179 results on '"Koo, Kevin"'
Search Results
2. Primary Palliative Care in Urology: Quality Improvement Summit 2021-2022.
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Bergman, Jonathan, Filippou, Pauline, Suskind, Anne M., Johnson, Karen, Calvert, Emily, Fero, Katherine, Lorenz, Karl A., Giannitrapani, Karleen, Hugar, Lee, Koo, Kevin, Leppert, John, Scales Jr, Charles D., Terris, Martha, Nielsen, Matthew, and Gore, John L.
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- 2024
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3. Initial Experience and Clinical Assessment of the Karl Storz FLEX-XC1 Single-Use Flexible Ureteroscope.
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Alamiri, Jamal, Robert Qi, Hanna, Kevin F., White, Lindsay A., Ungerer, Garrett N., Kemble, Jayson P., Thompson, Carly A., Potretzke, Aaron M., and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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4. The prevalence of impostor phenomenon and its association with burnout amongst urologists.
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Jefferson, Francis A., Fadel, Anthony, Findlay, Bridget L., Robinson, Maraika O., Seyer, Amanda K., Koo, Kevin, Granberg, Candace F., Boorjian, Stephen A., and Anderson, Katherine T.
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IMPOSTOR phenomenon ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,UROLOGISTS ,ODDS ratio ,CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
Objectives: To characterise the prevalence of impostor phenomenon (IP; tendency for high‐achieving individuals to perceive themselves as fraudulent in their successes) amongst attending staff in urology, to identify variables that predict more severe impostorism, and to study the association of IP with burnout. Subjects and Methods: A survey composed of the Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale (CIPS), demographic information, practice details, and burnout levels was e‐mailed to urologists via urological subspecialty societies. Survey results were analysed to identify associations between IP severity, survey respondent characteristics, and symptoms of professional burnout. This study was conducted in the United States of America. Results: A total of 614 survey responses were received (response rate 11.0%). In all, 40% (n = 213) of responders reported CIPS scores qualifying as either 'frequent' or 'intense' impostorism (i.e., scores of 61–100). On multivariable analysis, female gender, fewer years in practice (i.e., 0–2 years), and lower academic rank were all independently associated with higher CIPS scores (adjusted P < 0.05). Regarding burnout, 46% of responders reported burnout symptoms. On multivariable analysis, increase in CIPS score was independently associated with higher odds of burnout (odds ratio 1.06, 95% confidence interval 1.04–1.07; P < 0.001). Conclusion: Impostor phenomenon is prevalent in the urological community and is experienced more severely in younger and female urologists. IP is also independently associated with burnout. Increased female representation may improve IP amongst our female colleagues. More work is needed to determine strategies that are effective in mitigating feelings of IP and professional burnout amongst urologists, particularly those earlier in their careers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Variational quantum eigensolver for closed-shell molecules with non-bosonic corrections.
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Kim, Kyungmin, Lim, Sumin, Shin, Kyujin, Lee, Gwonhak, Jung, Yousung, Kyoung, Woomin, Rhee, June-Koo Kevin, and Rhee, Young Min
- Abstract
The realization of quantum advantage with noisy-intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) machines has become one of the major challenges in computational sciences. Maintaining coherence of a physical system with more than ten qubits is a critical challenge that motivates research on compact system representations to reduce algorithm complexity. Toward this end, the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) used to perform quantum simulations is considered to be one of the most promising algorithms for quantum chemistry in the NISQ era. We investigate reduced mapping of one spatial orbital to a single qubit to analyze the ground state energy in a way that the Pauli operators of qubits are mapped to the creation/annihilation of singlet pairs of electrons. To include the effect of non-bosonic (or non-paired) excitations, we introduce a simple correction scheme in the electron correlation model approximated by the geometrical mean of the bosonic (or paired) terms. Employing it in a VQE algorithm, we assess ground state energies of H
2 O, N2 , and Li2 O in good agreement with full configuration interaction (FCI) models respectively, using only 6, 8, and 12 qubits with quantum gate depths proportional to the squares of the qubit counts. With the adopted seniority-zero approximation that uses only one half of the qubit counts of a conventional VQE algorithm, we find that our non-bosonic correction method reaches reliable quantum chemistry simulations at least for the tested systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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6. Winograd Wedge Resection Matrixectomy versus Partial Nail Avulsion with Chemical Cautery: A Tertiary Institution's Clinical Outcomes and Proposed Triaging Protocol.
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Wong, Seng Juong, Heng, Marabelle Li-Wen, Kwok, Siew-Keong, Koo, Kevin O. T., and Yeo, Nicholas E. M.
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- 2024
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7. Nanophotonic immunoarray with electrochemically roughened surfaces for handheld detection of secreted PD-L1 to predict immuno-oncology efficacy.
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Dey, Shuvashis, Koo, Kevin M., Ahmed, Emtiaz, and Trau, Matt
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SERS spectroscopy ,IMMUNE checkpoint proteins ,PROGRAMMED death-ligand 1 ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,PROTEIN analysis ,PROGRAMMED cell death 1 receptors ,IMMUNOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
The analysis of secreted protein biomarkers can be a useful non-invasive method of predicting or monitoring cancer therapeutic response. The increased level of soluble programmed cell death protein ligand 1 (sPD-L1) is a promising predictive biomarker for selecting patients who are likely to respond to immune checkpoint immunotherapy. The current established immunoassay for secreted protein analysis is enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Yet, ELISA is generally still liable to limited detection sensitivity and restricted to bulky chromogenic readout equipment. Herein, we present a designed nanophotonic immunoarray sensor which achieved sPD-L1 analysis at high-throughput, enhanced detection sensitivity and portability. The key benefits of our nanophotonic immunoarray sensor are (i) high-throughput surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) analysis of multiple samples on a singular platform; (ii) improved sPD-L1 detection sensitivity at 1 pg mL
−1 (by two orders of magnitude as compared to ELISA) via electrochemically roughened gold sensor surfaces; (iii) fit for handheld SERS detection with miniaturized equipment footprint. We evaluated the analytical performance of the nanophotonic immunoarray sensor and successfully demonstrated quantitative sPD-L1 detection in a cohort of contrived human plasma samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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8. Quantum classifier with tailored quantum kernel.
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Blank, Carsten, Park, Daniel K., Rhee, June-Koo Kevin, and Petruccione, Francesco
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QUANTUM states ,WEIGHT training ,QUANTUM computing ,CLOUD computing ,PROOF of concept - Abstract
Kernel methods have a wide spectrum of applications in machine learning. Recently, a link between quantum computing and kernel theory has been formally established, opening up opportunities for quantum techniques to enhance various existing machine-learning methods. We present a distance-based quantum classifier whose kernel is based on the quantum state fidelity between training and test data. The quantum kernel can be tailored systematically with a quantum circuit to raise the kernel to an arbitrary power and to assign arbitrary weights to each training data. Given a specific input state, our protocol calculates the weighted power sum of fidelities of quantum data in quantum parallel via a swap-test circuit followed by two single-qubit measurements, requiring only a constant number of repetitions regardless of the number of data. We also show that our classifier is equivalent to measuring the expectation value of a Helstrom operator, from which the well-known optimal quantum state discrimination can be derived. We demonstrate the performance of our classifier via classical simulations with a realistic noise model and proof-of-principle experiments using the IBM quantum cloud platform. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Editorial Commentaries.
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Edney, Mark, Lehner, Kelly S., Granberg, Candace F., Koo, Kevin, Pratt, James, and Averch, Timothy D.
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- 2023
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10. Quantum Graph Neural Network Models for Materials Search.
