Updated on 2024/09/27

写真a

 
KASUGAI Daisuke
 
Organization
Nagoya University Hospital Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Assistant professor of hospital
Title
Assistant professor of hospital

Degree 2

  1. 博士(医学) ( 2023.7   名古屋大学 ) 

  2. Bachelar of Medicine (MD) ( 2015.3   Nagoya University ) 

Research Interests 4

  1. omics analysis

  2. organ injury

  3. coagulopathy

  4. sepsis

Research History 3

  1. Fujita Health University   Assistant

    2018.4 - 2019.3

  2. Nagoya University

    2017.4 - 2018.3

  3. 日本赤十字社医療センター

    2015.4 - 2017.3

Education 2

  1. Nagoya University

    2009.3 - 2015.3

  2. MPH iHOPE at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

    2022.3

Professional Memberships 2

  1. 日本救急医学会

    2017.4

  2. 日本集中治療医学会

    2017.4

Committee Memberships 2

  1. 一般社団法人PHR普及推進協議会   PHR サービスガイドライン策定特別委員会 作業班  

    2023   

  2. 日本集中治療学会主導共同研究推進会議   ワーキンググループ  

    2022   

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    Committee type:Academic society

Awards 2

  1. 最優秀演題賞

    2023.6   日本集中治療医学会 第7回東海北陸支部学術集会  

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    Award type:Award from Japanese society, conference, symposium, etc. 

  2. Finalist Award

    2020   SG HEALTHCARE AI DATATHON & EXPO  

 

Papers 46

  1. Association between Loss of Hypercoagulable Phenotype, Clinical Features and Complement Pathway Consumption in COVID-19 Invited Reviewed

    Kasugai D, Tanaka T, Suzuki T, et al.

    Frontiers in Immunology     2024.3

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

  2. Physical function and mental health trajectories in COVID-19 patients following invasive mechanical ventilation: a prospective observational study Reviewed International journal

    Yamamoto Hiromasa, Tanaka Shinya, Kasugai Daisuke, Shimizu Miho, Tsuchikawa Yohei, Hori Yuto, Fugane Yuki, Inoue Takayuki, Nagaya Motoki, Omote Norihito, Higashi Michiko, Yamamoto Takanori, Jingushi Naruhiro, Numaguchi Atsushi, Goto Yukari, Nishida Yoshihiro

    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS   Vol. 13 ( 1 ) page: 14529   2023.9

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    Authorship:Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Scientific Reports  

    This prospective observational cohort study was performed to investigate the physical function and mental health trajectories of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) after discharge from the intensive care unit (ICU). The study population consisted of 64 patients (median age, 60 years; 85.9% male; median IMV duration, 9 days). At ICU discharge, 28.1% of the patients had Medical Research Council (MRC) sum score < 48 points, and prolonged IMV was significantly associated with lower MRC sum score and handgrip strength. Symptoms were similar between groups at ICU discharge, and the symptoms most commonly reported as moderate-to-severe were impaired well-being (52%), anxiety (43%), tiredness (41%), and depression (35%). Although muscle strength and mobility status were significantly improved after ICU discharge, Edmonton Symptom Assessment System score did not improve significantly in the prolonged IMV group. EuroQol five-dimension five-level summary index was significantly lower in the prolonged than short IMV group at 6 months after ICU discharge. We found substantial negative physical function and mental health consequences in the majority of surviving COVID-19 patients requiring IMV, with prolonged period of IMV showing greater negative effects not only immediately but also at 6 months after discharge from the ICU.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-41684-3

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  3. Clinical implications of urine output-based sepsis-associated acute kidney injury Reviewed International journal

    Kasugai Daisuke, Nakashima Takaya, Goto Tadahiro

    INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE   Vol. 49 ( 10 ) page: 1263 - 1265   2023.8

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Intensive Care Medicine  

    DOI: 10.1007/s00134-023-07190-w

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  4. Challenges hindering emergency physicians; involvement in multicenter collaborative studies in Japan: A nationwide survey analysis Reviewed International coauthorship International journal

    Yasuda, M; Saito, A; Goto, T; Yamamoto, R; Liu, KB; Kuriyama, A; Kondo, Y; Kasugai, D

    ACUTE MEDICINE & SURGERY   Vol. 10 ( 1 ) page: e906   2023.1

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    Authorship:Last author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

    DOI: 10.1002/ams2.906

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  5. The Mystery of Futility of Appropriate Antibiotics for Coinfection in COVID-19 Reviewed International journal

    Kasugai Daisuke, Jingushi Naruhiro, Omote Norihiro, Shindo Yuichiro, Goto Yukari

    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE   Vol. 204 ( 12 ) page: 1489 - 1489   2021.12

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine  

    DOI: 10.1164/rccm.202107-1656LE

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  6. Clinical impact of visually assessed right ventricular dysfunction in patients with septic shock Reviewed International journal

    Hiraiwa Hiroaki, Kasugai Daisuke, Ozaki Masayuki, Goto Yukari, Jingushi Naruhiro, Higashi Michiko, Nishida Kazuki, Kondo Toru, Furusawa Kenji, Morimoto Ryota, Okumura Takahiro, Matsuda Naoyuki, Matsui Shigeyuki, Murohara Toyoaki

    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS   Vol. 11 ( 1 ) page: 18823   2021.9

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Scientific Reports  

    We retrospectively analyzed data from the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care-III critical care database to determine whether visually-assessed right ventricular (RV) dysfunction was associated with clinical outcomes in septic shock patients. Associations between visually-assessed RV dysfunction by echocardiography and in-hospital mortality, lethal arrhythmia, and hemodynamic indicators to determine the prognostic value of RV dysfunction in patients with septic shock were analyzed. Propensity score analysis showed RV dysfunction was associated with increased risk of in-hospital death in patients with septic shock (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.15; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.99–2.32; P < 0.001). In multivariate logistic regression analysis, RV dysfunction was associated with in-hospital death (OR 2.19; 95% CI 1.91–2.53; P < 0.001), lethal arrhythmia (OR 2.19; 95% CI 1.34–3.57; P < 0.001), and tendency for increased blood lactate levels (OR 1.31; 95% CI 1.14–1.50; P < 0.001) independent of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. RV dysfunction was associated with lower cardiac output, pulmonary artery pressure index, and RV stroke work index. In patients with septic shock, visually-assessed RV dysfunction was associated with in-hospital mortality, lethal arrhythmia, and circulatory insufficiency independent of LV dysfunction. Visual assessment of RV dysfunction using echocardiography might help to identify the short-term prognosis of patients with septic shock by reflecting hemodynamic status.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98397-8

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  7. Relative platelet reductions provide better pathophysiologic signatures of coagulopathies in sepsis Reviewed International journal

    Kasugai Daisuke, Ozaki Masayuki, Nishida Kazuki, Goto Yukari, Takahashi Kunihiko, Matsui Shigeyuki, Matsuda Naoyuki

    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS   Vol. 11 ( 1 ) page: 14033   2021.7

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Scientific Reports  

    In sepsis-associated coagulopathies and disseminated intravascular coagulation, relative platelet reductions may reflect coagulopathy severity. However, limited evidence supports their clinical significance and most sepsis-associated coagulopathy criteria focus on the absolute platelet counts. To estimate the impact of relative platelet reductions and absolute platelet counts on sepsis outcomes. A multicenter retrospective observational study was performed using the eICU Collaborative Research Database, comprising 335 intensive care units (ICUs) in the United States. Patients with sepsis and an ICU stay > 2 days were included. Estimated effects of relative platelet reductions and absolute platelet counts on mortality and coagulopathy-related complications were evaluated. Overall, 26,176 patients were included. Multivariate mixed-effect logistic regression analysis revealed marked in-hospital mortality risk with larger platelet reductions between days one and two, independent from the resultant absolute platelet counts. The adjusted odds ratio (OR) [95% confidence intervals (CI)] for in-hospital mortality was 1.28[1.23–1.32], 1.86[1.75–1.97], 2.99[2.66–3.36], and 6.05[4.40–8.31] for 20–40%, 40–60%, 60–80%, and > 80% reductions, respectively, when compared with a < 20% decrease in platelets (P < 0.001 for each). In the multivariate logistic regression analysis, platelet reductions ≥ 11% and platelet counts ≤ 100,000/μL on day 2 were associated with high coagulopathy-related complications (OR [95%CI], 2.03 and 1.18; P < 0.001 and P < 0.001), while only platelet reduction was associated with thromboembolic complications (OR [95%CI], 1.43 [1.03–1.98], P < 0.001). The magnitude of platelet reductions represent mortality risk and provides a better signature of coagulopathies in sepsis; therefore, it is a plausible criterion for sepsis-associated coagulopathies.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-93635-5

