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1.
Ann Surg Open ; 5(1): e383, 2024 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38883932

Objective: Intent-to-treat analysis follows patients from listing to death, regardless of their transplant status, and aims to provide a more holistic scope of the progress made in adult solid-organ transplantation. Background: Many studies have shown progress in waitlist and post-transplant survival for adult kidney, liver, heart, and lung transplants, but there is a need to provide a more comprehensive perspective of transplant outcomes for patients and their families. Methods: Univariable and multivariable Cox regression analyses were used to analyze factors contributing to intent-to-treat survival in 813,862 adults listed for kidney, liver, heart, and lung transplants. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to examine changes in waitlist, post-transplant, and intent-to-treat survival. Transplantation rates were compared using χ2 tests. Results: Intent-to-treat survival has steadily increased for liver, heart, and lung transplants. The percentage of patients transplanted within 1 year significantly increased for heart (57.4% from 52.9%) and lung (73.5% from 33.2%). However, the percentage of patients transplanted within 1 year significantly decreased from 35.8% to 21.2% for kidney transplant. Notably, intent-to-treat survival has decreased for kidneys despite increases in waitlist and post-transplant survival, likely because of the decreased transplant rate. Conclusion: Intent-to-treat survival steadily improved for liver, heart, and lung transplant over the 30-year study period. Continued advancements in allocation policy, immunosuppression, and improved care of patients on the waitlist may contribute to further progress in outcomes of all organs, but the increasing discrepancy in supply and demand of donor kidneys is alarming and has impeded the progress of kidney intent-to-treat survival.

2.
J Neurotrauma ; 41(3-4): 319-330, 2024 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37658840

Epilepsy surgery provides excellent benefits in post-traumatic epilepsy of the temporal lobe (PTE-TL), but outcomes relative to non-traumatic epilepsy of the temporal lobe (NTE-TL) are less favorable. Large well-designed studies are recommended to further clarify the role of epilepsy surgery in PTE. It is unclear whether epilepsy surgery outcomes in PTE are as robust as described for drug resistant epilepsy (DRE) in general. Prior outcome studies in PTE are limited by small numbers, lack of a control group, or both. We performed a meta-analysis of studies in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) to evaluate post-surgical outcomes in those with PTE-TL and compare outcomes to those with NTE-TL. PubMed, EMBASE, and Web of Science databases were queried for studies reporting epilepsy surgery outcomes separately for PTE-TL and NTE-TL. Outcomes were divided into favorable (Engel Class I) or unfavorable (Engel Class II-IV) for comparison. Meta-analyses were performed to evaluate: 1) the proportion of Class I outcomes following epilepsy surgery in PTE-TL; and 2) calculate the odds of Class I surgical outcomes in PTE-TL compared with NTE-TL. Of 3669 articles that reported surgical outcomes in epilepsy, nine studies (n = 886) were identified that reported outcomes for both PTE-TL (n = 219) and NTE-TL (n = 667). The weighted proportion of favorable outcomes (Engel Class I) were high for both PTE-TL (70.1%, 95% CI 61.9%-78.3%) and NTE-TL (75.2%, 95% CI 69.4%-80.2%). Patients with PTE-TL were at greater risk of unfavorable (Engel Class II-IV) outcomes (relative risk 1.36, 95% CI 1.04-1.78) compared with NTE-TL.


Drug Resistant Epilepsy , Epilepsy, Post-Traumatic , Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe , Epilepsy , Humans , Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe/surgery , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Treatment Outcome , Retrospective Studies
3.
Am J Otolaryngol ; 45(1): 104052, 2024.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37801744

PURPOSE: Patients often have basic audiometry (BA) but not objective diagnostic tests of the vestibular system (VNG) when complaining of symptoms of a vestibular disorder. The relationship of BA results to VNG results is unknown. This study sought to determine if BA scores are related to impaired VNG scores. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed electronic medical records at a tertiary care center, for patients seen between 2015 and 2021 who had had both a BA and a VNG (n = 651). BA subtests were pure tone averages, word recognition, and tympanogram. VNG subtests were cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potentials, Dix-Hallpike maneuvers, and bi-thermal caloric tests. All tests were summarized as normal/abnormal. RESULTS: More subjects had abnormal BA than abnormal VNG scores. Age but not sex was significantly related to abnormal scores. High BP was a significant comorbidity in 15 % of the sample, more in patients with abnormal than normal VNG scores. Although the abnormal BA and abnormal VNG were significantly related, pure tone averages and tympanogram scores were not related to VNG subtests. Abnormal word recognition with both ears combined was significantly related to normal and abnormal bi-thermal caloric tests. CONCLUSIONS: If the clinician needs to know of any VNG impairment, in general, then performing a BA without a VNG might suffice. If the clinician needs information about the details of possible vestibular impairment, then a VNG should be performed.


