Overactive bladder (OAB)--a syndrome characterized by urinary urgency, with or without urge incontinence, urinary frequency and nocturia--is estimated to affect 10% to 20% of the US and European populations. This study was carried out to validate a patient-administered screening awareness tool to identify patients with bothersome OAB symptoms. Patients were recruited from 12 primary care and 1 gynecology practice during regularly scheduled appointments. Enrollees completed an 8-item questionnaire assessing the amount of "bother" they associated with OAB symptoms. Clinicians then asked the patients 4 questions regarding urinary frequency, urgency, nocturia, and incontinence. If the screening was positive for symptoms of OAB or if the patient provided positive responses to the urinary symptom questions, the clinician asked additional questions regarding lifestyle and coping behaviors. The clinician then diagnosed the patient, placing him or her in the "No OAB," "Possible OAB," or "Probable OAB" category. Multivariable logistic regressions controlling for age and sex were performed to assess the applicability of the tool for identifying patients with OAB. A total of 1,299 patients were enrolled, and 1,260 provided complete data. Patients were aged 51.6+/-17.0 years, 62% were female, most (89%) were Caucasian, 22% experienced urinary urgency, and 18% experienced urge incontinence. The prevalence of Probable OAB was 12%. The c-index of the model identifying patients with a diagnosis of Probable OAB was 0.96, with a sensitivity and specificity of 98.0 and 82.7. For OAB-V8 scores >or=8, the odds ratio for Probable OAB was 95.7 (95% CI: 29.3; 312.4). The OAB-V8 performed well in helping clinicians identify patients with bothersome OAB symptoms in a primary care setting and will assist clinicians in identifying patients who may benefit from treatment.
The OAB-q, POSQ, and UQ demonstrated good test-retest reliability, with ICCs roughly equivalent or superior to those previously reported for 7-day micturition diaries. Findings suggest that the four measures examined in this study demonstrate the necessary reproducibility for use as outcome measures for OAB treatments.
Purpose: To assess the association of tumor mutational burden (TMB) with clinical outcomes, other biomarkers and patient/disease characteristics in patients receiving therapy for lung cancer. Results: In total, 4,303 publications were identified; 81 publications were included. The majority of publications assessing clinical efficacy of immunotherapy reported an association with high TMB, particularly when assessing progression-free survival and objective response rate. High TMB was consistently associated with TP53 alterations, and negatively associated with EGFR mutations. High TMB was also associated with smoking, squamous cell non-small cell lung carcinoma, and being male. Methods: A systematic literature review based upon an a priori protocol was conducted following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) and Cochrane methodologies. Searches were conducted in EMBASE, SCOPUS, Ovid MEDLINE®, and Emcare (from January 2012 until April 2018) and in two clinical trial registries. Conference abstracts were identified in EMBASE, and in targeted searches of recent major conference proceedings (from January 2016 until April 2018). Publications reporting data in patients receiving therapy for lung cancer that reported TMB and its association with clinical efficacy, or with other biomarkers or patient/disease characteristics, were included. Results are presented descriptively. Conclusion: This systematic literature review identified several clinical outcomes, biomarkers, and patient/disease characteristics associated with high TMB, and highlights the need for standardized definitions and testing practices. Further studies using standardized methodology are required to inform treatment decisions.
SUMMARY Contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN) is the third most common cause of hospital-acquired acute renal failure. There is increasing evidence that CIN has a significant adverse impact on patient morbidity and mortality. The objective of this study was to estimate the in-hospital and 1-year direct healthcare costs related to CIN. Using the values obtained from the literature review, a decision analytic model was developed to estimate the in-hospital and 1-year costs of CIN. Patients who develop CIN are more likely to experience adverse events, to undergo prolonged dialysis, to have longer hospital and intensive care unit stays and to have higher mortality rates. The average in-hospital cost of CIN is $10,345. The 1-year cost of treating a patient with CIN is $11,812. Overall, the economic burden associated with CIN is high. Adopting targeted interventions will reduce the incidence of CIN and its overall economic burden.
Achieving successful outcomes in chronic phase‐chronic myeloid leukemia (CP‐CML) requires careful monitoring of cytogenetic/molecular responses (CyR/MR). SIMPLICITY (NCT01244750) is an observational study exploring tyrosine kinase inhibitor use and management patterns in patients with CP‐CML receiving first‐line imatinib (n = 416), dasatinib (n = 418) or nilotinib (n = 408) in the US and 6 European countries in routine clinical practice. Twelve‐month follow‐up data of 1242 prospective patients (enrolled October 01 2010‐September 02 2015) are reported. 81% of patients had baseline comorbidities. Treatment selection was based on perceived efficacy over patient comorbidity profile. There was a predominance of imatinib‐treated patients enrolled earlier in the study, with subsequent shift toward dasatinib‐ and nilotinib‐treated patients by 2013/2014. Monitoring for either CyR/MR improved over time and was documented for 36%, 82%, and 95% of patients by 3, 6, and 12 months, respectively; 5% had no documentation of CyR/MR monitoring during the first year of therapy. Documentation of MR/CyR testing was higher in Europe than the US (P < .001) and at academic versus community practices (P = .001). Age <65 years, patients being followed at sites within Europe, those followed at academic centers and patients no longer on first‐line therapy were more likely to be monitored by 12 months. SIMPLICITY demonstrates that the NCCN and ELN recommendations on response monitoring have not been consistently translated into routine clinical practice. In the absence of appropriate monitoring practices, clinical response to TKI therapy cannot be established, any needed changes to treatment strategy will thus not be implemented, and long‐term patient outcomes are likely to be impacted.
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