531 results on '"Apers, S."'
Search Results
2. Chromatographic fingerprinting as a strategy to identify regulated plants in illegal herbal supplements
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Custers, D., Van Praag, N., Courselle, P., Apers, S., and Deconinck, E.
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- 2017
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3. Chromatographic impurity fingerprinting of genuine and counterfeit Cialis® as a means to compare the discriminating ability of PDA and MS detection
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Custers, D., Krakowska, B., De Beer, J.O., Courselle, P., Daszykowski, M., Apers, S., and Deconinck, E.
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- 2016
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4. The Relation between Patient-Centered Care and Quality of Life in Women with Endometriosis.
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Schreurs, A.M.F., Dancet, E.A.F., Apers, S., Kuchenbecker, W. K. H., Ven, P.M. van de, Maas, J.W.M., Lambalk, C.B., Nelen, W.L.D.M., Houwen, L.E.E. van der, Mijatovic, V, Schreurs, A.M.F., Dancet, E.A.F., Apers, S., Kuchenbecker, W. K. H., Ven, P.M. van de, Maas, J.W.M., Lambalk, C.B., Nelen, W.L.D.M., Houwen, L.E.E. van der, and Mijatovic, V
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 296142.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to examine the hypothesis that experiences with patient-centered endometriosis care are related to the endometriosis-specific quality of life dimensions "emotional well-being" and "social support." DESIGN: A secondary regression analysis of two cross-sectional studies was conducted. Participants/Materials: In total, data from 300 women were eligible for analysis. The participating women all had surgically proven endometriosis. SETTING: The study was conducted in one secondary and two tertiary endometriosis clinics in the Netherlands. Questionnaires were disseminated between 2011 and 2016. METHODS: Both included studies investigated patient-centeredness of endometriosis care and endometriosis-specific quality of life using, respectively, the ENDOCARE questionnaire (ECQ) and the Endometriosis Health Profile 30 (EHP-30). To increase power, the regression analysis focused on the previously found relation between the ten dimensions of the ECQ and the EHP-30 domains "emotional well-being" and "social support" rather than all five EHP-30 domains. After the Bonferroni correction to limit type 1 errors, the adjusted p value was 0.003 (0.05/20). RESULTS: The participating women had a mean age of 35.7 years and had predominantly been diagnosed with moderate to severe endometriosis. None of the relations between patient-centered endometriosis care and the EHP-30 domain "emotional well-being" were significant. Three dimensions of patient-centered endometriosis care proved to be significantly related to the EHP-30 domain "social support": "information, communication, and education" (p < 0.001, beta = 0.436), "coordination and integration of care" (p = 0.001, beta = 0.307), and "emotional support and alleviation of fear and anxiety" (p = 0.002, beta = 0.259). LIMITATIONS: This cross-sectional study identified relations rather than proving causality between experiencing less patient-centeredness of care and having lower quality of life.
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- 2023
5. Headspace–gas chromatographic fingerprints to discriminate and classify counterfeit medicines
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Custers, D., Canfyn, M., Courselle, P., De Beer, J.O., Apers, S., and Deconinck, E.
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- 2014
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6. Perceived health is partially associated with the symptomatological profile in patients with benign and severe conditions: the case of congenital heart disease
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Schoormans, D., Sprangers, M. A. G., Budts, W., Mulder, B. J. M., Apers, S., and Moons, P.
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- 2013
7. Single Run HPLC Separation of Escins Ia and IIa by Means of a Waters Symmetry Shield C8 Column
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Apers, S., Pieters, L., Vlietinck, A., Vercruysse, A., Foriers, A., Oleszek, Wieslaw, editor, and Marston, Andrew, editor
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- 2000
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8. Tropical peatland hydrology simulated with a global land surface model
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Apers, S., De Lannoy, G.J.M., Baird, A.J., Cobb, A.R., Dargie, G.C., del Aguila Pasquel, J., Gruber, A., Hastie, A., Hidayat, H., Hirano, T., Hoyt, A.M., Jovani‐Sancho, A.J., Katimon, A., Kurnain, A., Koster, R.D., Lampela, M., Mahanama, S.P.P., Melling, L., Page, S.E., Reichle, R.H., Taufik, M., Vanderborght, J., Bechtold, M., Apers, S., De Lannoy, G.J.M., Baird, A.J., Cobb, A.R., Dargie, G.C., del Aguila Pasquel, J., Gruber, A., Hastie, A., Hidayat, H., Hirano, T., Hoyt, A.M., Jovani‐Sancho, A.J., Katimon, A., Kurnain, A., Koster, R.D., Lampela, M., Mahanama, S.P.P., Melling, L., Page, S.E., Reichle, R.H., Taufik, M., Vanderborght, J., and Bechtold, M.
- Abstract
Tropical peatlands are among the most carbon-dense ecosystems on Earth, and their water storage dynamics strongly control these carbon stocks. The hydrological functioning of tropical peatlands differs from that of northern peatlands, which has not yet been accounted for in global land surface models (LSMs). Here, we integrated tropical peat-specific hydrology modules into a global LSM for the first time, by utilizing the peatland-specific model structure adaptation (PEATCLSM) of the NASA Catchment Land Surface Model (CLSM). We developed literature-based parameter sets for natural (PEATCLSMTrop,Nat) and drained (PEATCLSMTrop,Drain) tropical peatlands. Simulations with PEATCLSMTrop,Nat were compared against those with the default CLSM version and the northern version of PEATCLSM (PEATCLSMNorth,Nat) with tropical vegetation input. All simulations were forced with global meteorological reanalysis input data for the major tropical peatland regions in Central and South America, the Congo Basin, and Southeast Asia. The evaluation against a unique and extensive data set of in situ water level and eddy covariance-derived evapotranspiration showed an overall improvement in bias and correlation compared to the default CLSM version. Over Southeast Asia, an additional simulation with PEATCLSMTrop,Drain was run to address the large fraction of drained tropical peatlands in this region. PEATCLSMTrop,Drain outperformed CLSM, PEATCLSMNorth,Nat, and PEATCLSMTrop,Nat over drained sites. Despite the overall improvements of PEATCLSMTrop,Nat over CLSM, there are strong differences in performance between the three study regions. We attribute these performance differences to regional differences in accuracy of meteorological forcing data, and differences in peatland hydrologic response that are not yet captured by our model.
