The characteristics of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) have primarily been described in hospitalized adults. Characterization of COVID-19 in ambulatory care is needed for a better understanding of its evolving epidemiology. Our aim is to provide a description of the demographics, comorbidities, clinical presentation, and social factors in confirmed SARS-CoV-2-positive non-hospitalized adults. We conducted a retrospective medical record review of 208 confirmed SARS-CoV-2-positive patients treated in a COVID-19 virtual outpatient management clinic established in an academic health system in Georgia. The mean age was 47.8 (range 21–88) and 69.2% were female. By race/ethnicity, 49.5% were non-Hispanic African American, 25.5% other/unknown, 22.6% non-Hispanic white, and 2.4% Hispanic. Nearly 70% had at least one preexisting medical condition. The most common presenting symptoms were cough (75.5%), loss of smell or taste (63%), headache (62%), and body aches (54.3%). Physician or advanced practice provider assessed symptom severity ranged from 51.9% mild, 30.3% moderate, and 1.4% severe. Only eight reported limitations to home care (3.8%), 55.3% had a caregiver available, and 93.3% reported initiating self-isolation. Care needs were met for 83.2%. Our results suggest the demographic and clinical characteristics of COVID-19 illness in non-hospitalized adults differ considerably from hospitalized patients and warrant greater awareness of risk among younger and healthier individuals and consideration of testing and recommending self-isolation for a wider spectrum of clinical symptoms by clinicians. Social factors may also influence the efficacy of preventive strategies and allocation of resources toward the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
Understanding the relationships between health and aging is essential for delaying morbidity and maximizing independence in aging populations as life expectancies increase. Loss of cognitive function is a feared age-associated condition and growing public health concern. Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most common cause of dementia, has no curative therapies. Characterizing the relationships between risk factors, biomarkers, and AD progression is critical for the development of effective disease prediction, clinical intervention, and ultimately, disease prevention. The Emory Healthy Aging Study (EHAS) and the Emory Healthy Brain Study (EHBS), which is nested within EHAS, aim to further the understanding of healthy aging and the pathogenesis of age-related illnesses in well-characterized, community-based prospective cohorts and to identify biomarkers for the earliest manifestations of AD for the facilitation of preventative interventions. The EHAS is an innovative, longitudinal, web-based study enrolling English-speaking adults in the U.S. who agree to be contacted for future studies. Using validated instruments, the annual questionnaire enquires about demographics, socioeconomics, self-reported cognitive function, personal and family medical history, lifestyle, and psychosocial factors. Cognitive assessments are also obtained using an ambulatory device. Nested within EHAS, the EHBS is enrolling up to 2,500 EHAS participants, 50–75 years old, who do not have a diagnosis of AD, mild cognitive impairment, or any other memory disorder. EHBS in-person, biennial study visits, include neuropsychological testing, cardiovascular measures, retinal and brain imaging, biospecimen collection (blood, cerebrospinal fluid, gut microbiome), and other assessments. Since spring 2016, EHAS and EHBS have enrolled 12,500 and 863 participants with completed baseline assessments, respectively. Data and biospecimens from EHBS participants will support a broad range of AD biomarker discovery efforts, and follow-up of EHAS participants will enable assessment of self-reported cognitive trajectories and accumulation of incident cases of a variety of health conditions. The EHAS design supports the interval deployment of new study instruments and targeted sampling for ancillary studies. This project will increase our knowledge about healthy aging, improve our understanding of risk factors for cognitive impairment and dementias, support development of biomarkers, and facilitate studies of age-associated disorders including AD.
Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is diagnosed through expensive cross-sectional imaging, frequently followed by renal mass biopsy, which is not only invasive but also prone to sampling errors. Hence, there is a critical need for a noninvasive diagnostic assay. RCC exhibits altered cellular metabolism combined with the close proximity of the tumor(s) to the urine in the kidney, suggesting that urine metabolomic profiling is an excellent choice for assay development. Here, we acquired liquid chromatography− mass spectrometry (LC−MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data followed by the use of machine learning (ML) to discover candidate metabolomic panels for RCC. The study cohort consisted of 105 RCC patients and 179 controls separated into two subcohorts: the model cohort and the test cohort. Univariate, wrapper, and embedded methods were used to select discriminatory features using the model cohort. Three ML techniques, each with different induction biases, were used for training and hyperparameter tuning. Assessment of RCC status prediction was evaluated using the test cohort with the selected biomarkers and the optimally tuned ML algorithms. A seven-metabolite panel predicted RCC in the test cohort with 88% accuracy, 94% sensitivity, 85% specificity, and 0.98 AUC. Metabolomics Workbench Study IDs are ST001705 and ST001706.
