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1 during the training sessions and at pre- and posttreatment.
2 4, 48, and 72 hours and 5, 7, 9, and 14 days posttreatment.
3 tionnaires before, during, and up to 2 years posttreatment.
4 recorded at baseline, 3 hours, and 24 hours posttreatment.
5 mine and underwent repeated rs-fcMRI at 24 h posttreatment.
6 the same amount of initial DNA damage by 3 h posttreatment.
7 erienced vision loss; however, most improved posttreatment.
8 h a sustained virologic response at 12 weeks posttreatment.
9 er treatment, and this remained elevated 3 h posttreatment.
10 ; 12 (31%) reported residual visual symptoms posttreatment.
11 not predictive of clinical failure assessed posttreatment.
12 t randomization, biweekly, midtreatment, and posttreatment.
13 n the CD group during anticipatory phases at posttreatment.
14 4 and follow-up visits occurred for 9 months posttreatment.
15 incentive delay task (MIDT) pretreatment and posttreatment.
16 ore treatment and at 2 d and 1, 4, and 16 wk posttreatment.
17 Patients were followed until 1 year posttreatment.
18 g administration (baseline), 2 h, and 7 days posttreatment.
19 ially those experiencing persistent symptoms posttreatment.
20 ups with no significant differences pre- and posttreatment.
21 h a model Ag and monitoring immune responses posttreatment.
22 eek 4, end of treatment, and 6 and 12 months posttreatment.
23 nd levels contracted toward baseline by 4 wk posttreatment.
24 centrations of CO applied as pretreatment or posttreatment.
25 xiety symptoms were assessed at baseline and posttreatment.
26 and adverse events monitored 3 and 24 hours posttreatment.
27 went an (18)F-FDG PET/CT scan at baseline, a posttreatment (166)Ho SPECT/CT scan, and another (18)F-F
31 oradiation for NSCLC, involving baseline and posttreatment (18)F-FDG PET/CT imaging, were conducted b
35 WAZ score were examined from pretreatment to posttreatment (6 months) and change in HAZ score was ass
36 lume decreased (pretreatment, 1,118.7 cm(3); posttreatment, 870.7 cm(3); P = 0.003), whereas the nont
37 estimates of absorbed doses calculated from posttreatment (90)Y TOF PET/CT for tumor and nontumor ti
40 symptoms significantly improved from pre- to posttreatment across all conditions and were maintained
46 662; SMD = -0.35, 95% CI -0.56 to -0.14) at posttreatment and also compared with inactive control at
48 ve rate in patients who became sIFE-negative posttreatment and evaluate rates of minimal residual dis
49 rs displayed limited changes in ctDNA levels posttreatment and experienced significantly shorter prog
50 DCS group but not the placebo group, at both posttreatment and follow-up (clinician-rated Y-BOCS: t62
51 n increase in hydrogen peroxide is sustained posttreatment and potential mechanisms involved in this
52 serum at diagnosis who became sIFE-negative posttreatment and who had uIFE available, the uIFE-posit
56 ive quantitative measurement of baseline and posttreatment aromatase availability in primary tumors a
57 nhibition of MAPK and PI3K/AKT activation in posttreatment as compared with pretreatment tumor specim
58 d not change with treatment, and strength at posttreatment assessment also significantly predicted ab
59 a reduction of >=30% in YBOCS score) at the posttreatment assessment and after another month of foll
60 eek after the HRT session, youth completed a posttreatment assessment to evaluate change in the sever
62 easing importance in the detection, staging, posttreatment assessment, and detection of recurrence of
65 e diagnosis, pretreatment, on treatment, and posttreatment assessments, and management of chronic HCV
66 ia at week 12 (SVR12) and at week 24 (SVR24) posttreatment, at which time all had a clinical response
73 direct Sanger sequencing of samples pre- and posttreatment, but not on more sensitive deep sequencing
74 Minimal residual disease (MRD) was assessed posttreatment by a polymerase chain reaction-based ligas
75 Sleep quality was significantly improved at posttreatment by psychological interventions compared wi
76 On multivariable logistic regression, low posttreatment CA 19-9 level, RECIST partial response, an
77 anges in tumor size and anatomic extent, and posttreatment CA 19-9 levels were compared between patie
80 symptom score across days 2 to 4 of a 4-day posttreatment challenge (PTC) in the EEU after the grass
81 oconjunctivitis symptom scores (TRSSs) after posttreatment challenge (PTC) to rye grass in an environ
82 renchymal enhancement (BPE) (n = 91, 20.9%), posttreatment changes (n = 16, 3.8%), and other findings
86 y gene-modified hepatocytes observed 4 weeks posttreatment compared to traditional rAAV gene delivery
88 interval [CI] 42% to 143%, P < 0.001) at 2 d posttreatment compared with pretreatment concentrations.