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- 2022
9. Heart Failure and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease from 15 Countries.
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Lu, C-W, Wang, J-K, Yang, H-L, Kovacs, AH, Luyckx, K, Ruperti-Repilado, FJ, Van De Bruaene, A, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Apers, S, Moons, P, APPROACH‐IS consortium, the International Society for Adult Congenital Heart Disease (ISACHD) *, Lu, C-W, Wang, J-K, Yang, H-L, Kovacs, AH, Luyckx, K, Ruperti-Repilado, FJ, Van De Bruaene, A, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Apers, S, Moons, P, and APPROACH‐IS consortium, the International Society for Adult Congenital Heart Disease (ISACHD) *
- Abstract
Background Heart failure (HF) is the leading cause of mortality and associated with significant morbidity in adults with congenital heart disease. We sought to assess the association between HF and patient-report outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease. Methods and Results As part of the APPROACH-IS (Assessment of Patterns of Patient-Reported Outcomes in Adults with Congenital Heart disease-International Study), we collected data on HF status and patient-reported outcomes in 3959 patients from 15 countries across 5 continents. Patient-report outcomes were: perceived health status (12-item Short Form Health Survey), quality of life (Linear Analogue Scale and Satisfaction with Life Scale), sense of coherence-13, psychological distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), and illness perception (Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire). In this sample, 137 (3.5%) had HF at the time of investigation, 298 (7.5%) had a history of HF, and 3524 (89.0%) had no current or past episode of HF. Patients with current or past HF were older and had a higher prevalence of complex congenital heart disease, arrhythmias, implantable cardioverter-defibrillators, other clinical comorbidities, and mood disorders than those who never had HF. Patients with HF had worse physical functioning, mental functioning, quality of life, satisfaction with life, sense of coherence, depressive symptoms, and illness perception scores. Magnitudes of differences were large for physical functioning and illness perception and moderate for mental functioning, quality of life, and depressive symptoms. Conclusions HF in adults with congenital heart disease is associated with poorer patient-reported outcomes, with large effect sizes for physical functioning and illness perception. Registration URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT02150603.
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- 2022
10. Finding the KT Partition of a Weighted Graph in Near-Linear Time
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Apers, S, Gawrychowski, P, Lee, T, Apers, S, Gawrychowski, P, and Lee, T
- Abstract
In a breakthrough work Kawarabayashi and Thorup J ACM 19 gave a near linear time deterministic algorithm to compute the weight of a minimum cut in a simple graph G V E A key component of this algorithm is finding the 1 KT partition of G the coarsest partition P1 Pk of V such that for every non trivial 1 near minimum cut with sides S S it holds that Pi is contained in either S or S for i 1 k In this work we give a near linear time randomized algorithm to find the 1 KT partition of a weighted graph Our algorithm is quite different from that of Kawarabayashi and Thorup and builds on Karger s framework of tree respecting cuts J ACM 00 We describe a number of applications of the algorithm i The algorithm makes progress towards a more efficient algorithm for constructing the polygon representation of the set of near minimum cuts in a graph This is a generalization of the cactus representation and was initially described by Bencz r FOCS 95 ii We improve the time complexity of a recent quantum algorithm for minimum cut in a simple graph in the adjacency list model from Oe n3 2 to Oe mn when the graph has n vertices and m edges iii We describe a new type of randomized algorithm for minimum cut in simple graphs with complexity O m nlog6 n For graphs that are not too sparse this matches the complexity of the current best O m nlog2 n algorithm which uses a different approach based on random contractions The key technical contribution of our work is the following Given a weighted graph G with m edges and a spanning tree T of G consider the graph H whose nodes are the edges of T and where there is an edge between two nodes of H iff the corresponding 2 respecting cut of T is a non trivial near minimum cut of G We give a O mlog4 n time deterministic algorithm to compute a spanning forest of H Simon Apers Pawe Gawrychowski and Troy Lee
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- 2022
11. Cut Query Algorithms with Star Contraction
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Apers, S, Efron, Y, Gawrychowski, P, Lee, T, Mukhopadhyay, S, Nanongkai, D, Apers, S, Efron, Y, Gawrychowski, P, Lee, T, Mukhopadhyay, S, and Nanongkai, D
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- 2022
12. Classification models for neocryptolepine derivatives as inhibitors of the β-haematin formation
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Dejaegher, B., Dhooghe, L., Goodarzi, M., Apers, S., Pieters, L., and Vander Heyden, Y.
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- 2011
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13. P-334 Are measurements of patient-centeredness of endometriosis care and quality of life in women with endometriosis associated?
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Van der Houwen, L, primary, Schreurs, A, additional, Dancet, E, additional, Apers, S, additional, Kuchenbecker, W, additional, Van de Ven, P, additional, Maas, J, additional, Lambalk, C, additional, Nelen, W, additional, and Mijatovic, V, additional
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- 2022
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14. Rapid quantification of 14 saponins of Maesa lanceolata by UPLC–MS/MS
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Foubert, K., Cuyckens, F., Vleeschouwer, K., Theunis, M., Vlietinck, A., Pieters, L., and Apers, S.
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- 2010
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15. Tropical Peatland Hydrology Simulated With a Global Land Surface Model
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Apers, S., primary, De Lannoy, G. J. M., additional, Baird, A. J., additional, Cobb, A. R., additional, Dargie, G. C., additional, del Aguila Pasquel, J., additional, Gruber, A., additional, Hastie, A., additional, Hidayat, H., additional, Hirano, T., additional, Hoyt, A. M., additional, Jovani‐Sancho, A. J., additional, Katimon, A., additional, Kurnain, A., additional, Koster, R. D., additional, Lampela, M., additional, Mahanama, S. P. P., additional, Melling, L., additional, Page, S. E., additional, Reichle, R. H., additional, Taufik, M., additional, Vanderborght, J., additional, and Bechtold, M., additional
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- 2022
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16. ATR-FTIR spectroscopy and chemometrics: An interesting tool to discriminate and characterize counterfeit medicines
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Custers, D., Cauwenbergh, T., Bothy, J. L., Courselle, P., De Beer, J. O., Apers, S., and Deconinck, E.