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  8. Timing of administration of epinephrine predicts the responsiveness to epinephrine in norepinephrine-refractory septic shock: a retrospective study Reviewed

    Kasugai Daisuke, Nishikimi Mitsuaki, Nishida Kazuki, Higashi Michiko, Yamamoto Takanori, Numaguchi Atsushi, Takahashi Kunihiko, Matsui Shigeyuki, Matsuda Naoyuki

    JOURNAL OF INTENSIVE CARE   Vol. 7 ( 1 ) page: 20   2019.4

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

    DOI: 10.1186/s40560-019-0377-1

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  9. At-admission prediction of mortality and pulmonary embolism in an international cohort of hospitalised patients with COVID-19 using statistical and machine learning methods

    Mesinovic M., Wong X.C., Rajahram G.S., Citarella B.W., Peariasamy K.M., van Someren Greve F., Olliaro P., Merson L., Clifton L., Kartsonaki C., Abdukahil S.A., Abdulkadir N.N., Abe R., Abel L., Abrous A., Absil L., Acker A., Adachi S., Adam E., Adriano E., Adrião D., Ageel S.A., Ahmed S., Aiello M., Ainscough K., Airlangga E., Aisa T., Hssain A.A., Tamlihat Y.A., Akimoto T., Akmal E., Qasim E.A., Alalqam R., Alberti A., Al-dabbous T., Alegesan S., Alegre C., Alessi M., Alex B., Alexandre K., Al-Fares A., Alfoudri H., Ali A., Ali I., Alidjnou K.E., Aliudin J., Alkhafajee Q., Allavena C., Allou N., Alves J., Alves R., Cabrita J.A., Amaral M., Amira N., Ammerlaan H., Ampaw P., Andini R., Andréjak C., Angheben A., Angoulvant F., Ansart S., Anthonidass S., Antonelli M., de Brito C.A.A., Anwar K.R., Apriyana A., Arabi Y., Aragao I., Arancibia F., Araujo C., Arcadipane A., Archambault P., Arenz L., Arlet J.B., Arnold-Day C., Arora L., Arora R., Artaud-Macari E., Aryal D., Asaki M., Asensio A., Ashley E.A., Ashraf M., Assie J.B., Asyraf A., Atique A., Attanyake A.U.L., Auchabie J., Aumaitre H., Auvet A., Azemar L., Azoulay C., Bach B., Bachelet D., Badr C., Baig N., Baillie J.K., Baird J.K., Bak E.

    Scientific Reports   Vol. 14 ( 1 )   2024.12

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    Publisher:Scientific Reports  

    By September 2022, more than 600 million cases of SARS-CoV-2 infection have been reported globally, resulting in over 6.5 million deaths. COVID-19 mortality risk estimators are often, however, developed with small unrepresentative samples and with methodological limitations. It is highly important to develop predictive tools for pulmonary embolism (PE) in COVID-19 patients as one of the most severe preventable complications of COVID-19. Early recognition can help provide life-saving targeted anti-coagulation therapy right at admission. Using a dataset of more than 800,000 COVID-19 patients from an international cohort, we propose a cost-sensitive gradient-boosted machine learning model that predicts occurrence of PE and death at admission. Logistic regression, Cox proportional hazards models, and Shapley values were used to identify key predictors for PE and death. Our prediction model had a test AUROC of 75.9% and 74.2%, and sensitivities of 67.5% and 72.7% for PE and all-cause mortality respectively on a highly diverse and held-out test set. The PE prediction model was also evaluated on patients in UK and Spain separately with test results of 74.5% AUROC, 63.5% sensitivity and 78.9% AUROC, 95.7% sensitivity. Age, sex, region of admission, comorbidities (chronic cardiac and pulmonary disease, dementia, diabetes, hypertension, cancer, obesity, smoking), and symptoms (any, confusion, chest pain, fatigue, headache, fever, muscle or joint pain, shortness of breath) were the most important clinical predictors at admission. Age, overall presence of symptoms, shortness of breath, and hypertension were found to be key predictors for PE using our extreme gradient boosted model. This analysis based on the, until now, largest global dataset for this set of problems can inform hospital prioritisation policy and guide long term clinical research and decision-making for COVID-19 patients globally. Our machine learning model developed from an international cohort can serve to better regulate hospital risk prioritisation of at-risk patients.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-63212-7

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  10. Stroke in critically ill patients with respiratory failure due to COVID-19: Disparities between low-middle and high-income countries

    Battaglini D., Kelly T.L., Griffee M., Fanning J., Premraj L., Whitman G., Porto D.B., Arora R., Thomson D., Pelosi P., White N.M., Bassi G.L., Suen J., Fraser J.F., Robba C., Cho S.M., Al-Dabbous T., Alfoudri H., Shamsah M., Alfroukh K., Bairmani Z.A.A., Khalid K.J., Abukhalaf S.M.A., Hadhoud M.M., Abdrabo M.F., Fathi M., Alhouri H., Shahla D.H., Alhadad Q., Hanan M., Elapavaluru S., Berg A., Horn C., Abdelhalim A.R.M.E., Amer A.E., Elnaggar C.O.R., Hassan A.A., Abdelaziz A., Abdelhalim M., Orabi Y.S.S.A., Alaraji Z.A., Muhaisen M.R., Almasri L., Mustafa D., Hamdan S., Al-Saba'a Y., Dalloul Z., Alkahlout M., Jaber H., Aldabbourosama O., Abdalhadi A.A., Hussein A.A.M., Emad Z.K., Khaled S., Mohamed N., Hassanin E., Hamdi A., Gamal M., Emad A., Ragab A., Azizeldin M.G., Hamza A., Omer A.A.M., Fadl alla A.O.A., Abdallahrs A.A.A., Eltayeb A.A., Alhasan M.k.m.a., Abdelgaum E.H., Ahmed A.M., Abdulbaqi L.A., Mohammedelhassan O.A., Ahmed M.M.M., Ali M.T.E.M., Mayasi Y., Schroll S., Meyer D., Velazco J., Ploskanych L., Fikes W., Bagewadi R., Dao M., White H., Laviena A.B., Ehlers A., Shalabi-McGuire M., Witt T., Grazioli L., Lorini L., Grandin E.W., Nunez J., Reyes T., O'Briain D., Hunter S., Ramanan M., Affleck J., Veerendra H.H., Rai S., Russell-Brown J., Nourse M., Joseph M.

