V

Victoria Campbell

Star Technology and Research (United States)

Publishes on Chronic Kidney Disease and Diabetes, Dialysis and Renal Disease Management, Acute Kidney Injury Research. 11 papers and 791 citations.

11Publications
791Total Citations

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A Bayesian reanalysis of the Standard versus Accelerated Initiation of Renal-Replacement Therapy in Acute Kidney Injury (STARRT-AKI) trial
Cited by 19Open Access

BACKGROUND: Timing of initiation of kidney-replacement therapy (KRT) in critically ill patients remains controversial. The Standard versus Accelerated Initiation of Renal-Replacement Therapy in Acute Kidney Injury (STARRT-AKI) trial compared two strategies of KRT initiation (accelerated versus standard) in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury and found neutral results for 90-day all-cause mortality. Probabilistic exploration of the trial endpoints may enable greater understanding of the trial findings. We aimed to perform a reanalysis using a Bayesian framework. METHODS: We performed a secondary analysis of all 2927 patients randomized in multi-national STARRT-AKI trial, performed at 168 centers in 15 countries. The primary endpoint, 90-day all-cause mortality, was evaluated using hierarchical Bayesian logistic regression. A spectrum of priors includes optimistic, neutral, and pessimistic priors, along with priors informed from earlier clinical trials. Secondary endpoints (KRT-free days and hospital-free days) were assessed using zero-one inflated beta regression. RESULTS: The posterior probability of benefit comparing an accelerated versus a standard KRT initiation strategy for the primary endpoint suggested no important difference, regardless of the prior used (absolute difference of 0.13% [95% credible interval [CrI] - 3.30%; 3.40%], - 0.39% [95% CrI - 3.46%; 3.00%], and 0.64% [95% CrI - 2.53%; 3.88%] for neutral, optimistic, and pessimistic priors, respectively). There was a very low probability that the effect size was equal or larger than a consensus-defined minimal clinically important difference. Patients allocated to the accelerated strategy had a lower number of KRT-free days (median absolute difference of - 3.55 days [95% CrI - 6.38; - 0.48]), with a probability that the accelerated strategy was associated with more KRT-free days of 0.008. Hospital-free days were similar between strategies, with the accelerated strategy having a median absolute difference of 0.48 more hospital-free days (95% CrI - 1.87; 2.72) compared with the standard strategy and the probability that the accelerated strategy had more hospital-free days was 0.66. CONCLUSIONS: In a Bayesian reanalysis of the STARRT-AKI trial, we found very low probability that an accelerated strategy has clinically important benefits compared with the standard strategy. Patients receiving the accelerated strategy probably have fewer days alive and KRT-free. These findings do not support the adoption of an accelerated strategy of KRT initiation.

How useful is chest X-ray in addition to routine QuantiFERON® in the detection of latent tuberculosis prior to biologics?
Niamh Kearney, Fawad Aslam, Grace Boyd et al.|Clinical and Experimental Dermatology|2024
Cited by 4

Screening with QuantiFERON®/interferon-γ release assay (IGRA) and chest X-ray (CXR) for latent tuberculosis (TB) infection is recommended by the British Association of Dermatologists prior to commencing some biologics. QuantiFERON is highly sensitive, while CXR is poorly sensitive and poorly specific. In our cohort of 995 patients, 2.3% had a positive IGRA and 8.7% had any abnormality on CXR, with only 0.8% suggestive of TB. Patients were just as likely to have an abnormal CXR if they had a positive or negative IGRA (P = 0.93). We suggest that routine screening with IGRA alone is sufficient in the dermatology population, particularly in the setting of a low TB incidence country such as the UK.