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Dive into the research topics where Alexander S. Misono is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander S. Misono.


Drugs | 2010

Seizure Outcomes Following the Use of Generic versus Brand-Name Antiepileptic Drugs A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Aaron S. Kesselheim; Margaret R. Stedman; Ellen J. Bubrick; Joshua J. Gagne; Alexander S. Misono; Joy L. Lee; M. Alan Brookhart; Jerry Avorn; William H. Shrank

AbstractBackground: The automatic substitution of bioequivalent generics for brand-name antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) has been linked by anecdotal reports to loss of seizure control. Objective: To evaluate studies comparing brand-name and generic AEDs, and determine whether evidence exists of superiority of the brand-name version in maintaining seizure control. Data Sources: English-language human studies identified in searches of MEDLINE, EMBASE and International Pharmaceutical Abstracts (1984 to 2009). Study Selection: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies comparing seizure events or seizure-related outcomes between one brand-name AED and at least one alternative version produced by a distinct manufacturer. Data Extraction: We identified 16 articles (9 RCTs, 1 prospective non-randomized trial, 6 observational studies). We assessed characteristics of the studies and, for RCTs, extracted counts for patients whose seizures were characterized as ‘controlled’ and ‘uncontrolled’. Data Synthesis: Seven RCTs were included in the meta-analysis. The aggregate odds ratio (n = 204) was 1.1 (95% CI 0.9, 1.2), indicating no difference in the odds of uncontrolled seizure for patients on generic medications compared with patients on brand-name medications. In contrast, the observational studies identified trends in drug or health services utilization that the authors attributed to changes in seizure control. Conclusions: Although most RCTs were short-term evaluations, the available evidence does not suggest an association between loss of seizure control and generic substitution of at least three types of AEDs. The observational study data may be explained by factors such as undue concern from patients or physicians about the effectiveness of generic AEDs after a recent switch. In the absence of better data, physicians may want to consider more intensive monitoring of high-risk patients taking AEDs when any switch occurs.


Laryngoscope | 2011

Utilization of lipid‐laden macrophage index in evaluation of aerodigestive disorders

Brian K. Reilly; Eliot S. Katz; Alexander S. Misono; Umakanth Khatwa; Amanda Didas; Lin Huang; Kenan Haver; Reza Rahbar

The utility of the lipid‐laden macrophage index (LLMI) in the evaluation of airway inflammatory processes remains controversial. There is a paucity of normative data in both pediatric and adult populations, and there is wide variability in the reported cases. The goal of this project was to review the LLMI levels in a large series of patients with a wide range of well‐documented pulmonary and airway diseases (cystic fibrosis, aspiration, tracheo/bronchomalacia, recurrent pneumonia, asthma, immunosuppressed conditions, and laryngeal clefts) to develop a better understanding of the clinical utility of the LLMI.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2016

Medicare Utilization of CT Angiography from 2001 through 2014: Continued Growth by Radiologists

Anand M. Prabhakar; Alexander S. Misono; Jennifer Hemingway; Danny R. Hughes; Richard Duszak

PURPOSE To examine changes in utilization of computed tomography (CT) angiography nationally and changing relative specialty roles in examination interpretation. MATERIALS AND METHODS Service-specific claims data for region-specific CT angiography examinations were identified using Medicare Physician Supplier Procedure Summary Master Files from 2001 through 2014. Longitudinal national utilization rates were calculated using annual Medicare enrollment data for 2001-2013. Procedure volumes by specialty group and site of service were analyzed. RESULTS Total annual claims for CT angiography for Medicare fee for service beneficiaries increased from 64,846 to 1,709,088 (compound annual growth rate [CAGR] 29%) between 2001 and 2014. Per 1,000 beneficiaries, overall CT angiography utilization increased annually from 2.1 in 2001 to 47.6 in 2013. Overall interpretation market share increased 4% (91%-95%) for radiology. Cardiology increased from 1% in 2001 to 6% in 2007 but decreased annually to 2% in 2014. Vascular surgery market share remained < 1% throughout the study period. Growth of CT angiography in the emergency department (ED) outpaced all other sites of service, increasing from 11% to 28% (CAGR 38%). The chest was the dominant body region imaged with CT angiography, increasing from 36,984 to 914,086 (CAGR 28%). CONCLUSIONS Utilization of CT angiography in the Medicare population increased markedly for 2001-2014, particularly in the ED, with radiologists remaining dominant providers. The chest is the most common body region imaged with CT angiography.


Journal of The American College of Radiology | 2016

Medicare Utilization of Vascular Ultrasound From 1998 to 2013: Continued Growth in Both Radiologist and Nonradiologist Imaging.

