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  1. AU="Van Den Eeden, Stephen K"
  2. AU="Venkataraman, Srividhya"
  3. AU="S Asher"
  4. AU="Kaushik, Akanksha"
  5. AU="Crutu, Adrian"
  6. AU=Boardman Dominic A. AU=Boardman Dominic A.
  7. AU="Hao, Zhuang"
  8. AU=Daley Charles L
  9. AU="Arjona-Jimenez, Guadalupe"
  10. AU="d'Epenoux, Louise Ruffier"
  11. AU=Lam Katherine W
  12. AU="Ferrier, I Nicol"
  13. AU="Galanski, Mathea S"
  14. AU="Abdelmalek, Fady"
  15. AU="Junkiert, Ukasz"
  16. AU="Nuss, Rachelle"
  17. AU="Hogenkamp, David G"
  18. AU="Song, Weixiao"
  19. AU="Sharma, Siddhanth"
  20. AU="Maheen, Sara"
  21. AU=Weinhard Laetitia
  22. AU="Sun, Mi"
  23. AU="Pospísil, V"
  24. AU=Driscoll David R AU=Driscoll David R
  25. AU="Wojtalewicz, Nathalie"
  26. AU="Waingrow, Marshall"
  27. AU="Daymé Gonzalez Rodriguez"
  28. AU="Lou, Shuyi"
  29. AU="Figueiredo, Rodrigo S"
  30. AU=Fleet James C
  31. AU="Brohawn, David G"
  32. AU="Cho, Chun-Chieh"
  33. AU="van Raalte, Daniël H"
  34. AU="Zargarian, Loussiné"
  35. AU=Hascalovici Jacob
  36. AU="Spagnolo, Jennifer B"
  37. AU="Anderloni, Giulia"
  38. AU="Ahmad, Shoaib"
  39. AU="Du, Roujia"
  40. AU="Colmenero-Repiso, Ana"
  41. AU="Alvarez-Carbonell, David"
  42. AU="Phelippeau, Michael"
  43. AU="Lunghi, Laura"
  44. AU=Giersiepen Klaus
  45. AU="Drobyshev, Sergey"
  46. AU="Timme, Kathleen H"
  47. AU=Sfriso Paolo
  48. AU="Kim, John S"
  49. AU=Farkash Evan A AU=Farkash Evan A
  50. AU="Xia, Xueqian"

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  1. Artikel ; Online: DNA methylation markers for risk of metastasis in a cohort of men with localized prostate cancer.

    Habeshian, Talar S / Cannavale, Kimberly L / Slezak, Jeff M / Shu, Yu-Hsiang / Chien, Gary W / Chen, XuFeng / Shi, Feng / Siegmund, Kimberly D / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Huang, Jiaoti / Chao, Chun R

    Epigenetics

    2024  Band 19, Heft 1, Seite(n) 2308920

    Abstract: Accurately identifying life-threatening prostate cancer (PCa) at time of diagnosis remains an unsolved problem. We evaluated whether DNA methylation status of selected candidate genes can predict the risk of metastasis beyond clinical risk factors in men ...