Vestibular Diseases , Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials , Vestibule, Labyrinth , Humans , Vertigo/diagnosis , Hearing , Vestibular Diseases/diagnosis , Caloric Tests , Vestibular Function Tests
4.
Dig Dis Sci ; 68(9): 3810-3817, 2023 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37402977

IMPORTANCE: Transplantation has transformed into a burgeoning field that is rapidly evolving to optimize organ distribution and survival outcomes. The years since 2012 (the last comprehensive study) have seen changes in transplantation, such as advances in immunotherapy and novel indices, that necessitate an updated analysis of survival benefit. DESIGN: Our goal was to determine the survival benefit for solid-organ transplants in the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) database for a three decade period and provide updates on advancements since 2012. Our retrospective analysis examined data containing U.S. patient records from September 1, 1987, to September 1, 2021. RESULTS: We found that 3,430,272 life-years were saved over our transplant period (4.33 life-years saved per patient); kidney-1,998,492 life-years; liver -767,414; heart-435,312; lung-116,625; pancreas-kidney-123,463; pancreas-30,575; intestine-7901. After matching, 3,296,851 life-years were saved. Life-years saved and median survival increased for all organs between 2012 and 2021. Compared to 2012, median survival increased in kidney (from 12.4 to 14.76 years), liver (from 11.6 to 14.59), heart (9.5 to 11.73), lung (5.2 to 5.63), pancreas-kidney (from 14.5 to 16.88), pancreas (from 13.3 to 16.10). When compared to 2012, the percent transplanted increased in kidney, liver, heart, lung, and intestine, while pancreas-kidney and pancreas show decreased percent transplanted. CONCLUSION: Our study underscores the tremendous survival benefits of solid organ transplantation (over 3.4 million life-years saved) and shows improvements since 2012. Our study also highlights areas of transplantation, notably pancreas transplants, that may necessitate reinvigorated attention.


Organ Transplantation , Pancreas Transplantation , Tissue and Organ Procurement , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Liver , Graft Survival , Registries
5.
Seizure ; 110: 177-187, 2023 Aug.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37406461

INTRODUCTION: Review of videos (without electroencephalography) to differentiate epileptic seizures (ES) from non-epileptic spells (NES) may be helpful where epilepsy monitoring is not feasible. Previous studies of video-based diagnosis have suffered from variable accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity. METHODS: We systematically reviewed relevant literature in PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science from inception to September 2022, identifying articles that reported on the video-based diagnosis of ES and NES. In primary analysis, for each study, the most expert group was chosen when different groups of reviewers classified the videos (e.g., epilepsy specialists and general neurologists). In secondary analysis, we compared the diagnostic accuracy of different expertise levels (e.g., epileptologists, general neurologists, residents, medical students). Meta-analysis was performed to obtain pooled estimates of reliability measures. RESULTS: From 5245 articles identified, 13 met the inclusion criteria, with cumulative data from 683 patients (696 videos) reviewed by 95 independent reviewers in primary analysis. Video alone had a strong ability to differentiate ES from NES as evidenced by the following metrics- area under the curve- 0.9 (considered "outstanding"), sensitivity- 82.2% (95% Confidence Interval [C.I], 80.2%-84.0%), specificity- 84.7% (C.I., 82.8%-86.5%), and diagnostic odds ratio- 24.7 (C.I., 11.5-52.9). The secondary analysis showed reviewer-dependent accuracy with epileptologists showing the highest accuracy (DOR 81.2, C.I., 90.0%-94.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Video alone has reliable diagnostic performance for differentiating ES from NES. Meta-analysis limitations include inter-study heterogeneity including variable video quality and reviewer expertise. Combined video-EEG remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of epilepsy and NES.