Anand M. Prabhakar; Alexander S. Misono; Jennifer Hemingway; Danny R. Hughes; Richard Duszak

PURPOSE The aim of this study was to assess national trends in the utilization of vascular ultrasound (VUS) and changing relative specialty roles in examination interpretation. METHODS Service-specific claims data for VUS studies were identified using Medicare Physician Supplier Procedure Summary Master Files for the period from 1998 to 2013. Longitudinal national utilization rates were calculated using annual Medicare enrollment data for 1998 to 2012. Procedure volumes by specialty group and site of service were analyzed. RESULTS Total annual claims for VUS studies for Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries increased from 4,422,360 to 8,599,677 (+94.5%) between 1998 and 2013. Per 1,000 beneficiaries, overall utilization rose from 145.93 in 1998 to 264.26 in 2012 (+81.1%). However, this peaked in 2009 at 270.43 and has been slowly declining each year since. Overall market share decreased from 43% to 41% for radiology and increased from 10% to 16% and from 9% to 17% for vascular surgery and cardiology, respectively. Compound adjusted growth rate increases were 4.2% for radiology, 7.8% for vascular surgery, and 8.7% for cardiology. CONCLUSIONS Utilization of VUS in the Medicare population increased from 1998 through 2009 but has been declining ever since. Although radiology has maintained the dominant market share over time, relative growth by cardiology and vascular surgery has outpaced that by radiology.


Journal of The American College of Radiology | 2016

Imaging Decision Support Does Not Drive Out-of-Network Leakage of Referred Imaging

Anand M. Prabhakar; H. Benjamin Harvey; Alexander S. Misono; Ann E. Erwin; Nan Jones; James Heffernan; Daniel I. Rosenthal; James A. Brink; Sanjay Saini

PURPOSE Leakage (out-of-network referral) is undesirable because it limits ability to control costs of services. Clinical decision support (CDS) systems seek to ensure appropriate imaging of patients but theoretically could drive leakage if ordering providers attempt to circumvent CDS recommendations and obtain studies from other imaging providers. This study assessed the incidence of leakage of imaging studies that had low appropriateness scores. METHODS We queried our outpatient CDS system over a three-year period (2011-2013) for studies that received a low CDS appropriateness score and were canceled by the ordering physician. For patients meeting these criteria and participating in risk-shared contracts, we cross-referenced their imaging utilization reports in the risk-contract insurance payment database to determine if they received outpatient imaging within 60 days of the index order, contrary to the decision support recommendation. RESULTS The risk-shared insurance database contained an average of 63,378 patients who had 18,008 MRIs and 18,014 CTs. A total of 11,234 (31.2%) studies were leaked: 3,513 (9.8%) to affiliated institutions; 7,721 (21.4%) to unaffiliated imaging facilities. Overall, 111 imaging studies received a low appropriateness score in the risk-shared patient population and were performed within 60 days despite the low score. Of these studies, 106 of 111 (95.5%) were ultimately performed within our hospital system (104 at the home institution; 2 at affiliated institutions); only 5 of 111 (4.5%) were performed outside of our hospital system. CONCLUSIONS Decision support systems for ordering providers do not seem to drive imaging referrals out of hospital systems to other institutions. Hospital systems can implement decision support without fear of this occurring.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2015

Imaging utilization from the ED: no difference between observation and admitted patients.

Anand M. Prabhakar; Alexander S. Misono; H. Benjamin Harvey; Brian J. Yun; Sanjay Saini; Rahmi Oklu

OBJECTIVES This study aims to determine the use of diagnostic imaging in emergency department (ED) observation units, particularly relative to inpatients admitted from the ED. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective, descriptive analysis. METHODS Our database of ED patients was retrospectively reviewed to identify patients managed in the observation unit or admitted to inpatient services. In February 2014, we randomly selected 105 ED observation patients and 108 patients admitted to inpatient services from the ED. Electronic medical records were reviewed to assess diagnosis as well as type and quantity of imaging tests obtained. RESULTS Eighty (76%) ED observation patients underwent imaging tests (radiographs, 39%; computed tomography, 25%; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), 24%; ultrasound, 8%; other, 4%); 85 inpatients (79%) underwent imaging tests while in the ED (radiographs, 52%; computed tomography, 30%; MRI, 8%; ultrasound, 9%; other, 1%). There was no significant difference in overall imaging use between ED observation patients and inpatients, but ED observation patients were more likely to undergo MRI (P=.0243). The most common presenting diagnoses to the ED observation unit were neurologic complaints (25%), abdominal pain (17%), and cardiac symptoms (16%). CONCLUSION There is no difference in the overall use of imaging in patients transferred to the ED observation unit vs those directly admitted from the ED. However, because ED observation unit patients tend to be accountable for a higher proportion of their health care bill, the impact of imaging in these patients is likely substantive.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2017

Changing Medicare Utilization of Minimally Invasive Procedures for the Treatment of Chronic Venous Insufficiency

