PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Penn Medicine surgeons develop universal patient-reported outcomes tool to improve hernia care

The first-of-its-kind patient-informed instrument captures quality of life and other key outcomes pre- and post-surgery

2021-01-12
(Press-News.org) PHILADELPHIA--Patient-reported outcomes have become a critical part of improving surgical care because of their ability to capture patient experiences, such as quality of life and satisfaction, that can help inform treatment. However, for patients undergoing abdominal hernia repair -- a common procedure performed on about 400,000 patients a year in the United States -- a tool to effectively and practically measure those outcomes has not been widely accepted and implemented by clinics.

Now, researchers from the division of Plastic Surgery in the department of Surgery in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, have successfully developed, tested, and implemented a first-of-its-kind, patient-informed questionnaire tool for ventral hernia repair surgery patients that could be broadly used to improve the way clinicians care for patients and potentially outcomes.

The findings were reported online in the Annals of Surgery.

"By listening to the voices of patients and transforming that into an objective instrument that not only measures and quantifies outcomes from their standpoint but is also reproducible, we are able to capture the things that often go overlooked and aren't documented," said senior author John P. Fischer, MD, MPH, an associate professor of Surgery at Penn and director of the Clinical Research Program in the division of Plastic Surgery. "By measuring these outcomes, like pain, function, and body image, we are deepening our understanding about who does well and will ultimately be able to make better shared decisions about which treatment approach is most appropriate for which patients."

An abdominal, or ventral, hernia is a bulge of tissues through an opening of weakness within the abdominal wall muscles. They are a common, chronic surgical problem facing any patient undergoing abdominal surgery. Although traditionally thought of as a simple surgical issue, clinicians have come to recognize it as a complex, multi-dimensional disease. For instance, patients with ventral hernias experience negative effects on whole-body fitness, creating significant downstream effects, including restricted motion, increased pain, and difficulties completing activities of daily living. It can also lead to adverse effects on psychosocial well-being and a negative impact on body image and mental health.

The tool, which is known as Abdominal Hernia-Q (AHQ) and is being implemented across hernia surgery clinics at Penn Medicine, has been more than five years in the making, as it underwent rigorous testing and validation in the clinical setting with more than 400 patients and researchers from multiple disciplines.

It's both practical and efficient, the authors show, taking less than 70 seconds to complete the pre-op questions and less than three minutes for the post-operation questions. Older patients took longer to complete the questions, but no differences in time to completion were observed across race, ethnicities, and incomes.

For the study, all pre-operative and over six-month post-operative patients completed the questions on an iPad: six questions for pre-op and 16 questions for post-op. The tool captures physical issues that include but are not limited to how the patient is able to achieve tasks at work or home, pain issues, how they look and feel, sexuality, and their clinical care team experience.

The researchers psychometrically validated the tool by correlating it with clinical outcomes and data from other available patient reported outcome instruments over a year after surgery, and through re-testing.

The Penn tool improves upon others in several ways. It provides both pre-operative and post-operative instruments, with a simple scoring system, allowing for easy-to-interpret quality-of-life data, covers body image and satisfaction with surgical care, and was developed with input from not only patients but also their families, nurses, and clinicians. The tool is also more sensitive to negative clinical outcomes, with significantly lower scores for patients who had 30- and 90-day complications, readmissions, and importantly, recurrence.

"It's extremely reliable in capturing information and aspects of quality of life that are important in hernia repair," said Viren Patel, a fourth-year Penn medical student pursuing a career in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, and first author on the paper. "And because of the short amount of time it takes to complete, it won't get in the way of clinical flow."

Time to complete patient-reported outcomes has remained a barrier for collecting such measurements in the clinic.

More accurate patient-reported outcomes will help clinicians better determine who is a candidate for surgery, counsel patients about the benefits and risks, and perform operations, which will lead to higher value clinical care, the authors said.

The Penn AHQ instrument is currently available online for use and implementation into surgical clinical practices.

"We built this from the ground up, from foundational qualitative work to real world, prospective testing," Fisher said. "It is now ready for dissemination and wide-scale adoption as the first universal patient reported outcomes measure for patients with ventral hernias."