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Ryu, Ju-Young, Elala, Eyuel, and Rhee, June-Koo Kevin
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ARTIFICIAL neural networks ,QUANTUM graph theory ,FRONTIER orbitals ,BAND gaps - Abstract
Inspired by classical graph neural networks, we discuss a novel quantum graph neural network (QGNN) model to predict the chemical and physical properties of molecules and materials. QGNNs were investigated to predict the energy gap between the highest occupied and lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals of small organic molecules. The models utilize the equivariantly diagonalizable unitary quantum graph circuit (EDU-QGC) framework to allow discrete link features and minimize quantum circuit embedding. The results show QGNNs can achieve lower test loss compared to classical models if a similar number of trainable variables are used, and converge faster in training. This paper also provides a review of classical graph neural network models for materials research and various QGNNs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Environmental impact of single‐use and reusable flexible cystoscopes.
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Kemble, Jayson P., Winoker, Jared S., Patel, Sunil H., Su, Zhuo T., Matlaga, Brian R., Potretzke, Aaron M., and Koo, Kevin
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ENERGY consumption in transportation ,ECOLOGICAL impact ,WASTE management ,SOLID waste ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
Objectives: To compare the carbon footprint and environmental impact of single‐use and reusable flexible cystoscopes. Materials and Methods: We analysed the expected clinical lifecycle of single‐use (Ambu aScope™ 4 Cysto) and reusable (Olympus CYF‐V2) flexible cystoscopes, from manufacture to disposal. Performance data on cumulative procedures between repairs and before decommissioning were derived from a high‐volume multispecialty practice. We estimated carbon expenditures per‐case using published data on endoscope manufacturing, energy consumption during transportation and reprocessing, and solid waste disposal. Results: A fleet of 16 reusable cystoscopes in service for up to 135 months averaged 207 cases between repairs and 3920 cases per lifecycle. Based on a manufacturing carbon footprint of 11.49 kg CO2/kg device for reusable flexible endoscopes and 8.54 kg CO2/kg device for single‐use endoscopes, the per‐case manufacturing cost was 1.37 kg CO2 for single‐use devices and 0.0017 kg CO2 for reusable devices. The solid mass of single‐use and reusable devices was 0.16 and 0.57 kg, respectively. For reusable devices, the energy consumption of reusable device reprocessing using an automated endoscope reprocessor was 0.20 kg CO2, and per‐case costs of device repackaging and repair were 0.005 and 0.02 kg CO2, respectively. The total estimated per‐case carbon footprint of single‐use and reusable devices was 2.40 and 0.53 kg CO2, respectively, favouring reusable devices. Conclusion: In this lifecycle analysis, the environmental impact of reusable flexible cystoscopes is markedly less than single‐use cystoscopes. The primary contributor to the per‐case carbon cost of reusable devices is energy consumption of reprocessing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. In Vivo Prediction of Kidney Stone Fragility Using Radiomics-Based Regression Models.
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Sudhir Pillai, Parvathy, Hsieh, Scott S., Vercnocke, Andrew J., Potretzke, Aaron M., Koo, Kevin, McCollough, Cynthia H., and Ferrero, Andrea
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KIDNEY stones ,PERCUTANEOUS nephrolithotomy ,LASER lithotripsy ,REGRESSION analysis ,STANDARD deviations ,URINARY calculi - Abstract
Introduction: The surgical technique for urinary stone removal is partly influenced by its fragility, as prognosticated by the clinician. This feasibility study aims to develop a linear regression model from CT-based radiomic markers to predict kidney stone comminution time in vivo with two ultrasonic lithotrites. Materials and Methods: Patients identified by urologists at our institution as eligible candidates for percutaneous nephrolithotomy were prospectively enrolled. The active engagement time of the lithotrite in breaking the stone during surgery denoted the comminution time of each stone. The comminution rate was computed as the stone volume disintegrated per minute. Stones were grouped into three fragility classes (fragile, moderate, hard), based on inverse of the comminution rates with respect to the mean. Multivariable linear regression models were trained with radiomic features extracted from clinical CT images to predict comminution times in vivo. The model with the least root mean squared error (RMSE) on comminution times and the fewest misclassification of fragility was finally selected. Results: Twenty-eight patients with 31 stones in total were included in this study. Stones in the cohort averaged 1557 (±2472) mm
3 in volume and 5.3 (±7.4) minutes in comminution time. Ten stones had nonmoderate fragility. Linear regression of stone volume alone predicted comminution time with an RMSE of 6.8 minutes and missed all 10 stones with nonmoderate fragility. A fragility model that included stone volume, internal morphology, shape-based radiomics, and device type improved RMSE to below 3.3 minutes and correctly classified 20/21 moderate and 6/10 nonmoderate stones. Conclusions: CT metrics-based fragility models may provide information to surgeons regarding kidney stone fragility and facilitate the selection of stone removal procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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13. Variational quantum approximate support vector machine with inference transfer.
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Park, Siheon, Park, Daniel K., and Rhee, June-Koo Kevin
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SUPPORT vector machines ,MACHINE tools ,QUANTUM computers ,PERFORMANCE standards ,KERNEL operating systems ,MACHINE learning - Abstract
A kernel-based quantum classifier is the most practical and influential quantum machine learning technique for the hyper-linear classification of complex data. We propose a Variational Quantum Approximate Support Vector Machine (VQASVM) algorithm that demonstrates empirical sub-quadratic run-time complexity with quantum operations feasible even in NISQ computers. We experimented our algorithm with toy example dataset on cloud-based NISQ machines as a proof of concept. We also numerically investigated its performance on the standard Iris flower and MNIST datasets to confirm the practicality and scalability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Multifunctional Hybrid Nanozymes for Magnetic Enrichment and Bioelectrocatalytic Sensing of Circulating Tumor RNA during Minimal Residual Disease Monitoring.
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Koo, Kevin M.
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SYNTHETIC enzymes ,FERRIC oxide ,NUCLEIC acids ,RNA ,STREPTAVIDIN ,CANCER relapse - Abstract
Iron oxide nanozymes are a form of nanomaterial with both superparamagnetic and enzyme-mimicking properties. Ongoing research efforts have been made to create multifunctional iron oxide hybrid nanozymes with auxiliary properties through biomolecular modifications. Such iron oxide hybrid nanozymes can be useful for rapid and cost-effective analysis of circulating tumor nucleic acids (ctNAs) in patient liquid biopsies during minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring of cancer recurrence. Herein, the use of streptavidin-modified iron oxide hybrid nanozymes is reported for magnetic enrichment and bioelectrocatalytic sensing of three prostate cancer (PCa) ctRNA biomarkers with high detection specificity and sensitivity (10 copies) over an ultrabroad dynamic range (five orders of magnitude). Furthermore, the feasibility of ctRNA analysis for pre- and post-cancer treatment MRD monitoring is demonstrated using PCa urinary liquid biopsy samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Dietary Assessment of Lithogenic Factors in Plant-Based Meat Products.