Anand M. Prabhakar; Alexander S. Misono; Rahul A. Sheth; Andrew B. Rosenkrantz; Jennifer Hemingway; Danny R. Hughes; Richard Duszak

PURPOSE To examine changes in the utilization of procedures related to treatment of chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) in the Medicare population. MATERIALS AND METHODS Service-specific claims data for phlebectomy, sclerotherapy, and radiofrequency (RF) and laser ablation were identified by using Medicare Physician Supplier Procedure Summary master files from 2005 through 2014. Longitudinal national utilization rates were calculated by using annual Medicare enrollment data from 2005 through 2013. Procedure volumes by specialty group and site of service were analyzed. RESULTS Total annual claims for these procedures in the Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries increased from 95,206 to 332,244 (Compound Annual Growth Rate [CAGR], 15%) between 2005 and 2014. Per 1,000 beneficiaries, overall utilization increased annually from 2.8 in 2005 to 9.4 in 2013. Most procedures were performed in the private office setting (92% in 2014). In 2014, radiologists had a 10% relative market share, compared with vascular surgeons, other surgeons, and cardiologists, who had 26%, 25%, and 14% market shares, respectively. Cardiologists had the fastest relative growth, with a CAGR of 51% compared with 23% for radiology, 12% for vascular surgery, and 13% for other surgery. Total venous RF ablation services grew with a CAGR of 31%, with radiology and cardiology growing most rapidly (40% and 79%, respectively). Total venous laser ablation services grew with a CAGR of 22%, with radiology growing 15% and cardiology growing most rapidly at 44%. CONCLUSIONS Utilization of CVI procedures in the Medicare population increased markedly from 2005 through 2014. The overwhelming majority are performed in the private office setting by nonradiologists.


Current Problems in Diagnostic Radiology | 2017

Improving Access to Image-guided Procedures at an Integrated Rural Critical Access Hospital: Ultrasound-guided Thyroid Biopsy Program

Thang Q. Le; Yadiel Sánchez; Alexander S. Misono; Sanjay Saini; Anand M. Prabhakar

PURPOSE Critical access hospitals face difficulty providing all services locally and may need to refer patients off-site for additional care. Providing on-site minimally invasive biopsies, may obviate visits to tertiary or quaternary care centers. This study aims to assess feasibility and outcomes of an ultrasound-guided thyroid biopsy program in a critical access hospital. METHODS In this HIPAA compliant, IRB approved study, the Interventional Radiology (IR) database of a 19-bed, island, rural, critical access hospital without onsite pathology services affiliated with our quaternary care institution was retrospectively reviewed to identify all thyroid biopsies that were performed on site since inception of the service in April 2014 through August 2016. A specialized biopsy and specimen collection protocol was created as each specimen was transferred to and analyzed by the pathology department at our affiliated quaternary care institution. RESULTS Two IR physicians carried out thyroid biopsies on 34 nodules in 29 patients during the study period. The mean age of patients was 56.5 ± 14.0, with a range of 35-85 and 86% female, 14% male. 94.1% of nodules had adequate material for interpretation on the first biopsy and 97.1% upon repeat biopsy. Ultimately, 5 patients (with 6 nodules) underwent surgical resection at the integrated quaternary care center. Surgical resection identified one atypical follicular adenoma, one follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma, two papillary carcinomas, and two Hürthle cell tumors. CONCLUSION IR thyroid biopsy services may be successfully provided in the rural setting without onsite pathology analysis and adequacy checks, enhancing patient access and streamlining care while also expanding the reach of tertiary care centers.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2016

Revenue Potential for Inpatient IR Consultation Services: A Financial Model

Alexander S. Misono; Peter R. Mueller; Joshua A. Hirsch; R. Sheridan; Assad U. Siddiqi; Raymond W. Liu

PURPOSE Interventional radiology (IR) has historically failed to fully capture the value of evaluation and management services in the inpatient setting. Understanding financial benefits of a formally incorporated billing discipline may yield meaningful insights for interventional practices. MATERIALS AND METHODS A revenue modeling tool was created deploying standard financial modeling techniques, including sensitivity and scenario analyses. Sensitivity analysis calculates revenue fluctuation related to dynamic adjustment of discrete variables. In scenario analysis, possible future scenarios as well as revenue potential of different-size clinical practices are modeled. RESULTS Assuming a hypothetical inpatient IR consultation service with a daily patient census of 35 patients and two new consults per day, the model estimates annual charges of


Current Problems in Diagnostic Radiology | 2016

Use of Magnetic Resonance Venography in Screening Patients With Cryptogenic Stroke for May-Thurner Syndrome

Anand M. Prabhakar; Alexander S. Misono; Katelyn N. Brinegar; Ali Khademhosseini; Rahmi Oklu

2.3 million and collected revenue of

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A. Klobuka

University of Pittsburgh

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Aaron S. Kesselheim

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Danny R. Hughes

Georgia Institute of Technology

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