Background: During the COVID-19 pandemic, several factors, such as improved hand hygiene, social distancing, and restricted hospital referral, may have had an influence on the epidemiology of... Show moreBackground: During the COVID-19 pandemic, several factors, such as improved hand hygiene, social distancing, and restricted hospital referral, may have had an influence on the epidemiology of Clostridioides difficile infections (CDI). Methods: The annual CDI incidence rate of nine hospitals participating in the Dutch sentinel CI surveillance with complete data was compared between 2020 and the previous five surveillance years. Trends in characteristics of hos-pitalised CDI patients in 21-24 participating hospitals were compared between the first (March 13-May 12, 2020) or second Dutch COVID-19 wave (September 17, 2020-January 1, 2021) and the same calendar periods in 2015 through 2019. All analyses were adjusted for trend changes over time. Findings: The annual CDI incidence rate in 2020 was lower compared to previous years. During the second wave, the percentage of CDI patients with severe CDI was higher compared to earlier (25.8% in 2020 vs 17.9% in 2015-2019 (RR 1.6; 95%CI 1.1-2.3)). After adjustment for delayed C. difficile diagnostics (>= 8 days from start symptoms), the increase disappeared. Delayed C. difficile diagnostics was indeed more common during the second wave (RR 1.7; 95%CI 1.1-2.6), but only for community-onset CDI (CO-CDI). Interpretation: This study shows that a higher percentage of severe CDI cases was observed during the second COVID-19 wave. This may partially be caused by delayed diagnostics, potentially due to decreased visits to a physi-cian or restricted hospital referral for CO-CDI patients. Funding Dutch ministry of Health. Copyright (C) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Show less
This thesis aims to assess the differences and similarities between autoantibody-positive and autoantibody-negative RA from the start of complaints to the end of the disease. The described research... Show moreThis thesis aims to assess the differences and similarities between autoantibody-positive and autoantibody-negative RA from the start of complaints to the end of the disease. The described research was performed with the ultimate goal to clarify whether autoantibody-negative and autoantibody-positive RA are distinct diseases that require different diagnoses and treatment. Show less
Lauper, K.; Ludici, M.; Mongin, D.; Bergstra, S.A.; Choquette, D.; Codreanu, C.; ... ; Finckh, A. 2022
Background: JAK-inhibitors (JAKi), recently approved in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), have changed the landscape of treatment choices. We aimed to compare the effectiveness of four current second-line... Show moreBackground: JAK-inhibitors (JAKi), recently approved in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), have changed the landscape of treatment choices. We aimed to compare the effectiveness of four current second-line therapies of RA with different modes of action, since JAKi approval, in an international collaboration of 19 registers. Methods: In this observational cohort study, patients initiating tumour necrosis factor inhibitors (TNFi), interleukin-6 inhibitors (IL-6i), abatacept (ABA) or JAKi were included. We compared the effectiveness of these treatments in terms of drug discontinuation and Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) response rates at 1 year. Analyses were adjusted for patient, disease and treatment characteristics, including lines of therapy and accounted for competing risk. Results: We included 31 846 treatment courses: 17 522 TNFi, 2775 ABA, 3863 IL-6i and 7686 JAKi. Adjusted analyses of overall discontinuation were similar across all treatments. The main single reason of stopping treatment was ineffectiveness. Compared with TNFi, JAKi were less often discontinued for ineffectiveness (adjusted HR (aHR) 0.75, 95% CI 0.67 to 0.83), as was IL-6i (aHR 0.76, 95% CI 0.67 to 0.85) and more often for adverse events (aHR 1.16, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.33). Adjusted CDAI response rates at 1 year were similar between TNFi, JAKi and IL-6i and slightly lower for ABA. Conclusion: The adjusted overall drug discontinuation and 1 year response rates of JAKi and IL-6i were similar to those observed with TNFi. Compared with TNFi, JAKi were more often discontinued for adverse events and less for ineffectiveness, as were IL-6i. Show less