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- 2015
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17. Development and validation of an HPLC-method for the determination of alkaloids in the stem bark extract of Nauclea pobeguinii
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Dhooghe, L., Mesia, K., Kohtala, E., Tona, L., Pieters, L., Vlietinck, A.J., and Apers, S.
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- 2008
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18. A sublinear time quantum algorithm for s-t minimum cut on dense simple graphs
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Apers, S, Auza, A, and Lee, T
- Subjects
FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Quantum Physics ,Computer Science - Computational Complexity ,Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Data Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS) ,Computational Complexity (cs.CC) ,Quantum Physics (quant-ph) ,MathematicsofComputing_DISCRETEMATHEMATICS - Abstract
An $s{\operatorname{-}}t$ minimum cut in a graph corresponds to a minimum weight subset of edges whose removal disconnects vertices $s$ and $t$. Finding such a cut is a classic problem that is dual to that of finding a maximum flow from $s$ to $t$. In this work we describe a quantum algorithm for the minimum $s{\operatorname{-}}t$ cut problem on undirected graphs. For an undirected graph with $n$ vertices, $m$ edges, and integral edge weights bounded by $W$, the algorithm computes with high probability the weight of a minimum $s{\operatorname{-}}t$ cut in time $\widetilde O(\sqrt{m} n^{5/6} W^{1/3} + n^{5/3} W^{2/3})$, given adjacency list access to $G$. For simple graphs this bound is always $\widetilde O(n^{11/6})$, even in the dense case when $m = \Omega(n^2)$. In contrast, a randomized algorithm must make $\Omega(m)$ queries to the adjacency list of a simple graph $G$ even to decide whether $s$ and $t$ are connected.
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- 2021
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19. O-168 Chronic pelvic pain is the most troublesome endometriosis pain symptom for women’s quality of life
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Pijpops, P, primary, Apers, S, additional, Meuleman, C, additional, Tomassetti, C, additional, and Dancet, E, additional
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- 2021
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20. Finding the KT partition of a weighted graph in near-linear time
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Apers, S, Gawrychowski, P, Lee, T, Apers, S, Gawrychowski, P, and Lee, T
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- 2021
21. Quantum complexity of minimum cut
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Apers, S, Lee, T, Apers, S, and Lee, T
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- 2021
22. Sense of coherence in adults with congenital heart disease in 15 countries: Patient characteristics, cultural dimensions and quality of life.
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Moons P., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Wang J.-K., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Oechslin E., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Luyckx K., Moons P., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Wang J.-K., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Oechslin E., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., and Luyckx K.
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have found that sense of coherence (SOC) is positively related to quality of life (QoL) in persons with chronic conditions. In congenital heart disease (CHD), the evidence is scant. Aim(s): We investigated (i) intercountry variation in SOC in a large international sample of adults with CHD; (ii) the relationship between demographic and clinical characteristics and SOC; (iii) the relationship between cultural dimensions of countries and SOC; and (iv) variation in relative importance of SOC in explaining QoL across the countries. Method(s): APPROACH-IS was a cross-sectional, observational study, with 4028 patients from 15 countries enrolled. SOC was measured using the 13-item SOC scale (range 13-91) and QoL was assessed by a linear analog scale (range 0-100). Result(s): The mean SOC score was 65.5+/-13.2. Large intercountry variation was observed with the strongest SOC in Switzerland (68.8+/-11.1) and the lowest SOC in Japan (59.9+/-14.5). A lower SOC was associated with a younger age; lower educational level; with job seeking, being unemployed or disabled; unmarried, divorced or widowed; from a worse functional class; and simple CHD. Power distance index and individualism vs collectivism were cultural dimensions significantly related to SOC. SOC was positively associated with QoL in all participating countries and in the total sample, with an explained variance ranging from 5.8% in Argentina to 30.4% in Japan. Conclusion(s): In adults with CHD, SOC is positively associated with QoL. The implementation of SOC-enhancing interventions might improve QoL, but strategies would likely differ across countries given the substantial variation in explained variance.Copyright © 2020 Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021
23. Atrial arrhythmias and patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease: An international study.
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Enomoto J., Casteigt B., Samuel M., Laplante L., Shohoudi A., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Brouillette J., Moons P., Khairy P., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Enomoto J., Casteigt B., Samuel M., Laplante L., Shohoudi A., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Brouillette J., Moons P., Khairy P., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., and Dellborg M.
- Abstract
Background: Atrial arrhythmias (ie, intra-atrial reentrant tachycardia and atrial fibrillation) are a leading cause of morbidity and hospitalization in adults with congenital heart disease (CHD). Little is known about their effect on quality of life and other patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in adults with CHD. Objective(s): The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of atrial arrhythmias on PROs in adults with CHD and explore geographic variations. Method(s): Associations between atrial arrhythmias and PROs were assessed in a cross-sectional study of adults with CHD from 15 countries spanning 5 continents. A propensity-based matching weight analysis was performed to compare quality of life, perceived health status, psychological distress, sense of coherence, and illness perception in patients with and those without atrial arrhythmias. Result(s): A total of 4028 adults with CHD were enrolled, 707 (17.6%) of whom had atrial arrhythmias. After applying matching weights, patients with and those without atrial arrhythmias were comparable with regard to age (mean 40.1 vs 40.2 years), demographic variables (52.5% vs 52.2% women), and complexity of CHD (15.9% simple, 44.8% moderate, and 39.2% complex in both groups). Patients with atrial arrhythmias had significantly worse PRO scores with respect to quality of life, perceived health status, psychological distress (ie, depression), and illness perception. A summary score that combines all PRO measures was significantly lower in patients with atrial arrhythmias (-3.3%; P = .0006). Differences in PROs were consistent across geographic regions. Conclusion(s): Atrial arrhythmias in adults with CHD are associated with an adverse impact on a broad range of PROs consistently across various geographic regions.Copyright © 2020 Heart Rhythm Society
- Published
- 2021
24. Phenotypes of adults with congenital heart disease around the globe: a cluster analysis.
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Budts W., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Kutty S., Moons P., Callus E., Pagliuca S., Boveri S., Ambrogi F., Luyckx K., Kovacs A.H., Apers S., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Wang J.-K., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Budts W., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Kutty S., Moons P., Callus E., Pagliuca S., Boveri S., Ambrogi F., Luyckx K., Kovacs A.H., Apers S., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Wang J.-K., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., and Alday L.
