Searched for: person:goldfd01
Intestinal microorganisms and calcium oxalate stone disease
Goldfarb DS
EMBASE:2004414621
ISSN: 0392-6699
CID: 46297
Patients at the centre: In our practice, and in our use of language (multiple letters) [Letter]
Goldfarb DS; Montori V; Devereaux PJ; Schuemann H; Bhandari M; Guyatt G
EMBASE:2004205278
ISSN: 1356-5524
CID: 46310
The medical management of stone disease
Chapter by: Goldfarb DS; Coe FL
in: Oxford textbook of clinical nephrology by Davison AM [Eds]
Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press, 2004
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 0198508247
CID: 3510
Design and statistical issues in the homocysteinemia in kidney and end stage renal disease (HOST) study
Jamison, Rex L; Hartigan, Pamela; Gaziano, J Michael; Fortmann, Stephen P; Goldfarb, David S; Haroldson, Jeffrey A; Kaufman, James; Lavori, Philip; McCully, Kilmer S; Robinson, Killian
The Homocysteine Study (HOST) Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program No. 453, is a prospective, randomized, two arm, double blind study of patients with end stage renal disease (ESRD) or advanced chronic kidney disease (ACKD, defined as an estimated creatinine clearance of 30 ml/min or less). Its primary objective is to determine whether administration of high doses of three vitamins, folic acid, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12, to lower the high plasma homocysteine levels, will reduce all cause mortality. The secondary objectives are to examine whether the treatment lowers the incidence of myocardial infarction, stroke, amputation of a lower extremity, a composite of death and the foregoing three events, the plasma homocysteine level, and, in ESRD patients undergoing hemodialysis, thrombosis of the vascular access. A unique feature of this trial is that after initial evaluation at enrollment and one return visit the follow up is exclusively by phone (or, if necessary, by mail). The subject is contacted every three months throughout the duration of the study from a central location. The study drug is shipped to the patient from a central location rather supplied locally. In a two year enrollment period, 2006 patients are to be enrolled. The duration of the observation period is four to six years. Data will be stored and analyzed at a coordinating center. The study design has the power to detect a reduction in all cause mortality rate of 17%. Issues related to the unique features of the design of this study are discussed
PMID: 16279283
ISSN: 1740-7745
CID: 62594
Tuberculosis of the genitourinary tract
Chapter by: Goldfarb DS; Saiman L
in: Tuberculosis by Ron WN; Garay SM [Eds]
Philadelphia : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2004
pp. 550-563
ISBN: 0781736781
CID: 3977
Plasma vs. serum potassium concentrations and prevalence of true hyperkalemia in hemodialysis (HD) patients [Meeting Abstract]
Henner, DE; Goldfarb, DS
ISI:000186219101072
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 42560
Effect of treatment on measurements of cystine excretion (CysEx) and saturation (CysSS) in cystinuria [Meeting Abstract]
Goldfarb, DS; Coe, FL; Asplin, JR
ISI:000186219103236
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 42507
Effect of chitosan on post-prandial urinary oxalate excretion [Meeting Abstract]
Wolf, JH; Asplin, JR; Goldfarb, DS
ISI:000186219103235
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 42506
Single kidney glomerular filtration rate (GFR) based on dynamic contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and a multicompartmental model [Meeting Abstract]
Finkielstein, V; Goldfarb, DS; Nadkarni, V; Huang, A; Rusinek, H; Lee, VS
ISI:000186219102843
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 42505
Randomized controlled trial of clopidogrel plus aspirin to prevent hemodialysis access graft thrombosis
Kaufman, James S; O'Connor, Theresa Z; Zhang, Jane Hongyuan; Cronin, Robert E; Fiore, Louis D; Ganz, Michael B; Goldfarb, David S; Peduzzi, Peter N
Thrombosis of hemodialysis vascular access grafts represents a major medical and economic burden. Experimental and clinical models suggest a role for antiplatelet agents in the prevention of thrombosis. The study was designed to determine the efficacy of the combination of aspirin and clopidogrel in the prevention of graft thrombosis. The study was a randomized, double-blind trial conducted at 30 hemodialysis units at Veterans Affairs medical centers. Participants undergoing hemodialysis with a polytetrafluoroethylene graft in the arm were randomized to receive either double placebos or aspirin (325 mg) and clopidogrel (75 mg) daily. Participants were to be monitored while receiving study medications for a minimum of 2 yr. The study was stopped after randomization of 200 participants, as recommended by the Data Safety and Monitoring Board because of a significantly increased risk of bleeding among the participants receiving aspirin and clopidogrel therapy. The cumulative incidence of bleeding events was significantly greater for those participants, compared with participants receiving placebos [hazard ratio, 1.98; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.19 to 3.28; P = 0.007]. Twenty-three participants in the placebo group and 44 participants in the active treatment group experienced a bleeding event (P = 0.006). There was no significant benefit of active treatment in the prevention of thrombosis (hazard ratio, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.47 to 1.40; P = 0.45), although there was a trend toward a benefit among participants who had not experienced previous graft thrombosis (hazard ratio, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.22 to 1.26; P = 0.14). In the hemodialysis population, therapy with aspirin and clopidogrel was associated with a significantly increased risk of bleeding and probably would not result in a reduced frequency of graft thrombosis
PMID: 12937308
ISSN: 1046-6673
CID: 38099