VISUALIZING HETEROGENEOUS TRAJECTORIES OF SUBJECTS WITH SURGICAL RELAPSE IN INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE FROM UK BIOBANK GENERAL PRACTICE DATA
Abstract BACKGROUND AND AIMS The United Kingdom (UK) Biobank (UKBB) is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource, containing in-depth health information from half a million participants in UK that have been used for detailed analyses of IBD. Using the UKBB, we examined the lab findings...
Saved in:
Published in | Inflammatory bowel diseases Vol. 30; no. Supplement_1; p. S67 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
US
Oxford University Press
01.02.2024
|
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS
The United Kingdom (UK) Biobank (UKBB) is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource, containing in-depth health information from half a million participants in UK that have been used for detailed analyses of IBD. Using the UKBB, we examined the lab findings and prescription medication use in IBD subjects to identify trajectory patterns of disease with respect to surgical relapse.
METHODS
Of the 363 subjects in the UKBB with an established IBD diagnosis (UC, CD, or both) and an initial GI surgery, 116 had a subsequent surgery within 5 years of initial surgery and had follow up lab values of urine and serum creatinine, plasma and serum C-reactive protein, urine and serum albumin, urine albumin-creatinine ratio, total white blood count, urine microalbumin, total white cell count, hemoglobin estimation, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Additionally, data for the 9 most used IBD prescription medications: budesonide, sulfasalazine, methotrexate, hydrocortisone, balsalazide, olsalazine, prednisolone, azathioprine, and mesalamine was analyzed as well. Hidden Markov Models (HMM) using these variables and open-source packages were incorporated to label observations of each subject-visit until the subsequent surgery. Interactive visualizations using DPVis open-source package were then applied to identify individual trajectories and explore clinical characteristics.
RESULTS
Five hidden states were observed from HMM. The five states observed are based on differing prescription medication usage for the treatment of IBD and were assigned a color to allow for comparison (Figure 1). The majority of patients fell within the states labeled “blue” (azathioprine, sulfasalazine, and prednisone) “red” (mesalamine only) or “purple” (azathioprine, balsalazide, and prednisolone). The visualizer showed that while some transitions among states were observed, most patients fell into one of three major trajectory patterns as a factor of time to surgical relapse and were largely segregated by state. Based on the trajectories, a comparison of subjects with prescription of mesalamine-only vs. any immunosuppressive medications (azathioprine + sulfasalazine + balsalazide) in combination with prednisolone showed a significant difference in time to surgical relapse (P < 0.005) (Figure 2), with a shorter time to surgical relapse identified in patients who took mesalamine only.
CONCLUSIONS
We identified three distinct trajectories leading up to surgical relapse. These trajectories show distinctive medication prescription patterns (5-ASA vs. Azathioprine with steroid use), as well as significantly different times to surgical relapse. Furthermore, heterogeneity is shown within each trajectory pattern in terms of progression time and warrant further investigation.
Figure 1 Three Trajectories of time to surgical relapse generated from 5-State HMM using lab values and prescription medications. Note that a patient can traverse multiple states so the summation of the observed subjects of those states exceeds the cohort size (N=116).
Figure 2 Kaplan-Meier curves for the UC/CD subgroup with surgical relapse considering events from the first documented lab values and/or planned prescription at most 2 years prior to the baseline surgery up to the subsequent 5 years. |
---|---|
AbstractList | Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS
The United Kingdom (UK) Biobank (UKBB) is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource, containing in-depth health information from half a million participants in UK that have been used for detailed analyses of IBD. Using the UKBB, we examined the lab findings and prescription medication use in IBD subjects to identify trajectory patterns of disease with respect to surgical relapse.
METHODS
Of the 363 subjects in the UKBB with an established IBD diagnosis (UC, CD, or both) and an initial GI surgery, 116 had a subsequent surgery within 5 years of initial surgery and had follow up lab values of urine and serum creatinine, plasma and serum C-reactive protein, urine and serum albumin, urine albumin-creatinine ratio, total white blood count, urine microalbumin, total white cell count, hemoglobin estimation, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Additionally, data for the 9 most used IBD prescription medications: budesonide, sulfasalazine, methotrexate, hydrocortisone, balsalazide, olsalazine, prednisolone, azathioprine, and mesalamine was analyzed as well. Hidden Markov Models (HMM) using these variables and open-source packages were incorporated to label observations of each subject-visit until the subsequent surgery. Interactive visualizations using DPVis open-source package were then applied to identify individual trajectories and explore clinical characteristics.
