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Dive into the research topics where Birsen Arici is active.

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Featured researches published by Birsen Arici.


The Lancet | 2015

Adjunct prednisone therapy for patients with community-acquired pneumonia: a multicentre, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial

Claudine Blum; Nicole Nigro; Matthias Briel; Philipp Schuetz; Elke Ullmer; Isabelle Suter-Widmer; Bettina Winzeler; Roland Bingisser; Hanno Elsaesser; Daniel Drozdov; Birsen Arici; Sandrine Andrea Urwyler; Julie Refardt; Philip E. Tarr; Sebastian Wirz; Robert Thomann; Christine Baumgartner; Hervé Duplain; Dieter Burki; Werner Zimmerli; Nicolas Rodondi; Beat Mueller; Mirjam Christ-Crain

BACKGROUND Clinical trials yielded conflicting data about the benefit of adding systemic corticosteroids for treatment of community-acquired pneumonia. We assessed whether short-term corticosteroid treatment reduces time to clinical stability in patients admitted to hospital for community-acquired pneumonia. METHODS In this double-blind, multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled trial, we recruited patients aged 18 years or older with community-acquired pneumonia from seven tertiary care hospitals in Switzerland within 24 h of presentation. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1 ratio) to receive either prednisone 50 mg daily for 7 days or placebo. The computer-generated randomisation was done with variable block sizes of four to six and stratified by study centre. The primary endpoint was time to clinical stability defined as time (days) until stable vital signs for at least 24 h, and analysed by intention to treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00973154. FINDINGS From Dec 1, 2009, to May 21, 2014, of 2911 patients assessed for eligibility, 785 patients were randomly assigned to either the prednisone group (n=392) or the placebo group (n=393). Median time to clinical stability was shorter in the prednisone group (3·0 days, IQR 2·5-3·4) than in the placebo group (4·4 days, 4·0-5·0; hazard ratio [HR] 1·33, 95% CI 1·15-1·50, p<0·0001). Pneumonia-associated complications until day 30 did not differ between groups (11 [3%] in the prednisone group and 22 [6%] in the placebo group; odds ratio [OR] 0·49 [95% CI 0·23-1·02]; p=0·056). The prednisone group had a higher incidence of in-hospital hyperglycaemia needing insulin treatment (76 [19%] vs 43 [11%]; OR 1·96, 95% CI 1·31-2·93, p=0·0010). Other adverse events compatible with corticosteroid use were rare and similar in both groups. INTERPRETATION Prednisone treatment for 7 days in patients with community-acquired pneumonia admitted to hospital shortens time to clinical stability without an increase in complications. This finding is relevant from a patient perspective and an important determinant of hospital costs and efficiency. FUNDING Swiss National Science Foundation, Viollier AG, Nora van Meeuwen Haefliger Stiftung, Julia und Gottfried Bangerter-Rhyner Stiftung.


European Respiratory Journal | 2013

Biomarker-enhanced triage in respiratory infections: a proof-of-concept feasibility trial

Werner C. Albrich; Kristina Rüegger; Frank Dusemund; Philipp Schuetz; Birsen Arici; Alexander Litke; Claudine Blum; Rita Bossart; Katharina Regez; Ursula Schild; Merih Guglielmetti; Antoinette Conca; Petra Schäfer; Maria Schubert; Sabina De Geest; Barbara Reutlinger; Sarosh Irani; Ulrich Bürgi; Andreas Huber; Beat Müller