    Heart and Lung   Vol. 68   page: 131 - 144   2024.11

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    Publisher:Heart and Lung  

    Purpose: We aimed to compare the incidence of stroke in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) versus high-income countries (HICs) in critically ill patients with COVID-19 and its impact on in-hospital mortality. Methods: International observational study conducted in 43 countries. Stroke and mortality incidence rates and rate ratios (IRR) were calculated per admitted days using Poisson regression. Inverse probability weighting (IPW) was used to address the HICs vs. LMICs imbalance for confounders. Results: 23,738 patients [20,511(86.4 %) HICs vs. 3,227(13.6 %) LMICs] were included. The incidence stroke/1000 admitted-days was 35.7 (95 %CI = 28.4–44.9) LMICs and 17.6 (95 %CI = 15.8–19.7) HICs; ischemic 9.47 (95 %CI = 6.57–13.7) LMICs, 1.97 (95 %CI = 1.53, 2.55) HICs; hemorrhagic, 7.18 (95 %CI = 4.73–10.9) LMICs, and 2.52 (95 %CI = 2.00–3.16) HICs; unspecified stroke type 11.6 (95 %CI = 7.75–17.3) LMICs, 8.99 (95 %CI = 7.70–10.5) HICs. In regression with IPW, LMICs vs. HICs had IRR = 1.78 (95 %CI = 1.31–2.42, p < 0.001). Patients from LMICs were more likely to die than those from HICs [43.6% vs 29.2 %; Relative Risk (RR) = 2.59 (95 %CI = 2.29–2.93), p < 0.001)]. Patients with stroke were more likely to die than those without stroke [RR = 1.43 (95 %CI = 1.19–1.72), p < 0.001)]. Conclusions: Stroke incidence was low in HICs and LMICs although the stroke risk was higher in LMICs. Both LMIC status and stroke increased the risk of death. Improving early diagnosis of stroke and redistribution of healthcare resources should be a priority. Trial registration: ACTRN12620000421932 registered on 30/03/2020.

    DOI: 10.1016/j.hrtlng.2024.06.015

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  11. Effects of acute phase intensive electrical muscle stimulation in COVID-19 patients requireing invasive mechanical ventilation: an observational case-control study. Invited Reviewed

    Scientific Reports     2024.3

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

  12. Effects of acute phase intensive electrical muscle stimulation in COVID-19 patients requiring invasive mechanical ventilation: an observational case-control study

    Tsuchikawa, Y; Tanaka, S; Kasugai, D; Nakagawa, R; Shimizu, M; Inoue, T; Nagaya, M; Nasu, T; Omote, N; Higashi, M; Yamamoto, T; Jingushi, N; Numaguchi, A; Nishida, Y

    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS   Vol. 14 ( 1 ) page: 5254   2024.3

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    We investigated the effects of acute-phase intensive electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) on physical function in COVID-19 patients with respiratory failure requiring invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV) in the intensive care unit (ICU). Consecutive COVID-19 patients requiring IMV admitted to a university hospital ICU between January and April 2022 (EMS therapy group) or between March and September 2021 (age-matched historical control group) were included in this retrospective observational case–control study. EMS was applied to both upper and lower limb muscles for up to 2 weeks in the EMS therapy group. The study population consisted of 16 patients undergoing EMS therapy and 16 age-matched historical controls (median age, 71 years; 81.2% male). The mean period until initiation of EMS therapy after ICU admission was 3.2 ± 1.4 days. The EMS therapy group completed a mean of 6.2 ± 3.7 EMS sessions, and no adverse events occurred. There were no significant differences between the two groups in Medical Research Council sum score (51 vs. 53 points, respectively; P = 0.439) or ICU mobility scale at ICU discharge. Addition of upper and lower limb muscle EMS therapy to an early rehabilitation program did not result in improved physical function at ICU discharge in severe COVID-19 patients.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-55969-8

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  13. Variability of oxygen requirements in critically ill COVID-19 patients. Invited Reviewed International coauthorship

    Huth SF, Rothkopf A, Smith L, White N, Bassi GL, Suen JY, Fraser JF; COVID-19 Critical Care Consortium.

    J Glob Health.     2024.2

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  14. The Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock 2024

    Journal of the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine   Vol. advpub ( 0 )   2024

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    Language:Japanese   Publisher:The Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine  

    DOI: 10.3918/jsicm.2400001

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  15. Implementation of Recommendations on the Use of Corticosteroids in Severe COVID-19 Invited Reviewed

    Camirand-Lemyre F, Merson L, Tirupakuzhi Vijayaraghavan BK, Burrell AJC, Citarella BW, Domingue MP, Lévesque S, Usuf E, Wils EJ, Ohshimo S, Martin-Loeches I, Sandulescu O, Laake JH, Lamontagne F; ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group.

    JAMA Netw Open     2023.12

  16. High versus low positive end-expiratory pressure setting in patients receiving veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation support for severe acute respiratory distress syndrome: study protocol for the multicentre, randomised ExPress SAVER Trial Reviewed

    BMJ Open     2023.10

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  17. Implications of uremic cardiomyopathy for the practicing clinician: an educational review Reviewed International journal

    Hiraiwa Hiroaki, Kasugai Daisuke, Okumura Takahiro, Murohara Toyoaki

    HEART FAILURE REVIEWS   Vol. 28 ( 5 ) page: 1129 - 1139   2023.9

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Heart Failure Reviews  

    Studies over recent years have redeveloped our understanding of uremic cardiomyopathy, defined as left ventricular hypertrophy, congestive heart failure, and associated cardiac hypertrophy plus other abnormalities that result from chronic kidney disease and are often the cause of death in affected patients. Definitions of uremic cardiomyopathy have conflicted and overlapped over the decades, complicating the body of published evidence, and making comparison difficult. New and continuing research into potential risk factors, including uremic toxins, anemia, hypervolemia, oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance, indicates the increasing interest in illuminating the pathways that lead to UC and thereby identifying potential targets for intervention. Indeed, our developing understanding of the mechanisms of UC has opened new frontiers in research, promising novel approaches to diagnosis, prognosis, treatment, and management. This educational review highlights advances in the field of uremic cardiomyopathy and how they may become applicable in practice by clinicians. Pathways to optimal treatment with current modalities (with hemodialysis and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors) will be described, along with proposed steps to be taken in research to allow evidence-based integration of developing investigational therapies.

    DOI: 10.1007/s10741-023-10318-1

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  18. Thrombotic and hemorrhagic complications of COVID-19 in adults hospitalized in high-income countries compared with those in adults hospitalized in low- and middle-income countries in an international registry Invited Reviewed

    Griffee MJ, Bozza PT, Reyes LF, Eddington DP, Rosenberger D, Merson L, Citarella BW, Fanning JP, Alexander PMA, Fraser J, Dalton H, Cho SM; ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group.

    Research and Practice in Thrombosis and Haemostasis     2023.6

  19. Association of Country Income Level With the Characteristics and Outcomes of Critically Ill Patients Hospitalized With Acute Kidney Injury and COVID-19 Invited Reviewed

    Wainstein M, Spyrison N, Dai D, Ghadimi M, Chávez-Iñiguez JS, Rizo-Topete L, Citarella BW, Merson L, Pole JD, Claure-Del Granado R, Johnson DW, Shrapnel S; ISARIC Characterization Group.

    Kidney Int Rep     2023.5

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  20. Characteristics and outcomes of an international cohort of 600 000 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 Invited Reviewed International coauthorship

    Int J Epidemiol     2023.4

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  21. Neurological manifestations of COVID-19 in adults and children Reviewed International coauthorship

    Cho SM, White N, Premraj L, Battaglini D, Fanning J, Suen J, Bassi GL, Fraser J, Robba C, Griffee M, Singh B, Citarella BW, Merson L, Solomon T, Thomson D; ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group.

