TY - JOUR A1 - Wiegering, Verena A1 - Schmid, Sophie A1 - Andres, Oliver A1 - Wirth, Clemens A1 - Wiegering, Armin A1 - Meyer, Thomas A1 - Winkler, Beate A1 - Schlegel, Paul G. A1 - Eyrich, Matthias T1 - Thrombosis as a complication of central venous access in pediatric patients with malignancies: a 5-year single-center experience N2 - Background Reliable central venous access (CVC) is essential for hematology–oncology patients since frequent puncture of peripheral veins—e.g., for chemotherapy, antibiotic administration, repeated blood sampling, and monitoring—can cause unacceptable pain and psychological trauma, as well as severe side effects in cases of extravasation of chemotherapy drugs. However, CVC lines still carry major risk factors, including thrombosis, infection (e.g., entry site, tunnel, and luminal infections), and catheter dislocation, leakage, or breakage. Methods Here we performed a retrospective database analysis to determine the incidence of CVC-associated thrombosis in a single-center cohort of 448 pediatric oncologic patients, and to analyze whether any subgroup of patients was at increased risk and thus might benefit from prophylactic anticoagulation. Results Of the 448 patients, 269 consecutive patients received a CVC, and 55 of these 269 patients (20%) also had a thrombosis. Of these 55 patients, 43 had at least one CVC-associated thrombosis (total number of CVC-associated thrombosis: n = 52). Among all patients, the median duration of CVC exposure was 464 days. Regarding exposure time, no significant difference was found between patients with and without CVC-associated thrombosis. Subclavia catheters and advanced tumor stages seem to be the main risk factors for the development of CVC-associated thrombosis, whereas pharmacologic prophylaxis did not seem to have a relevant impact on the rate of thrombosis. Conclusions We conclude that pediatric surgeons and oncologists should pay close attention to ensuring optimal and accurate CVC placement, as this appears the most effective tool to minimize CVC-associated complications. KW - Pediatric malignancy KW - Central venous access KW - Port KW - Hickman catheter KW - Thrombosis Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-110476 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hebestreit, Helge A1 - Zeidler, Cornelia A1 - Schippers, Christopher A1 - de Zwaan, Martina A1 - Deckert, Jürgen A1 - Heuschmann, Peter A1 - Krauth, Christian A1 - Bullinger, Monika A1 - Berger, Alexandra A1 - Berneburg, Mark A1 - Brandstetter, Lilly A1 - Deibele, Anna A1 - Dieris-Hirche, Jan A1 - Graessner, Holm A1 - Gündel, Harald A1 - Herpertz, Stephan A1 - Heuft, Gereon A1 - Lapstich, Anne-Marie A1 - Lücke, Thomas A1 - Maisch, Tim A1 - Mundlos, Christine A1 - Petermann-Meyer, Andrea A1 - Müller, Susanne A1 - Ott, Stephan A1 - Pfister, Lisa A1 - Quitmann, Julia A1 - Romanos, Marcel A1 - Rutsch, Frank A1 - Schaubert, Kristina A1 - Schubert, Katharina A1 - Schulz, Jörg B. A1 - Schweiger, Susann A1 - Tüscher, Oliver A1 - Ungethüm, Kathrin A1 - Wagner, Thomas O. F. A1 - Haas, Kirsten T1 - Dual guidance structure for evaluation of patients with unclear diagnosis in centers for rare diseases (ZSE-DUO): study protocol for a controlled multi-center cohort study JF - Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases N2 - Background In individuals suffering from a rare disease the diagnostic process and the confirmation of a final diagnosis often extends over many years. Factors contributing to delayed diagnosis include health care professionals' limited knowledge of rare diseases and frequent (co-)occurrence of mental disorders that may complicate and delay the diagnostic process. The ZSE-DUO study aims to assess the benefits of a combination of a physician focusing on somatic aspects with