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Liaw, Christine W., Potretzke, Aaron M., Winoker, Jared S., Matlaga, Brian R., Lieske, John C., and Koo, Kevin
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MEAT ,PEA proteins ,RAW foods ,SOY proteins ,PLANT-based diet ,KIDNEY stones ,SOFT drinks ,EFFECT of salt on plants - Abstract
Introduction: Patients who form kidney stones are typically advised to limit intake of nondairy animal protein. Plant-based meat products may be a processed substitute protein source for these patients and have recently gained popularity because of health concerns, increased retail availability, decreased environmental impact, and meat supply shortages during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite these perceived benefits and tangential association with whole food plant-based diets, the potential lithogenic risks associated with these products are not well characterized. Methods: The U.S. Department of Agriculture database was queried with a sample of plant-based meat products widely available to U.S. consumers. Nutrient profile data were compiled and compared with animal protein data using standardized serving sizes. Primary protein sources were identified using verified ingredient lists. Oxalate content was extrapolated based on dietary data sources. Results: A total 47 plant-based meat products (16 beef, 11 pork, 10 chicken, and 10 seafood) were analyzed. Compared with their respective animal protein, most products contained on average fewer calories (plant-based beef 77%, pork 94%, chicken 86%, and seafood 83%) and less protein (plant-based beef 68%, pork 96%, chicken 53%, and seafood 54%). Most products used soy protein as the primary protein source (55%). Soy-based beef contained the highest average oxalate content (18 mg per serving), whereas soy-based seafood contained the lowest (7 mg). The most common non-soy protein source was pea protein (30%), containing trace amounts of oxalate. Sodium content was higher in most plant-based products overall (72%) and in each category (plant-based beef 109%, pork 128%, chicken 100%, and seafood 148%). Calcium content was higher (plant-based beef 317%, pork 144%, chicken 291%, and seafood 295%) compared with animal protein. Conclusions: Most plant-based meat products consist of protein sources that are, relative to animal protein sources, higher in oxalate, sodium, and calcium. Stone-forming patients should be counseled about the potential lithogenic risk of these processed products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Editorial Commentaries.
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Kraft, Kate H., Ungerer, Garrett N., and Koo, Kevin
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- 2023
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17. Advancing Practice Through Science: Strategies for Publishing in Urology Practice®.
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Koo, Kevin, Badalato, Gina M., Malik, Rena D., and Edney, Mark T.
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- 2023
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18. Photon-counting statistics-based support vector machine with multi-mode photon illumination for quantum imaging.
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Kim, Jin-Woo, Cho, Jeong-Sik, Sacarelo, Christian, Fitri, Nur Duwi Fat, Hwang, Ju-Seong, and Rhee, June-Koo Kevin
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SUPPORT vector machines ,PHOTON counting ,PARAMETRIC downconversion ,QUANTUM noise ,PHOTONS ,SINGLE photon generation ,IMAGING systems ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio - Abstract
We propose a photon-counting-statistics-based imaging process for quantum imaging where background photon noise can be distinguished and eliminated by photon mode estimation from the multi-mode Bose–Einstein distribution. Photon-counting statistics show multi-mode behavior in a practical, low-cost single-photon-level quantum imaging system with a short coherence time and a long measurement time interval. Different mode numbers in photon-counting probability distributions from single-photon illumination and background photon noise can be classified by a machine learning technique such as a support vector machine (SVM). The proposed photon-counting statistics-based support vector machine (PSSVM) learns the difference in the photon-counting distribution of each pixel to distinguish between photons from the source and the background photon noise to improve the image quality. We demonstrated quantum imaging of a binary-image object with photon illumination from a spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) source. The experiment results show that the PSSVM applied quantum image improves a peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) gain of 2.89dB and a structural similarity index measure (SSIM) gain of 27.7% compared to the conventional direct single-photon imaging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Harnessing gene fusion-derived neoantigens for 'cold' breast and prostate tumor immunotherapy.
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Velaga, Ravi, Koo, Kevin M, and Mainwaring, Paul N
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- 2022
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20. Evaluation of Potential Urologic Prescription Drug Savings With Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drug Company.
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Sax-Bolder, Anessa N. and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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21. PD60-08 HOW ARE WE PREPARING OUR CHIEF RESIDENTS FOR LEADERSHIP SUCCESS? INSIGHTS FROM UROLOGY PROGRAM DIRECTORS.
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Seyer, Amanda, Harris, Andrew, Matlaga, Brian, Knoedler, Margaret Ann, Nakada, Stephen, and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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22. PD47-06 IMPACT OF INTEGRATED, REAL-TIME DIGITAL MEASUREMENT ON SURGEON DECISION MAKING IN URETEROSCOPIC STONE SURGERY.
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Krueger, Alexander, Smith, Drew M., Parzych, Andrew T., Qi, Robert, Potretzke, Aaron M., Stoianovici, Dan, Holmes III, David, Lifson, Mark, and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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23. PD40-06 GEOGRAPHIC CHANGES IN RURAL ACCESS TO UROLOGICAL CARE IN THE UNITED STATES.
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Lehner, Kelly, Ungerer, Garrett, Granberg, Candace, and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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24. MP39-20 IMPACT OF PREFERENCE SIGNALING ON THE TOTAL FINANCIAL BURDEN OF UROLOGY RESIDENCY APPLICATIONS ON APPLICANTS AND PROGRAMS.
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Sax-Bolder, Anessa, Seyer, Amanda, Findlay, Bridget, Bearrick, Elizabeth, Granberg, Candace, and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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25. MP39-06 PROGRESS OR PERSISTENT DISPARITY? ASSESSING THE PERSISTENT GENDER GAP IN THE ENDOUROLOGY TRAINING PIPELINE.
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Ungerer, Garrett, Lehner, Kelly, Potretzke, Aaron, Granberg, Candace, and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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26. MP24-11 RAPID SHIFTS IN PRACTICE EMPLOYMENT PATTERNS AMONG U.S. UROLOGISTS FROM 2014 TO 2022.
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Lehner, Kelly, Ungerer, Garrett, Granberg, Candace, North, Amanda, and Koo, Kevin
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- 2024
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27. MP07-04 INITIAL EXPERIENCE WITH A FULLY INTEGRATED ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE PLATFORM DURING MINIMALLY INVASIVE SURGERY.
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Khanna, Abhinav, Boorjian, Stephen A., Frank, Igor, Shah, Paras, Sharma, Vidit, Thompson, R. Houston, Potretzke, Aaron, Chow, George, Miller, Adam, Avant, Ross, Elliott, Daniel, Lomas, Derek, Warner, J. Nicholas, Koo, Kevin, Cooper, Meghan, Kohler, Tobias, Mynderse, Lance, and Tollefson, Matthew
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- 2024
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28. Molecular locker probe enrichment of gene fusion variants from matched patient liquid biopsy specimens for magneto-bioelectrocatalytic nanosensing.
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Koo, Kevin M. and Trau, Matt
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- 2022
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29. Portomesenteric and portosystemic venous reconstructions in children using balloon-expandable endoprostheses.
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Parra, Jorge R., Bertino, Frederic J., Shin, David S., Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham, Koo, Kevin S. H., and Monroe, Eric J.