    Abstract Accurately identifying life-threatening prostate cancer (PCa) at time of diagnosis remains an unsolved problem. We evaluated whether DNA methylation status of selected candidate genes can predict the risk of metastasis beyond clinical risk factors in men with untreated PCa. A nested case-control study was conducted among men diagnosed with localized PCa at Kaiser Permanente California between 01/01/1997-12/31/2006 who did not receive curative treatments. Cases were those who developed metastasis within 10 years from diagnosis. Controls were selected using density sampling. Ninety-eight candidate genes were selected from functional categories of cell cycle control, metastasis/tumour suppressors, cell signalling, cell adhesion/motility/invasion, angiogenesis, and immune function, and 41 from pluripotency genes. Cancer DNA from diagnostic biopsy blocks were extracted and analysed. Associations of methylation status were assessed using CpG site level and principal components-based analysis in conditional logistic regressions. In 215 cases and 404 controls, 27 candidate genes were found to be statistically significant in at least one of the two analytical approaches. The agreement between the methods was 25.9% (7 candidate genes, including 2 pluripotency markers). The DNA methylation status of several candidate genes was significantly associated with risk of metastasis in untreated localized PCa patients. These findings may inform future risk prediction models for PCa metastasis beyond clinical characteristics.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Male ; Humans ; DNA Methylation ; Case-Control Studies ; Prostatic Neoplasms/genetics ; Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology ; Risk Factors
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2024-03-25
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ISSN 1559-2308
    ISSN (online) 1559-2308
    DOI 10.1080/15592294.2024.2308920
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Artikel ; Online: Characterizing the spectrum of bladder health and lower urinary tract symptoms among men: Results from the CARDIA study.

    Markland, Alayne D / Hellemann, Gerhard / Shan, Liang / Brady, Sonya S / Huling, Jared D / Schreiner, Pamela J / Sidney, Stephen / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Lewis, Cora E

    Neurourology and urodynamics

    2024  Band 43, Heft 4, Seite(n) 840–848

    Abstract: Objectives: To operationalize a new definition for bladder health, we examined the distribution and impact of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), along with risk factors, among men in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.! ...

    Abstract Objectives: To operationalize a new definition for bladder health, we examined the distribution and impact of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), along with risk factors, among men in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study.
    Methods: LUTS were defined by American Urologic Association Symptom Index (AUASI) scores and impact on quality of life (QoL). Separate questions assessed urinary incontinence (UI) and postvoid dribbling. We performed cluster analyses using AUASI scores, with and without urine incontinence and postvoid dribbling, and impact collected in 2010-11. We performed analyses to evaluate sociodemographic and cardiovascular risk factors between clusters.
    Results: Among CARDIA men (mean age: 50.0, SD = 3.6; range: 42-56 years) with complete LUTS data (n = 929), we identified and compared four clusters: men who reported no or very mild symptoms and no impact on well-being (bladder health, n = 696, 75%), men with moderate symptoms and moderate impact on well-being (moderate symptoms/impact, n = 84, 9%), men with high symptoms and high impact on well-being (severe symptoms/impact, n = 117, 13%), and a separate group that reported moderate symptoms and UI with a high impact on well-being (UI + moderate symptoms/severe impact, n = 32, 3%). Exploration of the groupings showed a large percentage of postvoid dribbling across groups (overall 69%). Sociodemographic and cardiovascular risk factors were not associated with symptom/impact groups.
    Conclusions: Bladder health clustered into four categories. A majority of middle-aged men in the community showed no or mild bladder symptoms without impact on QoL. Postvoid dribbling is pervasive but did not cluster with a specific LUTS or impact category.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Male ; Middle Aged ; Young Adult ; Humans ; Quality of Life ; Urinary Bladder ; Coronary Vessels ; Urinary Incontinence ; Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms/diagnosis
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2024-02-26
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 604904-7
    ISSN 1520-6777 ; 0733-2467
    ISSN (online) 1520-6777
    ISSN 0733-2467
    DOI 10.1002/nau.25430
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Artikel ; Online: Joint associations between neighborhood walkability, greenness, and particulate air pollution on cardiovascular mortality among adults with a history of stroke or acute myocardial infarction.

    Liao, Noelle S / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Sidney, Stephen / Deosaransingh, Kamala / Schwartz, Joel / Uong, Stephen P / Alexeeff, Stacey E

    Environmental epidemiology (Philadelphia, Pa.)

    2022  Band 6, Heft 2, Seite(n) e200

    Abstract: Fine particulate matter (PM: Methods: Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the risk of CVD mortality among adults with a history of acute myocardial infarction and/or stroke living in Northern California. We assessed the independent ... ...