    Brain     2023.4

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  22. 重症患者の免疫・血栓学的プロファイルの異質性に着目した持続的腎代替療法の回路早期閉塞発生メカニズムの探索

    加藤 孝昭, 沖 尚弥, 春日井 大介, 古橋 和拡

    日本透析医学会雑誌   Vol. 56 ( 6 ) page: 251 - 252   2023

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    Language:Japanese   Publisher:一般社団法人 日本透析医学会  

    DOI: 10.4009/jsdt.56.251

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  23. The Accuracy and Potential Racial and Ethnic Biases of GPT-4 in the Diagnosis and Triage of Health Conditions: Evaluation Study Reviewed International coauthorship International journal

    Ito, N; Kadomatsu, S; Fujisawa, M; Fukaguchi, K; Ishizawa, R; Kanda, N; Kasugai, D; Nakajima, M; Goto, T; Tsugawa, Y

    JMIR MEDICAL EDUCATION   Vol. 9 ( 1 ) page: e47532   2023

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:JMIR Medical Education  

    Background: Whether GPT-4, the conversational artificial intelligence, can accurately diagnose and triage health conditions and whether it presents racial and ethnic biases in its decisions remain unclear. Objective: We aim to assess the accuracy of GPT-4 in the diagnosis and triage of health conditions and whether its performance varies by patient race and ethnicity. Methods: We compared the performance of GPT-4 and physicians, using 45 typical clinical vignettes, each with a correct diagnosis and triage level, in February and March 2023. For each of the 45 clinical vignettes, GPT-4 and 3 board-certified physicians provided the most likely primary diagnosis and triage level (emergency, nonemergency, or self-care). Independent reviewers evaluated the diagnoses as "correct" or "incorrect." Physician diagnosis was defined as the consensus of the 3 physicians. We evaluated whether the performance of GPT-4 varies by patient race and ethnicity, by adding the information on patient race and ethnicity to the clinical vignettes. Results: The accuracy of diagnosis was comparable between GPT-4 and physicians (the percentage of correct diagnosis was 97.8% (44/45; 95% CI 88.2%-99.9%) for GPT-4 and 91.1% (41/45; 95% CI 78.8%-97.5%) for physicians; P=.38). GPT-4 provided appropriate reasoning for 97.8% (44/45) of the vignettes. The appropriateness of triage was comparable between GPT-4 and physicians (GPT-4: 30/45, 66.7%; 95% CI 51.0%-80.0%; physicians: 30/45, 66.7%; 95% CI 51.0%-80.0%; P=.99). The performance of GPT-4 in diagnosing health conditions did not vary among different races and ethnicities (Black, White, Asian, and Hispanic), with an accuracy of 100% (95% CI 78.2%-100%). P values, compared to the GPT-4 output without incorporating race and ethnicity information, were all.99. The accuracy of triage was not significantly different even if patients' race and ethnicity information was added. The accuracy of triage was 62.2% (95% CI 46.5%-76.2%; P=.50) for Black patients; 66.7% (95% CI 51.0%-80.0%; P=.99) for White patients; 66.7% (95% CI 51.0%-80.0%; P=.99) for Asian patients, and 62.2% (95%CI 46.5%-76.2%; P=.69) for Hispanic patients. P values were calculated by comparing the outputs with and without conditioning on race and ethnicity. Conclusions: GPT-4's ability to diagnose and triage typical clinical vignettes was comparable to that of board-certified physicians. The performance of GPT-4 did not vary by patient race and ethnicity. These findings should be informative for health systems looking to introduce conversational artificial intelligence to improve the efficiency of patient diagnosis and triage.

    DOI: 10.2196/47532

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  24. Early short course of neuromuscular blocking agents in patients with COVID-19 ARDS: a propensity score analysis Reviewed International coauthorship International journal

    Li Bassi G., Gibbons K., Suen J.Y., Dalton H.J., White N., Corley A., Shrapnel S., Hinton S., Forsyth S., Laffey J.G., Fan E., Fanning J.P., Panigada M., Bartlett R., Brodie D., Burrell A., Chiumello D., Elhazmi A., Esperatti M., Grasselli G., Hodgson C., Ichiba S., Luna C., Marwali E., Merson L., Murthy S., Nichol A., Ogino M., Pelosi P., Torres A., Ng P.Y., Fraser J.F., Al-Dabbous T., Alfoudri H., Shamsah M., Elapavaluru S., Berg A., Horn C., Mayasi Y., Schroll S., Meyer D., Velazco J., Ploskanych L., Fikes W., Bagewadi R., Dao M., White H., Meyer D., Ehlers A., Shalabi-McGuire M., Witt T., Grazioli L., Lorini L., Grandin E.W., Nunez J., Reyes T., OBriain D., Hunter S., Ramanan M., Affleck J., Veerendra H.H., Rai S., Russell-Brown J., Nourse M., Joseph M., Mitchell B., Tenzer M., Abe R., Cho H.J., Jeong I.S., Rahman N., Kakar V., Brozzi N., Mehkri O., Krishnan S., Duggal A., Houltham S., Graf J., Diaz R., Orrego R., Delgado C., González J., Sanchez M.S., Piagnerelli M., Sarrazin J.V., Zabert A./.G., Espinosa L., Delgado P., Delgado V., Rincón D.F.B., Yanten A.M.M., Duque M.B., Brodie D., Al-Hudaib A., Callahan M., Taufik M.A., Wardoyo E.Y., Gunawan M., Trisnaningrum N.S.

    Critical Care   Vol. 26 ( 1 )   2022.12

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    Background: The role of neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is not fully elucidated. Therefore, we aimed to investigate in COVID-19 patients with moderate-to-severe ARDS the impact of early use of NMBAs on 90-day mortality, through propensity score (PS) matching analysis. Methods: We analyzed a convenience sample of patients with COVID-19 and moderate-to-severe ARDS, admitted to 244 intensive care units within the COVID-19 Critical Care Consortium, from February 1, 2020, through October 31, 2021. Patients undergoing at least 2 days and up to 3 consecutive days of NMBAs (NMBA treatment), within 48 h from commencement of IMV were compared with subjects who did not receive NMBAs or only upon commencement of IMV (control). The primary objective in the PS-matched cohort was comparison between groups in 90-day in-hospital mortality, assessed through Cox proportional hazard modeling. Secondary objectives were comparisons in the numbers of ventilator-free days (VFD) between day 1 and day 28 and between day 1 and 90 through competing risk regression. Results: Data from 1953 patients were included. After propensity score matching, 210 cases from each group were well matched. In the PS-matched cohort, mean (± SD) age was 60.3 ± 13.2 years and 296 (70.5%) were male and the most common comorbidities were hypertension (56.9%), obesity (41.1%), and diabetes (30.0%). The unadjusted hazard ratio (HR) for death at 90 days in the NMBA treatment vs control group was 1.12 (95% CI 0.79, 1.59, p = 0.534). After adjustment for smoking habit and critical therapeutic covariates, the HR was 1.07 (95% CI 0.72, 1.61, p = 0.729). At 28 days, VFD were 16 (IQR 0–25) and 25 (IQR 7–26) in the NMBA treatment and control groups, respectively (sub-hazard ratio 0.82, 95% CI 0.67, 1.00, p = 0.055). At 90 days, VFD were 77 (IQR 0–87) and 87 (IQR 0–88) (sub-hazard ratio 0.86 (95% CI 0.69, 1.07; p = 0.177). Conclusions: In patients with COVID-19 and moderate-to-severe ARDS, short course of NMBA treatment, applied early, did not significantly improve 90-day mortality and VFD. In the absence of definitive data from clinical trials, NMBAs should be indicated cautiously in this setting.