Global initiatives such as the Millennium Development Goals have led to major improvements in the health of women and children, and significant reductions in childhood mortality. Worldwide, maternal mortality has decreased by 45% and under-five mortality has fallen by over 50% over the past two decades [1]. However, improvements have not been achieved evenly across all ages; since 1990, under-five mortality has declined by ∼5% annually, but the average decrease in neonatal mortality is only ∼3% per year. Against this background, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) convened a meeting in Berlin on January 29-30, 2015 of global health stakeholders, representing funders, academia, regulatory agencies, non-governmental organizations, vaccine manufacturers, and Ministries of Health from Africa and Asia. The topic of discussion was the potential of maternal immunization (MI) to achieve further improvements in under-five morbidity and mortality rates in children, and particularly neonates and young infants, through targeting infectious diseases that are not preventable by other interventions in these age groups. The meeting focused on effective and appropriately priced MI vaccines against influenza, pertussis, and tetanus, as well as against respiratory syncytial virus, and the group B Streptococcus, for which no licensed vaccines currently exist. The primary goals of the BMGF 2015 convening were to bring together the global stakeholders in vaccine development, policy and delivery together with the Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (MNCH) community, to get recognition that MI is a strategy shared between these groups and so encourage increased collaboration, and obtain alignment on the next steps toward achieving a significant health impact through implementation of a MI program.
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders can provide early and accurate prediction of underlying neuropathology even when the clinical symptoms are mild, but lumbar punctures (LP) to obtain CSF can be perceived as frightening and invasive. We previously demonstrated that this negative perception of the LP is strongly associated with a negative LP experience in terms of discomfort and complications, but it is not known what factors can lead to a negative perception of the LP. It has also been proposed that LP is less well-perceived by adults in the U.S. compared to Europe and elsewhere, although there is a paucity of primary data to support this. To address these knowledge gaps, we conducted a survey of 237 younger and older adults in the Atlanta area including a significant number born outside of the U.S. (n = 82, 34%) to determine demographic, medical, and experiential factors associated with the perception of LP as well as the willingness to undergo LP for medical or research purposes. Our results show that one in four respondents in this cohort with limited first-hand LP experience viewed the LP as a frightening invasive procedure, but the majority (89%) were willing to undergo LP for medical reasons. General awareness of the LP was associated with both standard and negative views of the LP, but perception did not influence willingness to undergo the procedure. Multi-variate models showed that higher annual household income, not place of birth or past experience, was associated with greater willingness to undergo LPs. We conclude that Americans (born in the U.S. or abroad) are not resistant to LPs if there is useful information to improve their health, although there is limited enthusiasm to undergo LPs solely for research purposes. At the same time, we failed to find modifiable factors to improve the perception of LP among those who already perceive it as frightening and invasive. Future recruitment effort should target adults with no preconceived notion of the LP with emphasis on data related to safety and tolerability.
National Vaccine Advisory Committee An average of 25,900 cases of human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated cancers are newly diagnosed in the United States each year. 1,2 An estimated 14 million people are newly infected with HPV each year, and nearly half of these infections occur in people aged 14-25 years. 3 Although most infections resolve over time, persistent infection with oncogenic HPV types is associated with a variety of cancers. Virtually all cervical cancers are caused by HPV, along with 90% of anal, 69% of vaginal, 60% of oropharyngeal, 51% of vulvar, and 40% of penile cancers. 1 Furthermore, 87% of anal, 76% of cervical, 60% of oropharyngeal, 55% of vaginal, 44% of vulva, and 29% of penile cancers are caused by oncogenic HPV type 16 or 18. 4 Of the 35,000 HPV cancers reported in 2009 in the United States, 39% occurred in males. 1 Three HPV vaccines are currently available in the United States. One is a bivalent vaccine (designated as HPV2) designed to protect against HPV types 16 and 18, which are responsible for the most HPV-associated cancers. One is a quadrivalent vaccine (HPV4), which protects against HPV types 16 and 18 and two additional types, 6 and 11, that are the most common causes of genital warts. One is a nonavalent vaccine (HPV9) that protects against HPV types 6, 11, 16, and 18, and offers additional protection against five oncogenic HPV types, 31, 33, 45, 52, and 58. To prevent cancers associated with HPV infections, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommends HPV immunization for all children aged 11 or 12 years with the licensed three-doses series. The ACIP has recommended routine HPV immunization for girls since 2006 and for boys since 2011. 2 Despite ACIP's recommendations, rates of vaccination have remained low. In 2013, initiation rates for the HPV vaccine series were just 57.3% for girls and Public Members
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