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Item A Systematic Review of Functional Outcomes in Cancer Rehabilitation Research(Elsevier, 2022) Sleight, Alix G.; Gerber, Lynn H.; Marshall, Timothy F.; Livinski, Alicia; Alfano, Catherine M.; Harrington, Shana; Flores, Ann Marie; Virani, Aneesha; Hu, Xiaorong; Mitchell, Sandra A.; Varedi, Mitra; Eden, Melissa; Hayek, Samah; Reigle, Beverly; Kerkman, Anya; Neves, Raquel; Jablonoski, Kathleen; Hacker, Eileen; Sun, Virginia; Newman, Robin; McDonnell, Karen Kane; L’Hotta, Allison; Schoenhals, Alana; Stout, Nicole L.; School of NursingObjective: To systematically review the evidence regarding rehabilitation interventions targeting optimal physical or cognitive function in adults with a history of cancer and describe the breadth of evidence as well as strengths and limitations across a range of functional domains. Data sources: PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Plus, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase. The time scope was January 2008 to April 2019. Study selection: Prospective, controlled trials including single- and multiarm cohorts investigating rehabilitative interventions for cancer survivors at any point in the continuum of care were included, if studies included a primary functional outcome measure. Secondary data analyses and pilot/feasibility studies were excluded. Full-text review identified 362 studies for inclusion. Data extraction: Extraction was performed by coauthor teams and quality and bias assessed using the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) Classification of Evidence Scheme (class I-IV). Data synthesis: Studies for which the functional primary endpoint achieved significance were categorized into 9 functional areas foundational to cancer rehabilitation: (1) quality of life (109 studies), (2) activities of daily living (61 studies), (3) fatigue (59 studies), (4) functional mobility (55 studies), (5) exercise behavior (37 studies), (6) cognition (20 studies), (7) communication (10 studies), (8) sexual function (6 studies), and (9) return to work (5 studies). Most studies were categorized as class III in quality/bias. Averaging results found within each of the functional domains, 71% of studies reported statistically significant results after cancer rehabilitation intervention(s) for at least 1 functional outcome. Conclusions: These findings provide evidence supporting the efficacy of rehabilitative interventions for individuals with a cancer history. The findings should be balanced with the understanding that many studies had moderate risk of bias and/or limitations in study quality by AAN criteria. These results may provide a foundation for future work to establish clinical practice guidelines for rehabilitative interventions across cancer disease types.Item Cardiac Rehabilitation for Patients With Heart Failure: JACC Expert Panel(Elsevier, 2021) Bozkurt, Biykem; Fonarow, Gregg C.; Goldberg, Lee R.; Guglin, Maya; Josephson, Richard A.; Forman, Daniel E.; Lin, Grace; Lindenfeld, JoAnn; O'Connor, Chris; Panjrath, Gurusher; Piña, Ileana L.; Shah, Tina; Sinha, Shashank S.; Wolfel, Eugene; ACC’s Heart Failure and Transplant Section and Leadership Council; Medicine, School of MedicineCardiac rehabilitation is defined as a multidisciplinary program that includes exercise training, cardiac risk factor modification, psychosocial assessment, and outcomes assessment. Exercise training and other components of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) are safe and beneficial and result in significant improvements in quality of life, functional capacity, exercise performance, and heart failure (HF)-related hospitalizations in patients with HF. Despite outcome benefits, cost-effectiveness, and strong practice guideline recommendations, CR remains underused. Clinicians, health care leaders, and payers should prioritize incorporating CR as part of the standard of care for patients with HF.Item Clinical and Quality of Life Benefits for End-Stage Workers' Compensation Chronic Pain Claimants following H-Wave® Device Stimulation: A Retrospective Observational Study with Mean 2-Year Follow-Up(MDPI, 2023-02-01) Trinh, Alan; Williamson, Tyler K.; Han, David; Hazlewood, Jeffrey E.; Norwood, Stephen M.; Gupta, Ashim; Medicine, School of MedicinePreviously promising short-term H-Wave® device stimulation (HWDS) outcomes prompted this retrospective cohort study of the longer-term effects on legacy workers’ compensation chronic pain claimants. A detailed chart-review of 157 consecutive claimants undergoing a 30-day HWDS trial (single pain management practice) from February 2018 to November 2019 compiled data on pain, restoration of function, quality