Aims: To quantify metabolic impairment via a one-factor approach with confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) including MRI-derived visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues and to associate it with... Show moreAims: To quantify metabolic impairment via a one-factor approach with confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) including MRI-derived visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues and to associate it with diastolic dysfunction. Methods: In this cross-sectional analysis, 916 participants (53% female, mean age (SD): 56 (6)) underwent abdominal and cardiovascular MRI. With CFA a metabolic-load factor of metabolic-syndrome variables and visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues was constructed. A piecewise structural equation model approach with adjustment for confounding factors was used to determine associations with left-ventricular diastolic function, cardiac morphology and hemodynamics. Results: Model fitting excluding blood pressure and waist circumference but including visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues, fasting glucose, HDL-c and triglycerides was used to construct the metabolic-load factor. Evaluating measurement invariance demonstrated sex-specificity. Change in mitral early/late peak filling rate ratio was -0.12 for both males [-0.20; -0.05, p > 0.05] and females [-0.17; -0.07, p > 0.001] per SD of metabolicload factor. Change in deceleration time of mitral early filling was -11.83 ms in females [-17.38; -6.27] per SD of metabolic-load factor. Conclusion: A single latent metabolic-load factor via CFA including MRI-derived adipose tissues increased sensitivity for metabolic impairment obsoleting waist circumference and is associated with a decreased leftventricular diastolic function, more apparent in females than in males. Show less
Over the last decades, increasingly so in the last years, epidemiological methods have been refined, making it challenging to keep abreast of all methodological developments. The choice of the data... Show moreOver the last decades, increasingly so in the last years, epidemiological methods have been refined, making it challenging to keep abreast of all methodological developments. The choice of the data analytical method directly influences the interpretation and clinical meaning of results of an analysis, yet it is undesirable that technical considerations define the subject of the investigation. Having a deeper understanding of the impact that data analytical decisions can have on the interpretation of numerical results of a study would help to apply analytical tools that are both suitable and appropriate to answer clinical questions. The aim of this thesis was to investigate the impact of choices regarding the design and statistical analysis of a study on the meaning of its numerical results in two sets of case studies in research into causal effects (Part I) and prediction research (Part II). The thesis concludes with a discussion on the role and importance of clinical research questions and estimands. Clearly defining a clinically relevant estimand ensures that data analytical decisions yield meaningful results. Making targeted research questions central to quantitative clinical research can reduce fallacious confidence in (complex) methods and can add to intelligibility of findings. Show less
Schuttevaer, R.; Boogers, W.; Brink, A.; Dijk, W. van; Steenwinkel, J. de; Schuit, S.; ... ; Alsma, J. 2022
Objectives To investigate whether the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) predicted short-term and long-term mortality in patients with a bloodstream infection visiting the emergency department (ED)... Show moreObjectives To investigate whether the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) predicted short-term and long-term mortality in patients with a bloodstream infection visiting the emergency department (ED) and compare it to the often-validated National Early Warning Score (NEWS). Design A retrospective cohort study. Setting A tertiary hospital in the Netherlands. Participants Adult patients attending the ED with a blood culture-proven infection between 2012 and 2017 were included. We collected the comorbidities from the CCI and the vital signs from the NEWS. Main outcomes Short-term mortality (30-day) and long-term mortality (1 year). We assessed the predictive performance by discrimination, expressed as the area under the curve (AUC). Results We included 1039 patients with a blood culture-proven infection. Mortality was 10.4% within 30 days and 27.8% within 1 year. On average patients had two comorbidities (ranging from 0 to 6). Highly prevalent comorbidities were malignancy (30.2%) and diabetes mellitus (20.5%). The predictive performance of the CCI was highest for 1-year mortality (AUC 0.696 (95%CI) (0.660 to 0.732)) and better compared with the NEWS (AUC (95% CI) 0.594 (0.555 to 0.632)). For prediction of 30-day mortality, the NEWS was superior (AUC (95% CI) 0.706 (0.656 to 0.756)) to the comorbidities of the CCI (AUC (95% CI) 0.568 (0.507 to 0.628)). Conclusions We found that presenting comorbidity (ie, the CCI) is most useful to prognosticate long-term outcome in patients with bloodstream infection in the ED. Short-term mortality is more accurately predicted by deviating vital signs (ie, the NEWS). Show less
