Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ashley Irish is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ashley Irish.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2002

Prevention of Tunneled Hemodialysis Catheter-Related Infections Using Catheter-Restricted Filling with Gentamicin and Citrate: A Randomized Controlled Study

Gursharan Dogra; Helen Herson; Brian Hutchison; Ashley Irish; Christopher H. Heath; Clay Golledge; Grant Luxton; Harry Moody

Tunneled catheters are widely used for the provision of hemodialysis. Long-term catheter survival is limited by tunneled catheter-related infections (CRI). This study assesses the efficacy of catheter-restricted filling with gentamicin and citrate in preventing CRI in hemodialysis patients. A double-blind randomized study was conducted to compare heparin (5000 U/ml) with gentamicin/citrate (40 mg/ml and 3.13% citrate; ratio 2:1) as catheter-lock solutions. A total of 112 tunneled catheters in 83 patients were enrolled at the time of catheter insertion for commencement or maintenance of hemodialysis. The primary end point was CRI. Catheter malfunction, defined as blood flow rate of <200 ml/min for three consecutive dialyses and/or the use of urokinase, was also assessed as a secondary end point. Infection rates per 100 catheter-days were 0.03 in the gentamicin group versus 0.42 in the heparin group (P = 0.003). Kaplan-Meier survival analyses showed mean infection-free catheter survival of 282 d (95% CI, 272 to 293 d) in the gentamicin group versus 181 d (95% CI, 124 to 237 d) in the heparin group (log rank, 9.58; P = 0.002). Cox regression analyses showed a relative risk for infection-free catheter survival of 0.10 (95% CI, 0.01 to 0.92) in the gentamicin group when adjusted for gender, race, diabetes mellitus, catheter malfunction, and hemoglobin (P = 0.042). The incidence of catheter malfunction was not significantly different between groups. Predialysis gentamicin levels were significantly higher in patients randomized to gentamicin (gentamicin/citrate: median 2.8 mg/L [range, 0.6 to 3.5 mg/L], n = 5; heparin: median <0.2 mg/L [range <0.2 to 0.2 mg/L], n = 5; P = 0.008). Tunneled hemodialysis catheter-restricted filling with gentamicin and citrate is a highly effective strategy for prevention of CRI. Although citrate as a catheter-lock solution provides adequate anticoagulation for the interdialytic period, gentamicin levels suggest significant risk for chronic aminoglycoside exposure and associated ototoxicity. Before this technique is adopted, these preliminary observations warrant replication in future studies that will examine the efficacy and safety of lower doses of gentamicin or alternative agents with a reduced potential for toxicity.


Transplantation | 1997

The factor V Leiden (R506Q) mutation and risk of thrombosis in renal transplant recipients

Ashley Irish; Fiona R. Green; Derek W. R. Gray; Peter J. Morris

BACKGROUND Renal transplantation and chronic renal failure are associated with an increased risk of venous thrombosis and myocardial infarction (MI). We investigated whether resistance to activated protein C due to a mutation in the factor V gene (FV Leiden/FV506Q) may predispose patients to thrombosis. METHODS Three hundred patients who had undergone renal transplantation were genotyped for the FV mutation. Seventy-seven patients who had suffered thrombotic complications (42 venous, 28 arterial, and 7 both) were compared with 223 patients free of thrombosis. RESULTS Thirty-two patients had suffered early renal allograft thrombosis (30 venous), and 33 patients had suffered MI. A higher proportion of the patients with thrombosis, compared to those without, had a family history of arterial cardiovascular disease (42% vs. 26%, P=0.04). Eighteen (6%) patients were heterozygous for FV506Q and seven (39%) of these had suffered venous thrombosis (including four primary allograft thromboses), compared with 15% of the patients without the mutation (P<0.05). The odds ratio for risk of venous thrombosis for FV506Q carriers was 3.6 (95% confidence interval: 1.3-9.9) or 4.0 (1.2-13.8) for primary allograft thrombosis. Only one of the FV506Q carriers had suffered an MI. CONCLUSIONS Carriers of the factor V 506Q mutation with chronic renal failure who have undergone transplantation are at an increased risk of venous but not arterial thrombosis. This mutation explained 14% of all venous and 20% of primary allograft thrombosis, suggesting that other unidentified genetic and environmental factors contribute to the risk of thrombosis in renal transplant recipients.


