Articles: mortality.
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To analyze long-term trends of the incidence and mortality of ovarian cancer in the United States. ⋯ This study provided evidence of a statistically significant decrease in the incidence and mortality of ovarian cancer from 2000 to 2017. Key message What is already known on this topic? Ovarian cancer is one of the most common tumors in women, with high morbidity and mortality. However, trends in long-term morbidity and mortality of patients with ovarian cancer have not been reported. What this study adds Overall incidence and mortality for ovarian cancer showed a decreased trend from 2000 to 2017, and trends in incidence and mortality varied by stage, histological subtype, and tumor grade. Factors associated with overall survival and cancer-specific survival also differ. How this study might affect research, practice, or police This study provides evidence of long-term trends in ovarian cancer incidence and mortality from 2000 to 2017.
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Multiple preoperative calculators are available online to predict preoperative mortality risk for noncardiac surgical patients. However, it is currently unknown how these risk calculators perform across different raters. The current study investigated the interrater reliability of three preoperative mortality risk calculators in an elective high-risk noncardiac surgical patient population to evaluate if these calculators can be safely used for identification of high-risk noncardiac surgical patients for a preoperative multidisciplinary team discussion. ⋯ The current results indicate that the preoperative risk calculators POSPOM, SRC, and SORT exhibit poor to moderate interrater reliability. These calculators are not sufficiently accurate for clinical identification and preoperative counseling of high-risk surgical patients. Clinicians should be trained in using mortality risk calculators. Also, clinicians should be cautious when using predicted mortality estimates from these calculators to identify high-risk noncardiac surgical patients for elective surgery.
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Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Oct 2024
ReviewHow to better prevent sudden cardiac death? Recent advances.
Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is a global public health problem. Despite efforts of the scientific community, it is characterized by low survival (<10%). ⋯ At the population level, efforts are concentrated on prevention of ischemic heart disease, as it is responsible for over 70% of sudden mortality cases in adults, and on development of resuscitation and early defibrillation programs. Much still needs to be done to improve survival by raising awareness in the population through training initiatives and by optimizing available technologies and making them more accessible.