INFORMATION:

Penn co-authors on the study include Jessica R. Cunning, MD, Arturo J. Rios-Diaz, MD, Jaclyn T. Mauch, Shelby L. Nathan, MD, Charles A. Messa IV, Cutler B. Whitely, Geoffrey M. Kozak, MD, and Robyn B. Broach, PhD. This work was a collaboration between researhcers in the division of Plastic Surgery and Gastrointestinal Surgery at Penn, including Jon Morris, MD, Stephen Kovach, MD, Sean Harbison, MD,Steven Raper, MD, Daniel Dempsey, MD, Kristoffel Dumon, MD, Najjia Mahmoud, MD, Alan Schuricht, MD, FACS, Noel Williams, MD, and David Wernsing, MD, FACS, and other partners within the department of Surgery.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Exciting times for efficient heavy-atom-free OLEDs

Exciting times for efficient heavy-atom-free OLEDs
2021-01-12
Osaka - Organic light-emitting diode (OLED) displays are now very popular features of many mainstream products including smartphones and televisions. OLEDs have the advantages of being low cost, light, flexible, and easy to modify, making them ideal display materials. However, current OLEDs that achieve commercially viable quantum efficiencies contain rare metal atoms such as iridium and platinum that increase costs and reduce sustainability. Now, an international team including researchers from Osaka University has reported the best performing heavy-atom-free OLED of its kind. Although OLEDs that do not contain heavy atoms--such as rare metals and halogens--are ...

Singapore and US scientists uncover the structure of Wnt, Wntless proteins

Singapore and US scientists uncover the structure of Wnt, Wntless proteins
2021-01-12
SINGAPORE, 12 January 2021 - Researchers from Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore and Columbia University in the US have solved how Wnt proteins, which play a fundamental role in cell proliferation and differentiation, hitch a ride to travel from their cellular factory to the cell surface. Drugs that interfere with Wnt transport, like the made-in-Singapore anti-cancer drug ETC-159, can be exploited to treat diseases with excess Wnt signalling, such as cancer and fibrosis. "Since excessive Wnt signalling can drive cancer, supress immunity and trigger fibrosis, ...

Conflict between divorced parents can lead to mental health problems in children

2021-01-12
Conflict between divorced or separated parents increases the risk of children developing physical and mental health problems. A new study from the Arizona State University Research and Education Advancing Children's Health (REACH) Institute has found that children experience fear of being abandoned when their divorced or separated parents engage in conflict. Worrying about being abandoned predicted future mental health problems in children. The work will be published in Child Development on January 12. "Conflict is a salient stressor for kids, and the link between exposure to interparental conflict ...

Endocrine Society recommends government negotiation and other policies to lower out-of-pocket costs

2021-01-12
WASHINGTON--The Endocrine Society is calling on policymakers to include government negotiation as part of an overall strategy to reduce insulin prices in its updated position statement published today in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. More than 34 million Americans have diabetes, and another 88 million are at risk for developing the disease. The cost of insulin has nearly tripled in the past 15 years, and a lack of transparency in the drug supply chain has made it challenging to identify and address the causes of soaring costs. Federal law currently prohibits Medicare, which accounts for a third of all drug spending, from negotiating directly with pharmaceutical companies over drug prices. Legislation empowering the ...

FAU develops simplified COVID-19 diagnostic method to ramp up widespread testing

FAU develops simplified COVID-19 diagnostic method to ramp up widespread testing
2021-01-12
To properly monitor and help curb the spread of COVID-19, several millions of diagnostic tests are required daily in just the United States alone. There is still a widespread lack of COVID-19 testing in the U.S. and many of the clinical diagnostics protocols require extensive human labor and materials that could face supply shortages and present biosafety concerns. The current gold standard for COVID-19 diagnostic testing in the U.S., developed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is quantitative PCR-based (qPCR) molecular tests that detect the presence of the viral ...

High levels of clinician burnout identified at leading cardiac centre

High levels of clinician burnout identified at leading cardiac centre
2021-01-12
Toronto (Jan. 12, 2021) - More than half the clinicians surveyed at the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre reported burnout and high levels of distress according to a series of studies published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal Open (CMAJ-OPEN). In these studies carried out before the COVID-19 pandemic, 78% of nurses, 73% of allied health staff and 65% of physicians described experiencing burnout. "In my 35 years as a physician I have never seen a more serious issue for clinicians than burnout," says lead author Dr. Barry Rubin, Chair and Medical Director, the Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, ...

iCeMS makes highly conductive antiperovskites with soft anion lattices

iCeMS makes highly conductive antiperovskites with soft anion lattices
2021-01-12
A new structural arrangement of atoms shows promise for developing safer batteries made with solid materials. Scientists at Kyoto University's Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences (iCeMS) designed a new type of 'antiperovskite' that could help efforts to replace the flammable organic electrolytes currently used in lithium ion batteries. Their findings were described in the journal Nature Communications. Perovskite compounds are being tested and used in a wide range of technologies due to their excellent ability to conduct electricity, among other properties. They can be made from a large combination of atoms with the formula ABX3, where A and B are positively charged atoms and X is a negatively ...

