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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Kennedy Catriona) "

Search: WFRF:(Kennedy Catriona)

  • Result 1-7 of 7
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1.
  • Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O., et al. (author)
  • Determinants of morbidity and mortality following emergency abdominal surgery in children in low-income and middle-income countries
  • 2016
  • In: BMJ Global Health. - : BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. - 2059-7908. ; 1:4
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Child health is a key priority on the global health agenda, yet the provision of essential and emergency surgery in children is patchy in resource-poor regions. This study was aimed to determine the mortality risk for emergency abdominal paediatric surgery in low-income countries globally.Methods: Multicentre, international, prospective, cohort study. Self-selected surgical units performing emergency abdominal surgery submitted prespecified data for consecutive children aged <16 years during a 2-week period between July and December 2014. The United Nation's Human Development Index (HDI) was used to stratify countries. The main outcome measure was 30-day postoperative mortality, analysed by multilevel logistic regression.Results: This study included 1409 patients from 253 centres in 43 countries; 282 children were under 2 years of age. Among them, 265 (18.8%) were from low-HDI, 450 (31.9%) from middle-HDI and 694 (49.3%) from high-HDI countries. The most common operations performed were appendectomy, small bowel resection, pyloromyotomy and correction of intussusception. After adjustment for patient and hospital risk factors, child mortality at 30 days was significantly higher in low-HDI (adjusted OR 7.14 (95% CI 2.52 to 20.23), p<0.001) and middle-HDI (4.42 (1.44 to 13.56), p=0.009) countries compared with high-HDI countries, translating to 40 excess deaths per 1000 procedures performed.Conclusions: Adjusted mortality in children following emergency abdominal surgery may be as high as 7 times greater in low-HDI and middle-HDI countries compared with high-HDI countries. Effective provision of emergency essential surgery should be a key priority for global child health agendas.
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2.
  • Kennedy, Catriona, et al. (author)
  • Diagnosing dying : an integrative literature review
  • 2014
  • In: BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care. - London : BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. - 2045-435X .- 2045-4368.
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background To ensure patients and families receive appropriate end-of-life care pathways and guidelines aim to inform clinical decision making. Ensuring appropriate outcomes through the use of these decision aids is dependent on timely use. Diagnosing dying is a complex clinical decision, and most of the available practice checklists relate to cancer. There is a need to review evidence to establish diagnostic indicators that death is imminent on the basis of need rather than a cancer diagnosis.Aim To examine the evidence as to how patients are judged by clinicians as being in the final hours or days of life.Design Integrative literature review.Data sources Five electronic databases (2001–2011): Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) on The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO and CINAHL. The search yielded a total of 576 hits, 331 titles and abstracts were screened, 42 papers were retrieved and reviewed and 23 articles were included.Results Analysis reveals an overarching theme of uncertainty in diagnosing dying and two subthemes: (1) ‘characteristics of dying’ involve dying trajectories that incorporate physical, social, spiritual and psychological decline towards death; (2) ‘treatment orientation’ where decision making related to diagnosing dying may remain focused towards biomedical interventions rather than systematic planning for end-of-life care.Conclusions The findings of this review support the explicit recognition of ‘uncertainty in diagnosing dying’ and the need to work with and within this concept. Clinical decision making needs to allow for recovery where that potential exists, but equally there is the need to avoid futile interventions.
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  • Lawrenson, Kate, et al. (author)
  • Functional mechanisms underlying pleiotropic risk alleles at the 19p13.1 breast-ovarian cancer susceptibility locus
  • 2016
  • In: Nature Communications. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 2041-1723. ; 7
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • A locus at 19p13 is associated with breast cancer (BC) and ovarian cancer (OC) risk. Here we analyse 438 SNPs in this region in 46,451 BC and 15,438 OC cases, 15,252 BRCA1 mutation carriers and 73,444 controls and identify 13 candidate causal SNPs associated with serous OC (P=9.2 × 10-20), ER-negative BC (P=1.1 × 10-13), BRCA1-associated BC (P=7.7 × 10-16) and triple negative BC (P-diff=2 × 10-5). Genotype-gene expression associations are identified for candidate target genes ANKLE1 (P=2 × 10-3) and ABHD8 (P<2 × 10-3). Chromosome conformation capture identifies interactions between four candidate SNPs and ABHD8, and luciferase assays indicate six risk alleles increased transactivation of the ADHD8 promoter. Targeted deletion of a region containing risk SNP rs56069439 in a putative enhancer induces ANKLE1 downregulation; and mRNA stability assays indicate functional effects for an ANKLE1 3′-UTR SNP. Altogether, these data suggest that multiple SNPs at 19p13 regulate ABHD8 and perhaps ANKLE1 expression, and indicate common mechanisms underlying breast and ovarian cancer risk.
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  • 2019
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
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journal article (5)
conference paper (2)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (7)
Author/Editor
Wilde Larsson, Bodil ... (4)
Larsson, Maria (2)
Ismail, Mohammed (1)
Børresen-Dale, Anne- ... (1)
Nevanlinna, Heli (1)
Blomqvist, Carl (1)
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Aittomäki, Kristiina (1)
Kelly, Daniel (1)
Yoon, Sook-Yee (1)
Bengtsson-Palme, Joh ... (1)
Nilsson, Henrik (1)
Chang-Claude, Jenny (1)
Kelly, Ryan (1)
Li, Ying (1)
Moore, Matthew D. (1)
Smith, T (1)
Mohammed, Ahmed (1)
Liu, Fang (1)
Zhang, Yao (1)
Jin, Yi (1)
Raza, Ali (1)
Rafiq, Muhammad (1)
Salah, Omar (1)
Zhang, Kai (1)
Khatlani, T (1)
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Wang, Qin (1)
Sörelius, Karl, 1981 ... (1)
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Neuhausen, Susan L (1)
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Ademuyiwa, Adesoji O ... (1)
Arnaud, Alexis P. (1)
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Karlstad University (4)
Karolinska Institutet (3)
Uppsala University (2)
Lund University (2)
University of Gothenburg (1)
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English (7)
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Medical and Health Sciences (7)
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