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1 n is an indispensable tool for diagnosis and surveillance.
2 l for early cancer diagnosis, monitoring and surveillance.
3  except admissions for routine postoperative surveillance.
4 to the CNS, whereas TH1 cells perform immune surveillance.
5 e ongoing outcome studies and post-marketing surveillance.
6  the harms available to patients considering surveillance.
7  affect membrane potential, ramification, or surveillance.
8 s will aid in facilitating global poliovirus surveillance.
9 ny more individuals experienced harm through surveillance.
10 soluble factors to the lymph node for immune surveillance.
11 f situations of successful and failed immune surveillance.
12 ars with well-compensated cirrhosis entering surveillance.
13 ower of 150 mW/cm for 22 min 15 s) or active surveillance.
14  a biothreat agent, abrin is in the focus of surveillance.
15 d for myeloid malignancies as part of cancer surveillance.
16 s in annual event rates calls for continuous surveillance.
17 ndamental question: how they modulate immune surveillance.
18 by 42.7% compared with FIT screening without surveillance.
19 se produced with the use of metagenomics for surveillance.
20 y are crucial participants in mucosal immune surveillance.
21  its absence enables escape of innate immune surveillance.
22 tions for targeted vector control and active surveillance.
23 d harms in cirrhosis patients undergoing HCC surveillance.
24  estimates than claims-based data for sepsis surveillance.
25  who are being encouraged to consider active surveillance.
26                        Utilization of active surveillance.
27 liance with standard precautions and ongoing surveillance.
28 todynamic therapy and 207 patients to active surveillance.
29 sehold visits were made weekly for morbidity surveillance.
30 ation,and allow for optimal case-based HIVDR surveillance.
31 nostic capacity and antimicrobial resistance surveillance.
32 ew facilities are able to maintain long-term surveillance.
33         Of the 48 (61.5%) HCCs identified by surveillance, 43.8% were detected by ultrasound, 31.2% b
34       At the time of randomization to active surveillance, a significant proportion of patients with
35 nary incontinence than either EBRT or active surveillance after 3 years and was associated with fewer
36  the last administered dose, and a prolonged surveillance after discharge of 48 h.
37 stitutions (piped water suppliers and health surveillance agencies in six countries) and estimates of
38 Control (ECDC) with European HIV cohorts and surveillance agencies, we constructed a standardized, 4-
39                       Active community-based surveillance allows for a better understanding of the tr
40 st, including safety and risk-stratified HCC surveillance among patients who received long-term NUC t
41           5019 (42%) patients did not attend surveillance and 6925 (58%) attended one or more surveil
42                      We did population-based surveillance and case-control studies.
43                   We conducted daily disease surveillance and climatic monitoring over an 8-year peri
44 am (STEP) was set up in 1997, and the better surveillance and clinical management practices initiated
45 able stepping stone in guiding policy on CSF surveillance and control in GB.
46 t stochastic models to optimize targeting of surveillance and control resources.
47  patterns is key to informing cost-effective surveillance and control strategies.
48 ia transmission requiring novel measures for surveillance and control.
49             gammadeltaT cells provide immune-surveillance and host defense against infection and canc
50 articularly to protect pathogens from immune surveillance and host defenses.
51                               Guidelines for surveillance and management of potential adverse effects
52 insecticide resistance is key to improve the surveillance and monitoring of malaria vector population
53                       In this hospital-based surveillance and nested age-matched case-control study,
54                  This balance between timely surveillance and overutilization of TTE in valvular dise
55 ordinated laboratory networks supporting VPD surveillance and present a plan for the further developm
56 ictions will assist in decision-making about surveillance and preventive measures in EVD outbreaks.
57 Organization (WHO), UNAIDS reports, national surveillance and program reports, United States Presiden
58                                      Durable surveillance and programs that emphasize the judicious u
59                Mitigation strategies include surveillance and research on emerging STEC, development
60 As is slowed by the natural loss of the mRNA surveillance and ribosome rescue factor Pelota.
61 ant, L344P, that largely escapes proteasomal surveillance and shows subtle but clear changes in terti
62 guidelines and patient counseling during the surveillance and survivorship phases of care.
63 outcome has led to the development of robust surveillance and treatment pathways.
64 echnologies has the potential to improve our surveillance and understanding of asthma.
65 ndings underscore the importance of national surveillance and understanding of risk factors to guide
66 ctivities, including cancer registration and surveillance, and research that uses cancer registry dat
67 portant clinical implications for diagnosis, surveillance, and therapy.