A direct comparison of two methods for estimating the treated incidence of schizophrenia: the first-contact design (current standard) vs. an electronic psychiatric case-register (new method). The... Show moreA direct comparison of two methods for estimating the treated incidence of schizophrenia: the first-contact design (current standard) vs. an electronic psychiatric case-register (new method). The assumptions underlying the first-contact design are tested. The causes of 2 to 4-fold difference in estimates are conceptualized in a 3-dimensional model. The model is tested on the Norther European incidence literature. Show less
Kok, A.A.L.; Pan, K.Y.; Rius-Ottenheim, N.; Jorg, F.; Eikelenboom, M.; Horsfall, M.; ... ; Penninx, B.W.J.H. 2022
Background: Little is known about the longer-term impact of the Covid-19 pandemic beyond the first months of 2020, particularly for people with pre-existing mental health disorders. Studies... Show moreBackground: Little is known about the longer-term impact of the Covid-19 pandemic beyond the first months of 2020, particularly for people with pre-existing mental health disorders. Studies including pre-pandemic data from large psychiatric cohorts are scarce. Methods: Between April 2020 and February 2021, twelve successive online questionnaires were distributed among participants of the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety, Netherlands Study of Depression in Older Persons, and Netherlands Obsessive Compulsive Disorder Association Study (N = 1714, response rate 62%). Outcomes were depressive symptoms, anxiety, worry, loneliness, perceived mental health impact of the pandemic, fear of Covid-19, positive coping, and happiness. Using linear mixed models we compared trajectories between subgroups with different pre-pandemic chronicity of disorders and healthy controls. Results: Depressive, anxiety and worry symptoms were stable since April-May 2020 whereas happiness slightly decreased. Furthermore, positive coping steadily decreased and loneliness increased - exceeding pre-Covid and April-May 2020 levels. Perceived mental health impact and fear of Covid-19 fluctuated in accordance with national Covid-19 mortality rate changes. Absolute levels of all outcomes were poorer with higher chronicity of disorders, yet trajectories did not differ among subgroups. Limitations: The most vulnerable psychiatric groups may have been underrepresented and results may not be generalizable to lower income countries. Conclusions: After a year, levels of depressive and worry symptoms remained higher than before the pandemic in healthy control groups, yet not in psychiatric groups. Nevertheless, persistent high symptoms in psychiatric groups and increasing loneliness in all groups are specific points of concern for mental health care professionals. Show less
Hitzl, W.; Stamm, T.; Kloppenburg, M.; Ritter, M.; Gaisberger, M.; Zee-neuen, A. van der 2022
Background The present study aimed to predict the expected number of patients with osteoarthritis (OA) in Austria up to the year 2080. Methods Demographic data and population projections between... Show moreBackground The present study aimed to predict the expected number of patients with osteoarthritis (OA) in Austria up to the year 2080. Methods Demographic data and population projections between 2019 and 2080 were obtained from European authorities. Information about recent age- and sex-stratified prevalence of patients with self-reported physician-diagnosed OA was obtained from the Austrian Health Interview Survey (n = 15,771). Projections were stratified by age and sex; sensitivity analyses were performed based on aging, main (most likely), and growth scenarios of the population. Results Based on the projection, the overall increase in the total number of patients with OA from 2019 to 2080 will be 38% for men and women. In 2019, the highest number of OA-patients nested in the groups of persons aged 70-79 (n = 238,749) and 60-69 (n = 237,729) years. In 2080, the 80+ age group is predicted to have the highest number of OA with 421,548 individuals (i.e. factor 3.45 and factor 2.48 increase in the male and female group, respectively, compared to 2019), followed by the group aged 70-79 with 314,617 individuals (factor 1.45 and factor 1.28 increase in the male and female group, respectively, compared to 2019). Similar trends were found in the ageing and growing scenarios. Conclusions The projected increase in the occurrence of OA will likely lead to a substantial socioeconomic burden for the Austrian healthcare system in the near and far future. The current findings plead for the development of sustainable concepts for the treatment and prevention of OA by European authorities. Show less
