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Dive into the research topics where A.H. Steinhart is active.

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Featured researches published by A.H. Steinhart.


Gut | 2010

Trough serum infliximab: a predictive factor of clinical outcome for infliximab treatment in acute ulcerative colitis

C Seow; A Newman; S P Irwin; A.H. Steinhart; Mark S. Silverberg; Gordon R. Greenberg

Background and Aims: Antibodies to infliximab reduce serum infliximab with loss of clinical benefit, but undetectable trough serum concentrations of infliximab may occur without antibody formation. The relationship between trough serum infliximab and clinical outcomes was evaluated in acute ulcerative colitis. Methods: In a cohort of 115 patients with ulcerative colitis treated with three-dose induction followed by scheduled maintenance infliximab, rates of clinical remission, colectomy, antibodies to infliximab and trough serum infliximab were determined. Results: Rates of remission were 32% at week 10 and 37% at week 54. Colectomy occurred in 40% of patients, at a median of 5.3 (IQR 1.9–12.1) months. Detectable trough serum infliximab was present in 39% of patients and, among patients with undetectable infliximab, 41% were antibody positive and 20% were antibody negative. For antibody-positive and antibody-negative patients, rates of remission (18% vs 14%), endoscopic improvement (25% vs 35%) and colectomy (52% vs 59%) were not different. A detectable serum infliximab was associated with higher rates of remission (69% vs 15%; p<0.001) and endoscopic improvement (76% vs 28%, p<0.001). An undetectable serum infliximab predicted an increased risk for colectomy (55% vs 7%, OR 9.3; 95% CI 2.9 to 29.9; p<0.001). Concurrent immunosuppression was not associated with clinical outcomes. Conclusions: For patients with ulcerative colitis treated with infliximab, a detectable trough serum infliximab predicts clinical remission, endoscopic improvement and a lower risk for colectomy. An undetectable trough serum infliximab, irrespective of antibody status, is associated with less favourable outcomes.


Genes and Immunity | 2007

The role of the Toll receptor pathway in susceptibility to inflammatory bowel diseases.

P. L. De Jager; Denis Franchimont; Alicja Waliszewska; Alain Bitton; Atika Cohen; D. Langelier; Jacques Belaiche; Severine Vermeire; L. Farwell; An Goris; Cécile Libioulle; N. Jani; Themistocles Dassopoulos; Gillian Bromfield; Bernard Dubois; Judy H. Cho; S R Brant; R. H. Duerr; Huiying Yang; J. I. Rotter; Mark S. Silverberg; A.H. Steinhart; Mark J. Daly; Daniel K. Podolsky; Edouard Louis; David A. Hafler; John D. Rioux

The intestinal flora has long been thought to play a role either in initiating or in exacerbating the inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Host defenses, such as those mediated by the Toll-like receptors (TLR), are critical to the host/pathogen interaction and have been implicated in IBD pathophysiology. To explore the association of genetic variation in TLR pathways with susceptibility to IBD, we performed a replication study and pooled analyses of the putative IBD risk alleles in NFKB1 and TLR4, and we performed a haplotype-based screen for association to IBD in the TLR genes and a selection of their adaptor and signaling molecules. Our genotyping of 1539 cases of IBD and pooled analysis of 4805 cases of IBD validates the published association of a TLR4 allele with risk of IBD (odds ratio (OR): 1.30, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.15–1.48; P=0.00017) and Crohns disease (OR: 1.33, 95% CI: 1.16–1.54; P=0.000035) but not ulcerative colitis. We also describe novel suggestive evidence that TIRAP (OR: 1.16, 95% CI: 1.04–1.30; P=0.007) has a modest effect on risk of IBD. Our analysis, therefore, offers additional evidence that the TLR4 pathway – in this case, TLR4 and its signaling molecule TIRAP – plays a role in susceptibility to IBD.


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2016

Higher Adalimumab Drug Levels are Associated with Mucosal Healing in Patients with Crohn's Disease.

Eran Zittan; B. Kabakchiev; Raquel Milgrom; Geoffrey C. Nguyen; Kenneth Croitoru; A.H. Steinhart; Mark S. Silverberg

