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Dive into the research topics where Anne-Marie Dyer is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne-Marie Dyer.


Cancer | 2005

Increased incidence of melanoma in renal transplantation recipients.

Michael M. Todd; Elizabeth M. Billingsley; Gregory Harper; Anne-Marie Dyer; Eugene J. Lengerich

It is well established that the incidence of nonmelanoma skin carcinoma is increased in renal transplantation recipients. However, existing studies are not in agreement over whether patients who undergo transplantation have an increased risk of melanoma. The objective of this study was to estimate the risk of melanoma among immunosuppressed renal transplantation recipients and to determine whether that risk is associated with patient and transplantation characteristics.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2007

The UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase 2B17 Gene Deletion Polymorphism: Sex-Specific Association with Urinary 4-(Methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-Pyridyl)-1-Butanol Glucuronidation Phenotype and Risk for Lung Cancer

Carla J. Gallagher; Joshua E. Muscat; Amy N. Hicks; Yan Zheng; Anne-Marie Dyer; Gary A. Chase; John P. Richie; Philip Lazarus

4-(Methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone is a potent and abundant procarcinogen found in tobacco smoke, and glucuronidation of its major metabolite, 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL), by UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGT) including UGT2B17 is an important mechanism for 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone detoxification. Both copies of the UGT2B17 gene are deleted in ∼10% of Whites and the deletion is associated with a reduction in NNAL glucuronidation activity in vitro. In this study, we examined the effects of the UGT2B17 deletion (0/0) on NNAL glucuronidation rates in a sample of 82 healthy cigarette smokers and further examined its effects on lung cancer risk in a separate case-control study. In the healthy smokers study, a lower urinary ratio of NNAL-glucuronide to NNAL was observed in women with the UGT2B17 deletion (0/0) as compared with women with either the wild-type or heterozygous genotypes (P = 0.058). There were no significant differences in this ratio by genotype in men (P = 0.597). In the case-control study of 398 lung cancer patients and 697 community controls, the UGT2B17 deletion (0/0) was associated with a significant increase in risk of lung cancer in women (odds ratio, 2.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.01-4.0). The risk for the subset of women with lung adenocarcinoma was 2.8 (95% confidence interval, 1.2-6.3). The deletion was not associated with other lung histologic types in women and was not associated with the risk for any lung histologic types in men. The association of the UGT2B17 deletion with increased lung adenocarcinoma in women is consistent with its association with decreased NNAL glucuronidation rates in women and with studies showing that NNAL is a selective inducer of lung adenocarcinoma in experimental animals. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2007;16(4):823–8)


Womens Health Issues | 2010

PRECONCEPTION PREDICTORS OF WEIGHT GAIN DURING PREGNANCY Prospective Findings from the Central Pennsylvania Women's Health Study

Carol S. Weisman; Marianne M. Hillemeier; Danielle Symons Downs; Cynthia H. Chuang; Anne-Marie Dyer

OBJECTIVES We examined preconception (prepregnancy) predictors of pregnancy weight gain and weight gain that exceeds the 2009 Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommendations based on pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), in a prospective study. METHODS Data are from a population-based cohort study of 1,420 women who were interviewed at baseline and 2 years later. The analytic sample includes 103 women who were not pregnant at baseline and gave birth to full-term singletons during the follow-up period. Preconception maternal weight category as well as health behaviors, psychosocial stress, parity, and age were examined as predictors of pregnancy weight gain and of weight gain in excess of the IOM recommendations using multiple linear and logistic regression analysis. RESULTS Pregnancy weight gain averaged 33.01 pounds, with 51% of women gaining weight in excess of the 2009 IOM recommendations for their preconception weight category. Preconception overweight (BMI = 25-29.9) increased the odds of excessive pregnancy weight gain nearly threefold, whereas preconception physical activity levels meeting activity guidelines reduced the odds of excessive weight gain but was marginally statistically significant. CONCLUSION Although future research examining the role of physical activity in relation to pregnancy weight gain is needed, preconception overweight and physical activity levels are prime targets for interventions to avoid excessive pregnancy weight gain.


Neurosurgery | 2006

Feasibility and limitations of endovascular coil embolization of anterior communicating artery aneurysms: morphological considerations.

