Publications by authors named "T D Tosteson"

Research articles in the clinical and translational science literature commonly use quantitative data to inform evaluation of interventions, learn about the etiology of disease, or develop methods for diagnostic testing or risk prediction of future events. The peer review process must evaluate the methodology used therein, including use of quantitative statistical methods. In this manuscript, we provide guidance for peer reviewers tasked with assessing quantitative methodology, intended to complement guidelines and recommendations that exist for manuscript authors.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how physicians manage emotions during serious illness conversations and aims to create a new framework to assess this regulation using various methods in simulated telehealth settings.
  • - Eleven out of twelve approached physicians participated in the pilot study, achieving high enrollment and survey completion rates, though one type of heart rate sensor recorded more than 20% missing data.
  • - The analysis revealed that physicians prioritized fostering hope over prognosis, aimed to build trusting relationships, and lacked full awareness of their own emotion regulation techniques.
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Importance: Surveillance after prior colon polyps is the most frequent indication for colonoscopy in older adults. However, to our knowledge, the current use of surveillance colonoscopy, clinical outcomes, and follow-up recommendations in association with life expectancy, factoring in both age and comorbidities, have not been studied.

Objective: To evaluate the association of estimated life expectancy with surveillance colonoscopy findings and follow-up recommendations among older adults.

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Purpose: In the genomic era, more women with low-risk breast cancer will forego chemotherapy and rely on adjuvant endocrine therapy (AET) to prevent metastatic recurrence. However, some of these patients will unfortunately relapse. We sought to understand this outcome.

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