of life (QoL), and polypharmacy reduction into a summary spreadsheet for an independent statistical analysis. Non-beneficial trials in 64 (40.8%) ended HWDS use, while 19 (12.1%) trial success charts lacked adequate data for assessing critical outcomes. Of the 74 final treatment study group charts, missing data points were removed for a statistical analysis. Pain chronicity was 7.8 years with 21.6 ± 12.2 months mean follow-up. Mean pain reduction was 35%, with 89% reporting functional improvement. Opioid consumption decreased in 48.8% of users and 41.5% completely stopped; polypharmacy decreased in 36.8% and 24.4% stopped. Zero adverse events were reported and those who still worked usually continued working. An overall positive experience occurred in 66.2% (p < 0.0001), while longer chronicity portended the risk of trial or treatment failure. Positive outcomes in reducing pain, opioid/polypharmacy, and anxiety/depression, while improving function/QoL, occurred in these challenging chronic pain injury claimants.Item Hospital-associated functional status decline in pulmonary patients(2017-06-26) Shay, Amy Cornett; Fulton, Janet; Von Ah, Diane; Otte, Julie Elam; Warden, Stuart J.; O'Malley, PatriciaChronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a significant worldwide cause of chronic illness and mortality and one of the most common admitting diagnoses in the United States. Persons with COPD are at increased risk for deconditioning during hospitalization, which can lead to decreased functional status at discharge. Disease-related factors and elements of the hospital environment make older adults with COPD vulnerable to hospital-associated functional status decline. The purpose of this dissertation was to identify activity factors that contribute to hospital-associated functional status decline in older adults with COPD by promoting functioning during hospitalization. This predictive correlational study is a secondary analysis of a pre-existing dataset. Patients with COPD were pulled from the larger parent study sample for comparison with patients without COPD. The convenience sample consisted of 111 patients with COPD and 190 patients without COPD. Subjects were 46.5% male, 53.5% female, and a mean age of 66 years. All subjects were patients admitted to a pulmonary unit and received an intervention protocol designed to address mobility barriers related to COPD and hospitalization. Statistical analysis explored the number, type, and timing of activity events in relation to the selected functional status outcomes of discharge disposition, length of hospital stay, and 30-day readmission rates for hospitalized older adults with COPD. Multivariate and bivariate analyses results indicated ambulation to the bathroom, ambulation outside the patient room, and number of days to first out-of-bed activity were significant predictors (p < 0.05) of patient discharge to home; days to first activity and ambulation were significant predictors (p < 0.05) of reduced length of stay; none of the variables were predictive of 30-day readmission. Patients with COPD experienced longer lengths of stay and more non-weight bearing activity than patients without COPD in this sample. These findings provide a foundation for future research to explore hospital environmental factors influencing mobility, determine optimal modes of activity during hospitalization, and examine potential cost savings associated with promotion of early mobility. Findings help explain the effects of physical activity during hospitalization and may aid development of nursing interventions to prevent or alleviate functional status decline in this vulnerable population.Item The Neglected Price of Pediatric Acute Kidney Injury: Non-renal Implications(Frontiers Media, 2022-06-30) Pande, Chetna K.; Smith, Mallory B.; Soranno, Danielle E.; Gist, Katja M.; Fuhrman, Dana Y.; Dolan, Kristin; Conroy, Andrea L.; Akcan-Arikan, Ayse; Pediatrics, School of MedicinePreclinical models and emerging translational data suggest that acute kidney injury (AKI) has far reaching effects on all other major organ systems in the body. Common in critically ill children and adults, AKI is independently associated with worse short and long term morbidity, as well as mortality, in these vulnerable populations. Evidence exists in adult populations regarding the impact AKI has on life course. Recently, non-renal organ effects of AKI have been highlighted in pediatric AKI survivors. Given the unique pediatric considerations related to somatic growth and neurodevelopmental consequences, pediatric AKI has the potential to fundamentally alter life course outcomes. In this article, we highlight the challenging and complex interplay