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MESENTERIC veins ,CHILD patients ,PORTAL vein ,DOPPLER ultrasonography ,CONTRAST-enhanced ultrasound ,CEREBROSPINAL fluid shunts ,PARACENTESIS ,MYELOFIBROSIS ,HYPERTENSIVE crisis - Abstract
Background: Portomesenteric and portosystemic venous occlusive disease may lead to portomesenteric hypertension, variceal bleeding, ascites and hypersplenism. Data regarding endovascular reconstructive strategies in children, however, are limited. Objective: To report technical success, outcome and patency of portomesenteric and portosystemic venous reconstruction using VIABAHN VBX balloon-expandable endoprostheses in pediatric patients. Materials and methods: Five pediatric patients (median age: 15 years, range: 4–18 years), including 3 (60%) boys and 2 (40%) girls, with portomesenteric or portosystemic venous occlusion or recurrent stenosis, underwent balloon-expandable stent graft reconstruction. Presenting symptoms included acute variceal bleeding, without (n = 2, 40%) or with (n = 1, 20%) splenomegaly, and transfusion-dependent chronic melena (n = 1, 20%). One patient was asymptomatic (n = 1, 20%). Preprocedural imaging included Doppler ultrasound and contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) in all patients. Initial imaging showed 4 (80%) occlusions and 1 (20%) recurrent stenosis greater than 50%. Technical aspects of the reconstructions, technical successes, clinical outcomes and adverse events were recorded. Technical success was defined as completion of stent graft reconstruction. Adverse events were categorized according to Society of Interventional Radiology criteria. Clinical success was defined as resolution of the presenting symptoms and/or prevention of portal hypertensive sequela. Results: Venous reconstruction was technically successful in all five patients. Stent graft locations included the main portal vein in 2 (40%), the superior mesenteric vein in 1 (20%), autologous Meso-Rex shunt in 1 (20%) and splenocaval shunt in 1 (20%). Six stent grafts were placed (two stent grafts placed in a single patient). Stent grafts had a median diameter of 7 mm (range: 6–10 mm) and a median length of 59 mm (range: 19–79 mm). Median fluoroscopy time was 36.6 min (range: 13.4–95.8 min) and median air kerma was 301.0 mGy (range: 218.0–1,148.2 mGy). No adverse events occurred. Median clinical follow-up was 18 months (range: 6–29 months). Median imaging follow-up was 17 months (range: 2–29 months). Clinical success was achieved in all patients and maintained during the follow-up period. One patient required follow-up intervention with superior mesenteric vein side extension with a self-expanding bare metal stent due to perigraft stenosis detected on CT 3 months after stent placement. There were no stent graft occlusions. Conclusion: Portomesenteric and portosystemic venous reconstruction using balloon-expandable stent grafts in pediatric patients was feasible and clinically successful in this preliminary experience. Additional studies are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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30. Evaluation and management of biliary complications after pediatric liver transplantation: pearls and pitfalls for percutaneous techniques.
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Monroe, Eric J., Shin, David S., Young, Victoria A., Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham, Koo, Kevin S. H., Woerner, Andrew, and Ingraham, Christopher R.
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LIVER transplantation ,INTERVENTIONAL radiology ,CHOLANGIOGRAPHY ,CHOLANGITIS ,ENDOSCOPIC retrograde cholangiopancreatography ,BILE ducts - Abstract
In pediatric liver transplantation, bile duct complications occur with a greater incidence than vascular anastomotic dysfunction and represent a major source of morbidity and mortality. While surgical re-anastomosis can reduce the need for retransplantation, interventional radiology offers minimally invasive and graft-saving therapies. The combination of small patient size and prevailing Roux-en-Y biliary enteric anastomotic techniques makes endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography difficult if not impossible. Expertise in percutaneous management is therefore imperative. This article describes post-surgical anatomy, pathophysiology and noninvasive imaging of biliary complications. We review percutaneous techniques, focusing heavily on biliary access and interventions for reduced liver grafts. Subsequently we review the results and adverse events of these procedures and describe conditions that masquerade as biliary obstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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31. Opioid-Sparing Analgesic Effects of Peripheral Nerve Blocks in Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy: A Systematic Review.
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Winoker, Jared S., Koo, Kevin, Alam, Ridwan, and Matlaga, Brian R.
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PERCUTANEOUS nephrolithotomy ,PERIPHERAL nervous system ,GENERAL anesthesia ,NERVE block ,INTERCOSTAL nerves ,ERECTOR spinae muscles ,OPIOID epidemic - Abstract
Introduction: Multimodal analgesic regimens incorporating peripheral nerve blocks (PNBs) have demonstrated reduced postoperative pain, opioid use, and recovery time in various disease states. However, this remains a subject of limited investigation in the percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) domain. In the face of an ongoing opioid epidemic and collective push to enhance prescribing stewardship, we sought to examine the potential opioid-sparing effect of PNBs in PCNL. Methods: A systematic review of Embase and PubMed was performed to identify all randomized controlled trials evaluating the use of a PNB with general anesthesia (GA) vs GA alone for pain control following PCNL. Studies evaluating neuraxial (epidural and spinal) anesthesia and those without GA as the control arm were excluded. Results: Seventeen trials evaluating 1,012 procedures were included. Five different blocks were identified and evaluated: paravertebral (n = 8), intercostal nerve (n = 3), quadratus lumborum (n = 2), transversus abdominis plane (n = 1), and erector spinae (n = 3). Nine of 16 (56%) studies observed lower pain scores with PNB use throughout the 24-hour postop period. By comparison, improved pain scores with PNBs were limited to the early (<6 hours) recovery period in five studies and two found no difference. Total analgesic and opioid requirements were significantly higher in the GA control arm in nearly all studies (12/14, 86%). Operative times were similar and there were no differences in rates of intercostal access or nephrostomy tube insertion between study arms in any trial. Conclusions: While greater analgesic use with GA alone likely minimizes or obscures differences in patient-reported pain scores, PNBs may offer a significant opioid-sparing analgesic effect during postoperative recovery after PCNL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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32. Evidence-Based Recommendations for Opioid Prescribing After Endourological and Minimally Invasive Urological Surgery.
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Koo, Kevin, Winoker, Jared S., Patel, Hiten D., Faisal, Farzana, Gupta, Natasha, Metcalf, Meredith R., Mettee, Lynda Z., Meyer, Alexa R., Pavlovich, Christian P., Pierorazio, Phillip M., and Matlaga, Brian R.
- Subjects
MINIMALLY invasive procedures ,UROLOGICAL surgery ,PROSTATE surgery ,DELPHI method ,OPIOIDS ,ADULTS - Abstract
Introduction: Procedure-specific guidelines for postsurgical opioid use can decrease overprescribing and facilitate opioid stewardship. Initial recommendations were based on feasibility data from limited pilot studies. This study aims to refine opioid prescribing recommendations for endourological and minimally invasive urological procedures by integrating emerging clinical evidence with a panel consensus. Materials and Methods: A multistakeholder panel was convened with broad subspecialty expertise. Primary literature on opioid prescribing after 16 urological procedures was systematically assessed. Using a modified Delphi technique, the panel reviewed and revised procedure-specific recommendations and opioid stewardship strategies based on additional evidence. All recommendations were developed for opioid-naive adult patients after uncomplicated procedures. Results: Seven relevant studies on postsurgical opioid prescribing were identified: four studies on ureteroscopy, two studies on robotic prostatectomy including a combined study on robotic nephrectomy, and one study on transurethral prostate surgery. The panel affirmed prescribing ranges to allow tailoring quantities to anticipated need. The panel noted that zero opioid tablets would be potentially appropriate for all procedures. Following evidence review, the panel reduced the maximum recommended quantities for 11 of the 16 procedures; the other 5 procedures were unchanged. Opioids were no longer recommended following diagnostic endoscopy and transurethral resection procedures. Finally, data on prescribing decisions supported expanded stewardship strategies for first-time prescribing and ongoing quality improvement. Conclusion: Reductions in initial opioid prescribing recommendations are supported by evidence for most endourological and minimally invasive urological procedures. Shared decision-making before prescribing and periodic reevaluation of individual prescribing patterns are strongly recommended to strengthen opioid stewardship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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33. Unsupervised View-Selective Deep Learning for Practical Indoor Localization Using CSI.