RESULTS
Five hidden states were observed from HMM. The five states observed are based on differing prescription medication usage for the treatment of IBD and were assigned a color to allow for comparison (Figure 1). The majority of patients fell within the states labeled “blue” (azathioprine, sulfasalazine, and prednisone) “red” (mesalamine only) or “purple” (azathioprine, balsalazide, and prednisolone). The visualizer showed that while some transitions among states were observed, most patients fell into one of three major trajectory patterns as a factor of time to surgical relapse and were largely segregated by state. Based on the trajectories, a comparison of subjects with prescription of mesalamine-only vs. any immunosuppressive medications (azathioprine + sulfasalazine + balsalazide) in combination with prednisolone showed a significant difference in time to surgical relapse (P < 0.005) (Figure 2), with a shorter time to surgical relapse identified in patients who took mesalamine only.
CONCLUSIONS
We identified three distinct trajectories leading up to surgical relapse. These trajectories show distinctive medication prescription patterns (5-ASA vs. Azathioprine with steroid use), as well as significantly different times to surgical relapse. Furthermore, heterogeneity is shown within each trajectory pattern in terms of progression time and warrant further investigation.
Figure 1 Three Trajectories of time to surgical relapse generated from 5-State HMM using lab values and prescription medications. Note that a patient can traverse multiple states so the summation of the observed subjects of those states exceeds the cohort size (N=116).
Figure 2 Kaplan-Meier curves for the UC/CD subgroup with surgical relapse considering events from the first documented lab values and/or planned prescription at most 2 years prior to the baseline surgery up to the subsequent 5 years. BACKGROUND AND AIMS The United Kingdom (UK) Biobank (UKBB) is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource, containing in-depth health information from half a million participants in UK that have been used for detailed analyses of IBD. Using the UKBB, we examined the lab findings and prescription medication use in IBD subjects to identify trajectory patterns of disease with respect to surgical relapse. METHODS Of the 363 subjects in the UKBB with an established IBD diagnosis (UC, CD, or both) and an initial GI surgery, 116 had a subsequent surgery within 5 years of initial surgery and had follow up lab values of urine and serum creatinine, plasma and serum C-reactive protein, urine and serum albumin, urine albumin-creatinine ratio, total white blood count, urine microalbumin, total white cell count, hemoglobin estimation, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Additionally, data for the 9 most used IBD prescription medications: budesonide, sulfasalazine, methotrexate, hydrocortisone, balsalazide, olsalazine, prednisolone, azathioprine, and mesalamine was analyzed as well. Hidden Markov Models (HMM) using these variables and open-source packages were incorporated to label observations of each subject-visit until the subsequent surgery. Interactive visualizations using DPVis open-source package were then applied to identify individual trajectories and explore clinical characteristics. RESULTS Five hidden states were observed from HMM. The five states observed are based on differing prescription medication usage for the treatment of IBD and were assigned a color to allow for comparison (Figure 1). The majority of patients fell within the states labeled “blue” (azathioprine, sulfasalazine, and prednisone) “red” (mesalamine only) or “purple” (azathioprine, balsalazide, and prednisolone). The visualizer showed that while some transitions among states were observed, most patients fell into one of three major trajectory patterns as a factor of time to surgical relapse and were largely segregated by state. Based on the trajectories, a comparison of subjects with prescription of mesalamine-only vs. any immunosuppressive medications (azathioprine + sulfasalazine + balsalazide) in