Master designers: Architects of the brain revealed

Master designers: Architects of the brain revealed
2021-01-12
Brain cells often cluster and grow together creating three-dimensional columns. While this pillar-like pattern of neurons is established, the exact mechanism behind its formation is still elusive. Makoto Sato's team at Kanazawa University has been closely studying this phenomenon. Their recent findings explain how molecules in the brain work in conjunction to create the architectural marvels that are the columns. The researchers base much of their work on the Drosophila (fruit fly) due to the organism's genetic similarities to humans. In this study they focused on the visual center of the fly's brain in a region known ...

Nanosheet-based electronics could be one drop away

Nanosheet-based electronics could be one drop away
2021-01-12
Scientists at Japan's Nagoya University and the National Institute for Materials Science have found that a simple one-drop approach is cheaper and faster for tiling functional nanosheets together in a single layer. If the process, described in the journal ACS Nano, can be scaled up, it could advance development of next-generation oxide electronics. "Drop casting is one of the most versatile and cost-effective methods for depositing nanomaterials on a solid surface," says Nagoya University materials scientist Minoru Osada, the study's corresponding author. "But it has serious drawbacks, one being the so-called coffee-ring effect: a pattern left by particles once the liquid they are in evaporates. We found, to our great surprise, that ...

No disassembly required: Non-destructive method to measure carrier lifetime in SiC

No disassembly required: Non-destructive method to measure carrier lifetime in SiC
2021-01-12
Silicon carbide (SiC), a versatile and resistant material that exists in multiple crystalline forms, has attracted much attention thanks to its unique electronic properties. From its use in the first LED devices, to its applications in high-voltage devices with low power losses, SiC displays exceptional semiconductor behavior. So far, the operating voltages for unipolar SiC devices are below 3.3 kV. Though useful for the electronic systems of cars, trains, and home appliances, unipolar SiC-based devices cannot be used in power generation and distribution systems, which operate at voltages above 10 kV. Some researchers believe that the solution to this conundrum lies in bipolar SiC devices, which offer low on-resistance (and hence lower losses) ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Multiple sclerosis drug may help with poor working memory

The MIT Press releases workshop report on the future of open access publishing and policy

Why substitute sugar with maple syrup?

New study investigates insecticide contamination in Minnesota’s water

The Einstein Foundation Berlin awards €500,000 prize to advance research quality

Mitochondrial encephalopathy caused by a new biallelic repeat expansion

Nanoplastics can impair the effect of antibiotics

Be humble: Pitt studies reveal how to increase perceived trustworthiness of scientists

Promising daily tablet increases growth in children with dwarfism

How 70% of the Mediterranean Sea was lost 5.5 million years ago

Keeping the lights on and the pantry stocked: Ensuring water for energy and food production

Parkinson’s Paradox: When more dopamine means more tremor

Study identifies strategy for AI cost-efficiency in health care settings

NIH-developed AI algorithm successfully matches potential volunteers to clinical trials release

Greg Liu is in his element using chemistry to tackle the plastics problem

Cocoa or green tea could protect you from the negative effects of fatty foods during mental stress - study

A new model to explore the epidermal renewal

Study reveals significant global disparities in cancer care across different countries

Proactively screening diabetics for heart disease does not improve long-term mortality rates or reduce future cardiac events, new study finds

New model can help understand coexistence in nature

National Poll: Some parents need support managing children's anger

Political shadows cast by the Antarctic curtain

Scientists lead study on ‘spray on, wash off’ bandages for painful EB condition

A new discovery about pain signalling may contribute to better treatment of chronic pain

Migrating birds have stowaway passengers: invasive ticks could spread novel diseases around the world

Diabetes drug shows promise in protecting kidneys

Updated model reduces liver transplant disparities for women

Risk of internal bleeding doubles when people on anticoagulants take NSAID painkiller

‘Teen-friendly’ mindfulness therapy aims to help combat depression among teenagers

Innovative risk score accurately calculates which kidney transplant candidates are also at risk for heart attack or stroke, new study finds

[Press-News.org] Penn Medicine surgeons develop universal patient-reported outcomes tool to improve hernia care
The first-of-its-kind patient-informed instrument captures quality of life and other key outcomes pre- and post-surgery