- Author
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Kim, Minseuk, Han, Dongsoo, and Rhee, June-Koo Kevin
- Abstract
Due to its high-dimensional data characteristics, the channel state information (CSI) of Wi-Fi signals has become a strong candidate for use in indoor localization. In addition, machine learning techniques can improve the accuracy of indoor localization systems using multiview CSI data received at multiple access points (APs). However, in complex environments, most CSI views collected at APs in non-line-of-sight (NLoS) configurations relative to a transmitter may lose so much useful data information as to become nonsalient. In this paper, we propose a practical machine learning approach named unsupervised view-selective deep learning (UVSDL), in which only the most salient CSI view is selected in an unsupervised manner to be applied in regression for localization. In an experiment in a complex building, our variational deep learning (VDL)-based regression method with the most salient CSI view achieves a localization accuracy of 1.36 m, significantly outperforming the best-known system BiLoc by 25 %. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A micro-costing analysis of outpatient flexible cystoscopy: implications for adoption of single-use flexible cystoscopes.
- Author
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Su, Zhuo T., Huang, Mitchell M., Matlaga, Brian R., Hutfless, Susan, and Koo, Kevin
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CYSTOSCOPY ,COST effectiveness ,SURGICAL stents ,COST estimates - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the total cost of outpatient flexible cystoscopy associated with reusable device purchase, maintenance, and reprocessing, and to assess potential cost benefits of single-use flexible cystoscopes. Methods: Cost data regarding the purchasing, maintaining, and reprocessing of reusable flexible cystoscopes were collected using a micro-costing approach at a high-volume outpatient urology clinic. We estimated the costs to facilities with a range of annual procedure volumes (1000–3000) performed with a fleet of cystoscopes ranging from 10 to 25. We also compared the total cost per double-J ureteral stent removal procedure performed using single-use flexible cystoscopes versus reusable devices. Results: The cost associated with reusable flexible cystoscopes ranged from $105 to $224 per procedure depending on the annual procedure volume and cystoscopes available. As a practice became more efficient by increasing the ratio of procedures performed to cystoscopes in the fleet, the proportion of the total cost due to cystoscope reprocessing increased from 22 to 46%. For ureteral stent removal procedures, the total cost per procedure using reusable cystoscopes (range $165–$1469) was higher than that using single-use devices ($244–$420), unless the annual procedure volume was sufficiently high relative to the number of reusable cystoscopes in the fleet (≥ 350 for a practice with ten reusable cystoscopes, ≥ 700 for one with 20 devices). Conclusion: The cost of reprocessing reusable cystoscopes represents a large fraction of the total cost per procedure, especially for high-volume facilities. It may be economical to adopt single-use cystoscopes specifically for stent removal procedures, especially for lower-volume facilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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35. Kevin Koo, MD, MPH, MPhil.
- Author
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Koo, Kevin
- Published
- 2024
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36. Line days as a determinant of central line-associated bloodstream infections in pediatric patients with tunneled femoral peripherally inserted central catheters.
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Koo, Kevin S. H., Cooper, Andrew B., Monroe, Eric J., Reis, Joseph, Shivaram, Giridhar M., and Zerr, Danielle M.
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PERIPHERALLY inserted central catheters ,CHILD patients ,LOGNORMAL distribution ,AKAIKE information criterion ,DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) ,WEIBULL distribution - Abstract
Background: Ultrasound (US)-guided tunneled femoral peripherally inserted central catheters (PICCs) are a safe central venous access option in infants and neonates. Studies have shown, however, that femoral central venous access has the potential for high central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI) rates with a significant increase in risk around line day 30, though no studies have evaluated these risks exclusively for tunneled femoral PICCs. Objective: The primary purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between line duration and the risk of CLABSI in tunneled femoral PICCs in children. Materials and methods: Four hundred forty-five patients (196 females, 249 males; median age: 49.4 days; median weight: 3.7 kg) who underwent 573 tunneled femoral PICC placements or exchanges from Jan. 1, 2017, to Jan. 31, 2020, were included in the study. All tunneled femoral PICCs were placed using US technique and catheter specifications, including catheter size (French) and length (cm), were retrieved from the electronic medical record. The location of the PICC placement, the number of lumens, the laterality of placement, and the patient's age and weight were also recorded. Only non-mucosal barrier injury CLABSIs, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) definitions, were counted as CLABSI for this study. The number of central line days until a CLABSI event was analyzed with an accelerated failure time model using the exponential, Weibull, and log-normal distributions to determine the probability of a CLABSI over time, taking into consideration the recorded covariates. Results: Tunneled femoral PICC placements accounted for 14,855 line days, during which 20 non-mucosal barrier injury CLABSIs (CLABSI rate of 1.35 per 1,000 line days) occurred during the study period. The highest CLABSI rate occurred in PICCs placed in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at 2.01 per 1,000 line days and the lowest occurred in PICCs placed in interventional radiology at 0.26 per 1,000 line days. Overall, PICCs placed outside of interventional radiology had a CLABSI rate of 1.72 per 1,000 line days. The CLABSI rate during the first 30 days a line was in situ was lower than the rate after 30 days (0.51 per 1,000 line days vs. 3.06 per 1,000 line days, respectively). Statistical modeling and hazard estimation using the Akaike information criterion corrected for small sample size (AICc)-average of log-normal, Weibull and exponential distributions demonstrate the daily risk of CLABSI rapidly increases from day 1 to day 30, with the risk remaining high for the duration of line days. Conclusion: While tunneled femoral PICCs are a relatively safe and effective central venous access alternative, the rate of CLABSI appears to rapidly increase with increasing line days until around day 30 and then remains high thereafter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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37. Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt creation may be associated with hyperplastic hepatic nodular lesions in the long term: an analysis of 18 pediatric and young adult patients.
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Woerner, Andrew J., Shin, David S., Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham, Koo, Kevin S. H., Hsu, Evelyn K., Tang, Elizabeth R., and Monroe, Eric J.
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YOUNG adults ,PORTAL hypertension ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,TEENAGERS ,NATURAL history ,HEPATIC encephalopathy - Abstract
Background: Retrospective studies have demonstrated the efficacy and safety of pediatric and adolescent transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS), but long-term outcomes warrant further investigation. Objective: To report on the development of hyperplastic hepatic nodular lesion development in children and young adults (<21 years) with TIPS patency >3 years. Materials and methods: Eighteen children and young adults, including 10 (55.6%) females and 8 (44.4%) males, underwent TIPS creation with >3 years' patency and follow-up evaluation at a tertiary children's hospital. The mean age at the time of TIPS creation was 12.5±5.1 years (range: 1.5–20.0 years). The mean model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) at the time of TIPS creation was 8.1±1.6 (range: 6–11). Indications for TIPS creation included acute variceal bleeding (8/18, 44.4%), primary (1/18, 5.6%) or secondary (7/18, 38.9%) prevention of varices, portal vein thrombosis (1/18, 5.6%), and splenic sequestration (1/18, 5.6%). Technical successes, intra-procedural parameters, hemodynamic and clinical successes, TIPS patencies, adverse events, imaging evaluations, and follow-ups were recorded. Results: All (100%) TIPS placements were successful; however, a direct intrahepatic portosystemic shunt was created in one (5.6%) patient. Mean reduction of the portosystemic shunt gradient was 9.1±3.3 mmHg (range: 4–16 mmHg). Seventeen (94.4%) patients demonstrated clinical success with resolution of their initial clinical indication for TIPS placement. The 3-year TIPS primary, primary-assisted, and secondary patencies were 83.3% (15/18), 94.4% (17/18), and 100% (18/18), respectively. Two (11.1%) patients developed mild, medically controlled hepatic encephalopathy. One (5.6%) patient developed hepatopulmonary syndrome. Nine (50%) patients developed single or multiple hepatic nodules at a mean imaging surveillance time after TIPS of 4.4±3.0 years (range: 1.5–10.2 years). Six (33.3%) patients developed nodules >1 cm with imaging features most consistent with focal nodular hyperplasia or focal nodular hyperplasia-like nodules. The mean follow-up duration was 5.7±2.9 years (range: 3.0–13.1 years). Conclusion: Long-term (>3 years) portosystemic shunting via TIPS is associated with the development of hepatic nodular lesions in children. Consequently, children with TIPS may need gray-scale assessment of hepatic parenchyma as part of routine ultrasound exams and extended imaging surveillance until more is understood regarding the natural history of induced nodularity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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38. Systematic Evaluation of Smartphone Applications for the Medical Management of Nephrolithiasis.