This thesis describes studies on methods for answering questions about causality, specifically so-called what-if questions, in the presence of methodological obstacles such as confounding, missing... Show moreThis thesis describes studies on methods for answering questions about causality, specifically so-called what-if questions, in the presence of methodological obstacles such as confounding, missing data, and measurement error. Show less
In the last decade, through Clinical Outcome Assessment, and especially measurement of patient-reported outcome measures (PROM)s, we, among others, have initiated a shift in focus from meningioma... Show moreIn the last decade, through Clinical Outcome Assessment, and especially measurement of patient-reported outcome measures (PROM)s, we, among others, have initiated a shift in focus from meningioma tumors to meningioma patients. In various studies we describe an improvement in surgical approaches for skull base meningioma. Nevertheless, patient functioning remains impaired in the long-term. We describe that on average nine years after treatment or diagnosis patients still suffer from participation restrictions in social situations with their friends, family, and at work. Often, at the outpatient clinic, we do not pay enough attention to these problems, especially as patient visits become less frequent in the long-term. Importantly, functioning of patients and their informal caregivers (i.e., close relatives/friends) is strongly interdependent. Moreover, patients and healthcare providers find different outcomes and care processes relevant. This underlines the importance of implementation of PROMs in clinical practice. The studies in this thesis suggest that meningioma care trajectories could benefit from the use of 1) case managers guiding patients and their informal caregivers, 2) implementation of PROMs, and 3) prediction models assisting in the identification of individual patients at high risk of long-term lowered functioning. Ideally, these trajectories should follow the value-based healthcare (VBHC) principles. Show less
Bizzarri, D.; Reinders, M.J.T.; Beekman, M.; Slagboom, P.E.; BBMRI-NL; Akker, E.B. van den 2022
Background Missing or incomplete phenotypic information can severely deteriorate the statistical power in epidemiological studies. High-throughput quantification of small-molecules in bio-samples,... Show moreBackground Missing or incomplete phenotypic information can severely deteriorate the statistical power in epidemiological studies. High-throughput quantification of small-molecules in bio-samples, i.e. `metabolomics', is steadily gaining popularity, as it is highly informative for various phenotypical characteristics. Here we aim to leverage metabolomics to impute missing data in clinical variables routinely assessed in large epidemiological and clinical studies.Methods To this end, we have employed similar to 26,000 H-1-NMR metabolomics samples from 28 Dutch cohorts collected within the BBMRI-NL consortium, to create 19 metabolomics-based predictors for clinical variables, including diabetes status (AUC(5-Fold CV) = 0.94) and lipid medication usage (AUC(5-Fold CV) = 0.90).Findings Subsequent application in independent cohorts confirmed that our metabolomics-based predictors can indeed be used to impute a wide array of missing clinical variables from a single metabolomics data resource. In addition, application highlighted the potential use of our predictors to explore the effects of totally unobserved confounders in omics association studies. Finally, we show that our predictors can be used to explore risk factor profiles contributing to mortality in older participants.Interpretation To conclude, we provide H-1-NMR metabolomics-based models to impute clinical variables routinely assessed in epidemiological studies and illustrate their merit in scenarios when phenotypic variables are partially incomplete or totally unobserved. Copyright (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. Show less