combination with prednisolone showed a significant difference in time to surgical relapse (P < 0.005) (Figure 2), with a shorter time to surgical relapse identified in patients who took mesalamine only. CONCLUSIONS We identified three distinct trajectories leading up to surgical relapse. These trajectories show distinctive medication prescription patterns (5-ASA vs. Azathioprine with steroid use), as well as significantly different times to surgical relapse. Furthermore, heterogeneity is shown within each trajectory pattern in terms of progression time and warrant further investigation. Figure 1 Three Trajectories of time to surgical relapse generated from 5-State HMM using lab values and prescription medications. Note that a patient can traverse multiple states so the summation of the observed subjects of those states exceeds the cohort size (N=116). Figure 2 Kaplan-Meier curves for the UC/CD subgroup with surgical relapse considering events from the first documented lab values and/or planned prescription at most 2 years prior to the baseline surgery up to the subsequent 5 years. |
Author | Anand, Vibha Liu, Julia Mulligan, Natasha Purpura, Alberto Yadete, Tesfaye Bettencourt-Silva, Joao Njoku, Kingsley Koski, Eileen Stappenbeck, Thaddeus Koseki, Akira Kosugi, Akihiro Kartoun, Uri |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Kingsley surname: Njoku fullname: Njoku, Kingsley – sequence: 2 givenname: Akira surname: Koseki fullname: Koseki, Akira – sequence: 3 givenname: Akihiro surname: Kosugi fullname: Kosugi, Akihiro – sequence: 4 givenname: Tesfaye surname: Yadete fullname: Yadete, Tesfaye – sequence: 5 givenname: Joao surname: Bettencourt-Silva fullname: Bettencourt-Silva, Joao – sequence: 6 givenname: Alberto surname: Purpura fullname: Purpura, Alberto – sequence: 7 givenname: Natasha surname: Mulligan fullname: Mulligan, Natasha – sequence: 8 givenname: Uri surname: Kartoun fullname: Kartoun, Uri – sequence: 9 givenname: Eileen surname: Koski fullname: Koski, Eileen – sequence: 10 givenname: Vibha surname: Anand fullname: Anand, Vibha – sequence: 11 givenname: Thaddeus surname: Stappenbeck fullname: Stappenbeck, Thaddeus – sequence: 12 givenname: Julia surname: Liu fullname: Liu, Julia |
BookMark | eNqFUMtOwzAQtBBItIUzV0vckEKdxHWco5M6rWmaVHlQwcVKnERqBU1J6AG-gY_Gpb0jWVrv7szO7gzB5a7d1QDcmejRRK493pTVePNd1MjSBYwvwMCc2MTAFONL_UcONZDr0msw7Pst0igLuQPw8yzSnIXiVUQzOOcZT-IZj3icpzBL2BP3szgRPIVxANPcO-YpXItsrrNkJnwWwoSHbJVyKCL9gpAtl0xzXqAXr3kIpyLlTHeDJF7CfAE9EXssWsCjSKLZq4T5mfA5nLKM3YCrpnjr69tzHIE84Jk_N8L4T8tQ-jBsmAW2aVnSgkxKXJX1BLlEEZNWNSU2ajC2LUWx2SjsVCVxlUMrRJzaKilpHKVKewTuT3P3XftxqPtPuW0P3U5LStskLqU2RpZGjU8o1bV939WN3Heb96L7kiaSR8ultlyeLZd6M814ODHaw_5f8C_yjHoZ |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2024 by the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation and the AGA Institute. This article is being published jointly in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases and Gastroenterology . 2024 2024 by the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation and the AGA Institute. This article is being published jointly in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases and Gastroenterology. |
Copyright_xml | – notice: 2024 by the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation and the AGA Institute. This article is being published jointly in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases and Gastroenterology . 2024 – notice: 2024 by the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation and the AGA Institute. This article is being published jointly in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases and Gastroenterology. |
DBID | AAYXX CITATION 3V. 7X7 7XB 88E 8FI 8FJ 8FK ABUWG AFKRA BENPR CCPQU FYUFA GHDGH K9. M0S M1P PHGZM PHGZT PJZUB PKEHL PPXIY PQEST PQQKQ PQUKI PRINS |
DOI | 10.1093/ibd/izae020.144 |
