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Authors = Bjoern Opitz

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21 pages, 2302 KiB  
Article
Pulmonary Hypertension in Adults with Congenital Heart Disease: Real-World Data from the International COMPERA-CHD Registry
by Harald Kaemmerer, Matthias Gorenflo, Dörte Huscher, David Pittrow, Christian Apitz, Helmut Baumgartner, Felix Berger, Leonhard Bruch, Eva Brunnemer, Werner Budts, Martin Claussen, Gerry Coghlan, Ingo Dähnert, Michele D’Alto, Marion Delcroix, Oliver Distler, Sven Dittrich, Daniel Dumitrescu, Ralf Ewert, Martin Faehling, Ingo Germund, Hossein Ardeschir Ghofrani, Christian Grohé, Karsten Grossekreymborg, Michael Halank, Georg Hansmann, Dominik Harzheim, Attila Nemes, Kalman Havasi, Matthias Held, Marius M. Hoeper, Michael Hofbeck, Wolfgang Hohenfrost-Schmidt, Elena Jurevičienė, Lina Gumbienè, Hans-Joachim Kabitz, Hans Klose, Thomas Köhler, Stavros Konstantinides, Martin Köestenberger, Rainer Kozlik-Feldmann, Hans-Heiner Kramer, Cornelia Kropf-Sanchen, Astrid Lammers, Tobias Lange, Philipp Meyn, Oliver Miera, Katrin Milger-Kneidinger, Rhoia Neidenbach, Claus Neurohr, Christian Opitz, Christian Perings, Bjoern Andrew Remppis, Gabriele Riemekasten, Laura Scelsi, Werner Scholtz, Iveta Simkova, Dirk Skowasch, Andris Skride, Gerd Stähler, Brigitte Stiller, Iraklis Tsangaris, Carmine Dario Vizza, Anton Vonk Noordegraaf, Heinrike Wilkens, Hubert Wirtz, Gerhard-Paul Diller, Ekkehard Grünig and Stephan Rosenkranzadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
J. Clin. Med. 2020, 9(5), 1456; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9051456 - 13 May 2020
Cited by 41 | Viewed by 8174
Abstract
Introduction: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a common complication in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD), aggravating the natural, post-operative, or post-interventional course of the underlying anomaly. The various CHDs differ substantially in characteristics, functionality, and clinical outcomes among each other and compared with [...] Read more.
Introduction: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a common complication in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD), aggravating the natural, post-operative, or post-interventional course of the underlying anomaly. The various CHDs differ substantially in characteristics, functionality, and clinical outcomes among each other and compared with other diseases with pulmonary hypertension. Objective: To describe current management strategies and outcomes for adults with PH in relation to different types of CHD based on real-world data. Methods and results: COMPERA (Comparative, Prospective Registry of Newly Initiated Therapies for Pulmonary Hypertension) is a prospective, international PH registry comprising, at the time of data analysis, >8200 patients with various forms of PH. Here, we analyzed a subgroup of 680 patients with PH due to CHD, who were included between 2007 and 2018 in 49 specialized centers for PH and/or CHD located in 11 European countries. At enrollment, the patients’ median age was 44 years (67% female), and patients had either pre-tricuspid shunts, post-tricuspid shunts, complex CHD, congenital left heart or aortic disease, or miscellaneous other types of CHD. Upon inclusion, targeted therapies for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) included endothelin receptor antagonists, PDE-5 inhibitors, prostacyclin analogues, and soluble guanylate cyclase stimulators. Eighty patients with Eisenmenger syndrome were treatment-naïve. While at inclusion the primary PAH treatment for the cohort was monotherapy (70% of patients), with 30% of the patients on combination therapy, after a median observation time of 45.3 months, the number of patients on combination therapy had increased significantly, to 50%. The use of oral anticoagulants or antiplatelets was dependent on the underlying diagnosis or comorbidities. In the entire COMPERA-CHD cohort, after follow-up and receiving targeted PAH therapy (n = 511), 91 patients died over the course of a 5-year follow up. The 5-year Kaplan–Meier