5 results on '"Joseph Odin"'
Search Results
2. Su1348: EFFICACY, SAFETY, AND TOLERABILITY OF SELADELPAR IN PATIENTS WITH COMPENSATED LIVER CIRRHOSIS DUE TO PRIMARY BILIARY CHOLANGITIS (PBC); A POOLED ANALYSIS OF PHASE 2 AND PHASE 3 STUDIES
- Author
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Stuart C. Gordon, Palak Trivedi, Christopher L. Bowlus, Michael Galambos, Aparna Goel, Aliya Gulamhusein, Cynthia Levy, Guy Neff, Carmen M. Stanca, Douglas Thorburn, Bruce R. Bacon, Brian B. Borg, Yvonne Doerffel, Lisa Forman, Bradley Freilich, Liliana Gheorghe, Maria Sarai Gonzalez-Huezo, Stephen A. Harrison, Jonathan C. Huang, Sook-Hayng Jeong, Seung-Up Kim, John Lake, Joseph Odin, Won Young Tak, Hillel Tobias, John M. Vierling, Ke Yang, Alexandra Steinberg, Yun-Jung Choi, Charles A. Mcwherter, and Marlyn J. Mayo
- Subjects
Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
3. Cytokine profiles in acute liver injury-Results from the US Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) and the Acute Liver Failure Study Group
- Author
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Herbert L Bonkovsky, Huiman X Barnhart, David M Foureau, Nury Steuerwald, William M Lee, Jiezhun Gu, Robert J Fontana, Paul J Hayashi, Naga Chalasani, Victor M Navarro, Joseph Odin, Andrew Stolz, Paul B Watkins, Jose Serrano, and US Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network and the Acute Liver Failure Study Group
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Etiology ,Physiology ,Gastroenterology and hepatology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:Medicine ,Liver transplantation ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Hepatitis ,Liver disease ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune Physiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,lcsh:Science ,Liver injury ,Innate Immune System ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Fatty liver ,Hepatitis B ,3. Good health ,Infectious hepatitis ,Cytokine ,Cohort ,Cytokines ,Infectious diseases ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immunology ,Acute Liver Failure ,Serum albumin ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Viral diseases ,Digestive System Procedures ,03 medical and health sciences ,Albumins ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Serum Albumin ,Liver diseases ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,Organ Transplantation ,Molecular Development ,medicine.disease ,Liver Transplantation ,Fatty Liver ,030104 developmental biology ,Immune System ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Changes in levels of cytokines and chemokines have been proposed as possible biomarkers of tissue injury, including liver injury due to drugs. Recently, in acute drug-induced liver injury (DILI), we showed that 19 of 27 immune analytes were differentially expressed and that disparate patterns of immune responses were evident. Lower values of serum albumin (< 2.8 g/dL) and lower levels of only four analytes, namely, IL-9, IL-17, PDGF-bb, and RANTES, were highly predictive of early death [accuracy = 96%]. The goals of this study were to assess levels of the same 27 immune analytes in larger numbers of subjects to learn whether the earlier findings would be confirmed in new and larger cohorts of subjects, compared with a new cohort of healthy controls. We studied 127 subjects with acute DILI enrolled into the US DILIN. We also studied 118 subjects with severe acute liver injury of diverse etiologies, enrolled into the ALF SG registry of subjects. Controls comprised 63 de-identified subjects with no history of liver disease and normal liver tests. Analytes associated with poor outcomes [death before 6 months, n = 32 of the total of 232 non-acetaminophen (Apap) subjects], were lower serum albumin [2.6 vs 3.0 g/dL] and RANTES [6,458 vs 8,999 pg/mL] but higher levels of IL-6 [41 vs 18], IL-8 [78 vs 48], and MELD scores [30 vs 24]. Similar patterns were observed for outcome of death/liver transplant within 6 months. A model that included only serum albumin < 2.8 g/dL and RANTES below its median value of 11,349 had 83% (or 81%) accuracy for predicting early death (or early death/liver transplant) in 127 subjects from DILIN. No patterns of serum immune analytes were reflective of the etiologies of acute liver failure, but there were cytokine patterns that predicted prognosis in both acute DILI and ALF.
