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Browsing by Subject "Kaplan-Meier Estimate"
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Item Diabetes and peripheral arterial disease in men: trends in prevalence, mortality, and effect of concomitant coronary disease(Wiley, 2009-08) Kamalesh, Masoor; Shen, Jianzhao; Biostatistics, School of Public HealthBACKGROUND: Recent data on trends in diabetes mellitus (DM) prevalence and long-term effect on mortality in peripheral arterial disease (PAD) subjects is lacking. METHODS: All subjects discharged from any VA medical center between October 1990 to September 1997 with an International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-9 code for PAD and DM in the discharge summary were retrospectively identified. Demographic data were extracted from the database. Mortality data were obtained from the Beneficiary Information and Resource Locator. Outcome measures were age specific DM prevalence over time, and short-term and long-term mortality. RESULTS: Of 33, 629 patients with PAD, 9474 (29%) had DM. Diabetes mellitus subjects were less likely to be white and had more comorbidities. Mean length of hospital stay was greater for DM (22.3 d vs 18.7 days, P < 0.001). Mortality was higher for DM at 180 days (9.8% vs 8.4%, P < 0.001), 1 year (16.4% vs 13.7%, P < 0.001), and continues to increase at 8 years of follow-up. Logistic regression analysis showed no interaction between DM and coronary artery disease (CAD). CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes mellitus increases all-cause mortality in subjects with PAD starting at 6 months post-discharge and continues to be higher even at 8 years of follow-up. There was a lack of interaction of DM and CAD on mortality in this cohort of subjects with PAD.Item High Survivorship With a Titanium-encased Alumina Ceramic Bearing for Total Hip Arthroplasty(Springer US, 2014-02) D’Antonio, James A.; Capello, William N.; Naughton, Marybeth; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, IU School of MedicineBackground Although ceramic-on-ceramic bearings for total hip arthroplasty (THA) show promising results in terms of bearing-surface wear, fracture of the bearing, insertional chips, and squeaking remain a concern. Questions/purposes Our primary objective of this report was to determine overall survivorship of a titanium- encased ceramic-on-ceramic bearing couple. Our secondary objectives were to evaluate for ceramic fracture, insertional chips, osteolysis, and device squeaking. Methods Six surgeons at six institutions implanted 194 patients (209 hips) with an average age of 52 years with cementless hips and alumina ceramic bearings. One hun- dred thirty-seven patients (146 hips) have 10-year followup (70%). We determined Kaplan-Meier survivorship of the bearing surface and implant system and collected radio- graphic and clinical data to evaluate for osteolysis and squeaking. Results Survivorship using revision for any reason as the end point was 97% at 10 years and survivorship end point bearing surface failure or aseptic loosening of 99%. There was one ceramic insert fracture (0.5%), there were no insertional chips, there was no visible osteolysis on AP and lateral radiographs, and there was a 1% patient- self-reported incidence of squeaking at the last clinical followup. Six hips underwent revision (3.7%). Conclusions Ceramic bearings for THA with a titanium- encased insert have high survivorship at 10 years followup and a fracture risk of 0.5%. We found at last followup on routine radiographs no evidence of osteolysis, and no patient has been revised for squeaking or has reported dissatisfaction with the clinical result because of noise. Level of Evidence Level IV, therapeutic study. See the Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.Item A high-risk study of bipolar disorder. Childhood clinical phenotypes as precursors of major mood disorders(AMA, 2011-10) Nurnberger, John I. Jr.; McInnis, Melvin; Reich, Wendy; Kastelic, Elizabeth; Wilcox, Holly C.; Glowinski, Glowinski; Mitchell, Philip; Fisher, Carrie; Erpe, Mariano; Gershon, Elliot S.; Berrettini, Wade; Laite, Gina; Schweitzer, Robert; Rhoadarmer, Kelly; Coleman, Vegas V.; Cai, Xueya; Azzouz, Faouzi; Liu, Hai; Kamali, Masoud; Brucksch, Christine; Monahan, Patrick O.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineCONTEXT: The childhood precursors of adult bipolar disorder (BP) are still a matter of controversy. OBJECTIVE: To report the lifetime prevalence and early clinical predictors of psychiatric disorders in offspring from families of probands with DSM-IV BP compared with offspring of control subjects. DESIGN: A longitudinal, prospective study of individuals at risk for BP and related disorders. We report initial (cross-sectional and retrospective) diagnostic and clinical characteristics following best-estimate procedures. SETTING: Assessment was performed at 4 university medical centers in the United States between June 1, 2006, and September 30, 2009. PARTICIPANTS: Offspring aged 12 to 21 years in families with a proband with BP (n = 141, designated as cases) and similarly aged offspring of control parents (n = 91). