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school:SOM

Department/Unit:Neurology

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High-Dose 4-Factor Prothrombin Complex Concentrate for Warfarin-Induced Intracranial Hemorrhage

Merchan, Cristian; Ahuja, Tania; Raco, Veronica; Lewis, Ariane
Background and Purpose/UNASSIGNED:The ideal dosing regimen of 4-factor prothrombin complex concentrate (4FPCC) after warfarin-induced intracranial hemorrhage (WICH) remains unclear. We sought to compare the safety and efficacy of the 4FPCC package insert dosing strategy (standard dose [SD]) with our institutional guideline for high-dose (HD) 4FPCC for patients with WICH. Methods/UNASSIGNED:We compared the percentage of SD and HD patients who achieved an international normalized ratio (INR) ≤1.3 at a single institution between January 2014 and July 2017. Additionally, we assessed hematoma expansion, recurrence of INR > 1.3, and occurrence of thrombotic events within 7 days of 4FPCC administration. Results/UNASSIGNED:= .243). Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:High-dose 4FPCC appears to be more effective at lowering INR and preventing bleed expansion in patients with WICH, while maintaining a similar safety profile.
PMCID:6900656
PMID: 31839860
ISSN: 1941-8744
CID: 4243452

Black African and Latino/a identity correlates with increased plasmablasts in MS

Telesford, Kiel M; Kaunzner, Ulrike W; Perumal, Jai; Gauthier, Susan A; Wu, Xian; Diaz, Ivan; Kruse-Hoyer, Mason; Engel, Casey; Marcille, Melanie; Vartanian, Timothy
OBJECTIVE:To determine the influence of self-reported Black African and Latin American identity on peripheral blood antibody-secreting cell (ASC) frequency in the context of relapsing-remitting MS. METHODS:In this cross-sectional study, we recruited 74 subjects with relapsing-remitting MS and 24 age-, and self-reported ethno-ancestral identity-matched healthy donors (HDs) to provide peripheral blood study samples. Subjects with MS were either off therapy at the time of study draw or on monthly natalizumab therapy infusions. Using flow cytometry, we assessed peripheral blood mononuclear cells for antibody-secreting B-cell subsets. RESULTS:subsets, were among those significantly increased. CONCLUSION:The enhanced peripheral blood plasmablast signature revealed among Black African or Latin American subjects with MS points to distinct underlying mechanisms associated with MS immunopathogenesis. This dysregulation may contribute to the disease disparity experienced by patient populations of Black African or Latin American ethno-ancestry.
PMCID:6865850
PMID: 31672834
ISSN: 2332-7812
CID: 5304542

A Multilevel Analysis of Surgical Category and Individual Patient-Level Risk Factors for Postoperative Stroke

Kummer, Benjamin R; Hazan, Rebecca; Merkler, Alexander E; Kamel, Hooman; Willey, Joshua Z; Middlesworth, William; Yaghi, Shadi; Marshall, Randolph S; Elkind, Mitchell S V; Boehme, Amelia K
Background and Purpose/UNASSIGNED:Many studies supporting the association between specific surgical procedure categories and postoperative stroke (POS) do not account for differences in patient-level characteristics between and within surgical categories. The risk of POS after high-risk procedure categories remains unknown after adjusting for such differences in patient-level characteristics. Methods/UNASSIGNED:Using inpatients in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Initiative Program database, we conducted a retrospective cohort study between January 1, 2000, and December 31, 2010. Our primary outcome was POS within 30 days of surgery. We characterized the relationship between surgical- and individual patient-level factors and POS by using multivariable, multilevel logistic regression that accounted for clustering of patient-level factors with surgical categories. Results/UNASSIGNED:We identified 729 886 patients, 2703 (0.3%) of whom developed POS. Dependent functional status (odds ratio [OR]: 4.11, 95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 3.60-4.69), history of stroke (OR: 2.35, 95%CI: 2.06-2.69) or transient ischemic attack (OR: 2.49 95%CI: 2.19-2.83), active smoking (OR: 1.20, 95%CI: 1.08-1.32), hypertension (OR: 2.11, 95%CI: 2.19-2.82), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (OR: 1.39 95%CI: 1.21-1.59), and acute renal failure (OR: 2.35, 95%CI: 1.85-2.99) were significantly associated with POS. After adjusting for clustering, patients who underwent cardiac (OR: 11.25, 95%CI: 8.52-14.87), vascular (OR: 4.75, 95%CI: 3.88-5.82), neurological (OR: 4.60, 95%CI: 3.48-6.08), and general surgery (OR: 1.40, 95%CI: 1.15-1.70) had significantly greater odds of POS compared to patients undergoing other types of surgical procedures. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:Vascular, cardiac, and neurological surgery remained strongly associated with POS in an analysis accounting for the association between patient-level factors and surgical categories.
PMCID:6900661
PMID: 31839861
ISSN: 1941-8744
CID: 4242032