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Winoker, Jared S., Koo, Kevin, Huang, Mitchell M., Bhanji, Yasin, and Matlaga, Brian R.
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MOBILE apps ,KIDNEY stones ,DIET therapy ,MOBILE health ,APPLICATION stores - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to comprehensively evaluate the quality of patient-oriented, mobile health applications (apps) available for medical management of kidney stone disease (KSD). Materials and Methods: A systematic search was performed to identify apps from the Apple and Google Play app stores. Eligible apps were divided into two categories: (1) fluid apps and (2) dietary apps. Descriptive characteristics were summarized and app quality was independently evaluated on the basis of technical quality, usability, clinical value, and privacy/security. The validated Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS) was the backbone for the evaluation framework. Results: In total, 31 apps (18 fluid apps and 13 dietary apps) were included. Fluid apps outscore dietary apps in all dimensions of MARS quality. All but one fluid app exceeded the minimum acceptable MARS score of 3.0 vs 46% of dietary management apps. Dietary apps feature less functionality and most are limited to noninteractive informational content. While most data-capturing apps provide a privacy policy and ensure that security measures are taken to protect user identity, only 36% offer users choice or consent for secondary use of their data after data have already been collected. Overall, only one app has undergone any form of real-world clinical investigation. Conclusions: Fluid management apps outperform dietary apps in technical quality, usability, and clinical value at the cost of greater privacy/security risks. Despite not being targeted to patients with KSD, they are higher in most quality measures and offer greater functionality to support long-term disease management compared with dietary apps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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39. Separation of distinct exosome subpopulations: isolation and characterization approaches and their associated challenges.
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Singh, Karishma, Nalabotala, Ruchika, Koo, Kevin M., Bose, Sudeep, Nayak, Ranu, and Shiddiky, Muhammad J. A.
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EXOSOMES ,EXTRACELLULAR vesicles ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems ,BIOPHYSICS - Abstract
Exosomes are nano-sized extracellular vesicles that serve as a communications system between cells and have shown tremendous promise as liquid biopsy biomarkers in diagnostic, prognostic, and even therapeutic use in different human diseases. Due to the natural heterogeneity of exosomes, there is a need to separate exosomes into distinct biophysical and/or biochemical subpopulations to enable full interrogation of exosome biology and function prior to the possibility of clinical translation. Currently, there exists a multitude of different exosome isolation and characterization approaches which can, in limited capacity, separate exosomes based on biophysical and/or biochemical characteristics. While notable reviews in recent years have reviewed these approaches for bulk exosome sorting, we herein present a comprehensive overview of various conventional technologies and modern microfluidic and nanotechnological advancements towards isolation and characterization of exosome subpopulations. The benefits and limitations of these different technologies to improve their use for distinct exosome subpopulations in clinical practices are also discussed. Furthermore, an overview of the most commonly encountered technical and biological challenges for effective separation of exosome subpopulations is presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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40. Confirmatory radiographs have limited utility following ultrasound-guided tunneled femoral central venous catheter placements by interventional radiology.
- Author
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Lewis, Spencer B., Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham, Koo, Kevin S. H., Woerner, Andrew J., Reis III, Joseph, Shivaram, Giridhar M., Shin, David S., and Monroe, Eric J.
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CENTRAL venous catheterization ,INTERVENTIONAL radiology ,RADIOGRAPHS ,CENTRAL venous catheters ,CATHETERIZATION ,CHILD patients ,CHILDREN'S hospitals - Abstract
Background: Ultrasonography may reliably visualize both appropriately positioned and malpositioned femoral-approach catheter tips. Radiography may be used to confirm catheter tip position after placement, but its utility following intraprocedural ultrasound (US) catheter tip verification is unclear. Objectives: To report the utility of confirmatory radiographs after US-guided tunneled femoral central venous catheter (CVC) placements by interventional radiology in pediatric patients. Materials and methods: A total of 484 pediatric patients underwent bedside US-guided tunneled femoral CVC placements in an intensive care setting at a single tertiary children's hospital between Jan. 1, 2016, and April 20, 2020. Technical success, adverse events, post-procedure radiographic practices and inter-modality catheter tip concordance were recorded. All radiographs were performed within 12 h of catheter placement. Results: The mean patient age was 175±508 days (range: 1 day to 19 years), including 257 (53.1%) males and 227 (46.9%) females. Of the 484 attempted placements, 472 (97.5%) were primary placements. Four hundred eighty-one (99.4%) placements were technically successful. There were three (0.6%) technical failures due to previously undiagnosed iliofemoral venous occlusive disease. Five (1.0%) adverse events occurred. Radiographs were obtained within 12 h of CVC placement in 171 (35.3%) patients, in 120 (70.2%) of whom the indication was recent catheter placement. All 171 (100%) post-placement radiographs showed catheter tip location concordance with the intra-procedural US. In one (0.2%) patient, in whom there was nonvisualization of a guidewire and clinical concern for malposition during US-guided placement, post-procedure radiographs, coupled with multiplanar venography, demonstrated inadvertent paravertebral venous plexus catheter placement. Conclusion: The concordance between intra-procedural US and confirmatory post-procedure radiographs of CVC placements by interventional radiology obviates the need for routine radiographs. Radiographs may be obtained in instances of proceduralist uncertainty or clinical concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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41. Beyond Self-Promotion: The New Landscape of Social Media Use in Clinical Practice and Career Development.
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Koo, Kevin and Malik, Rena D.
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- 2022
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42. Impact of an orthogeriatric collaborative care model for older adults with hip fracture in a community hospital setting.
- Author
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Lee, Janice C., Koo, Kevin, Wong, Eric K. C., Naqvi, Raza, and Wong, Camilla L.
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HIP fractures ,GERIATRICIANS ,OLDER people ,HOSPITAL care quality ,GERIATRIC care units ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,HEALTH care teams ,PREVENTION of surgical complications ,HOSPITALS ,FERRANS & Powers Quality of Life Index ,MATHEMATICAL models ,GERIATRIC assessment ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DELIRIUM ,POSTOPERATIVE period ,THEORY ,IMPACT of Event Scale - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Surgery is the property of CMA Impact Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
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43. Spinal ultrasound after failed landmarked-based lumbar puncture: a single institutional experience.
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Jeyakumar, Arthie, Weaver, John J., Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham, Hage, Anthony N., Koo, Kevin S. H., Shivaram, Giridhar M., and Monroe, Eric J.