90 d potent anti-influenza virus activity under posttreatment conditions [median 50% effective concentra
93 cted rhesus macaques that mirrored the human posttreatment controller phenotype and performed immunol
98 gh 7 days after treatment) and in follow-up (posttreatment days 8-210), after adjustment for sociodem
101 ip between pretreatment amygdala binding and posttreatment depression score, and were unable to predi
102 depression score, and were unable to predict posttreatment depression severity using both pretreatmen
104 upfront bortezomib and explore the impact of posttreatment dFLC < 10 mg/L ("stringent dFLC response")
105 ther brain region, GABA levels at 4 weeks or posttreatment did not differ between patients with FEP a
107 ictive dosimetry of (99m)Tc-MAA SPECT/CT and posttreatment dosimetry based on (90)Y time-of-flight (T
108 ng on intent-to-treat outcomes, within-group posttreatment effect sizes for CPT and prolonged exposur
109 A statistically significant pre- versus posttreatment effect was observed for MCCB speed of proc
111 dose of 10 mg or less were responders if the posttreatment eliciting dose was 300 mg or more; partici
113 ndpoint and clinical stability relative to a posttreatment evaluation (PTE) of clinical success.
114 sion:(18)F-FDG PET/CT shows good accuracy in posttreatment evaluation of anal cancer and has a releva
130 s ratio = 0.66, P < .036), during the 2-year posttreatment follow-up, and during the entire 5-year tr
132 interventions and inactive control group at posttreatment for quality of life (k = 6; n = 401; SMD =
133 of follow-up across all included studies at posttreatment for the primary outcome was 11.5 weeks.
134 ation transfer images were obtained pre- and posttreatment from veterans with (n=39) and without PTSD
136 comparison conditions for target symptoms at posttreatment (g=-0.153, 90% equivalence CI=-0.227 to -0
137 vioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) improved posttreatment global and most sleep outcomes, often comp
138 nalysis to determine mean slopes of pre- and posttreatment growth curves on a per-tumor basis and wer
140 BDI decrease >/=95%), and superior response (posttreatment HAM-D or BDI score of 0) using multilevel
141 -D or >/=9 BDI points), extreme nonresponse (posttreatment HAM-D score >/=21 or BDI score >/=31), sup
146 ic bacterial frequencies were not persistent posttreatment, however, with individual taxa showing onl
148 t of pretreatment HVPG, changes in HVPG, and posttreatment HVPG on the development of hepatic decompe
152 -specific dose conversion factors for common posttreatment imaging times are reported along with a ch
153 ratory tests, follow-up visits, and pre- and posttreatment imaging using (68)Ga-DOTATOC PET/CT from p
156 NA (range, 15-57 IU/mL) was measured 2 weeks posttreatment in 4 individuals, and 4 weeks posttreatmen
158 n, iron absorption, and utilization pre- and posttreatment in children with afebrile malaria, hookwor
160 d evidence of a previously undetected strain posttreatment; in many studies, this is interpreted as r
161 nhanced social functioning was mirrored by a posttreatment increase in their blood OXT concentrations
167 emistry (IHC) was performed on both pre- and posttreatment liver biopsies of 59 PIVENS patients rando
168 ment was assessed by paired pretreatment and posttreatment liver biopsies, magnetic resonance elastog
170 and three ADV-treated (14%) patients during posttreatment long-term follow-up with an overall annual
172 hase early Lyme disease, Lyme arthritis, and posttreatment Lyme disease syndrome, as well as the nece
174 Primary tumor size was assessed on pre- and posttreatment magnetic resonance images according to 1D
176 served in healthy control mice (baseline and posttreatment mean k(PL), 0.011 and 0.017 sec(-1), respe
177 sec(-1), respectively, P = .91; baseline and posttreatment mean nLac, 0.16 and 0.21, respectively, P
178 sec(-1), respectively, P = .01; baseline and posttreatment mean nLac, 0.28 and 0.22, respectively, P
179 wed greater improvement from pretreatment to posttreatment (mean difference, -3.62; 95% CI, -0.81 to
180 0.956]) and higher for all pretreatment than posttreatment measurements (ICC, 0.761 [95% CI: 0.209, 0
181 ordance correlation coefficient for pre- and posttreatment measurements was 0.83 (95% confidence inte
182 olchicine or vehicle and subject to pre- and posttreatment mechanical testing, which consisted of a s
184 relationship between tumor-absorbed dose and posttreatment metabolic activity was assessed per metast
189 No effect was seen on MTORC1 activation, but posttreatment MTORC1 and VH were correlated (rho = 0.51;
192 duced changes were sustained over the entire posttreatment observation interval (25-78 min) and consi
193 active, and biomicroscopic findings pre- and posttreatment of observed anterior stromal necrosis (ASN
194 patients with IGHV-M achieved MRD-negativity posttreatment; of these, PFS was 79.8% at 12.8 years.