- Abstract
Objective: To derive cluster analysis-based groupings for adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) when it comes to perceived health, psychological functioning, health behaviours and quality of life (QoL). Method(s): This study was part of a larger worldwide multicentre study called APPROACH-IS; a cross sectional study which recruited 4028 patients (2013-2015) from 15 participating countries. A hierarchical cluster analysis was performed using Ward's method in order to group patients with similar psychological characteristics, which were defined by taking into consideration the scores of the following tests: Sense Of Coherence, Health Behavior Scale (physical exercise score), Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, Illness Perception Questionnaire, Satisfaction with Life Scale and the Visual Analogue Scale scores of the EQ-5D perceived health scale and a linear analogue scale (0-100) measuring QoL. Result(s): 3768 patients with complete data were divided into 3 clusters. The first and second clusters represented 89.6% of patients in the analysis who reported a good health perception, QoL, psychological functioning and the greatest amount of exercise. Patients in the third cluster reported substantially lower scores in all PROs. This cluster was characterised by a significantly higher proportion of females, a higher average age the lowest education level, more complex forms of congenital heart disease and more medical comorbidities. Conclusion(s): This study suggests that certain demographic and clinical characteristics may be linked to less favourable health perception, quality of life, psychological functioning, and health behaviours in ACHD. This information may be used to improve psychosocial screening and the timely provision of psychosocial care.Copyright © 2021, The Author(s).
- Published
- 2021
25. Physical Functioning, Mental Health, and Quality of Life in Different Congenital Heart Defects: Comparative Analysis in 3538 Patients From 15 Countries.
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Moons P., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Ombelet F., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Moons P., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Ombelet F., Apers S., and Kovacs A.H.
- Abstract
Background: We compared physical functioning, mental health, and quality of life (QoL) of patients with different subtypes of congenital heart disease (CHD) in a large international sample and investigated the role of functional class in explaining the variance in outcomes across heart defects. Method(s): In the cross-sectional Assessment of Patterns of Patient-Reported Outcome in Adults with Congenital Heart Disease-International Study (APPROACH-IS), we enrolled 4028 adult patients with CHD from 15 countries. Diagnostic groups with at least 50 patients were included in these analyses, yielding a sample of 3538 patients (median age: 32 years; 52% women). Physical functioning, mental health, and QoL were measured with the SF-12 health status survey, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), linear analog scale (LAS) and Satisfaction with Life Scale, respectively. Functional class was assessed using the patient-reported New York Heart Association (NYHA) class. Multivariable general linear mixed models were applied to assess the relationship between the type of CHD and patient-reported outcomes, adjusted for patient characteristics, and with country as random effect. Result(s): Patients with coarctation of the aorta and those with isolated aortic valve disease reported the best physical functioning, mental health, and QoL. Patients with cyanotic heart disease or Eisenmenger syndrome had worst outcomes. The differences were statistically significant, above and beyond other patient characteristics. However, the explained variances were small (0.6% to 4.1%) and decreased further when functional status was added to the models (0.4% to 0.9%). Conclusion(s): Some types of CHD predict worse patient-reported outcomes. However, it appears that it is the functional status associated with the heart defect rather than the heart defect itself that shapes the outcomes.Copyright © 2020 The Authors
- Published
- 2021
26. Patient-Reported Outcomes in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease Following Hospitalization (from APPROACH-IS).
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Wang J.-K., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Chidambarathanu S., Moons P., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Cook S.C., Sluman M.A., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Alday L., Oechslin E., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Wang J.-K., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Chidambarathanu S., Moons P., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Cook S.C., Sluman M.A., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Alday L., Oechslin E., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., and Berghammer M.
- Abstract
In this international study, we (1) compared patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) who had versus had not been hospitalized during the previous 12 month, (2) contrasted PROs in patients who had been hospitalized for cardiac surgery versus nonsurgical reasons, (3) assessed the magnitude of differences between the groups (i.e., effect sizes), and (4) explored differential effect sizes between countries. APPROACH-IS was a cross-sectional, observational study that enrolled 4,028 patients from 15 countries (median age 32 years; 53% females). Self-report questionnaires were administered to measure PROs: health status; anxiety and depression; and quality of life. Overall, 668 patients (17%) had been hospitalized in the previous 12 months. These patients reported poorer outcomes on all PROs, with the exception of anxiety. Patients who underwent cardiac surgery demonstrated a better quality of life compared with those who were hospitalized for nonsurgical reasons. For significant differences, the effect sizes were small, whereas they were negligible in nonsignificant comparisons. Substantial intercountry differences were observed. For various PROs, moderate to large effect sizes were found comparing different countries. In conclusion, adults with CHD who had undergone hospitalization in the previous year had poorer PROs than those who were medically stable. Researchers ought to account for the timing of recruitment when conducting PRO research as hospitalization can impact results.Copyright © 2021 The Author(s)
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- 2021
27. Atrial arrhythmias and patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease: An international study
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Casteigt, B, Samuel, M, Laplante, L, Shohoudi, A, Apers, S, Kovacs, AH, Luyckx, K, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Lu, C-W, Jackson, JL, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Brouillette, J, Moons, P, Khairy, P, Casteigt, B, Samuel, M, Laplante, L, Shohoudi, A, Apers, S, Kovacs, AH, Luyckx, K, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Lu, C-W, Jackson, JL, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Brouillette, J, Moons, P, and Khairy, P
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Atrial arrhythmias (ie, intra-atrial reentrant tachycardia and atrial fibrillation) are a leading cause of morbidity and hospitalization in adults with congenital heart disease (CHD). Little is known about their effect on quality of life and other patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in adults with CHD. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of atrial arrhythmias on PROs in adults with CHD and explore geographic variations. METHODS: Associations between atrial arrhythmias and PROs were assessed in a cross-sectional study of adults with CHD from 15 countries spanning 5 continents. A propensity-based matching weight analysis was performed to compare quality of life, perceived health status, psychological distress, sense of coherence, and illness perception in patients with and those without atrial arrhythmias. RESULTS: A total of 4028 adults with CHD were enrolled, 707 (17.6%) of whom had atrial arrhythmias. After applying matching weights, patients with and those without atrial arrhythmias were comparable with regard to age (mean 40.1 vs 40.2 years), demographic variables (52.5% vs 52.2% women), and complexity of CHD (15.9% simple, 44.8% moderate, and 39.2% complex in both groups). Patients with atrial arrhythmias had significantly worse PRO scores with respect to quality of life, perceived health status, psychological distress (ie, depression), and illness perception. A summary score that combines all PRO measures was significantly lower in patients with atrial arrhythmias (-3.3%; P = .0006). Differences in PROs were consistent across geographic regions. CONCLUSION: Atrial arrhythmias in adults with CHD are associated with an adverse impact on a broad range of PROs consistently across various geographic regions.