a mental health expert working side by side as a tandem in the diagnostic process. Study design This multi-center, prospective controlled study has a two-phase cohort design. Methods Two cohorts of 682 patients each are sequentially recruited from 11 university-based German Centers for Rare Diseases (CRD): the standard care cohort (control, somatic expertise only) and the innovative care cohort (experimental, combined somatic and mental health expertise). Individuals aged 12 years and older presenting with symptoms and signs which are not explained by current diagnoses will be included. Data will be collected prior to the first visit to the CRD’s outpatient clinic (T0), at the first visit (T1) and 12 months thereafter (T2). Outcomes Primary outcome is the percentage of patients with one or more confirmed diagnoses covering the symptomatic spectrum presented. Sample size is calculated to detect a 10 percent increase from 30% in standard care to 40% in the innovative dual expert cohort. Secondary outcomes are (a) time to diagnosis/diagnoses explaining the symptomatology; (b) proportion of patients successfully referred from CRD to standard care; (c) costs of diagnosis including incremental cost effectiveness ratios; (d) predictive value of screening instruments administered at T0 to identify patients with mental disorders; (e) patients’ quality of life and evaluation of care; and f) physicians’ satisfaction with the innovative care approach. Conclusions This is the first multi-center study to investigate the effects of a mental health specialist working in tandem with a somatic expert physician in CRDs. If this innovative approach proves successful, it will be made available on a larger scale nationally and promoted internationally. In the best case, ZSE-DUO can significantly shorten the time to diagnosis for a suspected rare disease. KW - rare diseases KW - multi‑center cohort study KW - dual guidance Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-300440 VL - 17 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hanitsch, Leif A1 - Baumann, Ulrich A1 - Boztug, Kaan A1 - Burkhard‐Meier, Ulrike A1 - Fasshauer, Maria A1 - Habermehl, Pirmin A1 - Hauck, Fabian A1 - Klock, Gerd A1 - Liese, Johannes A1 - Meyer, Oliver A1 - Müller, Rainer A1 - Pachlopnik‐Schmid, Jana A1 - Pfeiffer‐Kascha, Dorothea A1 - Warnatz, Klaus A1 - Wehr, Claudia A1 - Wittke, Kirsten A1 - Niehues, Tim A1 - von Bernuth, Horst T1 - Treatment and management of primary antibody deficiency: German interdisciplinary evidence‐based consensus guideline JF - European Journal of Immunology N2 - This evidence‐based clinical guideline provides consensus‐recommendations for the treatment and care of patients with primary antibody deficiencies (PADs). The guideline group comprised 20 clinical and scientific expert associations of the German, Swiss, and Austrian healthcare system and representatives of patients. Recommendations were based on results of a systematic literature search, data extraction, and evaluation of methodology and study quality in combination with the clinical expertise of the respective representatives. Consensus‐based recommendations were determined via nominal group technique. PADs are the largest clinically relevant group of primary immunodeficiencies. Most patients with PADs present with increased susceptibility to infections, however immune dysregulation, autoimmunity, and cancer affect a significant number of patients and may precede infections. This guideline therefore covers interdisciplinary clinical and therapeutic aspects of infectious (e.g., antibiotic prophylaxis, management of bronchiectasis) and non‐infectious manifestations (e.g., management of granulomatous disease, immune cytopenia). PADs are grouped into disease entities with definitive, probable, possible, or