    Abstract Fine particulate matter (PM
    Methods: Cox proportional hazard models were used to estimate the risk of CVD mortality among adults with a history of acute myocardial infarction and/or stroke living in Northern California. We assessed the independent and joint effects of walkability, greenness (Normalized Differentiated Vegetation Index [NDVI]), and PM
    Results: Greenness had a nonlinear association with CVD mortality (
    Conclusions: High greenness may be protective of CVD mortality among adults with CVD history. PM
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2022-02-18
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ISSN 2474-7882
    ISSN (online) 2474-7882
    DOI 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000200
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  4. Artikel: Association between traffic related air pollution exposure and direct health care costs in Northern California

    Alexeeff, Stacey E. / Roy, Ananya / Shan, Jun / Ray, G. Thomas / Quesenberry, Charles Q. / Apte, Joshua / Portier, Christopher J. / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K.

    Atmospheric environment. 2022 July 03,

    2022  

    Abstract: Traffic related air pollution (TRAP) is associated with a complex and diverse array of health effects. It is unknown whether these effects may be reflected by higher health care costs. Evaluate the association between TRAP exposure and direct health care ...

    Abstract Traffic related air pollution (TRAP) is associated with a complex and diverse array of health effects. It is unknown whether these effects may be reflected by higher health care costs. Evaluate the association between TRAP exposure and direct health care costs in an elderly population. This multi-ethnic population-based cohort of 25,684 elderly subjects, served by Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC), were followed between 2013 and 2017. Hyperlocal long-term pollutant concentrations for nitrogen dioxide [NO₂], nitric oxide [NO], and black carbon [BC] were measured at a resolution of 30 m using repeated street-level mobile measurements and linked to residential addresses. Health care utilization and costs were derived from KPNC databases and were used to calculate individual annual total health care, inpatient, outpatient, and emergency room (ER) and pharmacy costs. The associations between TRAP exposures and health care costs were evaluated using generalized estimating equation models adjusted for age, sex, race, BMI, smoking, SES and comorbidities. Subgroup analyses and interaction models were used to assess differences among specific susceptible population subgroups. An IQR difference (10.1 ppb vs 4.2 ppb) in NO₂ concentration was associated with a 3% (95% CI: -1%, 6%), 22% (95% CI:11%, 35%), and 5% (95% CI:1%, 8%) increase in annual total health care, ER and outpatient costs in the baseline model. Associations with black carbon showed similar patterns but were smaller in magnitude. Among those with cardiovascular diseases, an IQR increase in NO₂ was associated with a 7% (95% CI: 1%, 13%) increase in total annual health care cost and 23% (95% CI: 17%, 29%) increase in ER costs. Higher long-term TRAP exposure was associated with higher direct annual health care cost in this elderly cohort. Those with existing cardiovascular disease had particularly strong associations between TRAP exposure and direct annual health care costs.
    Schlagwörter air pollution ; at-risk population ; carbon ; cardiovascular diseases ; elderly ; environment ; equations ; health care costs ; models ; nationalities and ethnic groups ; nitric oxide ; nitrogen dioxide ; pollutants ; traffic ; California
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsverlauf 2022-0703
    Erscheinungsort Elsevier Ltd
    Dokumenttyp Artikel
    Anmerkung Pre-press version
    ZDB-ID 216368-8
    ISSN 0004-6981 ; 1352-2310
    ISSN 0004-6981 ; 1352-2310
    DOI 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2022.119271
    Datenquelle NAL Katalog (AGRICOLA)

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  5. Artikel ; Online: Utilization of Pancreatic Endotherapy in Patients with Chronic Pancreatitis: Results From a Multicenter Cohort Study in the United States.

