5 research outputs found

    Le Peuple : organe quotidien du syndicalisme

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    03 septembre 19371937/09/03 (A17,N6069)-1937/09/03

    Identification of gaps in the current knowledge on pulmonary hypertension in extremely preterm infants:A systematic review and meta-analysis

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    BACKGROUND: Pulmonary hypertension complicates the clinical course of extremely preterm infants and is associated with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). However, prevalence, risk factors, and outcome of pulmonary hypertension in these infants are insufficiently known. This systematic review and meta-analysis aims to provide an up-to-date overview of available data on prevalence, risk factors, and outcome of pulmonary hypertension and to identify current knowledge gaps. METHODS: Medline, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Library databases were searched in July 2017. Two authors reviewed titles/abstracts and full-texts. Eligible studies reported prevalence, patient characteristics or mortality of infants with/without pulmonary hypertension. Studies were excluded if they did not include extremely preterm infants. Only similar study samples (selected infants with BPD or infants both with/without BPD) were compared in the meta-analyses. RESULTS: Of 1829 unique articles identified, 25 were eligible for inclusion. Pulmonary hypertension was observed in infants with BPD (20%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 14, 25), but also in those without BPD (2%, 95% CI 0, 8). Infants with severe BPD were most at risk of pulmonary hypertension (risk ratio [RR] 2.7, 95% CI 1.7, 4.2). Infants with pulmonary hypertension were more at risk of mortality (RR 4.7, 95% CI 2.7, 8.3). CONCLUSIONS: Pulmonary hypertension occurs in particularly in infants with severe BPD, and increases risk of mortality. Due to selected study populations, heterogeneous pulmonary hypertension-definitions and poorly reported timing of pulmonary hypertension assessments, however, data available in current reports are insufficient to allow accurate assessment of true prevalence, risk factors, and time-related outcome. Prospective studies, with standardised methodology and follow-up are needed to determine these factors

    Clinical Worsening as Composite Study End Point in Pediatric Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

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    BACKGROUND: Clinical worsening (CW), an increasingly used composite end point in adult pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), has not yet been evaluated in pediatric PAH. This study aims to evaluate the usefulness of CW in pediatric PAH by assessing the event incidence and prognostic value of each separate component of CW and of the composite CW end point. METHODS: Seventy pediatric patients with PAH from the Dutch National Network for Pediatric Pulmonary Hypertension, who started PAH-targeted therapy between January 2000 and January 2014, were included in the study and underwent standardized follow-up. The following CW components were prospectively registered: death, lung transplantation (LTx), PAH-related hospitalizations, initiation of IV prostanoids, and functional deterioration (World Health Organization functional-class deterioration, >= 15% decrease in 6-min walk distance, or both). The longitudinal event incidence and prognostic value were assessed for each separate component and their combination. RESULTS: The end-point components of death, LTx, hospitalizations, initiation of IV prostanoids, and functional deterioration occurred with a longitudinal event rate of 10.1, 2.5, 21.4, 9.4 and 48.1 events per 100 person-years, respectively. The composite CW end point occurred 91.5 times per 100 person-years. The occurrences of either hospitalization, initiation of IV prostanoids, or functional deterioration were predictive of death or LTx (P <.001 for each component). In this cohort, 1-, 3-, and 5-year transplant-free survival was 76%, 64%, and 56%, respectively. Freedom from CW at 1, 3, and 5 years was 43%, 22%, and 17%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: CW occurred with a high event incidence and each of the soft end-point components was predictive of death or LTx. This supports the usefulness of CW as a study end point in clinical trials in pediatric PAH

    Structural and metric validity of the Dutch translation of psychopathy checklist: youth version

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    In the present study, the structural validity of the dutch version of the psychopathy checklist: youth version (in dutch: psychopathie checklist: jeugd versie; pcl:yv; de ruiter, kuin, de vries, & das, 2002) was examined in adolescent offenders by means of confirmatory factor analysis (cfa) and item response theory (irt). The pcl:yv item ratings for 269 adolescent males, either admitted to a dutch juvenile treatment institution or psychologically evaluated upon request of the court, were used to test the fit of different factor models presumed to represent the structure of psychopathy as measured by the pcl-r in adults. The study provides support for a good absolute and relative fit for the 3-factor model, but not for the 4-factor model. Results from irt analyses demonstrate the highest discriminative value for the affective items in the dutch adolescent sample. The present findings demonstrate poor discriminative power and age influence on item functioning for most antisocial items of the fourth factor
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