    DOI: 10.1186/s13054-022-03983-5

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  25. ISARIC-COVID-19 dataset: A Prospective, Standardized, Global Dataset of Patients Hospitalized with COVID-19 Reviewed International coauthorship International journal

    Garcia-Gallo E., Merson L., Kennon K., Kelly S., Citarella B.W., Fryer D.V., Shrapnel S., Lee J., Duque S., Fuentes Y.V., Balan V., Smith S., Wei J., Gonçalves B.P., Russell C.D., Sigfrid L., Dagens A., Olliaro P.L., Baruch J., Kartsonaki C., Dunning J., Rojek A., Rashan A., Beane A., Murthy S., Reyes L.F., Abbas A., Abdukahil S.A., Abdulkadir N.N., Abe R., Abel L., Absil L., Jabal K.A., Zayyad H.A., Acharya S., Acker A., Adachi S., Adam E., Adriano E., Adrião D., Ageel S.A., Ahmed S., Aiello M., Ainscough K., Airlangga E., Aisa T., Hssain A.A., Tamlihat Y.A., Akimoto T., Akmal E., Qasim E.A., Al-Dabbous T., Al-Fares A., Alalqam R., Alberti A., Alegesan S., Alegre C., Alessi M., Alex B., Alexandre K., Alfoudri H., Ali A., Ali I., Shah N.A., Sheikh N.A., Alidjnou K.E., Aliudin J., Alkhafajee Q., Allavena C., Allou N., Altaf A., Alves J., Alves J.M., Alves R., Amaral M., Amira N., Ammerlaan H., Ampaw P., Andini R., Andrejak C., Angheben A., Angoulvant F., Ansart S., Anthonidass S., Antonelli M., Antunes de Brito C.A., Anwar K.R., Apriyana A., Arabi Y., Aragao I., Arancibia F., Araujo C., Arcadipane A., Archambault P., Arenz L., Arlet J.B., Arnold-Day C., Aroca A., Arora L., Arora R.

    Scientific Data   Vol. 9 ( 1 )   2022.7

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    The International Severe Acute Respiratory and Emerging Infection Consortium (ISARIC) COVID-19 dataset is one of the largest international databases of prospectively collected clinical data on people hospitalized with COVID-19. This dataset was compiled during the COVID-19 pandemic by a network of hospitals that collect data using the ISARIC-World Health Organization Clinical Characterization Protocol and data tools. The database includes data from more than 705,000 patients, collected in more than 60 countries and 1,500 centres worldwide. Patient data are available from acute hospital admissions with COVID-19 and outpatient follow-ups. The data include signs and symptoms, pre-existing comorbidities, vital signs, chronic and acute treatments, complications, dates of hospitalization and discharge, mortality, viral strains, vaccination status, and other data. Here, we present the dataset characteristics, explain its architecture and how to gain access, and provide tools to facilitate its use.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01534-9

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  26. ARDS clinical practice guideline 2021 Reviewed International journal

    Tasaka S., Ohshimo S., Takeuchi M., Yasuda H., Ichikado K., Tsushima K., Egi M., Hashimoto S., Shime N., Saito O., Matsumoto S., Nango E., Okada Y., Hayashi K., Sakuraya M., Nakajima M., Okamori S., Miura S., Fukuda T., Ishihara T., Kamo T., Yatabe T., Norisue Y., Aoki Y., Iizuka Y., Kondo Y., Narita C., Kawakami D., Okano H., Takeshita J., Anan K., Okazaki S.R., Taito S., Hayashi T., Mayumi T., Terayama T., Kubota Y., Abe Y., Iwasaki Y., Kishihara Y., Kataoka J., Nishimura T., Yonekura H., Ando K., Yoshida T., Masuyama T., Sanui M., Nakashima T., Masunaga A., Tanaka A., Inoue A., Higashi A., Tanikawa A., Ujiro A., Takayama C., Kasugai D., Ueno D., Satoh D., Kai S., Ota K., Hagiwara Y., Hamaguchi J., Fujii R., Hongo T., Masunaga N., Yamamoto R., Uchimido R., Terayama T., Hokari S., Sakamoto H., Dongli , Nakataki E., Tabata E., Okazawa S., Kotajima F., Ishimaru G., Hoshino H., Yoshida H., Iwai H., Nakagawa H., Sugimura H., Narumiya H., Nakamura H., Sugimoto H., Hashimoto H., Ito H., Dote H., Imahase H., Sato H., Katsurada M., Osawa I., Kamei J., Maki J., Sugihara J., Fujimoto J., Ishikawa J., Kosaka J., Shibata J., Hashimoto K., Nakano Y.

    Respiratory Investigation   Vol. 60 ( 4 ) page: 446 - 495   2022.7

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    Background: The joint committee of the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine/Japanese Respiratory Society/Japanese Society of Respiratory Care Medicine on ARDS Clinical Practice Guideline has created and released the ARDS Clinical Practice Guideline 2021. Methods: The 2016 edition of the Clinical Practice Guideline covered clinical questions (CQs) that targeted only adults, but the present guideline includes 15 CQs for children in addition to 46 CQs for adults. As with the previous edition, we used a systematic review method with the Grading of Recommendations Assessment Development and Evaluation (GRADE) system as well as a degree of recommendation determination method. We also conducted systematic reviews that used meta-analyses of diagnostic accuracy and network meta-analyses as a new method. Results: Recommendations for adult patients with ARDS are described: we suggest against using serum C-reactive protein and procalcitonin levels to identify bacterial pneumonia as the underlying disease (GRADE 2D); we recommend limiting tidal volume to 4–8 mL/kg for mechanical ventilation (GRADE 1D); we recommend against managements targeting an excessively low SpO2 (PaO2) (GRADE 2D); we suggest against using transpulmonary pressure as a routine basis in positive end-expiratory pressure settings (GRADE 2B); we suggest implementing extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for those with severe ARDS (GRADE 2B); we suggest against using high-dose steroids (GRADE 2C); and we recommend using low-dose steroids (GRADE 1B). The recommendations for pediatric patients with ARDS are as follows: we suggest against using non-invasive respiratory support (non-invasive positive pressure ventilation/high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy) (GRADE 2D); we suggest placing pediatric patients with moderate ARDS in the prone position (GRADE 2D); we suggest against routinely implementing NO inhalation therapy (GRADE 2C); and we suggest against implementing daily sedation interruption for pediatric patients with respiratory failure (GRADE 2D). Conclusions: This article is a translated summary of the full version of the ARDS Clinical Practice Guideline 2021 published in Japanese (URL: https://www.jrs.or.jp/publication/jrs_guidelines/). The original text, which was written for Japanese healthcare professionals, may include different perspectives from healthcare professionals of other countries.

    DOI: 10.1016/j.resinv.2022.05.003

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  27. The Contribution of Chest X-Ray to Predict Extubation Failure in Mechanically Ventilated Patients Using Machine Learning-Based Algorithms. Reviewed International journal

    Fukuchi K, Osawa I, Satake S, Ito H, Shibata J, Dohi E, Kasugai D, Miyamoto Y, Ohbe H, Tamoto M, Yamada N, Yoshikawa K, Goto T

    Critical care explorations   Vol. 4 ( 6 ) page: e0718   2022.6

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  28. Abnormal magnesium levels and their impact on death and acute kidney injury in critically ill children Reviewed International journal

    Morooka Hikaru, Tanaka Akihito, Kasugai Daisuke, Ozaki Masayuki, Numaguchi Atsushi, Maruyama Shoichi

    PEDIATRIC NEPHROLOGY   Vol. 37 ( 5 ) page: 1157 - 1165   2022.5

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    Background: The prevalence of magnesium imbalance in critically ill children is very high. However, its significance in the development of acute kidney injury (AKI) and mortality remains unknown. Methods: In this retrospective observational study from 2010 to 2018, the pediatric-specific intensive care database was analyzed. We included critically ill children aged > 3 months and those without chronic kidney disease. Patients were diagnosed with AKI, according to the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) study. We calculated the initial corrected magnesium levels (cMg) within 24 h and used a spline regression model to evaluate the cut-off values for cMg. We analyzed 28-day mortality and its association with AKI. The interaction between AKI and magnesium imbalance was evaluated. Results: The study included 3,669 children, of whom 105 died within 28 days, while 1,823 were diagnosed with AKI. The cut-off values for cMg were 0.72 and 0.94 mmol/L. Both hypermagnesemia and hypomagnesemia were associated with 28-day mortality (odds ratio [OR] = 2.99, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.89–4.71, p < 0.001; OR = 2.80, 95% CI = 1.60–4.89, p < 0.001). Hypermagnesemia was associated with AKI (OR = 1.52, 95% CI = 1.27–1.82, p < 0.001), while neither hypermagnesemia nor hypomagnesemia interacted with the AKI stage on the 28-day mortality. Conclusions: Abnormal magnesium levels were associated with 28-day mortality in critically ill children. AKI and hypermagnesemia had a strong association. Graphical abstract: “A higher resolution version of the Graphical abstract is available as Supplementary information”. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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  29. Recurrence of Overdose Suicide Attempt index: a novel scoring system for predicting the recurrence of intentional overdose