John K. Birknes; Sung-Kyun Hwang; Aditya S. Pandey; Kevin M. Cockroft; Anne-Marie Dyer; Ronald P. Benitez; Erol Veznedaroglu; Robert H. Rosenwasser

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study is to analyze anterior communicating artery (AComA) aneurysm morphology and its relationship to the limitations and feasibility of endovascular coil embolization. METHODS One hundred twenty-three patients were treated with endovascular coil embolization for AComA aneurysms. Aneurysm morphology was classified into six categories according to the projection of the aneurysm (anterior, posterior/superior, or inferior) and neck size (< 4 mm or >or= 4 mm). The following categories were used: Class A1, anterior projection and neck of aneurysm less than 4 mm; Class A2, anterior projection and neck of aneurysm 4 mm or more; Class B1, posterior (superior) projection and neck of aneurysm less than 4 mm; Class B2, posterior (superior) projection and neck of aneurysm 4 mm or more; Class C1, inferior projection and neck of aneurysm less than 4 mm; and Class C2, inferior projection and neck of aneurysm 4 mm or more. Endovascular procedures were categorized as either successful or unsuccessful according to specific criteria. In addition, patients were followed for recanalization. Clinical follow-up data was obtained at discharge and after 6 months and was classified according to the Glasgow Outcome Scale. RESULTS Complete or near complete aneurysm occlusion was observed in 108 (88%) patients, partial embolization was performed in three (2.4%) patients, and embolization was attempted in 12 (9.7%) patients. Successful embolization for AComA aneurysms was performed in 86 out of 123 (70%) patients or 77.5% (86 out of 111 patients) of those patients in whom embolization was possible. Statistical analysis demonstrated that anterior projecting aneurysms were more likely to be successfully coiled than either inferior or posterior/superior directed AComA aneurysms. In addition, inferiorly projecting AComA aneurysms and wide-neck aneurysms had a significantly higher rate of recanalization. CONCLUSION Endovascular coil embolization of AComA aneurysms shows good outcome in our study. Despite advanced modern techniques, there are limitations in the endovascular approach to AComA aneurysms. Consideration of aneurysm morphology may be used to guide approaches in the treatment of AComA aneurysms.


Womens Health Issues | 2008

Improving women's preconceptional health: findings from a randomized trial of the Strong Healthy Women intervention in the Central Pennsylvania women's health study.

Marianne M. Hillemeier; Danielle Symons Downs; Mark E. Feinberg; Carol S. Weisman; Cynthia H. Chuang; Roxanne Parrott; Diana L. Velott; Lori A. Francis; Sara A. Baker; Anne-Marie Dyer; Vernon M. Chinchilli

PURPOSE Improving the health of women before pregnancy is an important strategy for reducing adverse pregnancy outcomes for mother and child. This paper reports the first pretest-posttest results from a randomized trial of a unique, multidimensional, small group format intervention, Strong Healthy Women, designed to improve the health behaviors and health status of preconceptional and interconceptional women. METHODS Nonpregnant pre- and interconceptional women ages 18-35 were recruited in 15 low-income rural communities in Central Pennsylvania (n = 692). Women were randomized in a ratio of 2-to-1 to intervention and control groups; participants received a baseline and follow-up health risk assessment at 14 weeks and completed questionnaires to assess behavioral variables. The analytic sample for this report consists of 362 women who completed both risk assessments. Outcomes include measures of attitudinal and health-related behavior change. MAIN FINDINGS Women in the intervention group were significantly more likely than controls to report higher self-efficacy for eating healthy food and to perceive higher preconceptional control of birth outcomes; greater intent to eat healthy foods and be more physically active; and greater frequency of reading food labels, physical activity consistent with recommended levels, and daily use of a multivitamin with folic acid. Significant dose effects were found: Each additional intervention session attended was associated with higher perceived internal preconceptional control of birth outcomes, reading food labels, engaging in relaxation exercise or meditation for stress management, and daily use of a multivitamin with folic acid. CONCLUSIONS The attitudinal and behavior changes attributable to the intervention were related primarily to nutrition and physical activity. These results show that these topics can be successfully addressed with pre- and interconceptional women outside the clinical setting in community-based interventions.


Womens Health Issues | 2011

Improving women's preconceptional health: long-term effects of the Strong Healthy Women behavior change intervention in the central Pennsylvania Women's Health Study.