68 tion of this study is that it relies on case surveillance, and thus inference may be biased by age-sp
69 ch, this review will focus on the incidence, surveillance, and treatment of urologic malignancies in
70 racterized, so the frequency and duration of surveillance are unclear.
71 d inpatients at all health facilities in the surveillance area using standardised criteria for referr
72 aintenance in resource-poor countries of AFP surveillance as a platform for surveillance of vaccine-p
73                                       Active surveillance (AS) is increasingly accepted for managing
74  on the immune cell network mediating immune surveillance at a specific oral barrier, the gingiva - a
75 atory-challenged animals or during influenza surveillance at county fairs.
76 pared between each treatment group vs active surveillance at each time point.
77 se burden worldwide rely on passive sentinel surveillance at health clinics and hospitals that lack a
78                     Best practice for active surveillance at the time of study design was followed (i
79 ity with important implications for pathogen surveillance, autoimmunity, and transplant rejection.
80 to characterize prevalence and correlates of surveillance benefits and harms in cirrhosis patients un
81                  INTERPRETATION: Colonoscopy surveillance benefits most patients with intermediate-ri
82                     The results suggest that surveillance bias influenced the result which somewhat s
83  a routine posttransplant DSA monitoring and surveillance biopsy program for dnDSA since 2014.
84 recommend individualized decision making for surveillance breast imaging in older survivors of breast
85         Echocardiography is also used during surveillance, but it appears to be less sensitive.
86 nned aerial vehicles; UAVs) are employed for surveillance by the military and police, which suggests
87                                              Surveillance by ultrasonography for hepatocellular carci
88 omatin (BCOR, KDM6A, SMARCB1, TRRAP), immune surveillance (CD58, RFXAP), MAPK signaling (MAP2K1, NF1)
89 les from poultry outbreaks and active market surveillance collected from January 2012 to August 2015.
90 rom index colonoscopy through all subsequent surveillance colonoscopies.
91 dence and mortality; however, the benefit of surveillance colonoscopy on colorectal cancer risk remai
92 lso fewer invasive procedures in specialized surveillance compared with standard care in the communit
93                                              Surveillance continued through December 5, 2016.
94 and phase II titers could be reexamined as a surveillance criterion.
95 000 patient-days) with positive clinical and surveillance cultures for CRE were estimated based on ma
96   High-quality, comprehensive, and real-time surveillance data are essential to reduce the burden of
97          We show that the temporal extent of surveillance data can have a dramatic impact on inferenc
98  trends in its utilization, but national HIV surveillance data do not include PrEP uptake.
99                     We compiled and analysed surveillance data for nine countries in the meningitis b
100  extracted prospectively acquired Australian surveillance data from 2 studies nested within the Paedi
101 plements a Bayesian model using strain-typed surveillance data from both human cases and source sampl
102                                              Surveillance data on influenza virus activity permitted
103                                      Malaria surveillance data provide opportunity to develop forecas
104 ffects logistic regression models to routine surveillance data recording the presence of poliomyeliti
105                                           US surveillance data suggest that the case fatality ratio i
106                     Individual-level malaria surveillance data were collected from 1 outpatient depar
107                                   California surveillance data were reviewed to identify all children
108     METHODS AND Routinely-collected hospital surveillance data were used to undertake a pragmatic com
109 ase Control and Prevention respiratory virus surveillance data.
110 mmunications & community engagement, disease surveillance & data analysis, technical quality & capaci
111 ase Control and Prevention National Botulism Surveillance database.
112 ng organisations recommend increased cardiac surveillance during or after treatment, measurement of c
113 gression MCC has to escape the host's immuno-surveillance, e.g. by loss of HLA class-I expression.
114 ermine the facilities to monitor to maximize surveillance efficiency.
115 ed with age-adjusted cancer incidence in the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Program (SEER
116 d the general population using data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Program.
117  time of diagnosis were identified using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) datab
118  We used the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) datab
119 ative cohort of elderly patients Analysis of Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER)-Medic
120 , 1973, through December 31, 2014, using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database.
121 om population-based cancer registries in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results Program in t
122 es diagnosed between 1973 and 2012 in the 18 Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registries w
123  Georgia and Los Angeles County, California, Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registries.
124 east cancer between 1998 and 2012 within the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registry.
