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result(s) for
"Sheehan, Frederick"
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Panderer to power : the untold story of how Alan Greenspan enriched Wall Street and left a legacy of recession
A look at the man behind the bubble economies of the last two decades reveals the mix of ambition and poor judgment that compelled the former Fed Chairman, Alan Greenspan, to set policies that enriched Wall Street at the expense of the American economy.
LEGAL NOTICES
1963
AUTHORITY--Invltation for proposals for lease of parking facility at Broadway, Tremont St. and Shawmut Avenue, Boston, Massnchusetts. The McIropolitan Tranist Authority invitcs proposals for lease for public or private parking purposes for a term of...
Newspaper Article
Nielsen sells eight media publications to group led by former Bear Stearns CEO
2009
Investors including Alan Schwartz, former chief executive of Bear Stearns, pictured, agreed to buy the Hollywood Reporter, Billboard and six other publications from Nielsen Co. after Lachlan Murdoch reportedly dropped out.
Newspaper Article
Safety and efficacy of stereotactic body radiotherapy as primary treatment for vertebral metastases: a multi-institutional analysis
2014
Purpose
To evaluate patient selection criteria, methodology, safety and clinical outcomes of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for treatment of vertebral metastases.
Materials and methods
Eight centers from the United States (n = 5), Canada (n = 2) and Germany (n = 1) participated in the retrospective study and analyzed 301 patients with 387 vertebral metastases. No patient had been exposed to prior radiation at the treatment site. All patients were treated with linac-based SBRT using cone-beam CT image-guidance and online correction of set-up errors in six degrees of freedom.
Results
387 spinal metastases were treated and the median follow-up was 11.8 months. The median number of consecutive vertebrae treated in a single volume was one (range, 1-6), and the median total dose was 24 Gy (range 8-60 Gy) in 3 fractions (range 1-20). The median EQD2
10
was 38 Gy (range 12-81 Gy). Median overall survival (OS) was 19.5 months and local tumor control (LC) at two years was 83.9%. On multivariate analysis for OS, male sex (p < 0.001; HR = 0.44), performance status <90 (p < 0.001; HR = 0.46), presence of visceral metastases (p = 0.007; HR = 0.50), uncontrolled systemic disease (p = 0.007; HR = 0.45), >1 vertebra treated with SBRT (p = 0.04; HR = 0.62) were correlated with worse outcomes. For LC, an interval between primary diagnosis of cancer and SBRT of ≤30 months (p = 0.01; HR = 0.27) and histology of primary disease (NSCLC, renal cell cancer, melanoma, other) (p = 0.01; HR = 0.21) were correlated with worse LC. Vertebral compression fractures progressed and developed de novo in 4.1% and 3.6%, respectively. Other adverse events were rare and no radiation induced myelopathy reported.
Conclusions
This multi-institutional cohort study reports high rates of efficacy with spine SBRT. At this time the optimal fractionation within high dose practice is unknown.
Journal Article
Barriers to and solutions for representative inclusion across the lifespan and in life course research: The need for structural competency highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic
by
Carter, Ebony B.
,
Potter, Lindsey N.
,
Wafford, Q. Eileen
in
COVID-19
,
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion in Clinical and Translational Science
,
Implementation, Policy and Community Engagement
2023
Exclusion of special populations (older adults; pregnant women, children, and adolescents; individuals of lower socioeconomic status and/or who live in rural communities; people from racial and ethnic minority groups; individuals from sexual or gender minority groups; and individuals with disabilities) in research is a pervasive problem, despite efforts and policy changes by the National Institutes of Health and other organizations. These populations are adversely impacted by social determinants of health (SDOH) that reduce access and ability to participate in biomedical research. In March 2020, the Northwestern University Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute hosted the “Lifespan and Life Course Research: integrating strategies” “Un-Meeting” to discuss barriers and solutions to underrepresentation of special populations in biomedical research. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted how exclusion of representative populations in research can increase health inequities. We applied findings of this meeting to perform a literature review of barriers and solutions to recruitment and retention of representative populations in research and to discuss how findings are important to research conducted during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. We highlight the role of SDOH, review barriers and solutions to underrepresentation, and discuss the importance of a structural competency framework to improve research participation and retention among special populations.
Journal Article
Variability in spine radiosurgery treatment planning – results of an international multi-institutional study
by
Toussaint, André
,
Letourneau, Daniel
,
Tyagi, Neelam
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
,
Cancer patients
2016
Background
The aim of this study was to quantify the variability in spinal radiosurgery (SRS) planning practices between five international institutions, all member of the Elekta Spine Radiosurgery Research Consortium.
Methods
Four institutions provided one representative patient case each consisting of the medical history, CT and MR imaging. A step-wise planning approach was used where, after each planning step a consensus was generated that formed the basis for the next planning step. This allowed independent analysis of all planning steps of CT-MR image registration, GTV definition, CTV definition, PTV definition and SRS treatment planning. In addition, each institution generated one additional SRS plan for each case based on intra-institutional image registration and contouring, independent of consensus results.
Results
Averaged over the four cases, image registration variability ranged between translational 1.1 mm and 2.4 mm and rotational 1.1° and 2.0° in all three directions. GTV delineation variability was 1.5 mm in axial and 1.6 mm in longitudinal direction averaged for the four cases. CTV delineation variability was 0.8 mm in axial and 1.2 mm in longitudinal direction. CTV-to-PTV margins ranged between 0 mm and 2 mm according to institutional protocol. Delineation variability was 1 mm in axial directions for the spinal cord. Average PTV coverage for a single fraction18 Gy prescription was 87 ± 5 %; D
min
to the PTV was 7.5 ± 1.8 Gy averaged over all cases and institutions. Average D
max
to the PRV_SC (spinal cord + 1 mm) was 10.5 ± 1.6 Gy and the average Paddick conformity index was 0.69 ± 0.06.
Conclusions
Results of this study reflect the variability in current practice of spine radiosurgery in large and highly experienced academic centers. Despite close methodical agreement in the daily workflow, clinically significant variability in all steps of the treatment planning process was demonstrated. This may translate into differences in patient clinical outcome and highlights the need for consensus and established delineation and planning criteria.
Journal Article
ACCF/AHA/ACR/SCAI/SIR/SVM/SVN/SVS 2010 performance measures for adults with peripheral artery disease A Report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Performance Measures, the American College of Radiology, the Society for Cardiac Angiography and Interventions, the Society for Interventional Radiology, the Society for Vascular Medicine, the Society for Vascular Nursing, and the Society for Vascular Surgery (Writing Committee to Develop Clinical
by
Belkin, Michael
,
Peterson, Eric D
,
Hirsch, Alan T
in
Adult
,
Advisory Committees
,
American Heart Association
2010
Journal Article
Challenging risk assessment
1998
The current toxicological testing for potentially harmful substances released into the environment is designed to assess very high doses. However, many of the most harmful effects occur at doses much lower. A new model for endocrine-disrupting chemicals is proposed, which challenges the traditional assumptions in toxicology. Evidence from two experimental systems is reviewed to show that current toxicological testing methods are inappropriate for determining endocrine-disrupting effects at environmentally relevant doses. It is argued that, if one accepts that endocrine-disrupting chemicals do not show a response threshold in some circumstances, the traditional concept that there are safe exposure levels that pose no increase in risk must be abandoned.
Journal Article