Carol S. Weisman; Marianne M. Hillemeier; Danielle Symons Downs; Mark E. Feinberg; Cynthia H. Chuang; John J. Botti; Anne-Marie Dyer

PURPOSE To investigate the long-term (6- and 12-month) effects of the Strong Healthy Women intervention on health-related behaviors, weight and body mass index (BMI), and weight gain during pregnancy. Strong Healthy Women is a small-group behavioral intervention for pre- and interconceptional women designed to modify key risk factors for adverse pregnancy outcomes; pretest-posttest findings from a randomized, controlled trial have been previously reported. The following questions are addressed: 1) were significant pretest-posttest changes in health-related behaviors (previously reported) maintained over the 12-month follow-up period; 2) did the intervention impact weight and BMI over the 12-month follow-up period; and 3) did the intervention impact pregnancy weight gain for those who gave birth during the follow-up period? METHODS Data are from 6- and 12-month follow-up telephone interviews of women in the original trial of the Strong Healthy Women intervention (n = 362) and from birth records for singleton births (n = 45) during the 12-month follow-up period. Repeated measures regression was used to evaluate intervention effects. MAIN FINDINGS At the 12-month follow-up, participants in the Strong Healthy Women intervention were significantly more likely than controls to use a daily multivitamin with folic acid and to have lower weight and BMI. The interventions effect on reading food labels for nutritional values dropped off between the 6- and 12-month follow-up. Among those who gave birth to singletons during the follow-up period, women who participated in the intervention had lower average pregnancy weight gain compared with controls. Although the intervention effect was no longer significant when controlling for pre-pregnancy obesity, the adjusted means show a trend toward lower weight gain in the intervention group. CONCLUSION These findings provide important evidence that the Strong Healthy Women behavior change intervention is effective in modifying important risk factors for adverse pregnancy outcomes and may improve an important pregnancy outcome, weight gain during pregnancy. Because the intervention seems to help women manage their weight in the months after the intervention and during pregnancy, it may be an effective obesity prevention strategy for women before, during, and after the transition to motherhood.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

Features of the bronchial bacterial microbiome associated with atopy, asthma, and responsiveness to inhaled corticosteroid treatment

Juliana Durack; Susan V. Lynch; Snehal Nariya; Nirav R. Bhakta; Avraham Beigelman; Mario Castro; Anne-Marie Dyer; Elliot Israel; Monica Kraft; Richard J. Martin; David T. Mauger; Sharon R. Rosenberg; Tonya Sharp-King; Steven R. White; Prescott G. Woodruff; Pedro C. Avila; Loren C. Denlinger; Fernando Holguin; Stephen C. Lazarus; Njira L Lugogo; Wendy C. Moore; Stephen P. Peters; Loretta G. Que; Lewis J. Smith; Christine A. Sorkness; Michael E. Wechsler; Sally E. Wenzel; Homer A. Boushey; Yvonne J. Huang

Background Compositional differences in the bronchial bacterial microbiota have been associated with asthma, but it remains unclear whether the findings are attributable to asthma, to aeroallergen sensitization, or to inhaled corticosteroid treatment. Objectives We sought to compare the bronchial bacterial microbiota in adults with steroid‐naive atopic asthma, subjects with atopy but no asthma, and nonatopic healthy control subjects and to determine relationships of the bronchial microbiota to phenotypic features of asthma. Methods Bacterial communities in protected bronchial brushings from 42 atopic asthmatic subjects, 21 subjects with atopy but no asthma, and 21 healthy control subjects were profiled by using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Bacterial composition and community‐level functions inferred from sequence profiles were analyzed for between‐group differences. Associations with clinical and inflammatory variables were examined, including markers of type 2–related inflammation and change in airway hyperresponsiveness after 6 weeks of fluticasone treatment. Results The bronchial microbiome differed significantly among the 3 groups. Asthmatic subjects were uniquely enriched in members of the Haemophilus, Neisseria, Fusobacterium, and Porphyromonas species and the Sphingomonodaceae family and depleted in members of the Mogibacteriaceae family and Lactobacillales order. Asthma‐associated differences in predicted bacterial functions included involvement of amino acid and short‐chain fatty acid metabolism pathways. Subjects with type 2–high asthma harbored significantly lower bronchial bacterial burden. Distinct changes in specific microbiota members were seen after fluticasone treatment. Steroid responsiveness was linked to differences in baseline compositional and functional features of the bacterial microbiome. Conclusion Even in subjects with mild steroid‐naive asthma, differences in the bronchial microbiome are associated with immunologic and clinical features of the disease. The specific differences identified suggest possible microbiome targets for future approaches to asthma treatment or prevention. Graphical abstract Figure. No Caption available.