- Subjects
LUMBAR puncture ,DRUG efficacy ,EPIDURAL hematoma ,CHILD patients ,INTERVENTIONAL radiology ,CENTRAL venous catheterization - Abstract
Background: The safety and efficacy of US-guided lumbar puncture in children has been described. In the pediatric setting, children are frequently referred to interventional radiology only after a failed landmark-based attempt. Routine pre-procedure US in these children is useful to determine a safe level for subarachnoid access and to optimize success. Objective: To determine whether pre-procedure US improves technical success and safety of US-guided lumbar puncture. Materials and methods: We included 47 children. Inclusion criteria were urgent US-guided lumbar puncture in pediatric patients <18 years old. Exclusion criteria were non-urgent lumbar punctures, children referred without an antecedent landmark-based attempt, lumbar punctures performed with fluoroscopic guidance, and procedures performed prior to introducing the diagnostic approach in 2017. We did not evaluate data pertaining to successful landmark-based lumbar punctures performed without subsequent need for additional attempts. We recorded technical successes, adverse events and relevant abnormalities identified on pre-procedural US. Results: Thirty-six US-guided lumbar punctures were performed with 100% technical success. Eleven children referred to interventional radiology did not undergo lumbar puncture because of unfavorable US findings or interval clinical improvement obviating the need for lumbar puncture. Thirty-six children underwent US evaluation of the thecal sac prior to potential intervention. Of these 36 with pre-procedural US studies, 12 demonstrated paucity of cerebrospinal fluid and 14 demonstrated an epidural hematoma. Fifteen children who underwent lumbar puncture had a "traumatic tap," classified as a mild adverse event. No moderate or severe adverse events were recorded. Conclusion: Limited spinal US following failed landmark-based lumbar punctures frequently identifies procedure-related complications and can augment patient selection for future image-guided lumbar punctures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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44. Evidence‐based quality and accuracy of YouTube videos about nephrolithiasis.
- Author
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Huang, Mitchell M., Winoker, Jared S., Allaf, Mohamad E., Matlaga, Brian R., and Koo, Kevin
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KIDNEY stones ,STREAMING video & television ,DISEASE prevalence ,SYMPTOMS ,ELECTRONIC information resource searching - Abstract
Objective: To assess the quality and accuracy of online videos about the medical management of nephrolithiasis. Materials and Methods: To evaluate trends in online interest, we first examined the frequency of worldwide YouTube searches for 'kidney stones' from 2015 to 2020. We then queried YouTube with terms related to symptoms and treatment of kidney stones and analysed English‐language videos with >5000 views. Quality was assessed using the validated DISCERN instrument. Evidence‐based content analysis of video content and viewer comments was performed. Results: Online searches for videos about kidney stones doubled between 2015 and 2019 (P < 0.001). We analysed 102 videos with a median (range) number of views of 46 539 (5024–3 631 322). The mean (sd) DISCERN score was 3.0 (1.4) out of 5, indicating 'moderate' quality; scores were significantly higher for the 21 videos (21%) authored by academic hospitals (mean 3.7 vs 2.8, P = 0.02). Inaccurate or non‐evidence‐based claims were identified in 23 videos (23%); none of the videos authored by academic institutions contained inaccurate claims. Videos with inaccurate statements had more than double the viewer engagement (viewer‐generated comments, 'thumbs up' and 'thumbs down' ratings) compared to videos without inaccuracies (P < 0.001). Among viewer comments, 43 videos (43%) included comments with inaccurate or non‐evidence‐based claims, and a large majority (82 videos, 80%) had 'chatbot' recommendations. Conclusions: Interest in YouTube videos about nephrolithiasis has doubled since 2015. While highly viewed videos vary widely in quality and accuracy, videos produced by academic hospitals have significantly fewer inaccurate claims. Given the high prevalence of stone disease and poor‐quality videos, patients should be directed to evidence‐based content online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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45. Nucleic Acid Hybridization‐Based Noise Suppression for Ultraselective Multiplexed Amplification of Mutant Variants.
- Author
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Zeng, Yi, Koo, Kevin M., Shen, Ai‐Guo, Hu, Ji‐Ming, and Trau, Matt
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- 2021
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46. Transforaminal intrathecal delivery of nusinersen for older children and adults with spinal muscular atrophy and complex spinal anatomy: an analysis of 200 consecutive injections.
- Author
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Weaver, John J., Hallam, Danial K., Beecham Chick, Jeffrey Forris, Vaidya, Sandeep, Shin, David S., Natarajan, Niranjana, Rad, Nassim, Reis, Joseph, Koo, Kevin S. H., Shivaram, Giridhar M., Thibodeau, Ashley, Apkon, Susan, and Monroe, Eric James
- Subjects
COMPUTED tomography ,INTRATHECAL injections ,MENINGITIS ,NUCLEOTIDES ,RADIATION ,SPINAL muscular atrophy ,LUMBAR puncture - Abstract
Background Nusinersen is the only approved treatment for all spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) subtypes and is delivered intrathecally. Distorted spinal anatomy and instrumentation preclude standard approaches for intrathecal access, necessitating alternative techniques for delivery. The purpose of this study is to report technical success and adverse events of transforaminal intrathecal delivery of nusinersen. Methods 28 patients, mean age 24.1±9.8 years (range 10.0-51.0 years), with intermediate or late onset SMA, underwent a combined 200 transforaminal nusinersen injections. All patients had osseous fusion or spinal instrumentation precluding standard posterior access routes. Patients who underwent nusinersen injections using a technique other than transforaminal lumbar puncture (n=113) were excluded. Technical success, adverse events (AEs) and radiation exposure were recorded. results 200 (100%) procedures were technically successful; 6 (3%) required a second level of attempt for access. 187 (93.5%) interventions were completed using cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) with two-axis fluoroscopic navigational overlay. 13 (6.5%) procedures were performed with fluoroscopic-guidance only at subsequent sessions. There were 8 (4.0%) mild AEs and 2 (0.5%) severe AEs; one patient received antibiotics for possible traversal of the large bowel but did not develop meningitis, and one patient developed aseptic meningitis. Mean air kerma was 74.5±161.3 mGy (range 5.2-1693.0 mGy). Conclusion Transforaminal intrathecal delivery of nusinersen is feasible and safe for gaining access in patients with distorted spinal anatomy. The use of CBCT delineates anatomy and optimizes needle trajectory during the initial encounter, and may be used selectively for subsequent procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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47. Intrahepatic veno-venous collateralization and misrepresentative hepatic venous pressure gradients in children.