125 dence interval [CI], 12-14) compared with no surveillance, equating to a number needed to screen to p
126            Using the established protocol, a surveillance exercise was conducted of 27 retail samples
127     Upregulated transcripts evaded increased surveillance factor binding following glucose withdrawal
128 shment of a continent-wide enhanced sentinel surveillance for carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriae
129 previously CRE-free region, including active surveillance for CRE carriers and enhanced isolation of
130       This information can be used to inform surveillance for early detection of subsequent CNS tumor
131  result, an important question when planning surveillance for emerging vector-borne pathogens is wher
132 on, detected through population-based active surveillance for influenza in Bangladesh, to assess tran
133                                Use of active surveillance for intermediate-risk disease remained lowe
134 nformation obtained through laboratory-based surveillance for IPD from 2005 through 2014 in South Afr
135  Bangladesh and highlights the importance of surveillance for mild respiratory illness among populati
136 e study cohort; 363 patients (63%) underwent surveillance for more than 5 years, and 121 (21%) for mo
137                                              Surveillance for new evidence in targeted publications w
138  hours of hospital admission during sentinel surveillance for severe acute respiratory illness (SARI)
139  after baseline colonoscopy and the value of surveillance for them is unclear.
140           Screening, preventive therapy, and surveillance for tuberculosis are underused intervention
141 t common serious adverse event in the active surveillance group was myocardial infarction (three pati
142 red to incorporate molecular biomarkers into surveillance guidelines and adjuvant clinical trials.
143 ewer urinary irritative symptoms than active surveillance; however, no meaningful differences existed
144 hyroid cancer and persons with no surgery or surveillance; however, these studies did not adjust for
145 overy of AvrSr35 provides a new tool for Pgt surveillance, identification of host susceptibility targ
146                                     Although surveillance imaging is commonly performed in clinical p
147 1 of 518) with low-risk disease chose active surveillance in 2014.
148 tion coverage through active community-based surveillance in 4 ecologically distinct regions of Peru
149 n terms of cost-effectiveness of colonoscopy surveillance in a screening setting.
150 0 years may not benefit from FFD mammography surveillance in addition to DCE MR imaging.
151 improving uptake of preventive screening and surveillance in at-risk first-degree relatives.
152 D in a region of northern Illinois using CWD surveillance in deer and soils data.
153 fies the continuation of synchronized strain surveillance in humans and domestic animals.
154 ment suppress inflammation and impair immune surveillance in liver cancer.
155 ty and should be included in hospital safety surveillance in order to facilitate better design and as
156 as led to increased calls for more effective surveillance in plant health.
157 lth status, knowledge, and receipt of cancer surveillance in programme participants.
158 ere is debate regarding the effectiveness of surveillance in reducing mortality, and there is little
159 ommon Rule expressly addresses public health surveillance in relation to scientific research and the
160                  To test the role of nuclear surveillance in reprogramming gene expression, we identi
161                                    Increased surveillance in several Southeast Asian counties has led
162 fever endocarditis collected through passive surveillance in the United States.
163 e potential of a strategy routinely used for surveillance in these groups, respondent-driven sampling
164 ulations, with the ultimate goal of refining surveillance in these populations to enhance early detec
165  treatment with the standard of care, active surveillance, in men with low-risk prostate cancer in a
166                                    Long-term surveillance indicated that presence of clusters in preo
167 rds highlighting the need for more efficient surveillance/infection control strategies.
168 report outlines the current level of disease surveillance integration in 3 countries (Nepal, India, a
169 ed with recommendation of 3-year vs a 5-year surveillance interval included African American race (re
170 association with recommendation for a 3-year surveillance interval included family history of colorec
171 age 40 years, 5-year re-screening and 3-year surveillance intervals (unless shorter interval is indic
172  reasons that endoscopists recommend shorter surveillance intervals for some individuals with LRAs an
173 ekh, Dang, Surkhet, and Kanchanpur) that had surveillance intervals of 2, 4, 8, and 10 years, respect
174                                Extending the surveillance intervals to 5 years reduced CRC mortality
175 mmending shorter (3-year) vs longer (5-year) surveillance intervals, factors associated with these re
176 nited States show that greater use of active surveillance is important for prostate cancer screening
177  oesophagus will not progress and endoscopic surveillance is invasive, expensive, and fraught by issu
178                                  Post-market surveillance is needed to evaluate the real-world clinic
179 erstanding of how these tumors escape immune surveillance is required to enhance antitumor immune res
180  emerging public health disease and enhanced surveillance is required.
181                 One common method of disease surveillance is to carefully select nodes (sentinels, or
182  homeostasis is maintained and impacts tumor surveillance is unknown.