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- 2021
28. Pain in adults with congenital heart disease - An international perspective
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Leibold, A, Eichler, E, Chung, S, Moons, P, Kovacs, AH, Luyckx, K, Apers, S, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Fernandes, SM, Leibold, A, Eichler, E, Chung, S, Moons, P, Kovacs, AH, Luyckx, K, Apers, S, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, and Fernandes, SM
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- 2021
29. Physical Functioning, Mental Health, and Quality of Life in Different Congenital Heart Defects: Comparative Analysis in 3538 Patients From 15 Countries
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Moons, P, Luyckx, K, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Lu, C-W, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Ombelet, F, Apers, S, Kovacs, AH, Moons, P, Luyckx, K, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Lu, C-W, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Ombelet, F, Apers, S, and Kovacs, AH
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: We compared physical functioning, mental health, and quality of life (QoL) of patients with different subtypes of congenital heart disease (CHD) in a large international sample and investigated the role of functional class in explaining the variance in outcomes across heart defects. METHODS: In the cross-sectional Assessment of Patterns of Patient-Reported Outcome in Adults with Congenital Heart Disease-International Study (APPROACH-IS), we enrolled 4028 adult patients with CHD from 15 countries. Diagnostic groups with at least 50 patients were included in these analyses, yielding a sample of 3538 patients (median age: 32 years; 52% women). Physical functioning, mental health, and QoL were measured with the SF-12 health status survey, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), linear analog scale (LAS) and Satisfaction with Life Scale, respectively. Functional class was assessed using the patient-reported New York Heart Association (NYHA) class. Multivariable general linear mixed models were applied to assess the relationship between the type of CHD and patient-reported outcomes, adjusted for patient characteristics, and with country as random effect. RESULTS: Patients with coarctation of the aorta and those with isolated aortic valve disease reported the best physical functioning, mental health, and QoL. Patients with cyanotic heart disease or Eisenmenger syndrome had worst outcomes. The differences were statistically significant, above and beyond other patient characteristics. However, the explained variances were small (0.6% to 4.1%) and decreased further when functional status was added to the models (0.4% to 0.9%). CONCLUSIONS: Some types of CHD predict worse patient-reported outcomes. However, it appears that it is the functional status associated with the heart defect rather than the heart defect itself that shapes the outcomes.
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- 2021
30. Phenotypes of adults with congenital heart disease around the globe: a cluster analysis
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Callus, E, Pagliuca, S, Boveri, S, Ambrogi, F, Luyckx, K, Kovacs, AH, Apers, S, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Kutty, S, Moons, P, Callus, E, Pagliuca, S, Boveri, S, Ambrogi, F, Luyckx, K, Kovacs, AH, Apers, S, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Kutty, S, and Moons, P
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To derive cluster analysis-based groupings for adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) when it comes to perceived health, psychological functioning, health behaviours and quality of life (QoL). METHODS: This study was part of a larger worldwide multicentre study called APPROACH-IS; a cross sectional study which recruited 4028 patients (2013-2015) from 15 participating countries. A hierarchical cluster analysis was performed using Ward's method in order to group patients with similar psychological characteristics, which were defined by taking into consideration the scores of the following tests: Sense Of Coherence, Health Behavior Scale (physical exercise score), Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale, Illness Perception Questionnaire, Satisfaction with Life Scale and the Visual Analogue Scale scores of the EQ-5D perceived health scale and a linear analogue scale (0-100) measuring QoL. RESULTS: 3768 patients with complete data were divided into 3 clusters. The first and second clusters represented 89.6% of patients in the analysis who reported a good health perception, QoL, psychological functioning and the greatest amount of exercise. Patients in the third cluster reported substantially lower scores in all PROs. This cluster was characterised by a significantly higher proportion of females, a higher average age the lowest education level, more complex forms of congenital heart disease and more medical comorbidities. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that certain demographic and clinical characteristics may be linked to less favourable health perception, quality of life, psychological functioning, and health behaviours in ACHD. This information may be used to improve psychosocial screening and the timely provision of psychosocial care.
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- 2021
31. Sense of coherence in adults with congenital heart disease in 15 countries: Patient characteristics, cultural dimensions and quality of life
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Moons, P, Apers, S, Kovacs, AH, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Luyckx, K, Moons, P, Apers, S, Kovacs, AH, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, and Luyckx, K
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous studies have found that sense of coherence (SOC) is positively related to quality of life (QoL) in persons with chronic conditions. In congenital heart disease (CHD), the evidence is scant. AIMS: We investigated (i) intercountry variation in SOC in a large international sample of adults with CHD; (ii) the relationship between demographic and clinical characteristics and SOC; (iii) the relationship between cultural dimensions of countries and SOC; and (iv) variation in relative importance of SOC in explaining QoL across the countries. METHODS: APPROACH-IS was a cross-sectional, observational study, with 4028 patients from 15 countries enrolled. SOC was measured using the 13-item SOC scale (range 13-91) and QoL was assessed by a linear analog scale (range 0-100). RESULTS: The mean SOC score was 65.5±13.2. Large intercountry variation was observed with the strongest SOC in Switzerland (68.8±11.1) and the lowest SOC in Japan (59.9±14.5). A lower SOC was associated with a younger age; lower educational level; with job seeking, being unemployed or disabled; unmarried, divorced or widowed; from a worse functional class; and simple CHD. Power distance index and individualism vs collectivism were cultural dimensions significantly related to SOC. SOC was positively associated with QoL in all participating countries and in the total sample, with an explained variance ranging from 5.8% in Argentina to 30.4% in Japan. CONCLUSION: In adults with CHD, SOC is positively associated with QoL. The implementation of SOC-enhancing interventions might improve QoL, but strategies would likely differ across countries given the substantial variation in explained variance.