unlikely benefit of IgG‐replacement therapy. Summary and consensus‐recommendations are provided for treatment indication, dosing, routes of administration, and adverse events of IgG‐replacement therapy. Special aspects of concomitant impaired T‐cell function are highlighted as well as clinical data on selected monogenetic inborn errors of immunity formerly classified into PADs (APDS, CTLA‐4‐, and LRBA‐deficiency). KW - autoimmunity KW - CVID KW - hypogammaglobulinemia KW - immunoglobulins KW - primary antibody deficiency Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-225731 VL - 50 IS - 10 SP - 1432 EP - 1446 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schneider, Christoph A1 - Wiewelhove, Thimo A1 - Raeder, Christian A1 - Flatt, Andrew A. A1 - Hoos, Olaf A1 - Hottenrott, Laura A1 - Schumbera, Oliver A1 - Kellmann, Michael A1 - Meyer, Tim A1 - Pfeiffer, Mark A1 - Ferrauti, Alexander T1 - Heart Rate Variability Monitoring During Strength and High-Intensity Interval Training Overload Microcycles JF - Frontiers in Physiology N2 - Objective: In two independent study arms, we determine the effects of strength training (ST) and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) overload on cardiac autonomic modulation by measuring heart rate (HR) and vagal heart rate variability (HRV). Methods: In the study, 37 well-trained athletes (ST: 7 female, 12 male; HIIT: 9 female, 9 male) were subjected to orthostatic tests (HR and HRV recordings) each day during a 4-day baseline period, a 6-day overload microcycle, and a 4-day recovery period. Discipline-specific performance was assessed before and 1 and 4 days after training. Results: Following ST overload, supine HR, and vagal HRV (Ln RMSSD) were clearly increased and decreased (small effects), respectively, and the standing recordings remained unchanged. In contrast, HIIT overload resulted in decreased HR and increased Ln RMSSD in the standing position (small effects), whereas supine recordings remained unaltered. During the recovery period, these responses were reversed (ST: small effects, HIIT: trivial to small effects). The correlations between changes in HR, vagal HRV measures, and performance were weak or inconsistent. At the group and individual levels, moderate to strong negative correlations were found between HR and Ln RMSSD when analyzing changes between testing days (ST: supine and standing position, HIIT: standing position) and individual time series, respectively. Use of rolling 2–4-day averages enabled more precise estimation of mean changes with smaller confidence intervals compared to single-day values of HR or Ln RMSSD. However, the use of averaged values displayed unclear effects for evaluating associations between HR, vagal HRV measures, and performance changes, and have the potential to be detrimental for classification of individual short-term responses. Conclusion: Measures of HR and Ln RMSSD during an orthostatic test could reveal different autonomic responses following ST or HIIT which may not be discovered by supine or standing measures alone. However, these autonomic changes were not consistently related to short-term changes in performance and the use of rolling averages may alter these relationships differently on group and individual level. KW - orthostatic test KW - cardiac autonomic nervous system KW - fatigue KW - recovery KW - individual response KW - multivariate analysis KW - resistance training KW - overreaching Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-231515 VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dornelas, Maria A1 - Antão, Laura H. A1 - Moyes, Faye A1 - Bates, Amanda E. A1 - Magurran, Anne E. A1 - Adam, Dušan A1 - Akhmetzhanova, Asem A. A1 - Appeltans, Ward A1 - Arcos, José Manuel A1 - Arnold, Haley A1 - Ayyappan, Narayanan A1 - Badihi, Gal A1 - Baird, Andrew H. A1 - Barbosa, Miguel A1 - Barreto, Tiago Egydio A1 - Bässler, Claus A1 - Bellgrove, Alecia A1 - Belmaker, Jonathan A1 - Benedetti-Cecchi, Lisandro A1 - Bett, Brian J. A1 - Bjorkman, Anne D. A1 - Błażewicz, Magdalena A1 - Blowes, Shane A. A1 - Bloch, Christopher P. Bloch A1 - Bonebrake, Timothy C. A1 - Boyd, Susan A1 - Bradford, Matt A1 - Brooks, Andrew J. A1 - Brown, James H. A1 - Bruelheide, Helge A1 - Budy, Phaedra A1 - Carvalho, Fernando A1 - Castañeda-Moya, Edward A1 - Chen, Chaolun Allen A1 - Chamblee, John F. A1 - Chase, Tory J. A1 - Siegwart Collier, Laura A1 - Collinge, Sharon K. A1 - Condit, Richard A1 - Cooper, Elisabeth J. A1 - Cornelissen, J. Hans C. A1 - Cotano, Unai A1 - Crow, Shannan Kyle A1 - Damasceno, Gabriella A1 - Davies, Claire H. A1 - Davis, Robert A. A1 - Day, Frank P. A1 - Degraer, Steven A1 - Doherty, Tim S. A1 - Dunn, Timothy E. A1 - Durigan, Giselda A1 - Duffy, J. Emmett A1 - Edelist, Dor A1 - Edgar, Graham J. A1 - Elahi, Robin A1 - Elmendorf, Sarah C. A1 - Enemar, Anders A1 - Ernest, S. K. Morgan A1 - Escribano, Rubén A1 - Estiarte, Marc A1 - Evans, Brian S. A1 - Fan, Tung-Yung A1 - Turini Farah, Fabiano A1 - Loureiro Fernandes, Luiz A1 - Farneda, Fábio Z. A1 - Fidelis, Alessandra A1 - Fitt, Robert A1 - Fosaa, Anna Maria A1 - Franco, Geraldo Antonio Daher Correa A1 - Frank, Grace E. A1 - Fraser, William R. A1 - García, Hernando A1 - Cazzolla Gatti, Roberto A1 - Givan, Or A1 - Gorgone-Barbosa, Elizabeth A1 - Gould, William A. A1 - Gries, Corinna A1 - Grossman, Gary D. A1 - Gutierréz, Julio R. A1 - Hale, Stephen A1 - Harmon, Mark E. A1 - Harte, John A1 - Haskins, Gary A1 - Henshaw, Donald L. A1 - Hermanutz, Luise A1 - Hidalgo, Pamela A1 - Higuchi, Pedro A1 - Hoey, Andrew A1 - Van Hoey, Gert A1 - Hofgaard, Annika A1 - Holeck, Kristen A1 - Hollister, Robert D. A1 - Holmes, Richard A1 - Hoogenboom, Mia A1 - Hsieh, Chih-hao A1 - Hubbell, Stephen P. A1 - Huettmann, Falk A1 - Huffard, Christine L. A1 - Hurlbert, Allen H. A1 - Ivanauskas, Natália Macedo A1 - Janík, David A1 - Jandt, Ute A1 - Jażdżewska, Anna A1 - Johannessen, Tore A1 - Johnstone, Jill A1 - Jones, Julia A1 - Jones, Faith A. M. A1 - Kang, Jungwon A1 - Kartawijaya, Tasrif A1 - Keeley, Erin C. A1 - Kelt, Douglas A. A1 - Kinnear, Rebecca A1 - Klanderud, Kari A1 - Knutsen, Halvor A1 - Koenig, Christopher C. A1 - Kortz, Alessandra R. A1 - Král, Kamil A1 - Kuhnz, Linda A. A1 - Kuo, Chao-Yang A1 - Kushner, David J. A1 - Laguionie-Marchais, Claire A1 - Lancaster, Lesley T. A1 - Lee, Cheol Min A1 - Lefcheck, Jonathan S. A1 - Lévesque, Esther A1 - Lightfoot, David A1 - Lloret, Francisco A1 - Lloyd, John D. A1 - López-Baucells, Adrià A1 - Louzao, Maite A1 - Madin, Joshua S. A1 - Magnússon, Borgþór A1 - Malamud, Shahar A1 - Matthews, Iain A1 - McFarland, Kent P. A1 - McGill, Brian A1 - McKnight, Diane A1 - McLarney, William O. A1 - Meador, Jason A1 - Meserve, Peter L. A1 - Metcalfe, Daniel J. A1 - Meyer, Christoph F. J. A1 - Michelsen, Anders A1 - Milchakova, Nataliya A1 - Moens, Tom A1 - Moland, Even A1 - Moore, Jon A1 - Moreira, Carolina Mathias A1 - Müller, Jörg A1 - Murphy, Grace A1 - Myers-Smith, Isla H. A1 - Myster, Randall W. A1 - Naumov, Andrew A1 - Neat, Francis A1 - Nelson, James A. A1 - Nelson, Michael Paul A1 - Newton, Stephen F. A1 - Norden, Natalia A1 - Oliver, Jeffrey C. A1 - Olsen, Esben M. A1 - Onipchenko, Vladimir G. A1 - Pabis, Krzysztof A1 - Pabst, Robert J. A1 - Paquette, Alain A1 - Pardede, Sinta A1 - Paterson, David M. A1 - Pélissier, Raphaël A1 - Peñuelas, Josep A1 - Pérez-Matus, Alejandro A1 - Pizarro, Oscar A1 - Pomati, Francesco A1 - Post, Eric A1 - Prins, Herbert H. T. A1 - Priscu, John C. A1 - Provoost, Pieter A1 - Prudic, Kathleen L. A1 - Pulliainen, Erkki A1 - Ramesh, B. R. A1 - Ramos, Olivia