183 abase formed of the population under routine surveillance linked to admissions to Kilifi County Hospi
184 uated detection bias by comparing receipt of surveillance mammography among users of these 2 disparat
185 local therapy followed by annual or biennial surveillance mammography for healthy women and cessation
186               Purpose The benefits of annual surveillance mammography in older breast cancer survivor
187       Overall, 78.9% reported having routine surveillance mammography in the last 12 months.
188  2005, 2008, 2010, 2013, and 2015 to examine surveillance mammography use among women age >/= 65 year
189 ined associations between medication use and surveillance mammography using multivariable generalized
190 6 as a major checkpoint that controls immune surveillance may promote the design of individualized NK
191                         Compared with active surveillance, mean sexual dysfunction scores worsened by
192 ons are the country-level variations in both surveillance methods and testing policies.
193 evidence was on multimodal interventions and surveillance, monitoring, and feedback.
194 reported from Canada's Sentinel Practitioner Surveillance Network (SPSN).
195 ican meningitis belt, an enhanced meningitis surveillance network was established.
196 toring System, and Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network.
197 nologies as well as information from passive surveillance networks (e.g., citizen science) can be int
198          Interestingly, knockdown of the RNA surveillance nuclease, Xrn1, and members of the CCR4-Not
199 sts equating to a number needed to harm from surveillance of 7.
200 dy could be further supported by the routine surveillance of Ae. albopictus in areas identified as po
201 a-based surveillance systems for the routine surveillance of antibiotic resistance that would be help
202    We established a systematic, standardised surveillance of blood culture-based febrile illness in 1
203 I highlights the need for continued focus on surveillance of BMI and identification, implementation,
204     WEMA (Whole-Exome Molecular Autopsy) and surveillance of cardiac channelopathy and cardiomyopathy
205 to yearly FFD mammography and DCE MR imaging surveillance of carriers of the BRCA mutation.
206                                              Surveillance of Classical Swine Fever (CSF) should not o
207  models, further characterization and immune surveillance of H15 viruses are warranted.IMPORTANCE In
208                    Additionally, genome-wide surveillance of inherited SVs reveals novel variants, mi
209                             We used national surveillance of invasive pneumococcal disease (IPD) from
210                                              Surveillance of lead exposures from state-based food and
211                          Purpose Immunologic surveillance of minimal residual disease in chronic myel
212                                   Endoscopic surveillance of patients with BE likely improves overall
213                           BACKGROUND & AIMS: Surveillance of patients with cirrhosis increases early
214        Transthoracic echocardiographic (TTE) surveillance of patients with mitral regurgitation is in
215 low birth weight, suggesting that additional surveillance of pregnancies in this population is warran
216 sults emphasize the importance of continuing surveillance of sexual behaviors, alongside vaccine stat
217 nd colleagues discuss global initiatives for surveillance of sexually transmitted diseases.
218 res and specificities that can aid in global surveillance of such viruses for potential spread and em
219 ittle time or resources for organized health surveillance of the affected population, and even less f
220 ading to an improved understanding of immune surveillance of the central nervous system (CNS) have re
221 ugh June 2016; references; and experts, with surveillance of the literature through June 7, 2017.
222  October 2015, references, and experts, with surveillance of the literature through October 5, 2016.
223 nization (WHO) coordinates global laboratory surveillance of vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs), inc
224 ntries of AFP surveillance as a platform for surveillance of vaccine-preventable diseases and other o
225 intermediate-risk patients and the effect of surveillance on colorectal cancer incidence.
226                               Compared to no surveillance, one or two surveillance visits were associ
227 use-type gastric cancer and lack of reliable surveillance options.
228                  For every 1,000 patients in surveillance over 5 years, there are 13 fewer deaths (95
229 ithin the Paediatric Active Enhanced Disease Surveillance (PAEDS) network: the Influenza Complication
230            We also discuss the ways in which surveillance pathways compete with chaperone proteins th
231 actors, for both children and adults, with a surveillance period of 2 h after the last administered d
232 ng the risk of spread are key components for surveillance planning and resource allocation, and this
233  in the United States, potential studies and surveillance platforms needed to fill these gaps, and pr
234                        A careful oncological surveillance pretransplant as well as posttransplant is
235 sifications of A and B Readers in a national surveillance program offered to U.S. coal miners over an
236                             HCCs detected by surveillance programs at an early stage are candidates f
237 can inform the design of more cost-effective surveillance programs to detect and control bTB in Urugu
238 llover, are therefore key goals for pandemic surveillance programs.
239  RETREAT, which may help standardize post-LT surveillance, provide a framework for tumor staging and
240 y to target the highest-risk population, yet surveillance rates in the United States and Europe range
241 We characterized the association between HCC surveillance receipt and patient knowledge, attitudes, a
242 rmed to identify factors associated with HCC surveillance receipt during the 12-month period precedin
243 g, a detailed pedigree, and refined clinical surveillance recommendations for family members.