197 ated with curative intent, 124 had 1 or more posttreatment oral rinses available and were included in
198 although infrequent, persistent HPV16 DNA in posttreatment oral rinses is associated with poor progno
200 motherapy using pretreatment clinical stage, posttreatment pathologic stage, estrogen receptor (ER) s
202 n 7 of the 8 appearance scales compared with posttreatment patients (exception was skin) (P < .001 to
204 From April 2005 to August 2008, 783 pre- and posttreatment PB samples were quantified by quantitative
206 rol of both nausea and vomiting in the acute posttreatment period (first 24 hours after therapy) and
213 ng after induction chemotherapy in the early posttreatment phase, chemotherapy-induced changes in tum
214 rall survival; MRD status is the single best posttreatment predictor of long-term outcomes after CIT.
216 a highly aggressive malignancy with a dismal posttreatment prognosis-implicate XBP1s in promoting tum
220 tologic and immunologic changes suggest that posttreatment reactions following DEC and IVM share a co
221 to the occurrence of immune-mediated severe posttreatment reactions following ivermectin distributio
222 bset-specific analysis demonstrated that the posttreatment rebound was driven by the CD4(+)CD25(+)Fox
224 ment failure was due to nonresponse (n = 2), posttreatment relapse (n = 9), reinfection (n = 1), and
225 ived from bone marrows of newly diagnosed or posttreatment-relapsed MM patients, in both US- and Euro
227 eatment, at week 3, and after treatment) and posttreatment remission status based on cut points.
232 sson and Cox regression to evaluate pre- and posttreatment risk factors for infection, respectively.
233 y help to educate clinicians and patients on posttreatment risk, prevention, and management of lymphe
234 previously undetected variant present in the posttreatment sample in addition to a variant that was d
235 ignificantly differ between pretreatment and posttreatment samples and serum contained predominantly
238 rts to enable dose computation from a single posttreatment scan in a manner that may be applied to a
239 se in binding potential between the pre- and posttreatment scans indexed enhanced synaptic dopamine a
242 1,700 patients provided individual pre- and posttreatment scores on the Hamilton Depression Rating S
245 ie early therapeutic efficacy, whereas these posttreatment sex differences contribute to clinical tre
247 ion of rTMD23 in mice, both pretreatment and posttreatment, significantly increased the survival rate
248 istologic comparison of the pretreatment and posttreatment skin was performed using serial internal c
253 the ITG with unquantifiable HCV RNA 12 weeks posttreatment (sustained virological response 12 weeks a
258 Higher PRS significantly predicted greater posttreatment symptoms in the combined replication analy
260 VM) or fall (post-DEC) in the first 24 hours posttreatment, the eosinophil count rose significantly i
262 lymphocyte counts during the first 24 hours posttreatment, the overall pattern of hematologic and im
264 in cocaine dependence (CD) pretreatment and posttreatment to determine whether these changes relate
266 with end points reassessed early at 2 weeks posttreatment to minimize confounding from exercise adap
270 descriptive statistics and compared pre- and posttreatment uBPA concentrations using generalized esti
272 of all-cause mortality or recurrence 30 days posttreatment, using multivariable unconditional logisti
273 ts receiving azathioprine (AZA) therapy, and posttreatment Vdelta2 T cell recovery correlated with ti
276 ease patients as positive at the baseline or posttreatment visit than two-tiered testing (87.5% and 6
279 the study group (respective median pre- and posttreatment volume: 76.1 cm(3) and 58.4 cm(3) for read
280 he control group (respective median pre- and posttreatment volume: 79.9 cm(3) and 83.8 cm(3) for read
282 severely impairs host immunity, resulting in posttreatment vulnerability to reinfection and reactivat
284 7.4] years), improvement in PTSD severity at posttreatment was greater when CPT was administered indi
285 measure was sustained virologic response at posttreatment week 12 (SVR12) in patients with a genotyp
290 at analysis, sustained virologic response at posttreatment week 12 was achieved in 100% (6/6, 95% con
291 tudy outcome was SVR12 (HCV-RNA <25 IU/mL at posttreatment week 12) in patients naive to treatment.
299 %) and in all other monkeys at 10 to 49 days posttreatment, with recurrent zoster in one treated monk