DatabaseName | CrossRef ProQuest Central (Corporate) Health & Medical Collection ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016) Medical Database (Alumni Edition) Hospital Premium Collection Hospital Premium Collection (Alumni Edition) ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016) ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition) ProQuest Central UK/Ireland ProQuest Central ProQuest One Community College Health Research Premium Collection Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni) Health & Medical Collection (Alumni Edition) Medical Database ProQuest Central Premium ProQuest One Academic (New) ProQuest Health & Medical Research Collection ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New) ProQuest One Health & Nursing ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE) ProQuest One Academic ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition ProQuest Central China |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New) ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition ProQuest Health & Medical Complete (Alumni) ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition) ProQuest One Community College ProQuest One Health & Nursing ProQuest Hospital Collection Health Research Premium Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Central China ProQuest Hospital Collection (Alumni) ProQuest Central ProQuest Health & Medical Complete ProQuest Health & Medical Research Collection Health Research Premium Collection ProQuest Medical Library ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition Health and Medicine Complete (Alumni Edition) Health & Medical Research Collection ProQuest Central (New) ProQuest One Academic ProQuest One Academic (New) ProQuest Medical Library (Alumni) ProQuest Central (Alumni) |
DatabaseTitleList | ProQuest One Academic Middle East (New) |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: BENPR name: ProQuest Central url: https://www.proquest.com/central sourceTypes: Aggregation Database |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Medicine |
DocumentTitleAlternate | Abstracts from the 2023 Crohn’S & Colitis Congress® Held January 25-27, 2024 |
EISSN | 1536-4844 |
EndPage | S67 |
ExternalDocumentID | 10_1093_ibd_izae020_144 10.1093/ibd/izae020.144 |
GeographicLocations | United Kingdom--UK |
GeographicLocations_xml | – name: United Kingdom--UK |
GroupedDBID | --- .Z2 0R~ 1OC 31~ 3WU 4.4 48X 53G 5GY 5VS 5WD 66C 7O~ 7X7 8-0 8-1 88E 8F7 8FI 8FJ 8UM AAAXR AABZA AACZT AAJQQ AAKAS AAPGJ AAPQZ AAPXW AARHZ AARTV AAUAY AAUQX AAVAP AAWDT AAYEP ABBUW ABDFA ABEJV ABGNP ABJNI ABNHQ ABOCM ABPQP ABPTD ABQNK ABUWG ABVGC ABWST ABXVJ ABXVV ABZAD ACDDN ACEWG ACFRR ACGFO ACGFS ACUTJ ACVCV ACWDW ACWRI ACXNZ ACXQS ACYHN ACZBC ADBBV ADBIZ ADGZP ADIPN ADMTO ADNBA ADQBN ADRTK ADVEK ADZCM AEMQT AENEX AETBJ AFBPY AFFQV AFFZL AFKRA AFOFC AFTRI AFUWQ AFXAL AFYAG AFZJQ AGINJ AGKRT AGMDO AGORE AGQXC AGUTN AHGBF AHMBA AHMMS AHRYX AIJEX AIZYK AJAOE AJBYB AJDVS AJEEA AJNCP AJNYG ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS ALXQX APJGH AQDSO AQKUS ATGXG AVNTJ BAYMD BCRHZ BENPR BEYMZ BOYCO BTRTY C45 CCPQU CDBKE CS3 DAKXR DR2 DU5 E.X E3Z EBS EIHJH EJD ENERS EX3 F5P FECEO FL- FLUFQ FOEOM FOTVD FQBLK FYUFA GAUVT GJXCC H0~ H13 HMCUK HZ~ IAO IHR IN~ ITC IX1 JXSIZ KBUDW KOP KSI KSN LAW LH4 LW6 M1P MBLQV MHKGH NNB NOMLY NOYVH NU- NVLIB N~7 N~B O9- OAUYM OBFPC OCUKA OCZFY ODMLO OIG OJZSN OPAEJ ORVUJ OVD OWPYF P2P PAFKI PHGZM PHGZT PQQKQ PSQYO QRW ROL ROX RUSNO RX1 S4S TEORI TMA UKHRP V2E W99 WOQ WOW XV2 Y6R YAYTL YKOAZ YXANX ZFV AAYXX CITATION 3V. 7XB 8FK K9. PJZUB PKEHL PPXIY PQEST PQUKI PRINS |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c1444-1a438bb8a65b4dbe5096c618de8630f4432c841fc47db69c78d067e2b86f7ccb3 |
IEDL.DBID | 7X7 |
ISSN | 1078-0998 |
IngestDate | Fri Jul 25 21:43:15 EDT 2025 Tue Jul 01 04:33:07 EDT 2025 Mon Jun 30 08:34:52 EDT 2025 |
IsDoiOpenAccess | false |
IsOpenAccess | true |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | Supplement_1 |
Language | English |
License | This article is published and distributed under the terms of the Oxford University Press, Standard Journals Publication Model (https://academic.oup.com/pages/standard-publication-reuse-rights) https://academic.oup.com/pages/standard-publication-reuse-rights |