The increasing amount and complexity of data over the past decades have given rise to new sorts of questions, also in the field of infectious disease epidemiology. This thesis proposes methods to... Show moreThe increasing amount and complexity of data over the past decades have given rise to new sorts of questions, also in the field of infectious disease epidemiology. This thesis proposes methods to analyze data available at multiple resolution levels and to combine different data types in infectious disease surveillance. Hereby using techniques central to data science. Show less
Due to the increased incidence of breast cancer and improved survival, more women are at risk of developing contralateral breast cancer (CBC). The aim of this thesis was to explore risk factors... Show moreDue to the increased incidence of breast cancer and improved survival, more women are at risk of developing contralateral breast cancer (CBC). The aim of this thesis was to explore risk factors associated with CBC. We observed significant associations for a polygenic risk score of common germline variants (PRS313) and for different adjuvant systemic therapy regimens with (subtype-specific) CBC risk. These factors may be incorporated in CBC risk prediction models together with other known and available risk factors. For support of clinical decision making more biological information is needed to understand CBC development in women with invasive breast cancer and DCIS. As a first step towards implementation of a risk prediction model, we performed an exploratory interview study, which showed that patients had varying preferences for graphical presentation of probabilities in a CBC prediction model. In future studies, the prediction model should be incorporated in a decision support tool and implemented in clinical practice. This tool can then help to better identify women at high risk of CBC who may benefit from prophylactic surgery, while the estimates can also be used to reassure patients who are at low risk of developing CBC. Show less
A cross-sectional relationship between low-grade inflammation -characterized by increased blood levels of Creactive protein (CRP) and pro-inflammatory cytokines- and anxiety has been reported, but... Show moreA cross-sectional relationship between low-grade inflammation -characterized by increased blood levels of Creactive protein (CRP) and pro-inflammatory cytokines- and anxiety has been reported, but the potential longitudinal relationship has been less well studied. We aimed to examine whether basal and lipopolysaccharide (LPS-)induced levels of inflammatory markers are associated with anxiety symptom severity over the course of nine years. We tested the association between basal and LPS-induced inflammatory markers with anxiety symptoms (measured with the Beck's Anxiety Inventory; BAI, Fear Questionnaire; FQ and Penn's State Worry Questionnaire; PSWQ) at 5 assessment waves over a period up nine years. We used multivariate-adjusted mixed models in up to 2867 participants of the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA). At baseline, 43.6% of the participants had a current anxiety disorder, of which social phobia (18.5%) was most prevalent. Our results demonstrated that baseline inflammatory markers were significantly associated with several outcomes of anxiety at baseline over nine subsequent years. BAI subscale of somatic (arousal) symptoms of anxiety, and FQ subscale of agoraphobia demonstrated the strongest effects with standardized betacoefficients of up to 0.14. The associations were attenuated by 25%-30% after adjusting for the presence of (comorbid) major depressive disorder (MDD), but remained statistically significant. In conclusion, we found that participants with high levels of inflammatory markers have on average high levels of anxiety consisting of physical arousal and agoraphobia, which tended to persist over a period of nine years, albeit with small effect sizes. These associations were partly driven by co-morbid depression. Show less
Jain, P.; Finger, P.T.; Fili, M.; Damato, B.; Coupland, S.E.; Heimann, H.; ... ; Amer Joint Comm Canc Ophthal 2021
Background To relate conjunctival melanoma characteristics to local control. Methods Retrospective, registry-based interventional study with data gathered from 10 ophthalmic oncology centres from 9... Show moreBackground To relate conjunctival melanoma characteristics to local control. Methods Retrospective, registry-based interventional study with data gathered from 10 ophthalmic oncology centres from 9 countries on 4 continents. Conjunctival melanoma patients diagnosed between January 2001 and December 2013 were enrolled in the study. Primary treatments included local excision, excision with cryotherapy and exenteration. Adjuvant treatments included topical chemotherapy, brachytherapy, proton and external beam radiotherapy (EBRT). Cumulative 