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Lifetime DSM-IV diagnosis of a major affective disorder (BP type I; schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type; BP type II; or major depression). RESULTS: At a mean age of 17 years, cases showed a 23.4% lifetime prevalence of major affective disorders compared with 4.4% in controls (P = .002, adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, and correlation between siblings). The prevalence of BP in cases was 8.5% vs 0% in controls (adjusted P = .007). No significant difference was seen in the prevalence of other affective, anxiety, disruptive behavior, or substance use disorders. Among case subjects manifesting major affective disorders (n = 33), there was an increased risk of anxiety and externalizing disorders compared with cases without mood disorder. In cases but not controls, a childhood diagnosis of an anxiety disorder (relative risk = 2.6; 95% CI, 1.1-6.3; P = .04) or an externalizing disorder (3.6; 1.4-9.0; P = .007) was predictive of later onset of major affective disorders. CONCLUSIONS: Childhood anxiety and externalizing diagnoses predict major affective illness in adolescent offspring in families with probands with BP.Item Leukemia and chromosomal instability in aged Fancc-/- mice(Elsevier, 2016-05) Cerabona, Donna; Sun, Zejin; Nalepa, Grzegorz; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of MedicineFanconi anemia (FA) is an inherited disorder of genomic instability associated with high risk of myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Young mice deficient in FA core complex genes do not naturally develop cancer, hampering preclinical studies on malignant hematopoiesis in FA. Here we describe that aging Fancc(-/-) mice are prone to genomically unstable AML and other hematologic neoplasms. We report that aneuploidy precedes malignant transformation during Fancc(-/-) hematopoiesis. Our observations reveal that Fancc(-/-) mice develop hematopoietic chromosomal instability followed by leukemia in an age-dependent manner, recapitulating the clinical phenotype of human FA and providing a proof of concept for future development of preclinical models of FA-associated leukemogenesis.Item Survival Analysis of Endodontically Treated Teeth in Patients with Diabetes and Hypertension within National Dental PBRN Practices(2022-06) Crosby, William Justin; Spolnik, Kenneth; Thyvalikakath, Thankam Paul; Ehrlich, Ygal; Warner, NedIntroduction: The prevalence of diabetes mellitus (DM) is rapidly increasing among the aging United States population. This poses a challenge to dental providers since DM and multiple oral conditions have been identified as comorbidities. Hypertension (HTN) is associated with more poorly controlled DM and has been identified as contributing to RCT tooth loss in prior studies. Links have also been established between DM and the survival rate of root canal treated teeth, however, previous research has focused on institutional settings despite the majority of RCT being performed in private dental practices. This study will use data from private dental practices to evaluate the survival rate of RCT teeth in patients with DM and HTN. Materials and Methods: This retrospective study evaluated the survival rate of endodontic treated teeth among patients with DM and HTN using National Dental PBRN Practice data. Electronic dental records from 42 private dental practices in the United States over a period of 15 years with a minimum 2-year follow-up comprising 11,532 root canal treated teeth were analyzed. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were used to demonstrate the effects of HTN and DM on RCT tooth survival and Cox proportional hazards survival analysis was used to evaluate the DM and HTN effects after accounting for age, gender, insurance, year of treatment, tooth type, and crown and filling placement as covariates. Results: Patients with HTN only had significantly lower risk of failure than patients with both HTN and DM (p=0.003). Patients with neither HTN nor DM had significantly lower risk of failure than patients with both HTN and DM (p=0.020). Patients with DM only did not have significantly different risk of failure than patients with both HTN and DM (p=0.223). Patients with DM only did not have significantly different risk of failure than patients with HTN only (p=0.361). Patients with neither HTN nor DM did not have significantly different risk of failure than patients with HTN only (p=0.121) or patients with DM only (p=0.800). Conclusions: Patients with both DM and HTN have an increased chance of root canal treated tooth failure while patients with only DM or only HTN do not. Evaluation of severity of DM may be more important in determining RCT failure and studies utilizing laboratory values should be considered for future research.Item Ten-year results from the Natrelle 410 anatomical form-stable silicone breast implant core study(Oxford University Press, 2015-02) Maxwell, G. Patrick; Van Natta, Bruce W.; Bengtson, Bradley P.; Murphy, Diane K.; Department of Surgery, IU School of MedicineBACKGROUND: Silicone breast implants have long been used for breast augmentation and reconstruction. During this time, these medical devices have gone through a number of modifications to improve their safety, quality, and clinical outcome performance. OBJECTIVES: The authors conducted a 10-year study to determine the safety and effectiveness of Natrelle 410 silicone breast implants. METHODS: This prospective, multicenter study enrolled 941 subjects who were undergoing either augmentation, augmentation revision, reconstruction, or reconstruction revision. Data on complications, reoperations, explantations, and subject satisfaction were collected at annual clinic visits, and one-third of subjects underwent biennial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to screen for implant rupture. The authors used the Kaplan-Meier estimator to calculate risk rates for local complications, reoperations, and explantations. RESULTS: Capsular contracture rates increased approximately 1% per year from the previously reported 6-year rates. The rates were significantly lower than those from the Natrelle round gel core study. The overall rate of confirmed ruptured implants in subjects who underwent MRI was 5.7%. Eleven late seromas were reported. The most common reason for explantation was a subject requesting a size or style change. Satisfaction rates remained high through 10 years, with most subjects saying they were somewhat or definitely satisfied with their implants. CONCLUSIONS: This 10-year prospective trial demonstrated the long-term safety and effectiveness of Natrelle 410 anatomical form-stable implants. The complication rates were low and the satisfaction rates were high. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE 1: Therapeutic.