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Total Hip Arthroplasty in a Patient with Multicentric Carpotarsal Osteolysis: a Case Report

Sun, Kai; Barlow, Brian; Malik, Fardina; Inglis, Allan; Figgie, Mark; Goodman, Susan
PMCID:4916086
PMID: 27385948
ISSN: 1556-3316
CID: 2699242

Prevalance Of Rare Variants In Methotrexate Pathway Genes: Implications From The National Heart Lung Blood Institute (NHLBI) Exome Sequencing Project [Meeting Abstract]

Malik, Fardina
ISI:000325359203459
ISSN: 1529-0131
CID: 2699272

Methotrexate pharmacogenetics in rheumatoid arthritis: a status report

Malik, Fardina; Ranganathan, Prabha
Methotrexate (MTX), an antifolate drug, is the first-line disease-modifying agent for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) worldwide. MTX has excellent long-term efficacy, tolerability and safety. Early initiation of MTX in patients with RA controls joint destruction and slows progression of disease. However, the clinical response to MTX and frequency of adverse effects from the drug exhibit marked interpatient variability. Over the past decade, there has been a quest to identify genetic markers that reliably predict MTX efficacy and toxicity and help optimize MTX therapy in RA; that is, the field of MTX pharmacogenetics. This review will summarize key pharmacogenetic studies examining SNPs in the genes encoding enzymes in the MTX cellular pathway and their association with MTX response in RA. As evident from this review, MTX pharmacogenetics in RA remains a muddled field, mostly due to inconsistent results from several small underpowered studies.
PMID: 23394392
ISSN: 1744-8042
CID: 2699252

Metaanalysis of 5-Aminoimidazole-4-Carboxamide Ribonucleotide Transformylase (ATIC) 347C > G Polymorphism Affecting Methotrexate Efficacy and Toxicity in Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients [Meeting Abstract]

Malik, Fardina; Ranganathan, Prabha
ISI:000309748300356
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 2699262

Infectious complications in patients with left ventricular assist device: etiology and outcomes in the continuous-flow era

Topkara, Veli K; Kondareddy, Sreekanth; Malik, Fardina; Wang, I-Wen; Mann, Douglas L; Ewald, Gregory A; Moazami, Nader
BACKGROUND: Continuous-flow left ventricular assist devices (LVAD) are increasingly being used in patients with end-stage heart failure and have largely replaced older generation pulsatile devices. While significant rates of infection have been reported in patients with pulsatile device support, incidence and outcomes of this complication for the continuous-flow device patients remain unknown. METHODS: Between June 2005 and August 2009, 81 patients were implanted with continuous-flow LVADs at Washington University School of Medicine either as bridge to transplantation or as destination therapy. Outcomes of this study included incidence of postimplantation infection, types of infection, microbiologic profile, and association of postimplantation infections with clinical endpoints. RESULTS: Forty-two patients (51.9%) had at least one type of infection on continuous-flow LVAD support with a mean follow-up period of 9.2 +/- 9.2 months. Patients who had an infection on LVAD support had a significantly prolonged hospital stay (37.9 +/- 32.0 versus 20.7 +/- 23.0 days, p = 0.008) and a trend toward increased mortality (33.1% versus 18.7% at 2 years, respectively, log rank p = 0.102) compared with patients who did not. Subgroup analysis revealed that postimplantation sepsis was significantly associated with increased mortality in the continuous-flow LVAD cohort (61.9% versus 18.0% at 2 years, respectively, in septic and nonseptic patients, log rank p = 0.001). The majority of the sepsis cases occurred before hospital discharge, whereas most of the device related infections occurred after discharge. Resistant Staphylococcus and Pseudomonas species were the most common pathogens leading to device- and nondevice-related local infections. Development of driveline or pocket infection had no effect on survival in patients with continuous-flow assist device support (p = 0.193). CONCLUSIONS: Even though better clinical outcomes have been achieved with the newer generation continuous-flow devices, infection complications-in particular sepsis-are still a major risk for patients with continuous-flow LVAD implantation. Prevention strategies with aggressive medical and surgical management of infections may increase survival and decrease morbidity among continuous-flow LVAD patients.
PMID: 20868826
ISSN: 1552-6259
CID: 2465872