    Han, Samuel / Conwell, Darwin L / Easler, Jeffrey J / Yang, Yunlong / Andersen, Dana K / Fisher, William E / Fogel, Evan L / Forsmark, Chris / Hart, Phil A / Hughes, Steven J / Li, Liang / Pandol, Stephen J / Park, Walter G / Serrano, Jose / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Vege, Santhi Swaroop / Yadav, Dhiraj

    Gastrointestinal endoscopy

    2024  

    Abstract: Background and aims: Although commonly used for treating complications of chronic pancreatitis (CP), data on the frequency and factors associated with the use of pancreatic endotherapy (PET) are limited. Our aim was to define the utilization and factors ...

    Abstract Background and aims: Although commonly used for treating complications of chronic pancreatitis (CP), data on the frequency and factors associated with the use of pancreatic endotherapy (PET) are limited. Our aim was to define the utilization and factors predictive for receiving PET in a well-characterized CP cohort.
    Methods: This is a cross-sectional analysis of data from PROCEED, a multicenter US cohort study of CP. PET modalities primarily consisted of ERCP. A treatment course was defined as the number of sessions performed for a specific indication. A repeat course was defined as PET >1 year after completion of the last course. Multivariable logistic regression identified predictive factors for receiving PET, and proportional rates model assessed risk factors for repeat PET.
    Results: Of a total of 681 subjects, 238 (34.9%) received PET. Factors associated with receiving PET included female sex (OR: 1.26, 95% CI: 1.03-1.53), lower education (OR: 1.30, 95% CI: 1.04-1.62), income ≤ $50,000 per year (OR: 1.35, 95% CI: 1.07-1.71) and prior acute pancreatitis (AP) (OR: 1.74, 95% CI: 1.31, 2.32). 103/238 subjects (43.3%) underwent repeat PET at a median duration of 2 years with 23.1% receiving 2 courses, 9.7% receiving 3 courses, and 10.4% receiving 4+ courses.
    Conclusions: Nearly half of patients with CP who undergo PET received one or more repeat courses within 2-3 years. In addition to a prior history of AP, demographic and socioeconomic factors were associated with receiving PET.
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2024-04-05
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 391583-9
    ISSN 1097-6779 ; 0016-5107
    ISSN (online) 1097-6779
    ISSN 0016-5107
    DOI 10.1016/j.gie.2024.04.002
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Artikel ; Online: Long-Term PM

    Alexeeff, Stacey E / Liao, Noelle S / Liu, Xi / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Sidney, Stephen

    Journal of the American Heart Association

    2020  Band 10, Heft 1, Seite(n) e016890

    Abstract: Background Fine particulate matter <2.5 µm in diameter ( ... ...

    Abstract Background Fine particulate matter <2.5 µm in diameter (PM
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Air Pollutants/adverse effects ; Heart Disease Risk Factors ; Humans ; Myocardial Infarction/epidemiology ; Myocardial Ischemia/mortality ; Particulate Matter/adverse effects ; Stroke/epidemiology ; Time
    Chemische Substanzen Air Pollutants ; Particulate Matter
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2020-12-31
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Meta-Analysis ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2653953-6
    ISSN 2047-9980 ; 2047-9980
    ISSN (online) 2047-9980
    ISSN 2047-9980
    DOI 10.1161/JAHA.120.016890
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Artikel ; Online: Adverse Childhood Experiences and Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms and Impact Among Women.

    Brady, Sonya S / Arguedas, Andrés / Huling, Jared D / Shan, Liang / Lewis, Cora E / Fok, Cynthia S / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Markland, Alayne D

    The Journal of urology

    2023  Band 209, Heft 6, Seite(n) 1167–1175

    Abstract: Purpose: This study utilizes CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) cohort study data to examine whether (1) family-based adverse childhood experiences, recalled by women aged 32 to 47, are associated with lower urinary tract symptoms ...

