background: There is a clinical need for therapeutics for COVID-19 patients with acute hypoxemic respiratory failure whose 60-day mortality remains at 30-50%. Aviptadil, a lung-protective neuropeptide, and remdesivir, a nucleotide prodrug of an adenosine analog, were compared with placebo among patients with COVID-19 acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure.
    Methods: TESICO was a randomised trial of aviptadil and remdesivir versus placebo at 28 sites in the USA. Hospitalised adult patients were eligible for the study if they had acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure due to confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and were within 4 days of the onset of respiratory failure. Participants could be randomly assigned to both study treatments in a 2 × 2 factorial design or to just one of the agents. Participants were randomly assigned with a web-based application. For each site, randomisation was stratified by disease severity (high-flow nasal oxygen or non-invasive ventilation vs invasive mechanical ventilation or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [ECMO]), and four strata were defined by remdesivir and aviptadil eligibility, as follows: (1) eligible for randomisation to aviptadil and remdesivir in the 2 × 2 factorial design; participants were equally randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) to intravenous aviptadil plus remdesivir, aviptadil plus remdesivir matched placebo, aviptadil matched placebo plus remdesvir, or aviptadil placebo plus remdesivir placebo; (2) eligible for randomisation to aviptadil only because remdesivir was started before randomisation; (3) eligible for randomisation to aviptadil only because remdesivir was contraindicated; and (4) eligible for randomisation to remdesivir only because aviptadil was contraindicated. For participants in strata 2-4, randomisation was 1:1 to the active agent or matched placebo. Aviptadil was administered as a daily 12-h infusion for 3 days, targeting 600 pmol/kg on infusion day 1, 1200 pmol/kg on day 2, and 1800 pmol/kg on day 3. Remdesivir was administered as a 200 mg loading dose, followed by 100 mg daily maintenance doses for up to a 10-day total course. For participants assigned to placebo for either agent, matched saline placebo was administered in identical volumes. For both treatment comparisons, the primary outcome, assessed at day 90, was a six-category ordinal outcome: (1) at home (defined as the type of residence before hospitalisation) and off oxygen (recovered) for at least 77 days, (2) at home and off oxygen for 49-76 days, (3) at home and off oxygen for 1-48 days, (4) not hospitalised but either on supplemental oxygen or not at home, (5) hospitalised or in hospice care, or (6) dead. Mortality up to day 90 was a key secondary outcome. The independent data and safety monitoring board recommended stopping the aviptadil trial on May 25, 2022, for futility. On June 9, 2022, the sponsor stopped the trial of remdesivir due to slow enrolment. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04843761.
    Findings: Between April 21, 2021, and May 24, 2022, we enrolled 473 participants in the study. For the aviptadil comparison, 471 participants were randomly assigned to aviptadil or matched placebo. The modified intention-to-treat population comprised 461 participants who received at least a partial infusion of aviptadil (231 participants) or aviptadil matched placebo (230 participants). For the remdesivir comparison, 87 participants were randomly assigned to remdesivir or matched placebo and all received some infusion of remdesivir (44 participants) or remdesivir matched placebo (43 participants). 85 participants were included in the modified intention-to-treat analyses for both agents (ie, those enrolled in the 2 x 2 factorial). For the aviptadil versus placebo comparison, the median age was 57 years (IQR 46-66), 178 (39%) of 461 participants were female, and 246 (53%) were Black, Hispanic, Asian or other (vs 215 [47%] White participants). 431 (94%) of 461 participants were in an intensive care unit at baseline, with 271 (59%) receiving high-flow nasal oxygen or non-invasive ventiliation, 185 (40%) receiving invasive mechanical ventilation, and five (1%) receiving ECMO. The odds ratio (OR) for being in a better category of the primary efficacy endpoint for aviptadil versus placebo at day 90, from a model stratified by baseline disease severity, was 1·11 (95% CI 0·80-1·55; p=0·54). Up to day 90, 86 participants in the aviptadil group and 83 in the placebo group died. The cumulative percentage who died up to day 90 was 38% in the aviptadil group and 36% in the placebo group (hazard ratio 1·04, 95% CI 0·77-1·41; p=0·78). The primary safety outcome of death, serious adverse events, organ failure, serious infection, or grade 3 or 4 adverse events up to day 5 occurred in 146 (63%) of 231 patients in the aviptadil group compared with 129 (56%) of 230 participants in the placebo group (OR 1·40, 95% CI 0·94-2·08; p=0·10).
    Interpretation: Among patients with COVID-19-associated acute hypoxaemic respiratory failure, aviptadil did not significantly improve clinical outcomes up to day 90 when compared with placebo. The smaller than planned sample size for the remdesivir trial did not permit definitive conclusions regarding safety or efficacy.
    Funding: National Institutes of Health.
    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Humans ; Female ; Middle Aged ; Male ; COVID-19/complications ; SARS-CoV-2 ; Treatment Outcome ; COVID-19 Drug Treatment ; Respiratory Insufficiency/drug therapy ; Respiratory Insufficiency/etiology ; Oxygen
    Chemical Substances aviptadil (A67JUW790C) ; remdesivir (3QKI37EEHE) ; Oxygen (S88TT14065)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-19
    Publishing country England
    Document type Randomized Controlled Trial ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 2686754-0
    ISSN 2213-2619 ; 2213-2600
    ISSN (online) 2213-2619
    ISSN 2213-2600
    DOI 10.1016/S2213-2600(23)00147-9
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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