4 results on '"Kazeem G"'
Search Results
2. Validation of a Capillary Dry Blood Sample MITRA-Based Assay for the Quantitative Determination of Systemic Tacrolimus Concentrations in Transplant Recipients.
- Author
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Undre N, Dawson I, Aluvihare V, Kamar N, Saliba F, Torpey N, Anaokar S, Kazeem G, and Hussain I
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Chromatography, Liquid, Drug Monitoring, Female, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents pharmacokinetics, Male, Middle Aged, Transplant Recipients, Dried Blood Spot Testing, Kidney Transplantation, Tacrolimus pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Background: Tacrolimus is a narrow therapeutic index medication, which requires therapeutic drug monitoring to optimize dosing based on systemic exposure. MITRA microsampling offers a convenient, minimally invasive approach for the collection of capillary blood samples from a finger prick versus conventional venous blood sampling for quantitation of tacrolimus blood concentrations. However, the suitability of MITRA microsampling for the determination of tacrolimus concentrations requires assessment in clinical settings., Methods: Paired venous (2 mL) and capillary (10 μL) blood samples were collected pre-tacrolimus dose and 1 and 3 hours postdose during routine outpatient visits from stable adult liver or kidney transplant patients receiving prolonged-release tacrolimus. Tacrolimus concentrations were determined by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, and the concentrations obtained by the 2 sampling methods were compared by linear regression and Bland-Altman agreement analyses., Results: Samples were available for 82 transplant recipients (kidney, n = 41; liver, n = 41). A high correlation was observed between tacrolimus concentrations in capillary and venous blood samples (Pearson correlation coefficient, 0.97; Lin concordance coefficient, 0.87; slope of the fitted line, >1.0). Tacrolimus concentrations in capillary samples were 22.5% higher on average than in the corresponding venous blood samples (95% limits of agreement, 0.5%-44.6%). Similar results were observed in both transplant subgroups., Conclusions: MITRA finger prick sampling provides a convenient alternative to venipuncture for therapeutic drug monitoring in transplant recipients maintained on prolonged-release tacrolimus. When using the finger prick MITRA method, the positive bias in tacrolimus concentrations observed with this technique, when compared with venipuncture, needs to be taken into consideration., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the International Association of Therapeutic Drug Monitoring and Clinical Toxicology.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Incidence of Posttransplantation Diabetes Mellitus in De Novo Kidney Transplant Recipients Receiving Prolonged-Release Tacrolimus-Based Immunosuppression With 2 Different Corticosteroid Minimization Strategies: ADVANCE, A Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Mourad G, Glyda M, Albano L, Viklický O, Merville P, Tydén G, Mourad M, Lõhmus A, Witzke O, Christiaans MHL, Brown MW, Undre N, Kazeem G, and Kuypers DRJ
- Subjects
- Antibiotics, Antineoplastic administration & dosage, Delayed-Action Preparations, Diabetes Mellitus etiology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Therapy, Combination, Europe epidemiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents administration & dosage, Incidence, Male, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Glucocorticoids administration & dosage, Graft Rejection prevention & control, Immunosuppression Therapy methods, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Mycophenolic Acid administration & dosage, Tacrolimus administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: ADVANCE (NCT01304836) was a phase 4, multicenter, prospectively randomized, open-label, 24-week study comparing the incidence of posttransplantation diabetes mellitus (PTDM) with 2 prolonged-release tacrolimus corticosteroid minimization regimens., Methods: All patients received prolonged-release tacrolimus, basiliximab, mycophenolate mofetil and 1 bolus of intraoperative corticosteroids (0-1000 mg) as per center policy. Patients in arm 1 received tapered corticosteroids, stopped after day 10, whereas patients in arm 2 received no steroids after the intraoperative bolus. The primary efficacy variable was the diagnosis of PTDM as per American Diabetes Association criteria (2010) at any point up to 24 weeks postkidney transplantation. Secondary efficacy variables included incidence of composite efficacy failure (graft loss, biopsy-proven acute rejection or severe graft dysfunction: estimated glomerular filtration rate (Modification of Diet in Renal Disease-4) <30 mL/min per 1.73 m), acute rejection and graft and patient survival., Results: The full-analysis set included 1081 patients (arm 1: n = 528, arm 2: n = 553). Baseline characteristics and mean tacrolimus trough levels were comparable between arms. Week 24 Kaplan-Meier estimates of PTDM were similar for arm 1 versus arm 2 (17.4% vs 16.6%; P = 0.579). Incidence of composite efficacy failure, graft and patient survival, and mean estimated glomerular filtration rate were also comparable between arms. Biopsy-proven acute rejection and acute rejection were significantly higher in arm 2 versus arm 1 (13.6% vs 8.7%, P = 0.006 and 25.9% vs 18.2%, P = 0.001, respectively). Tolerability profiles were comparable between arms., Conclusions: A prolonged-release tacrolimus, basiliximab, and mycophenolate mofetil immunosuppressive regimen is efficacious, with a low incidence of PTDM and a manageable tolerability profile over 24 weeks of treatment. A lower incidence of biopsy-proven acute rejection was seen in patients receiving corticosteroids tapered over 10 days plus an intraoperative corticosteroid bolus versus those receiving an intraoperative bolus only.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A genomewide association study of smoking relapse in four European population-based samples.
- Author
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Tozzi F, Teumer A, Munafò M, Rawal R, Kazeem G, Gerbaulet M, McArdle W, Chilcoat H, Döring A, Dahmen N, Mooser V, Nauck M, Ring SM, Rubio JP, Vollenweider P, Waeber G, John U, Völzke H, Homuth G, Freyberger HJ, Völker U, Davey-Smith G, Gieger C, Preisig M, and Grabe HJ
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Demography, Female, Humans, Male, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Middle Aged, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Recurrence, Genome-Wide Association Study, Smoking genetics, White People genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: Genomewide association studies (GWAS) have identified clear evidence of genetic markers for nicotine dependence. Other smoking phenotypes have been tested, but the results are less consistent. The tendency to relapse versus the ability to maintain long-term abstinence has received little attention in genetic studies; thus, our aim was to provide a better biological understanding of this phenotype through the identification of genetic loci associated with smoking relapse., Methods: We carried out a GWAS on data from two European population-based collections, including a total of 835 cases (relapsers) and 990 controls (abstainers). Top-ranked findings from the discovery phase were tested for replication in two additional independent European population-based cohorts., Results: Of the seven top markers from the discovery phase, none were consistently associated with smoking relapse across all samples and none reached genomewide significance. A single-nucleotide polymorphism rs1008509, within the Xylosyltransferase II (XYLT2) gene, was suggestively associated with smoking relapse in the discovery phase (β=-0.504; P=5.6E-06) and in the first replication sample (ALSPAC) (β=-0.27; P=0.004; n=1932), but not in the second sample (KORA) (β=0.19; P=0.138; n=912). We failed to identify an association between loci implicated previously in other smoking phenotypes and smoking relapse., Conclusion: Although no genomewide significant findings emerged from this study, we found that loci implicated in other smoking phenotypes were not associated with smoking relapse, which suggests that the neurobiology of smoking relapse and long-term abstinence may be distinct from biological mechanisms implicated in the development of nicotine dependence.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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