    Hirose Masayuki, Kasugai Daisuke, Tajima Kousuke, Takahashi Hiroshi, Yamada Shigeki, Hirakawa Akihiko

    NAGOYA JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCIENCE   Vol. 84 ( 2 ) page: 301 - 310   2022.5

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    Repeated suicide attempts through intentional overdose are not infrequent, but little is known about the risk factors associated with intentional overdose. We investigated these risk factors within 1 year of discharge from hospital and developed an index predicting recurrence. This retrospective observational study included 419 patients admitted to our hospital between 2011 and 2018 due to intentional overdose. Of these, 43 (10.0%) repeated an overdose within 1 year of discharge. The risk factors with the highest odds ratios from multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to develop an index assessing Recurrence of Overdose Suicide Attempt. The following variables were significantly associated with recurrence and were included in the index: anxiety and/or insomnia at discharge; use of five or more psychotropic medications; diagnosis of an ICD-F4 anxiety disorders; and female sex (odds ratios: 4.24; 5.52; 2.41; and 3.41, respectively). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the index was 0.797. Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values for Recurrence of Overdose Suicide Attempt >4 points (out of 6) were 72.1%, 75.8%, 25.4%, and 96.0%, respectively. Our novel index predicted the recurrence of intentional overdose with a good negative predictive value and may therefore be a useful screening tool for this high-risk population.

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  30. Bedside cannulation for veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation using portable X-ray system in a coronavirus disease patient. Reviewed

    Kondo T, Kuwayama T, Hiraiwa H, Kasugai D, Goto Y, Numaguchi A, Katsu T, Matsui T, Hashimoto N, Tanaka A, Morimoto R, Okumura T, Murohara T

    Journal of cardiology cases   Vol. 25 ( 3 ) page: 185 - 187   2022.3

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    Transportation of patients with coronavirus disease (COVID)-19 outside isolation rooms should be avoided to prevent further spread of the disease. Here, we report a safe and accurate bedside cannulation method for veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VV-ECMO) in a COVID-19 patient in the intensive care unit. A 71-year-old man was admitted to our hospital and diagnosed as having COVID-19 pneumonia. We decided to initiate VV-ECMO therapy because maintaining blood oxygen saturation was difficult despite the mechanical ventilation. We placed two flat-panel detectors behind the patient's chest and the right inguinal area. We repeatedly imaged and monitored insertion of wires and cannulas using a portable X-ray system. Cannulas were successfully inserted in the appropriate position, and VV-ECMO was initiated without any complications. <Learning objective: Transportation of patients with coronavirus disease outside isolation rooms carries the risk of further spread of the disease. By repeatedly acquiring images using a portable X-ray system, safe and accurate cannulation for veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation cannulation can be performed at the bedside in the intensive care unit.>

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  31. Effects of evidence-based ICU care on long-term outcomes of patients with sepsis or septic shock (ILOSS): protocol for a multicentre prospective observational cohort study in Japan Reviewed International journal

    Liu Keibun, Kotani Toru, Nakamura Kensuke, Chihiro Takai, Morita Yasunari, Ishii Kenzo, Fujizuka Kenji, Yasumura Daisetsu, Taniguchi Daisuke, Hamagami Tomohiro, Shimojo Nobutake, Nitta Masakazu, Hongo Takashi, Akieda Kazuki, Atsuo Maeda, Kaneko Tadashi, Sakuda Yutaka, Andoh Kohkichi, Nagatomi Akiyoshi, Tanaka Yukiko, Irie Yuhei, Kamijo Hiroshi, Hanazawa Manabu, Kasugai Daisuke, Ayaka Matsuoka, Oike Kenji, Lefor Alan Kawarai, Takahashi Kunihiko, Katsukawa Hajime, Ogura Takayuki

    BMJ OPEN   Vol. 12 ( 3 ) page: e054478   2022.3

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    INTRODUCTION: Sepsis is not only the leading cause of death in the intensive care unit (ICU) but also a major risk factor for physical and cognitive impairment and mental disorders, known as postintensive care syndrome (PICS), reduced health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and even mental health disorders in patient families (PICS-family; PICS-F). The ABCDEF bundle is strongly recommended to overcome them, while the association between implementing the bundle and the long-term outcomes is also unknown. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This is a multicentre prospective observational study at 26 ICUs. All consecutive patients between 1 November 2020 and 30 April 2022, who are 18 years old or older and expected to stay in an ICU for more than 48 hours due to sepsis or septic shock, are enrolled. Follow-up to evaluate survival and PICS/ PICS-F will be performed at 3, 6 and 12 months and additionally every 6 months up to 5 years after hospital discharge. Primary outcomes include survival at 12 months, which is the primary outcome, and the incidence of PICS defined as the presence of any physical impairment, cognitive impairment or mental disorders. PICS assessment scores, HRQoL and employment status are evaluated. The association between the implementation rate for the ABCDEF bundle and for each of the individual elements and long-term outcomes will be evaluated. The PICS-F, defined as the presence of mental disorders, and HRQoL of the family is also assessed. Additional analyses with data up to 5 years follow-up are planned. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study received ethics approvals from Saiseikai Utsunomiya Hospital (2020-42) and all other participating institutions and was registered in the University Hospital Medical Information Network Clinical Trials Registry. Informed consent will be obtained from all patients. The findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at scientific conferences. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: UMIN000041433.

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  32. Ten months of temporal variation in the clinical journey of hospitalised patients with COVID-19: An observational cohort Reviewed International coauthorship

    ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group

    Elife     2021.11

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    DOI: 10.7554/eLife.70970

  33. The protective effect of tight-fitting powered air-purifying respirators during chest compressions Reviewed

    Goto Yukari, Jingushi Naruhiro, Hiraiwa Hiroaki, Ogawa Hiroaki, Sakai Yoshinori, Kasugai Daisuke, Tanaka Taku, Higashi Michiko, Yamamoto Takanori, Numaguchi Atsushi

    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE   Vol. 49   page: 172 - 177   2021.11

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    Background: Airborne personal protective equipment is required for healthcare workers when performing aerosol-generating procedures on patients with infectious diseases. Chest compressions, one of the main components of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, require intense and dynamic movements of the upper body. We aimed to investigate the protective effect of tight-fitting powered air-purifying respirators (PAPRs) during chest compressions. Methods: This single-center simulation study was performed from February 2021 to March 2021. The simulated workplace protection factor (SWPF) is the concentration ratio of ambient particles and particles inside the PAPR mask; this value indicates the level of protection provided by a respirator when subjected to a simulated work environment. Participants performed continuous chest compressions three times for 2 min each time, with a 4-min break between each session. We measured the SWPF of the tight-fitting PAPR during chest compression in real-time mode. The primary outcome was the ratio of any failure of protection (SWPF <500) during the chest compression sessions. Results: Fifty-four participants completed the simulation. Overall, 78% (n = 42) of the participants failed (the measured SWPF value was less than 500) at least one of the three sessions of chest compressions. The median value and interquartile range of the SWPF was 4304 (685–16,191). There were no reports of slipping down of the respirator or mechanical failure during chest compressions. Conclusions: Although the median SWPF value was high during chest compressions, the tight-fitting PAPR did not provide adequate protection.