5-year and 10-year Kaplan-Meier local recurrence rates were related to clinical and pathological T-categories of the eighth edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging system. Results 288 patients had a mean initial age of 59.7 +/- 16.8 years. Clinical T-categories (cT) were cT1 (n=218,75.7%), cT2 (n=34, 11.8%), cT3 (n=15, 5.2%), cTx (n=21,7.3%) with no cT4. Primary treatment included local excision (n=161/288, 55.9%) followed by excision biopsy with cryotherapy (n=108/288, 37.5%) and exenteration (n=5/288, 1.7%). Adjuvant therapies included topical mitomycin (n=107/288, 37.1%), plaque-brachytherapy (n=55/288, 19.1%), proton-beam (n=36/288, 13.5%), topical interferon (n=20/288, 6.9%) and EBRT (n=15/288, 5.2%). Secondary exenteration was performed (n=11/283, 3.9%). Local recurrence was noted in 19.1% (median=3.6 years). Cumulative local recurrence was 5.4% (3.2-8.9%), 19.3% (14.4-25.5%) and 36.9% (26.5-49.9%) at 1, 5 and 10 years, respectively. cT3 and cT2 tumors were twice as likely to recur than cT1 tumours, but only cT3 had statistically significantly greater risk of local recurrence than T1 (p=0.013). Factors such as tumour ulceration, plica or caruncle involvement and tumour thickness were not significantly associated with an increased risk of local recurrence. Conclusion This multicentre international study showed that eighth edition of AJCC tumour staging was related to the risk of local recurrence of conjunctival melanoma after treatment. The 10-year cumulative local recurrence remains high despite current management. Show less
Ramspek, C.L.; Steyerberg, E.W.; Riley, R.D.; Rosendaal, F.R.; Dekkers, O.M.; Dekker, F.W.; Diepen, M. van 2021
Etiological research aims to uncover causal effects, whilst prediction research aims to forecast an outcome with the best accuracy. Causal and prediction research usually require different methods,... Show moreEtiological research aims to uncover causal effects, whilst prediction research aims to forecast an outcome with the best accuracy. Causal and prediction research usually require different methods, and yet their findings may get conflated when reported and interpreted. The aim of the current study is to quantify the frequency of conflation between etiological and prediction research, to discuss common underlying mistakes and provide recommendations on how to avoid these. Observational cohort studies published in January 2018 in the top-ranked journals of six distinct medical fields (Cardiology, Clinical Epidemiology, Clinical Neurology, General and Internal Medicine, Nephrology and Surgery) were included for the current scoping review. Data on conflation was extracted through signaling questions. In total, 180 studies were included. Overall, 26% (n = 46) contained conflation between etiology and prediction. The frequency of conflation varied across medical field and journal impact factor. From the causal studies 22% was conflated, mainly due to the selection of covariates based on their ability to predict without taking the causal structure into account. Within prediction studies 38% was conflated, the most frequent reason was a causal interpretation of covariates included in a prediction model. Conflation of etiology and prediction is a common methodological error in observational medical research and more frequent in prediction studies. As this may lead to biased estimations and erroneous conclusions, researchers must be careful when designing, interpreting and disseminating their research to ensure this conflation is avoided. Show less
Introduction:This study aims to describe the epidemiology, aetiology and therapy of orbital fractures in a large municipal hospital in The Hague, Netherlands, and to demonstrate the effectiveness... Show moreIntroduction:This study aims to describe the epidemiology, aetiology and therapy of orbital fractures in a large municipal hospital in The Hague, Netherlands, and to demonstrate the effectiveness of an integrated approach of orbital trauma care with a team consisting of an ophthalmologist, an orthoptist and an oral and maxillofacial (OMF) surgeon.Methods:We obtained data from patients with an orbital fracture between June 2015 until July 2018. Primary outcomes were the classification of orbital fractures and treatment (conservative or surgical).Results:182 patients were included in this study. The most common type of orbital fracture was an isolated orbital floor fracture (n=56, 30.8%). In most cases, therapy was conservative (69.2%). When surgical repair was indicated, a polydioxanone (PDS) plate was most commonly used (11.5%). The main cause of an orbital fracture was a fall accident (38.5%), followed by assault (32.4%). 32.4% of the patients were intoxicated with alcohol.Conclusion:In our study population, almost 70% (69.2%) of the patients were treated conservatively in our study. Compared to the international literature, this percentage is considerably higher than in other studies. In our opinion, our integrated approach to orbital trauma has led to a justifiable reduction of the proportion of cases receiving surgical intervention in orbital fractures. We would like to advocate the implementation of a similar team in other hospitals to improve the quality and cost-effectiveness of treatment in patients with orbital fractures. Show less