- Published
- 2018
4. Features and Outcomes of 899 Patients With Drug-Induced Liver Injury: The DILIN Prospective Study
- Author
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Naga Chalasani, Herbert L. Bonkovsky, Robert Fontana, William Lee, Andrew Stolz, Jayant Talwalkar, K. Rajendar Reddy, Paul B. Watkins, Victor Navarro, Huiman Barnhart, Jiezhun Gu, Jose Serrano, Jawad Ahmad, Nancy Bach, Meena Bansal, Huiman X. Barnhart, Kimberly Beavers, Herbert Bonkovsky, Francisco O. Calvo, Charissa Chang, Hari Conjeevaram, Gregory Conner, Jama Darling, Ynto de Boer, Douglas Dieterich, Frank DiPaola, Francisco A. Durazo, James E. (Jay) Everhart, Robert J. Fontana, Marwan S. Ghabril, David Goldstein, Vani Gopalreddy, Priya Grewal, Paul H. Hayashi, Jay Hoofnagle, Neil Kaplowitz, Suthat Liangpunsakul, Steven Lichtman, Lawrence Liu, Victor J. Navarro, Joseph Odin, Simona Rossi, Mark Russo, Thomas Schiano, José Serrano, Averell H. Sherker, Raj Vuppalanchi, Paul Watkins, Steven Zacks, Amanda Balasco, Kristin Chesney, Audrey Corne, Sherrie Cummings, Gale Groseclose, Alex Hammett, Judy Hooker, Varun Kesar, Sophana Mao, Kenari Marks, Regina McFadden, Yolanda Melgoza, Sherif Mikhail, Susan Milstein, Wendy Morlan, Val Peacock, Nidia Rosado, Tracy Russell, Maricruz Vega, Manisha Verma, Patricia Walker, Rachana Yalamanchili, Michelle McClanahan-Crowder, Katherine Galan, Jiezhun (Sherry) Gu, Tuan Chau, Kowsalya Ragavan, Hoss Rostami, Carmel Puglisi-Scharenbroich, Rebecca J. Torrance, and Rebekah Van Raaphorst
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Liver injury ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gastroenterology ,Liver transplantation ,Chronic liver disease ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Liver disease ,Nitrofurantoin ,Concomitant ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Etiology ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background & Aims The Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network is conducting a prospective study of patients with DILI in the United States. We present characteristics and subgroup analyses from the first 1257 patients enrolled in the study. Methods In an observational longitudinal study, we began collecting data on eligible individuals with suspected DILI in 2004, following them for 6 months or longer. Subjects were evaluated systematically for other etiologies, causes, and severity of DILI. Results Among 1257 enrolled subjects with suspected DILI, the causality was assessed in 1091 patients, and 899 were considered to have definite, highly likely, or probable DILI. Ten percent of patients died or underwent liver transplantation, and 17% had chronic liver injury. In the 89 patients (10%) with pre-existing liver disease, DILI appeared to be more severe than in those without (difference not statistically significant; P = .09) and mortality was significantly higher (16% vs 5.2%; P 365 days were nitrofurantoin (25%) or minocycline (17%). There were no differences in outcomes of patients with short vs long latency of DILI. Compared with individuals younger than 65 years, individuals 65 years or older (n = 149) were more likely to have cholestatic injury, although mortality and rate of liver transplantation did not differ. Nine patients (1%) had concomitant severe skin reactions; implicated agents were lamotrigine, azithromycin, carbamazepine, moxifloxacin, cephalexin, diclofenac, and nitrofurantoin. Four of these patients died. Conclusions Mortality from DILI is significantly higher in individuals with pre-existing liver disease or concomitant severe skin reactions compared with patients without. Additional studies are needed to confirm the association between azithromycin and increased DILI in patients with chronic liver disease. Older age and short or long latencies are not associated with DILI mortality.
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- 2015
5. ABSTRACTS.
- Subjects
GASTROENTEROLOGY ,ENDOSCOPIC ultrasonography ,ENDOSCOPIC retrograde cholangiopancreatography - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of studies related to gastroenterology including a comparison of accuracy of endoscopic ultrasound and magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography in the diagnosis of choledocholithiasis, the normalization of serum alkaline phosphatase as a biomarker of decreased major adverse event risk in primary sclerosing cholangitis, and the prevalence of non-alcoholic fatty pancreas disease as well as its risk factors.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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