Medicine (St Vincent's) - Research Publications

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    Model Parameter Estimation As Features to Predict the Duration of Epileptic Seizures From Onset.
    Liu, Y ; Xia, S ; Soto-Breceda, A ; Karoly, P ; Cook, MJ ; Grayden, DB ; Schmidt, D ; Kuhlmann, L (IEEE, 2023-07)
    The durations of epileptic seizures are linked to severity and risk for patients. It is unclear if the spatiotemporal evolution of a seizure has any relationship with its duration. Understanding such mechanisms may help reveal treatments for reducing the duration of a seizure. Here, we present a novel method to predict whether a seizure is going to be short or long at its onset using features that can be interpreted in the parameter space of a brain model. The parameters of a Jansen-Rit neural mass model were tracked given intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG) signals, and were processed as time series features using MINIROCKET. By analysing 2954 seizures from 10 patients, patient-specific classifiers were built to predict if a seizure would be short or long given 7 s of iEEG at seizure onset. The method achieved an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) greater than 0.6 for five of 10 patients. The behaviour in the parameter space has shown different mechanisms are associated with short/long seizures.Clinical relevance-This shows that it is possible to classify whether a seizure will be short or long based on its early characteristics. Timely interventions and treatments can be applied if the duration of the seizures can be predicted.
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    Evidence of Onset and Sustained Neural Responses to Isolated Phonemes from Intracranial Recordings in a Voice-based Cursor Control Task
    Meng, K ; Lee, S-H ; Goodarzy, F ; Vogrin, S ; Cook, MJ ; Lee, S-W ; Grayden, DB (ISCA-INT SPEECH COMMUNICATION ASSOC, 2022)
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    Implementation of a closed-loop BCI system for real-time speech synthesis under clinical constraints
    Meng, K ; Kim, E ; Vogrin, S ; Cook, MJ ; Goodarzy, F ; Grayden, DB ; Chung, CK (IEEE, 2022)
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    Shortages of oral antiseizure medications and estimation of the number of patients impacted by shortages in Australia
    Welton, J ; Stratton, G ; Schoeninger, B ; Low, MH ; Moody, A ; D'Souza, W (Epilepsy Society of Australia, 2021)
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    Antiseizure medication shortages are associated with increased product switching: an analysis of levetiracetam
    Welton, J ; Stratton, G ; Schoeninger, B ; Low, MH ; Moody, A ; D'Souza, W (AESNet, 2021)
    Rationale: Product switching (brand/manufacturer or dose/formulation of the same drug) is associated with non-adherence and breakthrough seizures in patients with epilepsy. Rates of product switching and discontinuation were characterized in patients on levetiracetam (LEV) brands experiencing shortages in Australia, and compared with non-shortage periods to understand how antiseizure medication (ASM) shortages affect product switching and discontinuation in patients with epilepsy. LEV was chosen as the focus due to multiple shortages in the Medicine Shortage Information Initiative (MSII), widespread usage in multiple seizure types and ages, and limited use outside epilepsy. Methods: Data were obtained from the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration MSII on all LEV shortages between Jan 2019 and Nov 2020. Shortage dates were cross-referenced with IQVIA-NostraData Longitudinal Dispensation data, which collects pharmacy dispensing data from 25 million patients in Australia with 75% coverage of retail pharmacies nationwide. Patients dispensed a LEV product (brand-formulation-strength combination) appearing in MSII in the 90 days before a shortage were designated as “on therapy.” Patients on therapy and with two consecutive dispensations of a relevant product before start of a shortage were classified as “continuing” (only dispensation of index product throughout shortage), “switching” (dispensation of ≥ 1 different LEV ASM during the shortage), or “discontinuing” (no further LEV dispensations throughout shortage). Switching patterns were compared with the corresponding (non-shortage) period in the prior year to estimate how shortages were associated with rates of product switching and discontinuation. Results: 118 LEV product shortages were identified and 100% were generic brands. Overlapping shortages of same product were consolidated, leaving 23 distinct shortages (Table 1). Median shortage was 133 days (interquartile range 80, 229.5). Of 11 government funded generic brands of LEV, seven (64%) were affected by shortages over 23 months, representing 93% of total volume of generic LEV dispensed over study period. 46,037 patients had ≥ 1 dispensation for generic LEV over study period. 43,531 (95%) of these patients (non-unique) were affected by shortages. Across all shortages, 24% of patients on therapy at point of shortage continued on therapy across the shortage period vs 46% (non-shortage periods); 68% switched to a different product vs 47% (non-shortage periods); 8% discontinued LEV in shortage periods vs 7% (non-shortage periods) (Table 1). Conclusions: Shortages affected most brands of generic LEV in Australia, but not the originator brand Keppra. Shortages were associated with increased product switching compared with non-shortage periods. The results suggest that consideration may be necessary when initiating or switching patients to generic ASM brands due to high rates of generic ASMs being in shortage, and associated product switching in shortage periods, which in independent research has been associated with non-adherence and breakthrough seizures. Funding: Please list any funding that was received in support of this abstract.: UCB Pharma-funded.
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    Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQL) in Patients with Advanced Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma (CSCC) Treated with Cemiplimab: Post Hoc Exploratory Analysis of a Phase 2 Clinical Trial
    Migden, M ; Rischin, D ; Sasane, M ; Mastey, V ; Pavlick, A ; Schmults, C ; Chen, Z ; Guminski, A ; Hauschild, A ; Bury, D ; Chang, AL ; Rabinowits, G ; Ibrahim, S ; Lowy, I ; Fury, M ; Li, S ; Chen, C-I (National Society for Cutaneous Medicine, 2020-10-27)
    Abstract not available.
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    Improvement in Non-Relapse Mortality Following Allogeneic Transplantation for Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia in Australia and New Zealand: An Australasian Bone Marrow Transplant Recipient Registry Study
    Barge, L ; Tran, S ; Kennedy, G ; Ritchie, DS ; Gottlieb, D ; Milliken, S ; Spencer, A ; Purtill, D ; Perera, T ; Doocey, RT ; Larsen, S ; Butler, A ; Bardy, P ; Greenwood, M ; Durrant, S ; Curley, C ; Stewart, C ; Tam, CS ; Collins, J ; Balendran, S ; Di Ciaccio, PR ; Patil, S ; Han, M-H ; Hamad, N (Elsevier BV, 2021-03)