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Browsing by Author "Gaddy, Anna"

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    Facebook Groups Can Provide Support for Patients with Rare Diseases and Reveal Truths About the Secret Lives of Patients
    (Elsevier, 2021-04-01) Gaddy, Anna; Topf, Joel; Medicine, School of Medicine
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    Incidence and Importance of Calcium Deposition in Kidney Biopsy Specimens
    (Karger, 2022) Gaddy, Anna; Schwantes-An, Tae-Hwi; Moorthi, Ranjani N.; Phillips, Carrie L.; Eadon, Michael T.; Moe, Sharon M.; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of Medicine
    Introduction: Calcification on native kidney biopsy specimens is often noted by pathologists, but the consequence is unknown. Methods: We searched the pathology reports in the Biopsy Biobank Cohort of Indiana for native biopsy specimens with calcification. Results: Of the 4,364 specimens, 416 (9.8%) had calcification. We compared clinical and histopathology findings in those with calcification (n = 429) compared to those without calcification (n = 3,936). Patients with calcification were older, had more comorbidities, lower estimated glomerular filtration rates (eGFR), were more likely to have hyaline arteriosclerosis, interstitial fibrosis/tubular atrophy, and a primary pathologic diagnosis of acute tubular injury or acute tubular necrosis when compared to patients without calcification. Patients with calcium oxalate deposition alone, compared to calcium phosphate or mixed calcifications, had fewer comorbidities but were more likely to have a history of gastric bypass surgery or malabsorption and take vitamin D. In patients with two or more years of follow-up, multivariate analyses showed the presence of calcification (HR 0.59, 0.38-0.92, p = 0.02) and higher eGFR (HR 0.76, 0.73-0.79, p < 0.001), was associated with decreased likelihood of progressing to end-stage renal disease. The presence of calcification was also associated with a reduced slope/decline in eGFR compared to known biopsy and clinical risk factors for decline in kidney function. We hypothesized this was due to more recoverable acute kidney injury (AKI) and found more severe acute kidney injury network stage in patients with kidney calcification but also greater improvement over time. Discussion/conclusion: In summary, we demonstrated that calcification on kidney biopsy specimens was associated with a better prognosis than those without calcification due to the association with recoverable AKI.
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    Incidence and outcomes of acute kidney injury including hepatorenal syndrome in hospitalized patients with cirrhosis in the US
    (Elsevier, 2023) Patidar, Kavish R.; Belcher, Justin M.; Regner, Kevin R.; St. Hillien, Shelsea A.; Simonetto, Douglas A.; Asrani, Sumeet K.; Neyra, Javier A.; Sharma, Pratima; Velez, Juan Carlos Q.; Wadei, Hani; Nadim, Mitra K.; Chung, Raymond T.; Seethapathy, Ritu; Parada, Xavier Vela; Ouyang, Tianqi; Ufere, Nneka N.; Robinson, Jevon E.; McLean Diaz, Paige; Wilechansky, Robert M.; Przybyszewski, Eric M.; Smith, Thomas N.; Ali, Arzina Aziz; Orman, Eric S.; Schulz, Philipp; Siddiqui, Salaah M.; Shabbir, Rehma; Liu, Lucas J.; Cama-Olivares, Augusto; Flannery, Alexander H.; Baker, Megan L.; Gunasekaran, Deepthi; Aswine, Adeline; Issa, Rafik; Li, Jay; Verma, Shreya; Chalmers, Dustin; Varghese, Vipin; Lam, Walter; Mohamed, Muner; Kovacic, Rosemary; Gaddy, Anna; Attieh, Rose Mary; Cortes, Pedro; Semnani, Sahar; Wang, Lin; Khemichian, Saro; Allegretti, Andrew S.; HRS-HARMONY consortium; Medicine, School of Medicine
    Background & aims: Acute kidney injury (AKI) in cirrhosis is common and associated with high morbidity, but the incidence rates of different etiologies of AKI are not well described in the US. We compared incidence rates, practice patterns, and outcomes across etiologies of AKI in cirrhosis. Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study of 11 hospital networks, including consecutive adult patients admitted with AKI and cirrhosis in 2019. The etiology of AKI was adjudicated based on pre-specified clinical definitions (prerenal/hypovolemic AKI, hepatorenal syndrome [HRS-AKI], acute tubular necrosis [ATN], other). Results: A total of 2,063 patients were included (median age 62 [IQR 54-69] years, 38.3% female, median MELD-Na score 26 [19-31]). The most common etiology was prerenal AKI (44.3%), followed by ATN (30.4%) and HRS-AKI (12.1%); 6.0% had other AKI, and 7.2% could not be classified. In our cohort, 8.1% of patients received a liver transplant and 36.5% died by 90 days. The lowest rate of death was observed in patients with prerenal AKI (22.2%; p <0.001), while death rates were higher but not significantly different from each other in those with HRS-AKI and ATN (49.0% vs. 52.7%; p = 0.42). Using prerenal AKI as a reference, the adjusted subdistribution hazard ratio (sHR) for 90-day mortality was higher for HRS-AKI (sHR 2.78; 95% CI 2.18-3.54; p <0.001) and ATN (sHR 2.83; 95% CI 2.36-3.41; p <0.001). In adjusted analysis, higher AKI stage and lack of complete response to treatment were associated with an increased risk of 90-day mortality (p <0.001 for all). Conclusion: AKI is a severe complication of cirrhosis. HRS-AKI is uncommon and is associated with similar outcomes to ATN. The etiology of AKI, AKI stage/severity, and non-response to treatment were associated with mortality. Further optimization of vasoconstrictors for HRS-AKI and supportive therapies for ATN are needed. Impact and implications: Acute kidney injury (AKI) in cirrhosis carries high morbidity, and management is determined by the etiology of injury. However, a large and well-adjudicated multicenter database from US centers that uses updated AKI definitions is lacking. Our findings demonstrate that acute tubular necrosis and hepatorenal syndrome have similar outcomes (∼50% mortality at 90 days), though hepatorenal syndrome is uncommon (12% of all AKI cases). These findings represent practice patterns at US transplant/tertiary centers and can be used as a baseline, presenting the situation prior to the adoption of terlipressin in the US.
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