4 research outputs found
Disease Knowledge Transfer across Neurodegenerative Diseases
We introduce Disease Knowledge Transfer (DKT), a novel technique for
transferring biomarker information between related neurodegenerative diseases.
DKT infers robust multimodal biomarker trajectories in rare neurodegenerative
diseases even when only limited, unimodal data is available, by transferring
information from larger multimodal datasets from common neurodegenerative
diseases. DKT is a joint-disease generative model of biomarker progressions,
which exploits biomarker relationships that are shared across diseases. Our
proposed method allows, for the first time, the estimation of plausible,
multimodal biomarker trajectories in Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA), a rare
neurodegenerative disease where only unimodal MRI data is available. For this
we train DKT on a combined dataset containing subjects with two distinct
diseases and sizes of data available: 1) a larger, multimodal typical AD (tAD)
dataset from the TADPOLE Challenge, and 2) a smaller unimodal Posterior
Cortical Atrophy (PCA) dataset from the Dementia Research Centre (DRC), for
which only a limited number of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans are
available. Although validation is challenging due to lack of data in PCA, we
validate DKT on synthetic data and two patient datasets (TADPOLE and PCA
cohorts), showing it can estimate the ground truth parameters in the simulation
and predict unseen biomarkers on the two patient datasets. While we
demonstrated DKT on Alzheimer's variants, we note DKT is generalisable to other
forms of related neurodegenerative diseases. Source code for DKT is available
online: https://github.com/mrazvan22/dkt.Comment: accepted at MICCAI 2019, 13 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
Strategies to reengage patients lost to follow up in HIV care in high income countries, a scoping review
Background: Despite remarkable achievements in antiretroviral therapy (ART), losses to follow-up (LTFU) might prevent the long-term success of HIV treatment and might delay the achievement of the 90-90-90 objectives. This scoping review is aimed at the description and analysis of the strategies used in high-income countries to reengage LTFU in HIV care, their implementation and impact. Methods: A scoping review was done following Arksey & O'Malley's methodological framework and recommendations from Joanna Briggs Institute. Peer reviewed articles were searched for in Pubmed, Scopus and Web of Science; and grey literature was searched for in Google and other sources of information. Documents were charted according to the information presented on LTFU, the reengagement procedures used in HIV units in high-income countries, published during the last 15 years. In addition, bibliographies of chosen articles were reviewed for additional articles. Results: Twenty-eight documents were finally included, over 80% of them published in the United States later than 2015. Database searches, phone calls and/or mail contacts were the most common strategies used to locate and track LTFU, while motivational interviews and strengths-based techniques were used most often during reengagement visits. Outcomes like tracing activities efficacy, rates of reengagement and viral load reduction were reported as outcome measures. Conclusions: This review shows a recent and growing trend in developing and implementing patient reengagement strategies in HIV care. However, most of these strategies have been implemented in the United States and little information is available for other high-income countries. The procedures used to trace and contact LTFU are similar across reviewed studies, but their impact and sustainability are widely different depending on the country studied
Disease Knowledge Transfer Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
We introduce Disease Knowledge Transfer (DKT), a novel technique for transferring biomarker information between related neurodegenerative diseases. DKT infers robust multimodal biomarker trajectories in rare neurodegenerative diseases even when only limited, unimodal data is available, by transferring information from larger multimodal datasets from common neurodegenerative diseases. DKT is a joint-disease generative model of biomarker progressions, which exploits biomarker relationships that are shared across diseases. Our proposed method allows, for the first time, the estimation of plausible multimodal biomarker trajectories in Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA), a rare neurodegenerative disease where only unimodal MRI data is available. For this we train DKT on a combined dataset containing subjects with two distinct diseases and sizes of data available: (1) a larger, multimodal typical AD (tAD) dataset from the TADPOLE Challenge, and (2) a smaller unimodal Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA) dataset from the Dementia Research Centre (DRC), for which only a limited number of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans are available. Although validation is challenging due to lack of data in PCA, we validate DKT on synthetic data and two patient datasets (TADPOLE and PCA cohorts), showing it can estimate the ground truth parameters in the simulation and predict unseen biomarkers on the two patient datasets. While we demonstrated DKT on Alzheimer’s variants, we note DKT is generalisable to other forms of related neurodegenerative diseases. Source code for DKT is available online: https://github.com/mrazvan22/dkt.NIH (Grants NAC-P41EB015902 and U01-AG024904)DOD (Award W81XWH-12-2-0012
Strategies to reengage patients lost to follow up in HIV care in high income countries, a scoping review
Background: Despite remarkable achievements in antiretroviral therapy (ART), losses to follow-up (LTFU) might prevent the long-term success of HIV treatment and might delay the achievement of the 90-90-90 objectives. This scoping review is aimed at the description and analysis of the strategies used in high-income countries to reengage LTFU in HIV care, their implementation and impact. Methods: A scoping review was done following Arksey & O'Malley's methodological framework and recommendations from Joanna Briggs Institute. Peer reviewed articles were searched for in Pubmed, Scopus and Web of Science; and grey literature was searched for in Google and other sources of information. Documents were charted according to the information presented on LTFU, the reengagement procedures used in HIV units in high-income countries, published during the last 15 years. In addition, bibliographies of chosen articles were reviewed for additional articles. Results: Twenty-eight documents were finally included, over 80% of them published in the United States later than 2015. Database searches, phone calls and/or mail contacts were the most common strategies used to locate and track LTFU, while motivational interviews and strengths-based techniques were used most often during reengagement visits. Outcomes like tracing activities efficacy, rates of reengagement and viral load reduction were reported as outcome measures. Conclusions: This review shows a recent and growing trend in developing and implementing patient reengagement strategies in HIV care. However, most of these strategies have been implemented in the United States and little information is available for other high-income countries. The procedures used to trace and contact LTFU are similar across reviewed studies, but their impact and sustainability are widely different depending on the country studied