Cost determinants in management of brain arteriovenous malformations

Rutledge, Caleb; Nelson, Jeffrey; Lu, Alex; Nisson, Peyton; Jonzzon, Soren; Winkler, Ethan A; Cooke, Daniel; Abla, Adib A; Lawton, Michael T; Kim, Helen
INTRODUCTION:There is little data on the cost of treating brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). The goal of this study then is to identify cost determinants in multimodal management of brain AVMs. METHODS:One hundred forty patients with brain AVMs prospectively enrolled in the UCSF brain AVM registry and treated between 2012 and 2015 were included in the study. Patient and AVM characteristics, treatment type, and length of stay and radiographic evidence of obliteration were collected from the registry. We then calculated the cost of all inpatient and outpatient encounters, interventions, and imaging attributable to the AVM. We used generalized linear models to test whether there was an association between patient and AVM characteristics, treatment type, and cost and length of stay. We tested whether the proportion of patients with radiographic evidence of obliteration differed between treatment modalities using Fisher's exact test. RESULTS:The overall median cost of treatment and interquartile range was $77,865 (49,566-107,448). Surgery with preoperative embolization was the costliest treatment at $91,948 (79,914-140,600), while radiosurgery was the least at $20,917 (13,915-35,583). In multi-predictor analyses, hemorrhage, Spetzler-Martin grade, and treatment type were significant predictors of cost. Patients who had surgery had significantly higher rates of obliteration compared with radiosurgery patients. CONCLUSIONS:Hemorrhage, AVM grade, and treatment modality are significant cost determinants in AVM management. Surgery with preoperative embolization was the costliest treatment and radiosurgery the least; however, surgical cases had significantly higher rates of obliteration.
PMCID:7197935
PMID: 31760534
ISSN: 0942-0940
CID: 4837272

Multisensory Audiovisual Processing in Children With a Sensory Processing Disorder (II): Speech Integration Under Noisy Environmental Conditions

Foxe, John J; Del Bene, Victor A; Ross, Lars A; Ridgway, Elizabeth M; Francisco, Ana A; Molholm, Sophie
Background: There exists a cohort of children and adults who exhibit an inordinately high degree of discomfort when experiencing what would be considered moderate and manageable levels of sensory input. That is, they show over-responsivity in the face of entirely typical sound, light, touch, taste, or smell inputs, and this occurs to such an extent that it interferes with their daily functioning and reaches clinical levels of dysfunction. What marks these individuals apart is that this sensory processing disorder (SPD) is observed in the absence of other symptom clusters that would result in a diagnosis of Autism, ADHD, or other neurodevelopmental disorders more typically associated with sensory processing difficulties. One major theory forwarded to account for these SPDs posits a deficit in multisensory integration, such that the various sensory inputs are not appropriately integrated into the central nervous system, leading to an overwhelming sensory-perceptual environment, and in turn to the sensory-defensive phenotype observed in these individuals. Methods: We tested whether children (6-16 years) with an over-responsive SPD phenotype (N = 12) integrated multisensory speech differently from age-matched typically-developing controls (TD: N = 12). Participants identified monosyllabic words while background noise level and sensory modality (auditory-alone, visual-alone, audiovisual) were varied in pseudorandom order. Improved word identification when speech was both seen and heard compared to when it was simply heard served to index multisensory speech integration. Results: School-aged children with an SPD show a deficit in the ability to benefit from the combination of both seen and heard speech inputs under noisy environmental conditions, suggesting that these children do not benefit from multisensory integrative processing to the same extent as their typically developing peers. In contrast, auditory-alone performance did not differ between the groups, signifying that this multisensory deficit is not simply due to impaired processing of auditory speech. Conclusions: Children with an over-responsive SPD show a substantial reduction in their ability to benefit from complementary audiovisual speech, to enhance speech perception in a noisy environment. This has clear implications for performance in the classroom and other learning environments. Impaired multisensory integration may contribute to sensory over-reactivity that is the definitional of SPD.
PMCID:7381232
PMID: 32765229
ISSN: 1662-5145
CID: 4555632

A Two-Part, Phase 2b Efficacy Study of Staccato (R) Alprazolam Inhaler in Patients with Epilepsy with a Predictable Seizure Pattern: Topline Results from Part 2 [Meeting Abstract]

French, Jacqueline; Biton, Victor; Dave, Hina; Detyniecki, Kamil; Gelfand, Michael; Gong, Hui; Liow, Kore; O\Brien, Terence; Sadek, Ahmed; Isojarvi, Jouko
ISI:000536058001038
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 4561102

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Epilepsy Common Data Element Updates: Seizure Severity Instruments, Diagnostic Tools, and MRI Recommendations [Meeting Abstract]

Gay, Katelyn; Austin, Joan; French, Jacqueline; Gaillard, William; Shinnar, Ruth; Barbaro, Nicholas; Lowenstein, Daniel; Sheikh, Muniza; Collie, Damon; Esterlitz, Joy; Whittemore, Vicky; Mendoza-Puccini, Carolina
ISI:000536058000163
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 4561022

Individual patient responses to eliglustat in treatment-naive adults with Gaucher disease type 1: Final data from the phase 3 ENGAGE trial [Meeting Abstract]

Mistry, Pramod K.; Lukina, Elena; Ben Turkia, Hadhami; Shankar, Suma; Feldman, Hagit Baris; Ghosn, Marwan; Mehta, Atul; Packman, Seymour; Lau, Heather; Petakov, Milan; Assouline, Sarit; Balwani, Manisha; Danda, Sumita; Hadjiev, Evgueniy; Ortega, Andres; Foster, Meredith C.; Gaemers, Sebastiaan J. M.; Peterschmitt, M. Judith
ISI:000510805200294
ISSN: 1096-7192
CID: 4336732

Natalizumab related progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy

Zhovtis Ryerson, Lana; Major, Eugene O
ORIGINAL:0014777
ISSN: 1740-6757
CID: 4587192

Lorlatinib and Bevacizumab Activity in ALK-Rearranged Lung Cancers After Lorlatinib Progression [Case Report]

Choudhury, Noura J; Young, Robert J; Sellitti, Matthew; Miller, Alexandra; Drilon, Alexander
PMCID:7713518
PMID: 33283131
ISSN: 2473-4284
CID: 5671072