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  34. The value of open-source clinical science in pandemic response: lessons from ISARIC Reviewed International coauthorship

    The ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group

    Lancet Infect Dis.     2021.10

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    DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(21)00565-X

  35. Assessment of Critical Care Surge Capacity During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Japan Reviewed International coauthorship International journal

    Yamamoto Takanori, Ozaki Masayuki, Kasugai Daisuke, Burnham Gilbert

    HEALTH SECURITY   Vol. 19 ( 5 ) page: 479 - 487   2021.8

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    Japan has the highest proportion of older adults worldwide but has fewer critical care beds than most high-income countries. Although the COVID-19 infection rate in Japan is low compared with Europe and the United States, by the end of 2020, several infected people died in ambulances because they could not find hospitals to accept them. Our study aimed to examine the Japanese healthcare system's capacity to accommodate critically ill COVID-19 patients during the pandemic. We created a model to estimate bed and staff capacity at 3 levels of pandemic response (conventional, contingency, and crisis), as defined by the US National Academy of Medicine, and the function of Japan's healthcare system at each level. We then compared our estimates of the number of COVID-19 patients requiring intensive care at peak times with the national health system capacity using expert panel data. Our findings suggest that Japan's healthcare system currently can accommodate only a limited number of critically ill COVID-19 patients. It could accommodate the surge of pandemic demands by converting nonintensive care unit beds to critical care beds and using nonintensive care unit staff for critical care. However, bed and staff capacity should not be expanded uniformly, so that the limited number of physicians and nurses are allocated efficiently and so staffing does not become the bottleneck of the expansion. Training and deploying physicians and nurses to provide immediate intensive care is essential. The key is to introduce and implement the concept and mechanism of tiered staffing in the Japanese healthcare system. More importantly, most intensive care facilities in Japanese hospitals are small-scaled and thinly distributed in each region. The government needs to introduce an efficient system for smooth dispatching of medical personnel among hospitals regardless of their founding institutions.

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  36. COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission vary with age and sex: results from the ISARIC prospective multinational observational study Reviewed International coauthorship

    ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group

    Infection     2021.6

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    DOI: 10.1007/s15010-021-01599-5

  37. An appraisal of respiratory system compliance in mechanically ventilated covid-19 patients Reviewed International coauthorship

    Li Bassi G, Suen JY, Dalton HJ, White N, Shrapnel S, Fanning JP, Liquet B, Hinton S, Vuorinen A, Booth G, Millar JE, Forsyth S, Panigada M, Laffey J, Brodie D, Fan E, Torres A, Chiumello D, Corley A, Elhazmi A, Hodgson C, Ichiba S, Luna C, Murthy S, Nichol A, Ng PY, Ogino M, Pesenti A, Trieu HT, Fraser JF; COVID-19 Critical Care Consortium.

    critical care     2021.6

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    DOI: 10.1186/s13054-021-03518-4

  38. Usefulness of Respiratory Mechanics and Laboratory Parameter Trends as Markers of Early Treatment Success in Mechanically Ventilated Severe Coronavirus Disease: A Single-Center Pilot Study Reviewed International journal

    Kasugai Daisuke, Ozaki Masayuki, Nishida Kazuki, Hiraiwa Hiroaki, Jingushi Naruhiro, Numaguchi Atsushi, Omote Norihito, Shindo Yuichiro, Goto Yukari

    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE   Vol. 10 ( 11 )   2021.6

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    Whether a patient with severe coronavirus disease (COVID-19) will be successfully liberated from mechanical ventilation (MV) early is important in the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aimed to characterize the time course of parameters and outcomes of severe COVID-19 in relation to the timing of liberation from MV. This retrospective, single-center, observational study was performed using data from mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU between 1 March 2020 and 15 December 2020. Early liberation from ventilation (EL group) was defined as successful extubation within 10 days of MV. The trends of respiratory mechanics and laboratory data were visualized and compared between the EL and prolonged MV (PMV) groups using smoothing spline and linear mixed effect models. Of 52 admitted patients, 31 mechanically ventilated COVID-19 patients were included (EL group, 20 (69%); PMV group, 11 (31%)). The patients’ median age was 71 years. While in-hospital mortality was low (6%), activities of daily living (ADL) at the time of hospital discharge were significantly impaired in the PMV group compared to the EL group (mean Barthel index (range): 30 (7.5–95) versus 2.5 (0–22.5), p = 0.048). The trends in respiratory compliance were different between patients in the EL and PMV groups. An increasing trend in the ventilatory ratio during MV until approximately 2 weeks was observed in both groups. The interaction between daily change and earlier liberation was significant in the trajectory of the thrombin–antithrombin complex, antithrombin 3, fibrinogen, C-reactive protein, lymphocyte, and positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) values. The indicator of physiological dead space increases during MV. The trajectory of markers of the hypercoagulation status, inflammation, and PEEP were significantly different depending on the timing of liberation from MV. These findings may provide insight into the pathophysiology of COVID-19 during treatment in the critical care setting.

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  39. Failure of non-invasive respiratory support after 6 hours from initiation is associated with ICU mortality Reviewed International journal

    Nishikimi Mitsuaki, Nishida Kazuki, Shindo Yuichiro, Shoaib Muhammad, Kasugai Daisuke, Yasuda Yuma, Higashi Michiko, Numaguchi Atsushi, Yamamoto Takanori, Matsui Shigeyuki, Matsuda Naoyuki

    PLOS ONE   Vol. 16 ( 4 ) page: e0251030   2021.4

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    A previous study has shown that late failure (> 48 hours) of high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) was associated with intensive care unit (ICU) mortality. The aim of this study was to investigate whether failure of non-invasive respiratory support, including HFNC and non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV), was also associated with the risk of mortality even if it occurs in the earlier phase. We retrospectively analyzed 59 intubated patients for acute respiratory failure due to lung diseases between April 2014 and June 2018. We divided the patients into 2 groups according to the time from starting non-invasive ventilatory support until their intubation: ≤6 hours failure and > 6 hours failure group. We evaluated the differences in the ICU mortality between these two groups. The multivariate logistic regression analysis showed the highest mortality in the > 6 hours failure group as compared to the ≤6 hours failure group, with a statistically significant difference (p < 0.01). It was also associated with a statistically significant increased 30-day mortality and decreased ventilator weaning rate. The ICU mortality in patients with acute respiratory failure caused by lung diseases was increased if the time until failure of HFNC and NPPV was more than 6 hours.

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  40. A case of reexpansion pulmonary edema and acute pulmonary thromboembolism associated with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma treated with venovenous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation Reviewed

      Vol. 23 ( 1 ) page: 53 - 56   2021.1

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    DOI: 10.1016/j.jccase.2020.08.013

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  41. Relative bradycardia as a clinical feature in patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): A report of two cases. Reviewed International journal

    Hiraiwa H, Goto Y, Nakamura G, Yasuda Y, Sakai Y, Kasugai D, Jinno S, Tanaka T, Ogawa H, Higashi M, Yamamoto T, Jingushi N, Ozaki M, Numaguchi A, Kondo T, Morimoto R, Okumura T, Matsuda N, Murohara T

    Journal of cardiology cases   Vol. 22 ( 6 ) page: 260 - 264   2020.12

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    We treated two patients with COVID-19 pneumonia requiring mechanical ventilation. Case 1 was a 73-year-old Japanese man. Computed tomography (CT) revealed ground-glass opacities in both lungs. He had severe respiratory failure with a partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood/fraction of inspiratory oxygen ratio (P/F ratio) of 203. Electrocardiogram showed a heart rate (HR) of 56 beats/min, slight ST depression in leads II, III, and aVF, and mild saddle-back type ST elevation in leads V1 and V2. High-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (cTnT) level was slightly elevated. Despite a high fever and hypoxemia, his HR remained within 50–70 beats/min. Case 2 was a 52-year-old Japanese woman. CT revealed ground-glass opacities in the lower left lung. Electrocardiogram showed a HR of only 81 beats/min, despite a body temperature of 39.2 °C, slight ST depression in leads V4, V5, V6, and a prominent U wave in multiple leads. She had an elevated cTnT and a P/F ratio of 165. Despite a high fever and hypoxemia, her HR remained within 50–70 beats/min. Both patients had a poor compensatory increase in their HR, despite their critical status. Relative bradycardia could be a cardiovascular complication and is an important clinical finding in patients with COVID-19. <Learning objective: We report two Japanese cases of COVID-19 pneumonia with relative bradycardia as a condition and no significant compensatory increase in heart rate despite high fever and severe hypoxemia. Relative bradycardia in COVID-19 might be associated with myocardial injury due to not only direct viral involvement but also systemic inflammation. We should carefully observe the occurrence of relative bradycardia because it could potentially be a clinical sign of COVID-19.>