    Abstract Purpose: This study utilizes CARDIA (Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults) cohort study data to examine whether (1) family-based adverse childhood experiences, recalled by women aged 32 to 47, are associated with lower urinary tract symptoms and their impact, a composite variable with 4 levels (bladder health and mild, moderate, or severe lower urinary tract symptoms/impact), and (2) extensiveness of women's social networks in adulthood attenuates an association between adverse childhood experiences and lower urinary tract symptoms/impact.
    Materials and methods: In 2000-2001, frequency of adverse childhood experiences exposure was retrospectively assessed. In 2000-2001, 2005-2006, and 2010-2011, extensiveness of social networks was assessed; scores were averaged. In 2012-2013, lower urinary tract symptoms/impact data were collected. Logistic regression analyses examined whether adverse childhood experiences, extensiveness of social networks, and their interaction were associated with lower urinary tract symptoms/impact, adjusting for age, race, education, and parity (n=1,302).
    Results: Recall of more frequent family-based adverse childhood experiences was associated with report of more lower urinary tract symptoms/impact over 10 years later (OR=1.26, 95% CI=1.07, 1.48). Social networks during adulthood appeared to attenuate the association between adverse childhood experiences and lower urinary tract symptoms/impact (OR=0.64, 95% CI=0.41, 1.02). Among women with less extensive social networks, estimated probability of experiencing moderate or severe lower urinary tract symptoms/impact vs bladder health or mild lower urinary tract symptoms/impact was 0.29 and 0.21 for those reporting an adverse childhood experiences frequency corresponding to more than "a little" vs "rarely or none of the time," respectively. Among women with more extensive social networks, estimated probabilities were 0.20 and 0.21, respectively.
    Conclusions: Family-based adverse childhood experiences are related to lower urinary tract symptoms/impact vs bladder health in adulthood. Additional research is needed to corroborate the potentially attenuating effect of social networks.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Pregnancy ; Young Adult ; Humans ; Female ; Cohort Studies ; Retrospective Studies ; Adverse Childhood Experiences ; Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms/epidemiology
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-02-22
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 3176-8
    ISSN 1527-3792 ; 0022-5347
    ISSN (online) 1527-3792
    ISSN 0022-5347
    DOI 10.1097/JU.0000000000003387
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Artikel ; Online: Trajectories of depressive symptoms over 20 years and subsequent lower urinary tract symptoms and impact among women.

    Brady, Sonya S / Shan, Liang / Markland, Alayne D / Huling, Jared D / Arguedas, Andrés / Fok, Cynthia S / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Lewis, Cora E

    Menopause (New York, N.Y.)

    2023  Band 30, Heft 7, Seite(n) 723–731

    Abstract: Objective: The aim of the study is to examine the association between depressive symptoms and subsequent lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) and impact (a composite outcome) among women (N = 1,119) from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young ... ...

    Abstract Objective: The aim of the study is to examine the association between depressive symptoms and subsequent lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) and impact (a composite outcome) among women (N = 1,119) from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study.
    Methods: The Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D) was administered in 1990-1991 and every 5 years through 2010-2011. In 2012-2013, LUTS and impact data were collected for the first time. Accumulation of risk was examined in the following three ways: (1) mean CES-D score across 20 years (5 observations); (2) depressive symptom trajectory group, determined by group-based trajectory modeling; and (3) intercepts and slopes obtained from women's individual CES-D score trajectories through two-stage mixed effects modeling. For each approach, ordinal logistic regression analyses examined odds of having "greater LUTS/impact" for each unit change in a depressive symptom variable.
    Results: (1) With each one-unit increase in mean CES-D score over the 20-year period, women were 9% more likely to report greater LUTS/impact (odds ratio [OR] = 1.09, 95% CI = 1.07-1.11). (2) In comparison with women with consistently low depressive symptoms, women with consistently threshold depression or consistently high depressive symptoms were twice (OR = 2.07, 95% CI = 1.59-2.69) and over five times (OR = 5.55, 95% CI = 3.07-10.06) as likely, respectively, to report greater LUTS/impact. (3) Women's individual symptom intercept and slope interacted. Increases in depressive symptoms across 20 years (greater slopes) were associated with greater LUTS/impact when women's initial CES-D score (intercept) was in the moderate-to-high range relative to the sample.
    Conclusions: Depressive symptoms over 20 years, examined with different degrees of nuance, were consistently associated with subsequently measured LUTS and impact.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Young Adult ; Humans ; Female ; Depression/diagnosis ; Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms/epidemiology ; Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms/complications ; Coronary Vessels
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-05-10
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 1205262-0
    ISSN 1530-0374 ; 1072-3714
    ISSN (online) 1530-0374
    ISSN 1072-3714
    DOI 10.1097/GME.0000000000002193
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Artikel ; Online: Genome-wide methylation profiling of diagnostic tumor specimens identified DNA methylation markers associated with metastasis among men with untreated localized prostate cancer.