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- 2021
32. Patient-Reported Outcomes in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease Following Hospitalization (from APPROACH-IS)
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Moons, P, Luyckx, K, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Apers, S, Kovacs, AH, Moons, P, Luyckx, K, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Wang, J-K, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Oechslin, E, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Apers, S, and Kovacs, AH
- Abstract
In this international study, we (1) compared patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) who had versus had not been hospitalized during the previous 12 month, (2) contrasted PROs in patients who had been hospitalized for cardiac surgery versus nonsurgical reasons, (3) assessed the magnitude of differences between the groups (i.e., effect sizes), and (4) explored differential effect sizes between countries. APPROACH-IS was a cross-sectional, observational study that enrolled 4,028 patients from 15 countries (median age 32 years; 53% females). Self-report questionnaires were administered to measure PROs: health status; anxiety and depression; and quality of life. Overall, 668 patients (17%) had been hospitalized in the previous 12 months. These patients reported poorer outcomes on all PROs, with the exception of anxiety. Patients who underwent cardiac surgery demonstrated a better quality of life compared with those who were hospitalized for nonsurgical reasons. For significant differences, the effect sizes were small, whereas they were negligible in nonsignificant comparisons. Substantial intercountry differences were observed. For various PROs, moderate to large effect sizes were found comparing different countries. In conclusion, adults with CHD who had undergone hospitalization in the previous year had poorer PROs than those who were medically stable. Researchers ought to account for the timing of recruitment when conducting PRO research as hospitalization can impact results.
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- 2021
33. Lignans and neolignans as lead compounds
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Apers, S., Vlietinck, A., and Pieters, L.
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- 2003
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34. Antihyperglycemic Activity of Extracts from Boldoa purpurascens Leaves in Alloxan-Induced Diabetic Rats
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González Mosquera, D. M., Ortega, Hernandez Y., By, B., Muro, Vicet L., Hernandez, Saucedo Y., Ábalos, Grau R., Dehaen, W., Pieters, L., and Apers, S.
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- 2013
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35. Antiviral activity of Rwandan medicinal plants against human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1)
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Cos, P., Hermans, N., De Bruyne, T., Apers, S., Sindambiwe, J.B., Witvrouw, M., De Clercq, E., Berghe, D. Vanden, Pieters, L., and Vlietinck, A.J.
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Summary Selected plants used in Rwandan traditional medicine for the treatment of infections and/or rheumatoid diseases were investigated for antiviral activity in vitro against human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1). Of [...]
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- 2002
36. Complement modulating activity of Rwandan medicinal plants
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Cos, P., Hermans, N., Van Poel, B., De Bruyne, T., Apers, S., Sindambiwe, J.B., Berghe, D. Vanden, Pieters, L., and Vlietinck, A.J.
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Summary Forty-two ethanolic extracts of thirty-six Rwandan medicinal plants were investigated for their influence on complement-mediated hemolysis. The plants were selected on the base of their ethnomedicinal use in infections [...]
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- 2002
37. The ENDOCARE questionnaire guides European endometriosis clinics to improve the patient-centeredness of their care
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Dancet, E.A.F., Apers, S., Kluivers, K.B., Kremer, J.A.M., Sermeus, W., Devriendt, C., Nelen, W.L.D.M., and DʼHooghe, T.M.
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- 2012
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38. Quality management to improve the patient-centeredness of endometriosis care in European clinics: O-172
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Dancet, E. A.F., Apers, S., Kluivers, K., Kremer, J. A.M., Sermeus, W., Nelen, W. L.D.M., and DʼHooghe, T. M.
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- 2012
39. PLGA nanoparticles loaded with the antileishmanial saponin β-aescin: Factor influence study and in vitro efficacy evaluation
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Van de Ven, H., Vermeersch, M., Matheeussen, A., Vandervoort, J., Weyenberg, W., Apers, S., Cos, P., Maes, L., and Ludwig, A.
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- 2011
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40. The stepwise development of an interactive web-based sex education programme for subfertile couples: the Pleasure & Pregnancy programme
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Dreischor, F, primary, Laan, E T M, additional, Apers, S, additional, Repping, S, additional, van Lunsen, R H W, additional, Lambalk, C B, additional, D’ Hooghe, T M, additional, Goddijn, M, additional, Custers, I M, additional, and Dancet, E A F, additional
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- 2020
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41. UPLC-MS/MS-based molecular networking and NMR structural determination for the untargeted phytochemical characterization of the fruit of Crescentia cujete (Bignoniaceae)
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Rivera-Mondragón, A. Tuenter, E. Ortiz, O. Sakavitsi, M.E. Nikou, T. Halabalaki, M. Caballero-George, C. Apers, S. Pieters, L. Foubert, K.