Epilepsy , Seizures , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Seizures/diagnosis , Seizures/complications , Epilepsy/diagnosis , Epilepsy/complications , Electroencephalography , Monitoring, Physiologic , Video Recording
6.
Pediatr Nephrol ; 38(4): 1309-1317, 2023 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36066770

BACKGROUND: The Kidney Donor Risk Index (KDRI) by Rao et al. was developed to measure the quality of kidney allografts. While Rao's KDRI has been found to be a robust measure of kidney allograft survival for adult kidney transplant recipients, many studies have indicated the need to create a distinct pediatric KDRI. METHODS: Our retrospective study utilized data from the United Network for Organ Sharing database. We examined 9295 deceased donor recipients' data for age < 18 years from 1990 to 2020. We performed a multivariate Cox regression to determine the significant recipient and transplant factors impacting pediatric kidney allograft survival. RESULTS: Multivariate analysis found 5 donor factors to be independently associated with graft failure or recipient death: age, female sex, anoxia as the cause of death, history of cigarette use, and cold ischemia time. Using receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve analysis and analyzing the predictive value of each KDRI at 1, 5, and 10 years, the proposed pediatric KDRI had a statistically significant and higher predictive value for pediatric recipients at 5 (0.60 versus 0.57) and 10 years (0.61 versus 0.57) than the Rao KDRI. CONCLUSIONS: The proposed pediatric KDRI may provide a more accurate and simpler index to assess the quality of kidney allografts for pediatric recipients. However, due to the mild increase in predictive capabilities over the Rao index, the study serves as a proof of concept to develop a pediatric KDRI. Further studies should focus on increasing the index's predictive capabilities. A higher resolution version of the Graphical abstract is available as Supplementary information.


Kidney Transplantation , Adult , Humans , Child , Female , Adolescent , Kidney Transplantation/adverse effects , Retrospective Studies , Graft Survival , Kidney , Transplantation, Homologous , Tissue Donors , Transplant Recipients
7.
Clin Transplant ; 36(9): e14777, 2022 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35822915

INTRODUCTION: Although lung demand continues to outpace supply, 75% of potential donor lungs are discarded without being transplanted in the United States. To identify the discarded cohorts best suited to alleviate the lung shortage and reduce waitlist mortality, we explored changes in survival over time for five marginal donor definitions: age >60 years, smoking history >20 pack-years, PaO2 /FiO2  < 300 mmHg, purulent bronchoscopic secretions, and chest radiograph infiltrates. METHODS: Our retrospective cohort study separated 27 803 lung recipients in the UNOS Database into three 5-year eras by transplant date: 2005-2009, 2010-2014, and 2015-2019. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression and Kaplan-Meier analysis with log-rank test were used to compare survival across the eras. RESULTS: Three definitions-low PaO2 /FiO2 , purulent bronchoscopic secretions, and abnormal chest radiographs-did not bear out as truly marginal, demonstrating lack of significantly elevated risk. Advanced donor age demonstrated considerable survival improvement (HR (95% CI): 1.47 (1.26-1.72) in 2005-2009 down to 1.14 (.97-1.35) for 2015-2019), with protective factors being recipients <60 years, moderate recipient BMI, and low Lung Allocation Score (LAS). Donors with smoking history failed to demonstrate any significant improvement (HR (95% CI): 1.09 (1.01-1.17) in 2005-2009 increasing to 1.22 (1.08-1.38) in 2015-2019). CONCLUSIONS: Advanced donor age, previously the most significant risk factor, has improved to near-benchmark levels, demonstrating the possibility for matching older donors to healthier non-elderly recipients in selected circumstances. Low PaO2 /FiO2 , bronchoscopic secretions, and abnormal radiographs demonstrated survival on par with standard donors. Significant donor smoking history, a moderate risk factor, has failed to improve.


Lung Transplantation , Tissue and Organ Procurement , Age Factors , Allografts , Humans , Lung , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Tissue Donors , Treatment Outcome , United States/epidemiology
8.
Eur J Med Chem ; 224: 113729, 2021 Nov 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34365128

Previous studies demonstrated that anti-hyperlipidemic drug gemfibrozil acts as NO- and heme-independent activator of NO receptor soluble guanylyl cyclase. A series of new gemfibrozil derivatives were synthesized and evaluated for sGC activation. The structure-activity relationship study identified the positions in gemfibrozil's scaffold that are detrimental for sGC activation and those that are amendable for optimizing modifications. Compared with gemfibrozil, compounds 7c and 15b were more potent activators of cGMP-forming activity of purified sGC and exhibited enhanced relaxation of preconstricted mouse thoracic aorta rings. These studies established the overall framework needed for futher improvement of sGC activators based on gemfibrozil scaffold.


Gemfibrozil/therapeutic use , Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Soluble Guanylyl Cyclase/drug effects , Animals , Gemfibrozil/pharmacology , Humans , Mice , Structure-Activity Relationship
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