Mendivil A1 - Rassweiler, Andrew A1 - Rebelo, Jose Eduardo A1 - Reed, Daniel C. A1 - Reich, Peter B. A1 - Remillard, Suzanne M. A1 - Richardson, Anthony J. A1 - Richardson, J. Paul A1 - van Rijn, Itai A1 - Rocha, Ricardo A1 - Rivera-Monroy, Victor H. A1 - Rixen, Christian A1 - Robinson, Kevin P. A1 - Rodrigues, Ricardo Ribeiro A1 - de Cerqueira Rossa-Feres, Denise A1 - Rudstam, Lars A1 - Ruhl, Henry A1 - Ruz, Catalina S. A1 - Sampaio, Erica M. A1 - Rybicki, Nancy A1 - Rypel, Andrew A1 - Sal, Sofia A1 - Salgado, Beatriz A1 - Santos, Flavio A. M. A1 - Savassi-Coutinho, Ana Paula A1 - Scanga, Sara A1 - Schmidt, Jochen A1 - Schooley, Robert A1 - Setiawan, Fakhrizal A1 - Shao, Kwang-Tsao A1 - Shaver, Gaius R. A1 - Sherman, Sally A1 - Sherry, Thomas W. A1 - Siciński, Jacek A1 - Sievers, Caya A1 - da Silva, Ana Carolina A1 - da Silva, Fernando Rodrigues A1 - Silveira, Fabio L. A1 - Slingsby, Jasper A1 - Smart, Tracey A1 - Snell, Sara J. A1 - Soudzilovskaia, Nadejda A. A1 - Souza, Gabriel B. G. A1 - Souza, Flaviana Maluf A1 - Souza, Vinícius Castro A1 - Stallings, Christopher D. A1 - Stanforth, Rowan A1 - Stanley, Emily H. A1 - Sterza, José Mauro A1 - Stevens, Maarten A1 - Stuart-Smith, Rick A1 - Suarez, Yzel Rondon A1 - Supp, Sarah A1 - Tamashiro, Jorge Yoshio A1 - Tarigan, Sukmaraharja A1 - Thiede, Gary P. A1 - Thorn, Simon A1 - Tolvanen, Anne A1 - Toniato, Maria Teresa Zugliani A1 - Totland, Ørjan A1 - Twilley, Robert R. A1 - Vaitkus, Gediminas A1 - Valdivia, Nelson A1 - Vallejo, Martha Isabel A1 - Valone, Thomas J. A1 - Van Colen, Carl A1 - Vanaverbeke, Jan A1 - Venturoli, Fabio A1 - Verheye, Hans M. A1 - Vianna, Marcelo A1 - Vieira, Rui P. A1 - Vrška, Tomáš A1 - Vu, Con Quang A1 - Vu, Lien Van A1 - Waide, Robert B. A1 - Waldock, Conor A1 - Watts, Dave A1 - Webb, Sara A1 - Wesołowski, Tomasz A1 - White, Ethan P. A1 - Widdicombe, Claire E. A1 - Wilgers, Dustin A1 - Williams, Richard A1 - Williams, Stefan B. A1 - Williamson, Mark A1 - Willig, Michael R. A1 - Willis, Trevor J. A1 - Wipf, Sonja A1 - Woods, Kerry D. A1 - Woehler, Eric J. A1 - Zawada, Kyle A1 - Zettler, Michael L. T1 - BioTIME: A database of biodiversity time series for the Anthropocene JF - Global Ecology and Biogeography N2 - Motivation The BioTIME database contains raw data on species identities and abundances in ecological assemblages through time. These data enable users to calculate temporal trends in biodiversity within and amongst assemblages using a broad range of metrics. BioTIME is being developed as a community-led open-source database of biodiversity time series. Our goal is to accelerate and facilitate quantitative analysis of temporal patterns of biodiversity in the Anthropocene. Main types of variables included The database contains 8,777,413 species abundance records, from assemblages consistently sampled for a minimum of 2 years, which need not necessarily be consecutive. In addition, the database contains metadata relating to sampling methodology and contextual information about each record. Spatial location and grain BioTIME is a global database of 547,161 unique sampling locations spanning the marine, freshwater and terrestrial realms. Grain size varies across datasets from 0.0000000158 km2 (158 cm2) to 100 km2 (1,000,000,000,000 cm2). Time period and grain BioTIME records span from 1874 to 2016. The minimal temporal grain across all datasets in BioTIME is a year. Major taxa and level of measurement BioTIME includes data from 44,440 species across the plant and animal kingdoms, ranging from plants, plankton and terrestrial invertebrates to small and large vertebrates. Software format .csv and .SQL. KW - biodiversity KW - global KW - spatial KW - species richness KW - temporal KW - turnover Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-222846 VL - 27 ER -