- Abstract
The fruit pulp of Crescentia cujete is traditionally used in folk medicine for the treatment of a variety of respiratory conditions and gastrointestinal disorders. Due to the lack of a comprehensive phytochemical description of the fruit of this plant, its active compounds and rational quality control parameters have not yet been described. An untargeted metabolomics approach combining UPLC-MS/MS-based molecular networking with conventional isolation and NMR methods was carried out for the phytochemical profiling of the fruit pulp of Crescentia cujete. Sixty-six metabolites, including nine n-alkyl glycosides, twenty-three phenolic acid derivatives (such as cinnamoyl and benzoyl derivatives), fifteen flavonoids, four phenylethanoid derivatives and fifteen iridoid glycosides were identified at different levels of confirmation: eighteen confirmed structures (Level 1), six probable structures (Level 2) and forty two tentative candidates (Level 3). Among these, all four phenylethanoid derivatives were described for the first time within this species. In addition, 8-epi-eranthemoside, crescentiol A and crescentiol B were reported as three undescribed iridoid glucosides. The use of molecular networking has resulted in a detailed phytochemical overview of this species. This work provides a useful tool for further development and validation of appropriate analytical methods for routine quality control assessment of commercially available products containing the fruit of this species and further interpretation of their related pharmacological effects. © 2020 Elsevier Ltd
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- 2020
42. Towards more patient-centred endometriosis care: a cross-sectional survey using the ENDOCARE questionnaire
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Schreurs, A.M.F., Hoefen Wijsard, M. van, Dancet, Eline A. F., Apers, S., Kuchenbecker, W. K. H., Ven, P.M. van de, Nelen, W.L.D.M., Houwen, L.E.E. van der, Mijatovic, V, Schreurs, A.M.F., Hoefen Wijsard, M. van, Dancet, Eline A. F., Apers, S., Kuchenbecker, W. K. H., Ven, P.M. van de, Nelen, W.L.D.M., Houwen, L.E.E. van der, and Mijatovic, V
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 245136.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)
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- 2020
43. Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators and patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease: An international study.
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Luyckx K., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Brouillette J., Casteigt B., Moons P., Khairy P., Levesque V., Laplante L., Shohoudi A., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Luyckx K., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., White K., Callus E., Kutty S., Brouillette J., Casteigt B., Moons P., Khairy P., Levesque V., Laplante L., Shohoudi A., Apers S., Kovacs A.H., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., and Johansson B.
- Abstract
Background: Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs) are increasingly being used to prevent sudden death in the growing population of adults with congenital heart disease (CHD). However, little is known about their impact on patient-reported outcomes (PROs). Objective(s): The purpose of this study was to assess and compare PROs in adults with CHD with and without ICDs. Method(s): A propensity-based matching weight analysis was conducted to evaluate PROs in an international cross-sectional study of adults with CHD from 15 countries across 5 continents. Result(s): A total of 3188 patients were included: 107 with ICDs and 3081 weight-matched controls without ICDs. ICD recipients were an average age of 40.1 +/- 12.4 years, and >95% had moderate or complex CHD. Defibrillators were implanted for primary and secondary prevention in 38.3% and 61.7%, respectively. Perceived health status, psychological distress, sense of coherence, and health behaviors did not differ significantly among patients with and without ICDs. However, ICD recipients had a more threatening view of their illness (relative % difference 8.56; P = .011). Those with secondary compared to primary prevention indications had a significantly lower quality-of-life score (Linear Analogue Scale 72.0 +/- 23.1 vs 79.2 +/- 13.0; P = .047). Marked geographic variations were observed. Overall sense of well-being, assessed by a summary score that combines various PROs, was significantly lower in ICD recipients (vs controls) from Switzerland, Argentina, Taiwan, and the United States. Conclusion(s): In an international cohort of adults with CHD, ICDs were associated with a more threatening illness perception, with a lower quality of life in those with secondary compared to primary prevention indications. However, marked geographic variability in PROs was observed.Copyright © 2019 Heart Rhythm Society
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- 2020
44. Healthcare system inputs and patient-reported outcomes: a study in adults with congenital heart defect from 15 countries.
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Kutty S., White K., Callus E., Moons P., Van Bulck L., Goossens E., Luyckx K., Apers S., Oechslin E., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Fernandes S.M., Kutty S., White K., Callus E., Moons P., Van Bulck L., Goossens E., Luyckx K., Apers S., Oechslin E., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Lu C.-W., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., and Fernandes S.M.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The relationship between healthcare system inputs (e.g., human resources and infrastructure) and mortality has been extensively studied. However, the association between healthcare system inputs and patient-reported outcomes remains unclear. Hence, we explored the predictive value of human resources and infrastructures of the countries' healthcare system on patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease. METHOD(S): This cross-sectional study included 3588 patients with congenital heart disease (median age=31y; IQR=16.0; 52% women; 26% simple, 49% moderate, and 25% complex defects) from 15 countries. The following patient-reported outcomes were measured: perceived physical and mental health, psychological distress, health behaviors, and quality of life. The assessed inputs of the healthcare system were: (i) human resources (i.e., density of physicians and nurses, both per 1000 people) and (ii) infrastructure (i.e., density of hospital beds per 10,000 people). Univariable, multivariable, and sensitivity analyses using general linear mixed models were conducted, adjusting for patient-specific variables and unmeasured country differences. RESULT(S): Sensitivity analyses showed that higher density of physicians was significantly associated with better self-reported physical and mental health, less psychological distress, and better quality of life. A greater number of nurses was significantly associated with better self-reported physical health, less psychological distress, and less risky health behavior. No associations between a higher density of hospital beds and patient-reported outcomes were observed. CONCLUSION(S): This explorative study suggests that density of human resources for health, measured on country level, are associated with patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease. More research needs to be conducted before firm conclusions about the relationships observed can be drawn. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Clinical
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- 2020
45. Healthcare system inputs and patient-reported outcomes: a study in adults with congenital heart defect from 15 countries
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Van Bulck, L, Goossens, E, Luyckx, K, Apers, S, Oechslin, E, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Lu, C-W, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, Moons, P, Van Bulck, L, Goossens, E, Luyckx, K, Apers, S, Oechslin, E, Thomet, C, Budts, W, Enomoto, J, Sluman, MA, Lu, C-W, Jackson, JL, Khairy, P, Cook, SC, Chidambarathanu, S, Alday, L, Eriksen, K, Dellborg, M, Berghammer, M, Johansson, B, Mackie, AS, Menahem, S, Caruana, M, Veldtman, G, Soufi, A, Fernandes, SM, White, K, Callus, E, Kutty, S, and Moons, P