Health Services Research | 2008

Women's Preconceptional Health and Use of Health Services: Implications for Preconception Care

Marianne M. Hillemeier; Carol S. Weisman; Gary A. Chase; Anne-Marie Dyer; Michele L. Shaffer

OBJECTIVE To improve understanding of womens use of health care before pregnancy, by analyzing how the health status and health risks of pre- and interconceptional women are associated with health services use. DATA SOURCE Data are from a cross-sectional random-digit dial telephone survey of a representative sample of 2002 women ages 18-45 years from the Central Pennsylvania Womens Health Study (CePAWHS). A subsample of 1,325 respondents with current reproductive capacity, classified by reproductive life stage (preconceptional or interconceptional), was analyzed. STUDY DESIGN Bivariate and multiple logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine how health needs (including indices of health status and health risks related to adverse pregnancy outcomes) are associated with five indicators of health services use (receipt of a regular physical exam, obstetrician-gynecologist [ob/gyn] visit, receipt of a set of recommended screening services, receipt of health counseling services on general health topics, and receipt of pregnancy-related counseling), controlling for predisposing and enabling variables. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS Only half of women at risk of pregnancy report receiving counseling about pregnancy planning in the past year. One-third of women surveyed did not receive routine physical examinations and screening services, and over half received little or no health counseling. Multivariate analyses showed that all the measures of health needs except for negative health behavior were related to some type of health services use. Psychosocial stress was associated with having a recent ob/gyn visit, with receiving general health counseling, and with receiving pregnancy planning counseling. Cardiovascular risk was positively associated with receiving general health counseling and a regular physical exam, but negatively associated with seeing an ob/gyn. Positive health behaviors were associated with receiving screening services and with receiving general health counseling. Preconceptional reproductive life stage was positively associated with receiving a regular physical exam and negatively associated with having an ob/gyn visit. CONCLUSIONS Pre- and interconceptional women with specific health care needs may not receive appropriate health care before pregnancy. Improving pregnancy experiences and outcomes requires more comprehensive preconception health care and more preventive care before the first pregnancy.


Preventive Medicine | 2011

The relationship between pregnancy intention and preconception health behaviors

Cynthia H. Chuang; Marianne M. Hillemeier; Anne-Marie Dyer; Carol S. Weisman

OBJECTIVE To describe smoking, heavy drinking, and folic acid supplementation in preconception women and determine if the likelihood of healthy preconception behaviors differs by whether and when women intend future pregnancy. METHODS Analysis was based on 35,351 nonpregnant women who participated in the 2004 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System who were of reproductive age (18-44 years), sexually active, and capable of future pregnancy. The association between future pregnancy intention and preconception behaviors was determined adjusting for diabetes, weight category, age group, race/ethnicity, marital status, education, income, and children living in household. RESULTS Eighty percent of women were non-smokers, 94.3% were non-heavy drinkers, and 42.6% were daily folic acid users. In adjusted analysis, only the odds of folic acid supplementation remained higher in women intending pregnancy in the next 12 months (adjusted odds ratio, 1.57; 95% confidence interval, 1.21-2.04) compared with women not intending future pregnancy. Women intending pregnancy later or ambivalent about future pregnancy were no more likely to be engaging in healthy preconception behaviors than women not intending future pregnancy. CONCLUSION Women intending pregnancy within 12 months were more likely to use folic acid, but pregnancy intention was not associated with preconception smoking or heavy drinking.


Cancer | 2010

Varying recurrence rates and risk factors associated with different definitions of local recurrence in patients with surgically resected, stage I nonsmall cell lung cancer

John M. Varlotto; Abram Recht; John C. Flickinger; Laura N. Medford-Davis; Anne-Marie Dyer; Malcolm M. DeCamp

The objective of this study was to examine the effects of different definitions of local recurrence on the reported patterns of failure and associated risk factors in patients who undergo potentially curative resection for stage I nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

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Carol S. Weisman

Pennsylvania State University

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Gary A. Chase

Pennsylvania State University

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Cynthia H. Chuang

Pennsylvania State University

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Danielle Symons Downs

Pennsylvania State University

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Joshua E. Muscat

Pennsylvania State University

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Abram Recht

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Carla J. Gallagher

Pennsylvania State University

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John M. Varlotto

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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