LinkModel | DirectLink |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c1444-1a438bb8a65b4dbe5096c618de8630f4432c841fc47db69c78d067e2b86f7ccb3 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 |
OpenAccessLink | https://academic.oup.com/ibdjournal/article-pdf/30/Supplement_1/S67/56417310/izae020.144.pdf |
PQID | 3169883402 |
PQPubID | 996336 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_journals_3169883402 crossref_primary_10_1093_ibd_izae020_144 oup_primary_10_1093_ibd_izae020_144 |
ProviderPackageCode | CITATION AAYXX |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 20240201 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2024-02-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 02 year: 2024 text: 20240201 day: 01 |
PublicationDecade | 2020 |
PublicationPlace | US |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: US – name: Baltimore |
PublicationTitle | Inflammatory bowel diseases |
PublicationYear | 2024 |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Publisher_xml | – name: Oxford University Press |
SSID | ssj0020209 |
Score | 2.4158533 |
Snippet | Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS
The United Kingdom (UK) Biobank (UKBB) is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource, containing in-depth health... BACKGROUND AND AIMS The United Kingdom (UK) Biobank (UKBB) is a large-scale biomedical database and research resource, containing in-depth health information... |
SourceID | proquest crossref oup |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Publisher |
StartPage | S67 |
SubjectTerms | Antibiotics Biobanks Creatinine Inflammatory bowel disease Prescription drugs Surgery Urine |
Title | VISUALIZING HETEROGENEOUS TRAJECTORIES OF SUBJECTS WITH SURGICAL RELAPSE IN INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE FROM UK BIOBANK GENERAL PRACTICE DATA |
URI | https://www.proquest.com/docview/3169883402 |
Volume | 30 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwhV1Nb9QwELWglRAXxKcolMoSHLhEuxt7bedUebsJG7pJVsmGLlyi2LGlXralLRd-Az-aceKo6gWkXCw7h3gm9jzP8zyEPvGp4MLMHefJHd0A_AqEZQBWuA21gQDf9Herspytavp1N9_5A7dbT6sc18R-oe6utDsjn5AZi4QgAHdOr38GTjXKZVe9hMZjdOhKlzlKF9_dA67pQPEAhONS_JEYS_tEZHKpusnl79bAEJfffLArPbjpNi7N_X6TPEfPfKCI5WDZF-iR2b9ETzKfCn-F_nxLq1qu0x9p_gWvYohKC0dDK-oKb0vpREyKEkI9XCTYi5pU-CLdrqBV9vIH2KllbKoYpzk8yVpmmYR3vuNFcRGv8TKtYgm9SVlkuD7Hi7RYyPwce64b3pSOf3IW46XcyteoTuLt2Srw0gqBhq-lwaylRCglWjZXtFPGFYHRbCY6IxiZWkpJqAWdWU15p1ikuehgWzOhEsxyrRV5gw72V3vzFmEetZzZqDXuXlQUcmFDpgDIWesypkQcoc_j1DbXQwWNZsh8kwas0HgrAAahR-gjTP3_Rx2Ppmn8D3fb3LvHu393v0dPwS_oQLw-Rgd3N7_MB4gr7tRJ7zwn6HAR55sSWssy_AvicMD6 |
linkProvider | ProQuest |
linkToHtml | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtV1Lb9QwELbKVoJeEE_RUsASIHGJdjf2Os4BVd5uQszmscqDFi4hThypl22hRRX8hv6W_kbGmwTUC5wq5RLZyWFmbM_n-WYGoTfOhDtczwznyVzdAPyyeMsArDitXWtw8PUmtyqKWVDQj8ez4y10PeTCGFrlsCduNurmtDZ35GMyZS7nBODOwdk3y3SNMtHVoYVGZxZL_fMSINv5e7kA_b61bd_LDwOr7ypg1QAeqDWtKOFK8YrNFG2UNvVPajbljeaMTFpKiV1zOm1r6jSKubXDG9jRta04a526VgT-ewdtUwJQZoS25168Sv9AvElHKgFMZUgFLh-KCblkfKKa8cmvSsMUE1G9cQ7eyK0bDoPNCec_QPd71xSLzpYeoi29foTuRn3w_TG6-iSzQoTyi4w_4MADPzgxxLekyHCeCtM2JUnBucSJj_s2Khk-knkAb-lGNNj051hlHpYxPH4ookjAN5_xPDnyQryQmSdg1E-TCBdLPJfJXMRL3LPr8Co1jJdDDy9ELp6g4lbE_hSN1qdr_Qxhx60c1rqVNplYru3w1mYKoGPbmhgt4bvo3SDa8qyr2VF2sXZSghbKXguAeugueg2i__-s_UE1Zb_Ez8u_Brn37-FX6F6QR2EZynj5HO2AjdCO9r2PRhfff-gX4NVcqJe9KWH09bat9zftNPx2 |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=VISUALIZING+HETEROGENEOUS+TRAJECTORIES+OF+SUBJECTS+WITH+SURGICAL+RELAPSE+IN+INFLAMMATORY+BOWEL+DISEASE+FROM+UK+BIOBANK+GENERAL+PRACTICE+DATA&rft.jtitle=Inflammatory+bowel+diseases&rft.au=Njoku%2C+Kingsley&rft.au=Koseki%2C+Akira&rft.au=Kosugi%2C+Akihiro&rft.au=Yadete%2C+Tesfaye&rft.date=2024-02-01&rft.pub=Oxford+University+Press&rft.issn=1078-0998&rft.eissn=1536-4844&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=Supplement_1&rft.spage=S67&rft.epage=S67&rft_id=info:doi/10.1093%2Fibd%2Fizae020.144&rft.externalDocID=10.1093%2Fibd%2Fizae020.144 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1078-0998&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1078-0998&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1078-0998&client=summon |