survival estimate for CHD associated PH was significantly better than that for idiopathic PAH (76% vs. 54%; p < 0.001). Within the CHD associated PH group, survival estimates differed particularly depending on the underlying diagnosis and treatment status. Conclusions: In COMPERA-CHD, the overall survival of patients with CHD associated PH was dependent on the underlying diagnosis and treatment status, but was significantly better as than that for idiopathic PAH. Nevertheless, overall survival of patients with PAH due to CHD was still markedly reduced compared with survival of patients with other types of CHD, despite an increasing number of patients on PAH-targeted combination therapy. Full article
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14 pages, 1045 KiB  
Article
Solar Neutrinos Spectroscopy with Borexino Phase-II
by Lino Miramonti, Matteo Agostini, Konrad Altenmueller, Simon Appel, Victor Atroshchenko, Zara Bagdasarian, Davide Basilico, Gianpaolo Bellini, Jay Benziger, Daniel Bick, Irene Bolognino, Giuseppe Bonfini, David Bravo, Barbara Caccianiga, Frank Calaprice, Alessio Caminata, Silvia Caprioli, Marco Carlini, Paolo Cavalcante, Francesca Cavanna, Alexander Chepurnov, Koun Choi, Laura Collica, Stefano Davini, Alexander Derbin, XueFeng Ding, Antonio Di Ludovico, Lea Di Noto, Ilia Drachnev, Kirill Fomenko, Andrey Formozov, Davide Franco, Federico Gabriele, Cristiano Galbiati, Michael Gschwender, Chiara Ghiano, Marco Giammarchi, Augusto Goretti, Maxim Gromov, Daniele Guffanti, Caren Hagner, Thibaut Houdy, Ed Hungerford, Aldo Ianni, Andrea Ianni, Anna Jany, Dominik Jeschke, Vladislav Kobychev, Denis Korablev, Gyorgy Korga, Tobias Lachenmaier, Matthias Laubenstein, Evgeny Litvinovich, Francesco Lombardi, Paolo Lombardi, Livia Ludhova, Georgy Lukyanchenko, Liudmila Lukyanchenko, Igor Machulin, Giulio Manuzio, Simone Marcocci, Jelena Maricic, Johann Martyn, Emanuela Meroni, Mikko Meyer, Marcin Misiaszek, Valentina Muratova, Birgit Neumair, Lothar Oberauer, Bjoern Opitz, Vsevolod Orekhov, Fausto Ortica, Marco Pallavicini, Laszlo Papp, Omer Penek, Lidio Pietrofaccia, Nelly Pilipenko, Andrea Pocar, Alessio Porcelli, Georgy Raikov, Gioacchino Ranucci, Alessandro Razeto, Alessandra Re, Mariia Redchuk, Aldo Romani, Nicola Rossi, Sebastian Rottenanger, Stefan Schöenert, Dmitrii Semenov, Mikhail Skorokhvatov, Oleg Smirnov, Albert Sotnikov, Lee F. F. Stokes, Yura Suvorov, Roberto Tartaglia, Gemma Testera, Jan Thurn, Maria Toropova, Evgenii Unzhakov, Alina Vishneva, Bruce Vogelaar, Franz Von Feilitzsch, Stefan Weinz, Marcin Wojcik, Michael Wurm, Zachary Yokley, Oleg Zaimidoroga, Sandra Zavatarelli, Kai Zuber and Grzegorz Zuzeladd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
Universe 2018, 4(11), 118; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe4110118 - 7 Nov 2018
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 4986
Abstract
Solar neutrinos have played a central role in the discovery of the neutrino oscillation mechanism. They still are proving to be a unique tool to help investigate the fusion reactions that power stars and further probe basic neutrino properties. The Borexino neutrino observatory [...] Read more.
Solar neutrinos have played a central role in the discovery of the neutrino oscillation mechanism. They still are proving to be a unique tool to help investigate the fusion reactions that power stars and further probe basic neutrino properties. The Borexino neutrino observatory has been operationally acquiring data at Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy since 2007. Its main goal is the real-time study of low energy neutrinos (solar or originated elsewhere, such as geo-neutrinos). The latest analysis of experimental data, taken during the so-called Borexino Phase-II (2011-present), will be showcased in this talk—yielding new high-precision, simultaneous wide band flux measurements of the four main solar neutrino components belonging to the “pp” fusion chain (pp, pep, 7 Be, 8 B), as well as upper limits on the remaining two solar neutrino fluxes (CNO and hep). Full article
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