Publications by authors named "Glynn R"

Importance: Evidence on cardiovascular benefits and safety of sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT-2) inhibitors is mainly from placebo-controlled trials. Therefore, the comparative effectiveness and safety of individual SGLT-2 inhibitors remain unknown.

Objective: To compare the use of canagliflozin or dapagliflozin with empagliflozin for a composite outcome (myocardial infarction [MI] or stroke), heart failure hospitalization, MI, stroke, all-cause death, and safety outcomes, including diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), lower-limb amputation, bone fracture, severe urinary tract infection (UTI), and genital infection and whether effects differed by dosage or cardiovascular disease (CVD) history.

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  • The study addresses the challenges of missing data in confounding variables when using real-world data, specifically in pharmaceutical research comparing cardiovascular outcomes between two types of diabetes medications in older adults.
  • Utilizing the Structural Missing Data Investigations (SMDI) toolkit, researchers analyzed the missingness patterns of important health metrics like HbA1c and BMI from electronic health records.
  • Results indicated significant missing data (63.6% for HbA1c and 16.5% for BMI) and demonstrated that missingness could be predicted and managed through statistical techniques, leading to improved estimates of medication effects.
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  • Scientists are researching new medicines to help people with atopic dermatitis (AD), which is a type of skin condition.
  • They are checking how safe these new treatments are by looking at lots of patients and comparing different drugs.
  • So far, early results show that some medicines might cause more infections or acne compared to others, but they will keep studying to learn more about safety over time.
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Blood pressure (BP) levels are important modifiable risk factors for incident cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, many adults are on anti-hypertensive medication (MEDS) which lowers their BP but is a marker for increased CVD risk. To capture the association of BP and its treatment with risk, it is important to estimate BP levels in the absence of medication, i.

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The healthy user effect is a well-recognized bias in the field of pharmacoepidemiology and can be expected to overstate the effect of a preventive intervention when comparing long term users or "adherers" to non-users. Similar to the healthy worker effect observed in occupational epidemiology, the healthy user effect can be separated into a healthy initiator effect (baseline confounding) and a healthy adherer effect (selection bias). Restriction approaches and new user designs that implicitly condition on the indication and, similar healthy behaviors or health status can often mitigate the healthy initiator effect (confounding) or healthy adherer effect (selection bias) at the start of a study.

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Background And Objective: Prospective sequential analyses after a new drug approval allow proactive surveillance of new drugs. In the current study, we demonstrate feasibility of frailty-specific sequential analyses for dabigatran, rivaroxaban, and apixaban versus warfarin.

Methods: We partitioned Medicare data from 2011 to 2020 into datasets based on calendar year following the date of drug approval.

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Objective: The objective of this study is to evaluate the concordance of results between the Health Outcomes and Reduced Incidence with Zoledronic Acid Once Yearly (HORIZON)-Pivotal Fracture Trial (PFT) and a nonrandomized database study designed to emulate the trial.

Methods: HORIZON-PFT evaluated the efficacy of zoledronic acid versus placebo in reducing the risk of hip fractures and found a 41% risk reduction over a three-year treatment period (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.59; 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.

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Virtual care appointments expanded rapidly during COVID-19 out of necessity and to enable access and continuity of care for many patients. While previous work has explored health care providers' experiences with telehealth usage on small-scale projects, the broad-level adoption of virtual care during the pandemic has expounded opportunities for a better understanding of how to enhance the integration of telehealth as a regular mode of health care services delivery. Training and education for health care providers on the effective use of virtual care technologies are factors that can help facilitate improved adoption and use.

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  • The study evaluates the effectiveness of ticagrelor compared to clopidogrel in older adults with acute coronary syndrome undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention.
  • It included a cohort of 42,843 Medicare beneficiaries, with 23% classified as frail, and analyzed data on major adverse cardiovascular events and major bleeding following treatment.
  • The results showed a slight reduction in cardiovascular events and an increase in bleeding risk with ticagrelor for non-frail patients, while showing insufficient evidence for its benefits in frail older adults.
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  • Non-randomized studies suggest bariatric surgery may significantly reduce mortality within 6-12 months compared to non-surgical patients, but these results might be influenced by biases.
  • A review of 21 relevant studies revealed that many suffered from immortal time bias and confounding bias related to body mass index (BMI), affecting the reliability of their findings.
  • The analysis suggests that adjusting for these biases led to less extreme conclusions about the effectiveness of bariatric surgery, emphasizing the need for better study designs in future research.
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  • The ATM kinase initiates a response to DNA double-strand breaks by activating NF-κB factors, leading to gene expression changes that help cells survive and repair damage.
  • ATM uses two main mechanisms to activate NF-κB: phosphorylating the Nemo protein, which then helps activate NF-κB, and migrating to the cytoplasm where it also empowers Nemo to trigger NF-κB.
  • Research with mice expressing a modified Nemo protein suggests that ATM's phosphorylation of Nemo is not essential for NF-κB activation in response to DNA damage, as these mice still display normal immune cell development and responses to different stimuli.
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Purpose: To describe and demonstrate sample size and power calculation for ophthalmic studies with a binary outcome from one or both eyes.