Concerns about inadequate performance and complexity limit routine use of clinical risk scores in lower respiratory tract infections. Our aim was to study feasibility and effects of adding the biomarker proadrenomedullin (proADM) to the confusion, urea >7 mmol·L−1, respiratory rate ≥30 breaths·min−1, blood pressure <90 mmHg (systolic) or ≤60 mmHg (diastolic), age ≥65 years (CURB-65) score on triage decisions and length of stay. In a randomised controlled proof-of-concept intervention trial, triage and discharge decisions were made for adults with lower respiratory tract infection according to interprofessional assessment using medical and nursing risk scores either without (control group) or with (proADM group) knowledge of proADM values, measured on admission, and on days 3 and 6. An adjusted generalised linear model was calculated to investigate the effect of our intervention. On initial presentation the algorithms were overruled in 123 (39.3%) of the cases. Mean length of stay tended to be shorter in the proADM (n=154, 6.3 days) compared with the control group (n=159, 6.8 days; adjusted regression coefficient -0.19, 95% CI -0.41–0.04; p=0.1). This trend was robust in subgroup analyses and for overall length of stay within 90 days (7.2 versus 7.9 days; adjusted regression coefficient -0.18, 95% CI -0.40–0.05; p=0.13). There were no differences in adverse outcomes or readmission. Logistic obstacles and overruling are major challenges to implement biomarker-enhanced algorithms in clinical settings and need to be addressed to shorten length of stay. Proof-of-concept trial: how to shorten LOS in patients with LRTIs by reducing medically unnecessary days in the hospital http://ow.ly/nI7z4


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2015

Symptoms and Characteristics of Individuals with Profound Hyponatremia: A Prospective Multicenter Observational Study

Nicole Nigro; Bettina Winzeler; Isabelle Suter-Widmer; Philipp Schuetz; Birsen Arici; Martina Bally; Claudine Blum; Roland Bingisser; Andreas Bock; Andreas Huber; Beat Müller; Christian H. Nickel; Mirjam Christ-Crain

To assess symptoms and characteristics of hyponatremia, the most common electrolyte disturbance in hospitalized individuals and a condition that is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

Postoperative Copeptin Concentration Predicts Diabetes Insipidus After Pituitary Surgery

Bettina Winzeler; Christian Zweifel; Nicole Nigro; Birsen Arici; Martina Bally; Philipp Schuetz; Claudine Blum; Christopher Kelly; Sven Berkmann; Andreas Huber; Fred Gentili; Gelareh Zadeh; Hans Landolt; Luigi Mariani; Beat Müller; Mirjam Christ-Crain

CONTEXT Copeptin is a stable surrogate marker of vasopressin release; the peptides are stoichiometrically secreted from the neurohypophysis due to elevated plasma osmolality or nonosmotic stress. We hypothesized that following stress from pituitary surgery, patients with neurohypophyseal damage and eventual diabetes insipidus (DI) would not exhibit the expected pronounced copeptin elevation. OBJECTIVE The objective was to evaluate copeptins accuracy to predict DI following pituitary surgery. DESIGN This was a prospective multicenter observational cohort study. SETTING Three Swiss or Canadian referral centers were used. PATIENTS Consecutive pituitary surgery patients were included. MEASUREMENTS Copeptin was measured postoperatively daily until discharge. Logistic regression models and diagnostic performance measures were calculated to assess relationships of postoperative copeptin levels and DI. RESULTS Of 205 patients, 50 (24.4%) developed postoperative DI. Post-surgically, median [25th-75th percentile] copeptin levels were significantly lower in patients developing DI vs those not showing this complication: 2.9 [1.9-7.9] pmol/L vs 10.8 [5.2-30.4] pmol/L; P < .001. Logistic regression analysis revealed strong association between postoperative copeptin concentrations and DI even after considering known predisposing factors for DI: adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) 1.41 (1.16-1.73). DI was seen in 22/27 patients with copeptin <2.5 pmol/L (positive predictive value, 81%; specificity, 97%), but only 1/40 with copeptin >30 pmol/L (negative predictive value, 95%; sensitivity, 94%) on postoperative day 1. LIMITATIONS Lack of standardized DI diagnostic criteria; postoperative blood samples for copeptin obtained during everyday care vs at fixed time points. CONCLUSIONS In patients undergoing pituitary procedures, low copeptin levels despite surgical stress reflect postoperative DI, whereas high levels virtually exclude it. Copeptin therefore may become a novel tool for early goal-directed management of postoperative DI.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2017

Evaluation of copeptin and commonly used laboratory parameters for the differential diagnosis of profound hyponatraemia in hospitalized patients: 'The Co-MED Study'

Nicole Nigro; Bettina Winzeler; Isabelle Suter-Widmer; Philipp Schuetz; Birsen Arici; Martina Bally; Claudine Blum; Christian H. Nickel; Roland Bingisser; Andreas Bock; Andreas Huber; Beat Müller; Mirjam Christ-Crain