- Author
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Monroe, Eric J., Michalsky, Whitney Shofner, Koo, Kevin S. H., Shivaram, Giridhar M., Hage, Anthony N., Hsu, Evelyn K., Horslen, Simon P., and Chick, Jeffrey Forris Beecham
- Subjects
VENOUS pressure ,VENOGRAPHY ,HEPATIC veins ,PORTAL vein ,CENTRAL venous catheterization ,INTRAVENOUS catheterization ,PORTAL hypertension - Abstract
Background: Accurate and reproducible means of measuring the portosystemic gradient are essential for risk stratification and treatment of portal hypertension. Objective: To report the reliability of hepatic venous pressure gradients in children with intrahepatic veno-venous collateralization. Materials and methods: Between January 2012 and December 2019 (96 months), 39 patients with native livers underwent wedge hepatic venography and hepatic venous pressure gradient measurements at a tertiary pediatric center. All archived images were reviewed for balloon isolation of the hepatic vein and hepatic vein-to-hepatic vein (HV-HV) collaterals. HV-HV collaterals were categorized as present on the basis of non-catheterized segmental venous opacification despite appropriate balloon isolation. Hepatic venous pressure gradient was defined as the difference of wedge and free hepatic venous pressures. Wedge portosystemic gradient was defined as the difference between wedge hepatic venous pressure and right atrial (RA) pressures. For patients subsequently undergoing portal venous catheterization, portosystemic gradient was defined as the difference between main portal vein and RA pressures. Results: Thirteen of 39 (33.3%) patients demonstrated HV-HV collaterals on wedge hepatic venography. The mean hepatic venous pressure gradient was 5.2±3.8 mmHg (range: 0–15 mmHg). The mean hepatic venous pressure gradient was 3.6±2.6 mmHg (range: 0–9 mmHg) in the presence of HV-HV collaterals and 5.9±4.2 mmHg (range: 1–15 mmHg) in the absence of HV-HV collaterals (P=0.043). Twelve (30.8%) patients were found to have varices: 10 gastroesophageal, 1 rectal and 1 stomal. The mean hepatic venous pressure gradient in patients with varices was 5.4±47 mmHg (range: 0–15 mmHg). For patients with varices, mean hepatic venous pressure gradient was 3.0±2.7 mmHg (range: 0–9 mmHg) in the presence of HV-HV collaterals and 10.3±4.1 mmHg (range: 5–15 mmHg) in the absence of HV-HV collaterals (P=0.004). Four (10.3%) patients had extrahepatic portal vein occlusion: 3 with cavernous transformation and 1 with type Ib Abernethy malformation. All patients with extrahepatic portal vein occlusion demonstrated HV-HV collaterals compared with 8 of 35 (22.9%) patients without extrahepatic portal vein occlusion (P=0.002). Four of 39 (10.3%) patients underwent direct portal pressure measurements: 3 via transhepatic and 1 via trans-splenic portal access. All had demonstrated HV-HV collaterals on wedged imaging. One had extrahepatic portal vein occlusion. The mean time between wedge portosystemic gradient and portosystemic gradient measurement was 3.75 days (range: 0–8 days). The mean wedge portosystemic gradient was 4.5±3.1 mmHg (range: 2–9 mmHg) and the mean portosystemic gradient was 14.5±3.7 mmHg (range: 12–20 mmHg) (P=0.006). Conclusion: HV-HV collateralization is frequently observed in children undergoing wedged portal venography and leads to misrepresentative hepatic venous pressure gradients. All patients undergoing hepatic venous pressure gradient measurement should have wedged venography to identify HV-HV collaterals and to qualify measured pressures. Additional techniques to obtain representative pressures in the presence of HV-HV collaterals warrant further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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48. The Growing Impact of Micro/Nanomaterial‐Based Systems in Precision Oncology: Translating "Multiomics" Technologies.
- Author
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Li, Junrong, Wuethrich, Alain, Dey, Shuvashi, Lane, Rebecca E., Sina, Abu A. I., Wang, Jing, Wang, Yuling, Puttick, Simon, Koo, Kevin M., and Trau, Matt
- Subjects
TUMOR classification ,ONCOLOGY ,SHIFT systems ,EARLY detection of cancer ,TECHNOLOGY ,CANCER prognosis - Abstract
The field of precision oncology is rapidly progressing toward integrated "multiomics" analysis of multiple molecular species (such as DNA, RNA, or proteins) to provide a more complete profile of tumor heterogeneity. Micro/nanomaterial‐based systems, which leverage the unique properties of miniature materials, are currently well positioned to expand beyond rudimentary biomarker detection toward multiomics signature analysis. To enable clinical translation, the rational design and implementation of miniaturized systems should be driven by the unique clinical challenges present at various crucial cancer stages. This review features micro/nanomaterial‐based systems that are robustly tested on real patient samples for molecular biomarker detection at i) initial cancer screening and/or diagnosis, ii) cancer prognosis and risk stratification, and iii) longitudinal treatment/recurrence monitoring. Furthermore, this review discusses the use of micro/nanomaterials to facilitate sample preparation for different molecular biomarker species. Finally, this review deliberates on the recent paradigm shift of micro/nanomaterial‐based system innovation toward integrated multiomics cancer signature analysis and puts forth insights and perspectives on existing challenges. It is anticipated that this review could stimulate the propagation of new concepts and approaches to kick‐start a new generation of clinically translational technologies that capitalize on multiomics cancer signatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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49. The Growing Impact of Micro/Nanomaterial‐Based Systems in Precision Oncology: Translating "Multiomics" Technologies.
- Author
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Li, Junrong, Wuethrich, Alain, Dey, Shuvashi, Lane, Rebecca E., Sina, Abu A. I., Wang, Jing, Wang, Yuling, Puttick, Simon, Koo, Kevin M., and Trau, Matt
- Subjects
CANCER prognosis ,DISEASE risk factors ,BIOMARKERS ,ONCOLOGY ,TUMOR classification ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
The field of precision oncology is rapidly progressing toward integrated "multiomics" analysis of multiple molecular species (such as DNA, RNA, or proteins) to provide a more complete profile of tumor heterogeneity. Micro/nanomaterial‐based systems, which leverage the unique properties of miniature materials, are currently well positioned to expand beyond rudimentary biomarker detection toward multiomics signature analysis. To enable clinical translation, the rational design and implementation of miniaturized systems should be driven by the unique clinical challenges present at various crucial cancer stages. This review features micro/nanomaterial‐based systems that are robustly tested on real patient samples for molecular biomarker detection at i) initial cancer screening and/or diagnosis, ii) cancer prognosis and risk stratification, and iii) longitudinal treatment/recurrence monitoring. Furthermore, this review discusses the use of micro/nanomaterials to facilitate sample preparation for different molecular biomarker species. Finally, this review deliberates on the recent paradigm shift of micro/nanomaterial‐based system innovation toward integrated multiomics cancer signature analysis and puts forth insights and perspectives on existing challenges. It is anticipated that this review could stimulate the propagation of new concepts and approaches to kick‐start a new generation of clinically translational technologies that capitalize on multiomics cancer signatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Integrated Real-Time Digital Measurement During Ureteroscopic Procedures for Nephrolithiasis: A Workflow Feasibility Study.
- Author
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Koo, Kevin, Aro, Tareq, Becker, Russell E.N., Lim, Sunghwan, Winoker, Jared S., Petrisor, Doru, Stoianovici, Dan, and Matlaga, Brian R.
- Subjects
URETEROSCOPY ,SURGICAL complications ,KIDNEY stones ,FEASIBILITY studies ,WORKFLOW ,LASER lithotripsy ,APPLICATION software - Abstract
Introduction: Accurate estimation of stone fragment size during ureteroscopic lithotripsy procedures facilitates operative efficiency and predicts the safety of fragment extraction or spontaneous passage. Using a novel stone measurement software application, this study assesses the feasibility of performing integrated real-time digital stone measurement during ureteroscopy. Methods: This workflow feasibility study was conducted in two phases. First, in the ex vivo simulation, mock stone fragments were placed in a renal collecting system training model. A basket extraction task was performed using a digital ureteroscope, with and without digital stone measurement. The time required to perform the tasks was recorded and compared. Second, in the in vivo workflow trial, adult patients undergoing ureteroscopic stone procedures were prospectively enrolled. Intraoperative measurements of stone fragments were performed to determine the time required to complete the measurements. Technical failures and perioperative complications were recorded. Results: In the ex vivo simulation, 20 mock stones mimicking varied fragmentation conditions were tested in the training model. The mean completion time of the basketing task without vs with digital stone measurement was 16.5 seconds (range 10.2–33.7) vs 38.9 seconds (range 27.2–60.0). Mean additional time required to measure stones was 22.3 seconds (range 8.4–42.7). In the in vivo workflow trial, nine patients undergoing ureteroscopy were enrolled. A median of five fragments (range 3–10) were measured in each patient. Mean completion time for each measurement was 10.1 seconds (range 8.2–12.8). Mean total time required to perform digital measurement per procedure was 50.8 seconds (range 25.9–99.0). No technical failures or clinical complications were observed. Conclusions: Integrating real-time digital stone measurement during ureteroscopy is safe and feasible. The findings support clinical trials of digital stone measurement to enhance intraoperative decision-making during ureteroscopy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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