Methods: We describe sample size and power calculation for four commonly used eye designs: (1) one-eye design or person-design: one eye per subject or outcome is at person-level; (2) paired design: two eyes per subject and two eyes are in different treatment groups; (3) two-eye design: two eyes per subject and both eyes are in the same treatment group; and (4) mixture design: mixture of one eye and two eyes per subject. For each design, we demonstrate sample size and power calculations in real ophthalmic studies.

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The objective of this review is to summarize and appraise the research methodology, emerging findings, and future directions in pharmacoepidemiologic studies assessing the benefits and harms of pharmacotherapies in older adults with different levels of frailty. Older adults living with frailty are at elevated risk for poor health outcomes and adverse effects from pharmacotherapy. However, current evidence is limited due to the under-enrollment of frail older adults and the lack of validated frailty assessments in clinical trials.

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Objective: We compared health care resource utilization (HCRU) and costs for inpatient and outpatient services and dispensed medications in older adults with type 2 diabetes initiating empagliflozin versus dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitors (DPP-4is).

Research Design And Methods: The study population included U.S.

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Background: Treatments for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are associated with complex changes in lipids and lipoproteins that may impact cardiovascular (CV) risk. The objective of this study was to examine lipid and lipoprotein changes associated with two common RA treatment strategies, triple therapy or tumor necrosis factor inhibitor (TNFi), and association with CV risk.

Methods: In this secondary data analysis of the TARGET trial, methotrexate (MTX) inadequate responders with RA were randomized to either add sulfasalazine and hydroxychloroquine (triple therapy), or TNFi for 24-weeks.

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Introduction: Beta-carotene (BC) protects the body against free radicals that may damage the kidney and lead to the development of acute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease (CKD). Previous studies in animal models have demonstrated a potential protective effect of 30 mg/kg BC supplementation on renal ischemia or reperfusion injury and subsequently improved kidney function. The extension of these findings to humans, however, remains unclear.

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Background: Statin effects extend beyond low-density lipoprotein cholesterol reduction, potentially modulating the metabolism of bioactive lipids (BALs), crucial for biological signaling and inflammation. These bioactive metabolites may serve as metabolic footprints, helping uncover underlying processes linked to pleiotropic effects of statins and yielding a better understanding of their cardioprotective properties. This study aimed to investigate the impact of high-intensity statin therapy versus placebo on plasma BALs in the JUPITER trial (Justification for the Use of Statins in Prevention: an Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin; NCT00239681), a randomized primary prevention trial involving individuals with low-density lipoprotein cholesterol <130 mg/dL and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein ≥2 mg/L.

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Objective: Partially observed confounder data pose challenges to the statistical analysis of electronic health records (EHR) and systematic assessments of potentially underlying missingness mechanisms are lacking. We aimed to provide a principled approach to empirically characterize missing data processes and investigate performance of analytic methods.

Methods: Three empirical sub-cohorts of diabetic SGLT2 or DPP4-inhibitor initiators with complete information on HbA1c, BMI and smoking as confounders of interest (COI) formed the basis of data simulation under a plasmode framework.

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Background: Machine learning-based approaches that seek to accomplish individualized treatment effect prediction have gained traction; however, some salient challenges lack wider recognition.

Methods: We describe key methodologic considerations for individualized treatment effect prediction models using data from the Treatment of Preserved Cardiac Function Heart Failure with an Aldosterone Antagonist Trial for spironolactone in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. The causal survival forest algorithm was used for model development.

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Aims/hypothesis: Limited evidence exists on the comparative safety and effectiveness of empagliflozin against alternative glucose-lowering medications in individuals with type 2 diabetes with the broad spectrum of cardiovascular risk. The EMPagliflozin compaRative effectIveness and SafEty (EMPRISE) cohort study was designed to monitor the safety and effectiveness of empagliflozin periodically for a period of 5 years with data collection from electronic healthcare databases.

Methods: We identified individuals ≥18 years old with type 2 diabetes who initiated empagliflozin or dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (DPP-4i) from 2014 to 2019 using US Medicare and commercial claims databases.

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Background: Premature coronary heart disease (CHD) is a major cause of death in women. We aimed to characterize biomarker profiles of women who developed CHD before and after age 65 years.

Methods: In the Women's Health Study (median follow-up 21.

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This article describes the rationale, aims, and methodology of the Accelerating Medicines Partnership® Schizophrenia (AMP® SCZ). This is the largest international collaboration to date that will develop algorithms to predict trajectories and outcomes of individuals at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis and to advance the development and use of novel pharmacological interventions for CHR individuals. We present a description of the participating research networks and the data processing analysis and coordination center, their processes for data harmonization across 43 sites from 13 participating countries (recruitment across North America, Australia, Europe, Asia, and South America), data flow and quality assessment processes, data analyses, and the transfer of data to the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Data Archive (NDA) for use by the research community.

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