Hyponatraemia is common and its differential diagnosis is challenging. Commonly used diagnostic algorithms have limited diagnostic accuracy. Copeptin, the c‐terminal portion of the precursor peptide of arginine vasopressin might help in the differential diagnosis of hyponatraemia.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

Plasma Apelin Concentrations in Patients With Polyuria-Polydipsia Syndrome

Sandrine Andreas Urwyler; Katharina Timper; Wiebke Fenske; Nadia De Mota; Anne Blanchard; Felix Kühn; Birsen Arici; Jonas Rutishauser; Peter Kopp; Christoph Stettler; Beat Müller; Mira Katan; Catherine Llorens-Cortes; Mirjam Christ-Crain

CONTEXT Apelin and arginine vasopressin are antagonists in the regulation of body fluid and osmotic homeostasis. There are no data about apelin levels in patients with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome (PPS). OBJECTIVE To investigate plasma apelin levels and plasma apelin to copeptin ratios in patients with PPS and healthy volunteers using copeptin as a surrogate marker for arginine vasopressin. DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS, AND SETTING We included 41 patients with PPS in this post hoc analysis of a prospective study performed in tertiary care hospitals in Switzerland and Germany and 113 healthy volunteers as a control group. OUTCOME MEASURES Plasma apelin and copeptin levels were measured in 15 patients with complete central diabetes insipidus (DI), seven patients with complete nephrogenic DI, 19 patients with primary polydipsia (PP), and 113 healthy volunteers. RESULTS Plasma apelin levels were highest in patients with complete nephrogenic DI (413 pmol/L; interquartile range, 332-504 pmol/L; P = .01) and lower in patients with PP (190 [172-215] pmol/L; P < .001) or complete central DI (209 [174-241] pmol/L; P = .02) as compared to healthy volunteers (254 [225-311] pmol/L). Plasma apelin to copeptin ratio in patients with PP (53 [38-92] pmol/pmol; P > .9) was similar to healthy volunteers (57 [37-102] pmol/pmol). In contrast, the apelin to copeptin ratio was higher in patients with complete central DI (89 [73-135] pmol/pmol; P = .02) and lower in patients with complete nephrogenic DI (7 [6-10] pmol/pmol; P < .001) compared to healthy volunteers. CONCLUSION In PP, normal plasma apelin to copeptin ratio attests a normal water homeostasis. In contrast, in patients with central or nephrogenic DI, the increased or decreased apelin to copeptin ratio, respectively, reflects a disturbed osmotic and body fluid homeostasis.


Journal of Clinical Medicine | 2014

Effectiveness of Proadrenomedullin Enhanced CURB65 Score Algorithm in Patients with Community-Acquired Pneumonia in “Real Life”, an Observational Quality Control Survey

Daniel Widmer; Daniel Drozdov; Kristina Rüegger; Alexander Litke; Birsen Arici; Katharina Regez; Merih Guglielmetti; Ursula Schild; Antoinette Conca; Petra Schäfer; Rita Bossart Kouegbe; Barbara Reutlinger; Claudine Blum; Philipp Schuetz; Sarosh Irani; Andreas Huber; Ulrich Bürgi; Beat Müller; Werner C. Albrich

Background: An intervention trial found a trend for shorter length of stay (LOS) in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) when the CURB65 score was combined with the prognostic biomarker proadrenomedullin (ProADM) (CURB65-A). However, the efficacy and safety of CURB65-A in real life situations remains unclear. Methods: From September, 2011, until April, 2012, we performed a post-study prospective observational quality control survey at the cantonal Hospital of Aarau, Switzerland of consecutive adults with CAP. The primary endpoint was length of stay (LOS) during the index hospitalization and within 30 days. We compared the results with two well-defined historic cohorts of CAP patients hospitalized in the same hospital with the use of multivariate regression, namely 83 patients in the observation study without ProADM (OPTIMA I) and the 169 patients in the intervention study (OPTIMA II RCT). Results: A total of 89 patients with confirmed CAP were included. As compared to patients with CURB65 only observed in the OPTIMA I study, adjusted regression analysis showed a significant shorter initial LOS (7.5 vs. 10.4 days; −2.32; 95% CI, −4.51 to −0.13; p = 0.04) when CURB65-A was used in clinical routine. No significant differences were found for LOS within 30 days. There were no significant differences in safety outcomes in regard to mortality and ICU admission between the cohorts. Conclusion: This post-study survey provides evidence that the use of ProADM in combination with CURB65 (CURB65-A) in “real life” situations reduces initial LOS compared to the CURB65 score alone without apparent negative effects on patient safety.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2017

Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients with Profound Hyponatremia due to Primary Polydipsia

Clara Sailer; Bettina Winzeler; Nicole Nigro; Isabelle Suter-Widmer; Birsen Arici; Martina Bally; Philipp Schuetz; Beat Mueller; Mirjam Christ-Crain

Hyponatraemia due to excessive fluid intake (ie primary polydipsia [PP]) is common. It may culminate in profound hyponatraemia—carrying considerable risk of morbidity. However, data on patients with PP leading to hyponatraemia are lacking. Herein, we describe the characteristics of polydiptic patients hospitalized with profound hyponatraemia and assess 1‐year outcomes.


Critical Care | 2018

Copeptin levels and commonly used laboratory parameters in hospitalised patients with severe hypernatraemia - the “Co-MED study”

Nicole Nigro; Bettina Winzeler; Isabelle Suter-Widmer; Philipp Schuetz; Birsen Arici; Martina Bally; Julie Refardt; Matthias Johannes Betz; Gani Gashi; Sandrine Andrea Urwyler; Lukas Burget; Claudine Blum; Andreas Bock; Andreas Huber; Beat Müller; Mirjam Christ-Crain

BackgroundHypernatraemia is common in inpatients and is associated with substantial morbidity. Its differential diagnosis is challenging, and delayed treatment may have devastating consequences. The most important hormone for the regulation of water homeostasis is arginine vasopressin, and copeptin, the C-terminal portion of the precursor peptide of arginine vasopressin, might be a reliable new parameter with which to assess the underlying cause of hypernatraemia.MethodsIn this prospective, multicentre, observational study conducted in two tertiary referral centres in Switzerland, 92 patients with severe hyperosmolar hypernatraemia (Na+ > 155 mmol/L) were included. After a standardised diagnostic evaluation, the underlying cause of hypernatraemia was identified and copeptin levels were measured.ResultsThe most common aetiology of hypernatraemia was dehydration (DH) (n = 65 [71%]), followed by salt overload (SO) (n = 20 [22%]), central diabetes insipidus (CDI) (n = 5 [5%]) and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI) (n = 2 [2%]). Low urine osmolality was indicative for patients with CDI and NDI (P < 0.01). Patients with CDI had lower copeptin levels than patients with DH or SO (both P < 0.01) or those with NDI. Copeptin identified CDI with an AUC of 0.99 (95% CI 0.97–1.00), and a cut-off value ≤ 4.4pmol/L showed a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 99% to predict CDI. Similarly, urea values were lower in CDI than in DH or SO (P < 0.05 and P < 0.01, respectively) or NDI. The AUC for diagnosing CDI was 0.98 (95% CI 0.96–1.00), and a cut-off value < 5.05 mmol/L showed high specificity and sensitivity for the diagnosis of CDI (98% and 100%, respectively). Copeptin and urea could not differentiate hypernatraemia induced by DH from that induced by SO (P = 0.66 and P = 0.30, respectively).ConclusionsCopeptin and urea reliably identify patients with CDI and are therefore helpful tools for therapeutic management in patients with severe hypernatraemia.Trials registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01456533. Registered on 20 October 2011.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

Diagnostic accuracy of copeptin in the differential diagnosis of the polyuria-polydipsia syndrome: A prospective multicenter study

Katharina Timper; Wiebke Fenske; Felix Kühn; Birsen Arici; Jonas Rutishauser; Peter Kopp; Bruno Allolio; Christoph Stettler; Beat Müller; Mira Katan; Mirjam Christ-Crain

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Beat Müller

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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