244             Purpose To evaluate a multimodal surveillance regimen including yearly full-field digital
245                                  We recorded surveillance-related benefits, defined as early tumor de
246                                              Surveillance-related harms were associated with elevated
247  tumor detection and curative treatment, and surveillance-related physical harms, defined as computed
248 erformed for false-positive or indeterminate surveillance results.
249 ual disease, which may require an additional surveillance scan at 1 year after CCRT to be detected.
250                     Understanding how immune surveillance shapes the cancer genome could help in the
251                                       Active surveillance should be an initial management option for
252                                          Its surveillance should provide up-to-date and relevant info
253 .g., citizen science) can be integrated into surveillance strategies.
254 led in the Cancer Care Outcomes Research and Surveillance study (a multiregional, prospective, observ
255 e north London convulsive status epilepticus surveillance study cohort; NLSTEPSS).
256                                            A surveillance study of retail purchased "100% Arabica" co
257 ation of H5N1 cases through population-based surveillance suggests possible additional undetected cas
258 f the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS).
259 idities in the Kilifi Health and Demographic Surveillance System (KHDSS, a database formed of the pop
260 s study used state-level Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS) data from January 1, 1999, t
261 ars) TB cases reported to the US National TB Surveillance System during 1993-2014.
262 o the National Respiratory and Enteric Virus Surveillance System during July 2005-June 2015.
263     Data were obtained from the National HIV Surveillance System on infants with HIV born in the Unit
264         Detailed considerations to an active surveillance system that includes reporting, identificat
265 illages of the Matlab Health and Demographic Surveillance System to include two doses of HRV with the
266     The spindle checkpoint acts as a mitotic surveillance system, monitoring interactions between kin
267  data from the Nationally Notifiable Disease Surveillance System, National Outbreak Reporting System,
268 s is a first step study to explore designing surveillance systems for early detection on temporal net
269  of local and national laboratory data-based surveillance systems for the routine surveillance of ant
270 asily integrated into contemporary influenza surveillance systems to provide reliable estimates of AV
271 ructure may be leveraged to design efficient surveillance systems.
272 ty to detect fungal diseases with associated surveillance systems; procurement and distribution of lo
273 ramework based on ten themes: strengthen CKD surveillance; tackle major risk factors for CKD; reduce
274 total of 5 in-person visits, hospitalization surveillance, telephone calls, and repeated cognitive ev
275                                   In adults, surveillance tests positive for influenza (RR, 1.02; 95%
276 cal harm for false-positive or indeterminate surveillance tests-more often related to ultrasound than
277  ultrasound, 31.2% by AFP, and 25.0% by both surveillance tests.
278 by numerous challenges, including short-term surveillance that focuses on single epidemics and acutel
279 us, we establish a new paradigm for mosquito surveillance that takes advantage of the existing global
280                                       Active surveillance (the serial monitoring for disease progress
281                          Results Specialized surveillance through the High Risk Clinic was both less
282 eloping tumors and can participate in immune surveillance to eliminate neoplastic cells.
283                                       Adding surveillance to FIT screening is not cost-effective base
284                                       Adding surveillance to FIT screening reduced mortality by an ad
285 and global health strategies and health risk surveillance to reduce mortality.
286 undertaken through the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit, with monthly notification of new case
287                        Conclusion FDG-PET/CT surveillance using Hopkins criteria 12 weeks after CCRT
288 f this study was to identify barriers to HCC surveillance, using data from the Veterans Health Admini
289      Compared to no surveillance, one or two surveillance visits were associated with a significant r
290 eillance and 6925 (58%) attended one or more surveillance visits.
291                       Conclusion Specialized surveillance was a cost-effective strategy for the manag
292                                         Drug surveillance was done to ensure patient compliance with
293                                              Surveillance was enhanced for arthritis and dermatitis t
294 ficant inhibition of genes regulating immune surveillance was observed in Igfbp7(-/-) murine livers,
295 econd breast cancer events was observed when surveillance was removed from otherwise adjusted models.
296 atients who initially underwent radiographic surveillance were divided into those with <5 years and >
297 ses microglial ramification and thus reduces surveillance, whereas blocking P2Y12 receptors does not
298 sification can allow precise cross-sectional surveillance with a desirable temporal range of incidenc
299 , tumor cell dormancy and escape from immune surveillance, with emerging functions in establishing th
300 ns and evaluated the impact of adjusting for surveillance within Cox proportional hazard models.

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