    Chao, Chun R / Slezak, Jeff / Siegmund, Kimberly / Cannavale, Kimberly / Shu, Yu-Hsiang / Chien, Gary W / Chen, Xu-Feng / Shi, Feng / Song, Nan / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Huang, Jiaoti

    Cancer medicine

    2023  Band 12, Heft 18, Seite(n) 18837–18849

    Abstract: Background: We used a genome-wide discovery approach to identify methylation markers associated with metastasis in men with localized prostate cancer (PCa), as better identification of those at high risk of metastasis can inform treatment decision- ... ...

    Abstract Background: We used a genome-wide discovery approach to identify methylation markers associated with metastasis in men with localized prostate cancer (PCa), as better identification of those at high risk of metastasis can inform treatment decision-making.
    Methods: We identified men with localized PCa at Kaiser Permanente California (January 1, 1997-December 31, 2006) who did not receive curative treatment and followed them for 10 years to determine metastasis status. Cases were chart review-confirmed metastasis, and controls were matched using density sampling. We extracted DNA from the cancerous areas in the archived diagnostic tissue blocks. We used Illumina's Infinium MethylationEPIC BeadChip for methylation interrogation. We used conditional logistic regression and Bonferroni's correction to identify methylation markers associated with metastasis. In a separate validation cohort (2007), we evaluated the added predictive utility of the methylation score beyond clinical risk score.
    Results: Among 215 cases and 404 controls, 31 CpG sites were significantly associated with metastasis status. Adding the methylation score to the clinical risk score did not meaningfully improve the c-statistic (0.80-0.81) in the validation cohort, though the score itself was statistically significant (p < 0.01). In the validation cohort, both clinical risk score alone and methylation marker score alone are well calibrated for predicted 10-year metastasis risks. Adding the methylation score to the clinical risk score only marginally improved predictive risk calibration.
    Conclusion: Our findings do not support the use of these markers to improve clinical risk prediction. The methylation markers identified may inform novel hypothesis in the roles of these genetic regions in metastasis development.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Male ; Humans ; DNA Methylation ; Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology ; Risk Factors ; CpG Islands
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-09-11
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2659751-2
    ISSN 2045-7634 ; 2045-7634
    ISSN (online) 2045-7634
    ISSN 2045-7634
    DOI 10.1002/cam4.6507
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Artikel ; Online: Interpersonal Stressors and Resources for Support: Associations with Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms and Impact Among Women.

    Brady, Sonya S / Arguedas, Andrés / Huling, Jared D / Shan, Liang / Lewis, Cora E / Fok, Cynthia S / Van Den Eeden, Stephen K / Markland, Alayne D

    Journal of women's health (2002)

    2023  Band 32, Heft 6, Seite(n) 693–701

    Abstract: Background: ...

    Abstract Background:
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Pregnancy ; Humans ; Female ; Quality of Life ; Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms/epidemiology ; Urinary Bladder ; Parity ; Interpersonal Relations
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2023-04-11
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 1139774-3
    ISSN 1931-843X ; 1059-7115 ; 1540-9996
    ISSN (online) 1931-843X
    ISSN 1059-7115 ; 1540-9996
    DOI 10.1089/jwh.2022.0483
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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