BACKGROUND AND AIMS The current approach to managing the loss of response to anti-tumour necrosis factor (TNF) agents is generally empirical. Prior studies have suggested that adalimumab levels of >4.9 µg/mL are required to achieve clinical remission. Our aim was to identify an optimal adalimumab level to achieve endoscopic healing in Crohns disease (CD). METHODS A cohort of 60 CD patients treated with adalimumab between 2005 and 2013 were reviewed for the study. Demographic and clinical information was obtained from chart review and patient interview. Disease activity was determined using the Harvey-Bradshaw index (HBI), ileocolonoscopy reports and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels. Clinical remission was defined as HBI <5. Endoscopic remission/mucosal healing (MH) was defined as the absence of any ulceration in all ileocolonic segments. Trough adalimumab levels and adalimumab antibody levels were tested using a liquid-phase mobility shift assay. RESULTS Lower median CRP was significantly associated with MH 1.2mg/dl vs no MH 14.4mg/dl (p = 6.93×10(-6)). Higher adalimumab trough level was significantly associated with MH (median 14.7 µg/mL in those with MH vs 3.4 µg/mL in those without, p = 6.25×10(-5)). Higher adalimumab trough level was also significantly associated with the combined outcome of clinical and endoscopic remission (median 13.0 vs 4.8 µg/mL, p = 5.36×10(-3)). A cut-off of 8.14 µg/ml best discriminated subjects with MH from those without MH, with sensitivity and specificity of 91.4 and 76.0%, respectively (positive and negative predictive values 84.2 and 86.4%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Higher adalimumab levels were significantly associated with MH. This study suggests that attaining MH alone or a combined outcome of clinical and endoscopic remission is more likely to occur in those patients who achieve an adalimumab trough level of at least 8.14 μg/mL.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2003

Home Total Parenteral Nutrition: An Alternative to Early Surgery for Complicated Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Justin Evans; A.H. Steinhart; Zane Cohen; Robin S. McLeod

This paper examines the safety and feasibility of providing short-term, in-home total parenteral nutrition (TPN) for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) for whom the alternative is prolonged hospitalization or early surgery. The records of all patients with IBD who were receiving temporary home TPN between June 1996 and July 2000 were reviewed. A quality-of-life phone interview was conducted at the time of review. Fifteen patients (11 men and 4 women) were identified whose average age was 35 years. The underlying diagnosis was Crohn’s disease in 10 and ulcerative colitis in five. The indications for home TPN were complex internal fistulas and resolving sepsis in two, postoperative septic complications (anastomotic leak/enterocutaneous fistula) in five, high-output proximal stomas in four, prolonged ileus/partial obstruction in three, and spontaneous enterocutaneous fistula in one. The average duration of home TPN was 75 days (range 7 to 240 days). Two patients (13%) failed home TPN (1 with uncontrolled sepsis; 1 with dehydration) and were readmitted to the hospital. Home TPN was discontinued in one patient whose enterocutaneous fistula failed to heal with nonoperative treatment. Home TPN was successful in 12 patients (80%): eight (53%) who underwent planned definitive surgery and four (27%) whose conditions resolved without surgery. Complications of home TPN were line sepsis and pulmonary aspergillosis in one patient. All patients preferred home TPN to further hospitalization and reported good or excellent quality of life at home. Home TPN is a safe alternative to prolonged hospitalization or early surgery in patients with complicated IBD.


Genes and Immunity | 2008

MAST3: a Novel IBD Risk Factor that Modulates TLR4 Signaling

Catherine Labbé; Philippe Goyette; C Lefebvre; Christine Stevens; Todd Green; M K Tello-Ruiz; Zhifang Cao; Aimee Landry; Joanne M. Stempak; Vito Annese; Anna Latiano; S R Brant; R. H. Duerr; Kent D. Taylor; Judy H. Cho; A.H. Steinhart; Mark J. Daly; Mark S. Silverberg; Ramnik J. Xavier; John D. Rioux

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic disorder caused by multiple factors in a genetically susceptible host. Significant advances in the study of genetic susceptibility have highlighted the importance of the innate immune system in this disease. We previously completed a genome-wide linkage study and found a significant locus (IBD6) on chromosome 19p. We were interested in identifying the causal variant in IBD6. We performed a two-stage association mapping study. In stage 1, 1530 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were selected from the HapMap database and genotyped in 761 patients with IBD. Among the SNPs that passed the threshold for replication, 26 were successfully genotyped in 754 additional patients (stage 2). One intronic variant, rs273506, located in the microtubule-associated serine/threonine-protein kinase gene-3 (MAST3), was found to be associated in both stages (pooled P=1.8 × 10−4). We identified four MAST3 coding variants, including a non-synonymous SNP rs8108738, correlated to rs273506 and associated with IBD. To test whether MAST3 was expressed in cells of interest, we performed expression assays, which showed abundant expression of MAST3 in antigen-presenting cells and in lymphocytes. The knockdown of MAST3 specifically decreased Toll-like receptor-4-dependent NF-κB activity. Our findings are additional proofs of the pivotal role played by modulators of NF-κB activity in IBD pathogenesis.