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The relationship between healthcare system inputs (e.g., human resources and infrastructure) and mortality has been extensively studied. However, the association between healthcare system inputs and patient-reported outcomes remains unclear. Hence, we explored the predictive value of human resources and infrastructures of the countries' healthcare system on patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease. METHODS: This cross-sectional study included 3588 patients with congenital heart disease (median age = 31y; IQR = 16.0; 52% women; 26% simple, 49% moderate, and 25% complex defects) from 15 countries. The following patient-reported outcomes were measured: perceived physical and mental health, psychological distress, health behaviors, and quality of life. The assessed inputs of the healthcare system were: (i) human resources (i.e., density of physicians and nurses, both per 1000 people) and (ii) infrastructure (i.e., density of hospital beds per 10,000 people). Univariable, multivariable, and sensitivity analyses using general linear mixed models were conducted, adjusting for patient-specific variables and unmeasured country differences. RESULTS: Sensitivity analyses showed that higher density of physicians was significantly associated with better self-reported physical and mental health, less psychological distress, and better quality of life. A greater number of nurses was significantly associated with better self-reported physical health, less psychological distress, and less risky health behavior. No associations between a higher density of hospital beds and patient-reported outcomes were observed. CONCLUSIONS: This explorative study suggests that density of human resources for health, measured on country level, are associated with patient-reported outcomes in adults with congenital heart disease. More research needs to be conducted before firm conclusions about the relationships observed can be drawn. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTr
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- 2020
46. Quantum complexity of minimum cut
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Apers, S, Lee, T, Apers, S, and Lee, T
- Abstract
The minimum cut problem in an undirected and weighted graph $G$ is to find the minimum total weight of a set of edges whose removal disconnects $G$. We completely characterize the quantum query and time complexity of the minimum cut problem in the adjacency matrix model. If $G$ has $n$ vertices and edge weights at least $1$ and at most $\tau$, we give a quantum algorithm to solve the minimum cut problem using $\tilde O(n^{3/2}\sqrt{\tau})$ queries and time. Moreover, for every integer $1 \le \tau \le n$ we give an example of a graph $G$ with edge weights $1$ and $\tau$ such that solving the minimum cut problem on $G$ requires $\Omega(n^{3/2}\sqrt{\tau})$ many queries to the adjacency matrix of $G$. These results contrast with the classical randomized case where $\Omega(n^2)$ queries to the adjacency matrix are needed in the worst case even to decide if an unweighted graph is connected or not. In the adjacency array model, when $G$ has $m$ edges the classical randomized complexity of the minimum cut problem is $\tilde \Theta(m)$. We show that the quantum query and time complexity are $\tilde O(\sqrt{mn\tau})$ and $\tilde O(\sqrt{mn\tau} + n^{3/2})$, respectively, where again the edge weights are between $1$ and $\tau$. For dense graphs we give lower bounds on the quantum query complexity of $\Omega(n^{3/2})$ for $\tau > 1$ and $\Omega(\tau n)$ for any $1 \leq \tau \leq n$. Our query algorithm uses a quantum algorithm for graph sparsification by Apers and de Wolf (FOCS 2020) and results on the structure of near-minimum cuts by Kawarabayashi and Thorup (STOC 2015) and Rubinstein, Schramm and Weinberg (ITCS 2018). Our time efficient implementation builds on Karger's tree packing technique (STOC 1996).
- Published
- 2020
47. Towards more patient-centred endometriosis care: a cross-sectional survey using the ENDOCARE questionnaire
- Author
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Schreurs, A M F, primary, van Hoefen Wijsard, M, primary, Dancet, E A F, primary, Apers, S, primary, Kuchenbecker, W K H, primary, van de Ven, P M, primary, Lambalk, C B, primary, Nelen, W L D M, primary, van der Houwen, L E E, primary, and Mijatovic, V, primary
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A systematic review and secondary analysis of two studies identifying demographic and medical characteristics determining patient-centeredness in endometriosis care as experienced by patients
- Author
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Schreurs, A M F, primary, Dancet, E A F, additional, Apers, S, additional, van Hoefen Wijsard, M, additional, Kuchenbecker, W K H, additional, van de Ven, P M, additional, Lambalk, C B, additional, Nelen, W L D M, additional, van der Houwen, L E E, additional, and Mijatovic, V, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Erratum to: Perceived health is partially associated with the symptomatological profile in patients with benign and severe conditions: the case of congenital heart disease
- Author
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Schoormans, D., Sprangers, M. A. G., Budts, W., Mulder, B. J. M., Apers, S., and Moons, P.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Differential impact of physical activity type on depression in adults with congenital heart disease: A multi-center international study.
- Author
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Fernandes S.M., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Kutty S., Moons P., Cedars A.M., Tecson K.M., Apers S., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Callus E., Wang J.-K., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Ko J.M., White K.S., Kovacs A.H., Fernandes S.M., Dellborg M., Berghammer M., Johansson B., Mackie A.S., Menahem S., Caruana M., Veldtman G., Soufi A., Kutty S., Moons P., Cedars A.M., Tecson K.M., Apers S., Luyckx K., Thomet C., Budts W., Enomoto J., Sluman M.A., Callus E., Wang J.-K., Jackson J.L., Khairy P., Cook S.C., Chidambarathanu S., Alday L., Eriksen K., Ko J.M., White K.S., and Kovacs A.H.
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to examine the association between physical activity (PA) and depression in a large international cohort of adults with congenital heart disease (ACHD) as data about the differential impact of PA type on depression in this population are lacking. Method(s): In 2018, we conducted a cross-sectional assessment of 3908 ACHD recruited from 24 ACHD-specialized centers in 15 countries between April 2013 to March 2015. The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale was used to assess self-reported depressive symptoms and the Health-Behavior Scale-Congenital Heart Disease was used to collect PA information. Cochran-Armitage tests were performed to assess trends between depressive symptom levels and PA participation. Chi-Square and Wilcoxon Rank Sum tests were utilized to examine relations between depressive symptom levels and patient characteristics. Stepwise multivariable models were then constructed to understand the independent impact of PA on depressive symptoms. Result(s): The overall prevalence of elevated depressive symptoms in this sample was 12% with significant differences in rates between countries (p <.001). Physically active individuals were less likely to be depressed than those who were sedentary. Of the 2 PA domains examined, sport participation rather than active commute was significantly associated with reduced symptoms of depression. After adjustment in multivariable analysis, sport participation was still significantly associated with 38% decreased probability of depressive symptoms (p <.001). Conclusion(s): Sport participation is independently associated with reduced depressive symptoms. The development and promotion of sport-related exercise prescriptions uniquely designed for ACHD may improve depression status in this unique population.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc.
- Published
- 2019
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