between AKI and the brain, heart, lungs, immune system, growth, functional status, and longitudinal outcomes. Specifically, we discuss the biologic basis for how AKI may contribute to neurologic injury and neurodevelopment, cardiac dysfunction, acute lung injury, immunoparalysis and increased risk of infections, diminished somatic growth, worsened functional status and health related quality of life, and finally the impact on young adult health and life course outcomes.Item Severe Acute Kidney Injury is Associated with Increased Risk of Death and New Morbidity After Pediatric Septic Shock(Wolters Kluwer, 2020-09) Starr, Michelle C.; Banks, Russell; Reeder, Ron W.; Fitzgerald, Julie C.; Pollack, Murray M.; Meert, Kathleen L.; McQuillen, Patrick S.; Mourani, Peter M.; Chima, Ranjit S.; Sorenson, Samuel; Varni, James W.; Hingorani, Sangeeta; Zimmerman, Jerry J.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineObjectives: Acute kidney injury is common in critically ill children; however, the frequency of septic shock-associated acute kidney injury and impact on functional status are unknown. We evaluated functional outcomes of children with septic shock-associated acute kidney injury. Design: Secondary analysis of patients with septic shock from the prospective Life after Pediatric Sepsis Evaluation study. We defined acute kidney injury using Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes criteria, comparing patients with absent/Stage 1 acute kidney injury to those with Stage 2/3 acute kidney injury (severe acute kidney injury). Our primary outcome was a composite of mortality or new functional morbidity at day 28 of hospitalization or discharge. We also assessed poor long-term outcome, defined as mortality or a persistent, serious deterioration in health-related quality of life at 3 months. Setting: Twelve academic PICUs in the United States. Patients: Critically ill children, 1 month to 18 years, with community-acquired septic shock requiring vasoactive-inotropic support. Interventions: None. Measurements and main results: More than 50% of patients (176/348) developed severe acute kidney injury; of those, 21.6% (38/176) required renal replacement therapy. Twice as many patients with severe acute kidney injury died or developed new substantive functional morbidity (38.6 vs 16.3%; p < 0.001). After adjustment for age, malignancy, and initial illness severity, severe acute kidney injury was independently associated with mortality or new substantive morbidity (adjusted odds ratio, 2.78; 95% CI, 1.63-4.81; p < 0.001). Children with severe acute kidney injury had poorer health-related quality of life at 3 months (adjusted effect size 2.46; 95% CI, 1.44-4.20; p = 0.002). Children with severe acute kidney injury required longer duration of mechanical ventilation (11.0 vs 7.0 d; p < 0.001) and PICU stay (11.7 vs 7.1 d; p < 0.001). Conclusions: Among children with septic shock, severe acute kidney injury was independently associated with increased risk of death or new substantive functional morbidity. Survivors of sepsis with severe acute kidney injury were more likely to have persistent, serious health-related quality of life deterioration at 3 months.Item The Neglected Price of Pediatric Acute Kidney Injury: Non-renal Implications(Frontiers Media, 2022-06-30) Pande, Chetna K.; Smith, Mallory B.; Soranno, Danielle E.; Gist, Katja M.; Fuhrman, Dana Y.; Dolan, Kristin; Conroy, Andrea L.; Akcan-Arikan, Ayse; Pediatrics, School of MedicinePreclinical models and emerging translational data suggest that acute kidney injury (AKI) has far reaching effects on all other major organ systems in the body. Common in critically ill children and adults, AKI is independently associated with worse short and long term morbidity, as well as mortality, in these vulnerable populations. Evidence exists in adult populations regarding the impact AKI has on life course. Recently, non-renal organ effects of AKI have been highlighted in pediatric AKI survivors. Given the unique pediatric considerations related to somatic growth and neurodevelopmental consequences, pediatric AKI has the potential to fundamentally alter life course outcomes. In this article, we highlight the challenging and complex interplay between AKI and the brain, heart, lungs, immune system, growth, functional status, and longitudinal outcomes. Specifically, we discuss the biologic basis for how AKI may contribute to neurologic injury and neurodevelopment, cardiac dysfunction, acute lung injury, immunoparalysis and increased risk of infections, diminished somatic growth, worsened functional status and health related quality of life, and finally the impact on young adult health and life course outcomes.