Genes and Immunity | 2008

An SNP linkage scan identifies significant Crohn's disease loci on chromosomes 13q13.3 and, in Jewish families, on 1p35.2 and 3q29

Yin Yao Shugart; Mark S. Silverberg; R. H. Duerr; Kent D. Taylor; Ming Hsi Wang; K. Zarfas; L. P. Schumm; Gillian Bromfield; A.H. Steinhart; Anne M. Griffiths; Sunanda V. Kane; M. Michael Barmada; Jerome I. Rotter; Ling Mei; Charles N. Bernstein; Theodore M. Bayless; D. Langelier; Albert Cohen; Alain Bitton; John D. Rioux; Judy H. Cho; S R Brant

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a complex genetic disorder of two major phenotypes, Crohns disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), with increased risk in Ashkenazi Jews. Twelve genome-wide linkage screens have identified multiple loci, but these screens have been of modest size and have used low-density microsatellite markers. We, therefore, performed a high-density single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genome-wide linkage study of 993 IBD multiply affected pedigrees (25% Jewish ancestry) that contained 1709 IBD-affected relative pairs, including 919 CD–CD pairs and 312 UC–UC pairs. We identified a significant novel CD locus on chromosome 13p13.3 (peak logarithm of the odds (LOD) score=3.98) in all pedigrees, significant linkage evidence on chromosomes 1p35.1 (peak LOD score=3.5) and 3q29 (peak LOD score=3.19) in Jewish CD pedigrees, and suggestive loci for Jewish IBD on chromosome 10q22 (peak LOD score=2.57) and Jewish UC on chromosome 2q24 (peak LOD score=2.69). Nominal or greater linkage evidence was present for most previously designated IBD loci (IBD1–9), notably, IBD1 for CD families at chromosome 16q12.1 (peak LOD score=4.86) and IBD6 in non-Jewish UC families at chromosome 19p12 (peak LOD score=2.67). This study demonstrates the ability of high information content adequately powered SNP genome-wide linkage studies to identify loci not observed in multiple microsatellite-based studies in smaller cohorts.


Human Genetics | 2001

Carrier rate of APC I1307K is not increased in inflammatory bowel disease patients of Ashkenazi Jewish origin

Mark S. Silverberg; Catherine Clelland; Janet Murphy; A.H. Steinhart; Robin S. McLeod; Gordon R. Greenberg; Zane Cohen; Katherine A. Siminovitch

Abstract. Colorectal cancer (CRC) occurs with an increased incidence in individuals with chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) of the colon. Recent data suggest that a family history of colorectal cancer is an independent risk factor for CRC in IBD, an observation that implies that genetic factors are relevant to the development of CRC in this context. Among the genetic defects associated with CRC, the APC I1307K mutation has been detected nearly exclusively in individuals of Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) origin, occurring in 6%–7% of the AJ general population and in 10%–28% of AJ with a either a personal or family history of CRC or adenomatous polyps. These findings, together with the increased incidence of IBD in AJ, prompted the current analysis of the contribution of the APC I1307K variant of CRC in AJ IBD patients. APC I1307K carrier frequencies were determined in 306 AJ individuals affected with IBD and 308 of their unaffected relatives ascertained from a family collection obtained for the identification of IBD susceptibility genes. Prevalence of the I1307K variant was not significantly different among individuals with IBD, Crohns disease, ulcerative colitis, and unaffected relatives (6.9%, 7.6%, 4.7%, and 6.2%, respectively), and the mutation was detected in only one of five IBD-affected individuals with a diagnosis of CRC. These results reveal that IBD patients of AJ origin carry the APC I1307K variant at the same rate as individuals within the general AJ population. Lack of an increased APC I1307K carrier rate suggests that this mutation does not account for the increased CRC susceptibility associated with IBD.


Gut | 2001

Diagnostic misclassification reduces the ability to detect linkage in inflammatory bowel disease genetic studies

Mark S. Silverberg; M. J. Daly; D N Moskovitz; John D. Rioux; Robin S. McLeod; Zane Cohen; Gordon R. Greenberg; Thomas J. Hudson; Katherine A. Siminovitch; A.H. Steinhart


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2017

P502 Ulcerative colitis patients on vedolizumab lacking response at induction phase continue to improve over the first 6 months of treatment

Petros Zezos; B. Kabakchiev; Adam V. Weizman; Geoffrey C. Nguyen; N. Narula; Kenneth Croitoru; A.H. Steinhart; Mark S. Silverberg


Journal of Crohns & Colitis | 2017

P296 Persistent symptoms, CRP elevation and treatment changes over time in Crohn's disease patients are associated with bowel damage progression as expressed by deterioration of Lemann Index score

Petros Zezos; T.P. Chawla; Adam V. Weizman; Geoffrey C. Nguyen; Neeraj Narula; Boyko Kabakchiev; Raquel Milgrom; Kenneth Croitoru; A.H. Steinhart; Mark S. Silverberg

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John D. Rioux

Université de Montréal

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Judy H. Cho

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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