    DOI: 10.1016/j.jccase.2020.07.015

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  42. Maximum Norepinephrine Dosage Within 24 Hours as an Indicator of Refractory Septic Shock: A Retrospective Study. Reviewed International journal

    Kasugai D, Hirakawa A, Ozaki M, Nishida K, Ikeda T, Takahashi K, Matsui S, Uenishi N

    Journal of intensive care medicine   Vol. 35 ( 11 ) page: 1285 - 1289   2020.11

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    Authorship:Lead author, Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

    DOI: 10.1177/0885066619860736

    Web of Science

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  43. Prognostic Impact of Parameters of Metabolic Acidosis in Critically Ill Children with Acute Kidney Injury: A Retrospective Observational Analysis Using the PIC Database Reviewed International journal

    Morooka Hikaru, Kasugai Daisuke, Tanaka Akihito, Ozaki Masayuki, Numaguchi Atsushi, Maruyama Shoichi

    DIAGNOSTICS   Vol. 10 ( 11 )   2020.11

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    Authorship:Corresponding author   Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

    DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics10110937

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  44. The prognostic impact of right ventricular dysfunction in patients with septic cardiomyopathy Reviewed International journal

    Hiraiwa H., Kasugai D., Okumura T., Kazama S., Kimura Y., Shibata N., Arao Y., Oishi H., Kato H., Kuwayama T., Yamaguchi S., Kondo T., Furusawa K., Morimoto R., Murohara T.

    EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL   Vol. 41   page: 1836 - 1836   2020.11

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  45. Multiple limb compartment syndrome as a manifestation of capillary leak syndrome secondary to metformin and dipeptidyl peptidase IV inhibitor overdose: A case report. Reviewed

    Kasugai D, Tajima K, Jingushi N, Uenishi N, Hirakawa A

    Medicine   Vol. 99 ( 29 ) page: e21202   2020.7

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    Language:Japanese   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

    DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000021202

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  46. EFFECT OF SUSTAINED HIGH-EFFICIENCY DAILY DIAFILTRATION USING A MEDIATOR-ADSORBING MEMBRANE ON 28-DAY MORTALITY IN SEPTIC SHOCK PATIENTS

    Hasegawa Daisuke, Nishida Kazuki, Kasugai Daisuke, Kawaji Takahiro, Moriyama Kazuhiro, Nishida Osamu

    SHOCK   Vol. 53   page: 31 - 32   2020.6

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    Language:Japanese  

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Books 1

  1. ICUグリーンノート

    ( Role: Contributor ,  急性肝不全、消化管障害)

    中外医学社  2021.6 

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    Language:Japanese

Presentations 6

  1. ゼロから始める多施設共同トランスレーショナルリサーチ:ASCULAPIUS研究の展望 Invited

    春日井大介

    第50回日本集中治療医学会学術総会  2023.3.3  日本集中治療医学会

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    Event date: 2023.3

    Language:Japanese   Presentation type:Oral presentation (invited, special)  

    Venue:京都   Country:Japan  

  2. 凝固プロファイルのダイナミクスから 微小血栓形成によるCOVID-19の重症化メカニズムに迫る

    春日井大介

    日本集中治療医学会総会  2022.3.19 

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    Event date: 2022.3

    Language:Japanese   Presentation type:Symposium, workshop panel (public)  

  3. 難治性敗血症性ショックにおける 心原性ショックのマネジメント :from Big Data to Bedside

    春日井大介, 後藤縁, 平岩宏章, 沼口敦, 松田直之

    日本集中治療医学会総会  2022.3.19 

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    Event date: 2022.3

    Language:Japanese   Presentation type:Symposium, workshop panel (public)  

    Venue:web  

  4. 重症 COVID-19 における APTT 比を用いた凝固管理の限界と ROTEM を併用した抗凝固療法の可能性の探索

    Daisuke Kasugai

    The 48th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine  2021.2.12  Yasuhiro Kuroda

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    Event date: 2021.2

    Language:Japanese   Presentation type:Symposium, workshop panel (public)  

    Venue:WEB   Country:Japan  

  5. 持続可能なトランスレーショナル研究基盤構築による診療と研究の両立

    春日井大介

    第51回日本集中治療医学会学術総会  2024.3.14  日本集中治療医学会

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    Event date: 2024.3

    Language:Japanese   Presentation type:Symposium, workshop panel (public)  

    Venue:日本  

  6. Smart monitoring to achieve optimal hemodynamic goal in the setting of Emergency and Medical Intensive Care Unit Invited

    Daisuke Kasugai

    The 48th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine  2021.2.12  Yasuhiro Kuroda

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    Event date: 2021.2

    Language:Japanese   Presentation type:Oral presentation (invited, special)  

    Venue:WEB   Country:Japan  

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Research Project for Joint Research, Competitive Funding, etc. 6

  1. ミッドカインを活用した新型コロナウイルス(COVID-19) 重症化予測簡易判定系の研究・開発

    2022.4 - 2024.3

    沖縄県  沖縄イノベーション・エコシステム共同研究推進事業 

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    Authorship:Coinvestigator(s)  Grant type:Competitive

    Grant amount:\15000000

  2. Establishment of clinical trial infrastracture for the treatment of pulmonary microembolisms in severe COVID-19

    2021.4 - 2022.3

    Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development 

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    Authorship:Coinvestigator(s)  Grant type:Competitive

    Grant amount:\19500000 ( Direct Cost: \15000000 、 Indirect Cost:\4500000 )

  3. 生命の危機に瀕した重症未診断疾患のリアルタイムendotyping法を開発するための基盤構築

    2023

    医学研究奨励助成事業 

  4. 急性呼吸促拍症候群のモニタリングデータを用いたフェノタイ ピング・エンドタイピング法の開発

    2023

    研究助成 

  5. 重症新型コロナウイルス(COVID-19)肺炎のモニタリングデータを用いたTemporal Fusion Transformerによる病態悪化の検知法確立

    2021.10 - 2023.9

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    Authorship:Principal investigator  Grant type:Competitive

    Grant amount:\2000000

  6. 敗血症性凝固障害の異質性を解決するための病型分類法の確立

    2020.3 - 2021.2

    令和元年度(第50回)研究奨励金 

    春日井大介

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    Authorship:Principal investigator  Grant type:Competitive

    Grant amount:\500000

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KAKENHI (Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research) 2

  1. ビッグデータと凝固プロファイリングによる敗血症性凝固障害主要メカニズムの解明

    Grant number:22K09180  2022.4 - 2025.3

    科学研究費助成事業  基盤研究(C)

    春日井 大介, 西田 一貴

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    Authorship:Principal investigator  Grant type:Competitive

    Grant amount:\4160000 ( Direct Cost: \3200000 、 Indirect Cost:\960000 )

    本研究では敗血症性凝固障害発症・重症化のリスク因子の解明及び重症化に寄与する主要メカニズムを明らかにする。国内外の2つの大規模なデータベースを利用して、敗血症性凝固障害の発症・重症化予測因子を明らかにし、機械学習により凝固障害の重症化を予測する精度の高いモデルを構築する。次に、、包括的凝固機能プロファイル測定を活用した主要な凝固障害のフェノタイプ毎のモニタリング方法を探索的に明らかにする。

  2. Identifying Novel Sepsis Endotypes

    Grant number:23K27696  2023.4 - 2026.3

    Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

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    Authorship:Coinvestigator(s)