Meulmeester, F.L.; Luo, J.; Martens, L.G.; Ashrafi, N.; Mutsert, R. de; Mook-Kanamori, D.O.; ... ; Noordam, R. 2021
Background and aims: The accumulation of fat increases the formation of lipid perox-ides, which are partly scavenged by alpha-tocopherol (a-TOH). Here, we aimed to investigate the associations... Show moreBackground and aims: The accumulation of fat increases the formation of lipid perox-ides, which are partly scavenged by alpha-tocopherol (a-TOH). Here, we aimed to investigate the associations between different measures of (abdominal) fat and levels of urinary a-TOH metab-olites in middle-aged individuals. Methods and results: In this cross-sectional analysis in the Netherlands Epidemiology of Obesity study (N Z 511, 53% women; mean [SD] age of 55 [6.1] years), serum a-TOH and a-TOH metab-olites from 24-h urine were measured as alpha-tocopheronolactone hydroquinone (a-TLHQ, oxidized) and alpha-carboxymethyl-hydroxychroman (a-CEHC, enzymatically converted) using liquid-chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Body mass index and total body fat were measured, and abdominal subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue (aSAT and VAT) were as-sessed using magnetic resonance imaging. Using multivariable-adjusted linear regression ana -lyses, we analysed the associations of BMI, TBF, aSAT and VAT with levels of urinary a-TOH metabolites, adjusted for confounders. We observed no evidence for associations between body fat measures and serum a-TOH. Higher BMI and TBF were associated with lower urinary levels of TLHQ (0.95 [95%CI: 0.90, 1.00] and 0.94 [0.88, 1.01] times per SD, respectively) and with lower TLHQ relative to CEHC (0.93 [0.90, 0.98] and 0.93 [0.87, 0.98] times per SD, respectively). We observed similar associations for VAT (TLHQ: 0.94 [0.89, 0.99] times per SD), but not for aSAT. Conclusions: Opposite to our research hypothesis, higher abdominal adiposity was moderately associated with lower levels of oxidized a-TOH metabolites, which might reflect lower vitamin E antioxidative activity in individuals with higher abdominal fat instead. (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of The Italian Diabetes Society, the Italian Society for the Study of Atherosclerosis, the Italian Society of Human Nutrition and the Department of Clinical Medicine and Surgery, Federico II University. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Show less
Despite developments in the prevention of invasive aspergillosis, the incidence rates are up to 10% in high risk groups. Within high risk groups, individual patients with an even higher risks can... Show moreDespite developments in the prevention of invasive aspergillosis, the incidence rates are up to 10% in high risk groups. Within high risk groups, individual patients with an even higher risks can be identified, such as those suffering from relapsed AML. Mortality of IA is high within all populations and is mainly found in the first 30 days after diagnosis. Because of the serious nature of the underlying diseases that predispose for IA, it can be challenging to quantify the contribution of IA to mortality; crude mortality rates cannot distinguish death due to IA-unrelated causes from IA-related death, almost certainly leading to inflation of mortality rates. It can be helpful to assess contributability of IA to death to provide a better understanding of the impact of IA in this vulnerable patient population. Additionally, we have explored the new problem that is posed by the increase of triazoleresistant Aspergillus fungi, resulting in challenges in the application of antifungal therapies. Treatment strategies involving the use of LAmB are becoming more prevalent in areas withhigh resistance rates, but should be applied with care due to concerns of renal toxicity and decreased efficacy against triazole-susceptible isolates when compared to voriconazole. Rational application of PCR could help us to initiate the right therapy sooner, by possibly providing information about the susceptibility of the Aspergillus fungus. Show less