Journal of Hypertension | 2009

The effects of [omega]3 fatty acids and coenzyme Q10 on blood pressure and heart rate in chronic kidney disease: a randomized controlled trial

Trevor A. Mori; Valerie Burke; Ashley Irish; Christine A. Cowpland; Lawrence J. Beilin; Gursharan Dogra; Gerald F. Watts

Background and objective Chronic kidney disease (CKD) associates with increased cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Hypertension is a major determinant of progression of CKD. Omega-3 fatty acids (ω3FA) protect against CVD via improvements in blood pressure, heart rate, vascular reactivity and serum lipids. Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ) may improve blood pressure and vascular function. This study determined whether ω3FA and CoQ have independent or additive effects in improving the cardiovascular profile, particularly blood pressure and heart rate, in nondiabetic patients with CKD stages 3–4. Methods In a double-blind, placebo-controlled intervention, patients were randomized to either ω3FA (4 g), CoQ (200 mg), both supplements or control (4 g), daily for 8 weeks. Results Eighty-five patients aged 56.5 ± 1.4 years; BMI 27.3 ± 0.5 kg/m2; supine blood pressure 125.0/72.3 mmHg; and glomerular filtration rate 35.8 ± 1.2 ml/min/1.73 m2, were randomized. Seventy-four completed the study. ω3FA, but not CoQ, reduced 24-h ambulatory heart rate (P < 0.0001) and blood pressure (P < 0.0001). Main effects for ω3FA on 24-h measurements were −3.3 ± 0.7/−2.9 ± 0.5 mmHg and −4.0 ± 0.5 bpm. Postintervention blood pressure showed significant interactions between treatments. ω3FA reduced triglycerides 24% (P < 0.001). There were no changes in glomerular filtration rate, urinary albumin or total protein excretion, cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol (C), LDL-C, glucose, insulin, or high-sensitivity C-reactive protein. Conclusion This study has shown that ω3FA reduce blood pressure, heart rate and triglycerides in patients with CKD. CoQ had no independent effect on blood pressure but increased heart rate. These results show that ω3FA lower blood pressure and may reduce cardiovascular risk in nondiabetic patients with moderate-to-severe CKD.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

Post-Transplant HLA class II Antibodies and High Soluble CD30 Levels are Independently Associated with Poor Kidney Graft Survival

L.L. Langan; Lawrence P. Park; T.L. Hughes; Ashley Irish; Grant Luxton; C. Witt; Frank T. Christiansen

HLA‐specific antibodies (HSA) and soluble CD30 (sCD30) were measured in 208 renal transplant recipients with functioning grafts at least 1 year after transplantation (median 8.2 years) to investigate the predictive value of HSA and sCD30 on subsequent graft outcome. HSA (class I and class II) were detected by both ELISA LAT‐M and Luminex LabScreen assays. Data on graft outcome was collected with a median follow‐up time of 3.5 years after antibody and sCD30 measurement. Recipients with post‐transplant HLA class II antibodies had particularly poor graft outcome with a hazard ratio (HR) of 7.8 (p < 0.0001) when detected by ELISA, and a HR of 6.0 (p < 0.0001) when detected by Luminex. A high post‐transplant sCD30 level ≥100 U/mL was associated with increased risk of subsequent graft failure (HR 2.7, p = 0.03). sCD30 and HSA had an independent and additive association with graft outcome. Recipients with HLA class II antibody and high sCD30 had the highest risk of subsequent graft failure (HR 43.4, p < 0.0001 and HR 18.1, p = 0.0008 for ELISA and Luminex, respectively). These data show that detection of HSA and serum sCD30 measured at least 1‐year post‐transplant provides valuable and predictive information regarding subsequent graft outcome.


American Journal of Cardiovascular Drugs | 2004

Hypercoagulability in Renal Transplant Recipients

Ashley Irish

Renal transplantation improves survival and quality of life for patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Improvements in immunosuppressive therapy have reduced early allograft loss due to acute rejection to very low levels. Early allograft loss, due to acute thrombotic complications, remains a constant and proportionally increasing complication of renal transplantation. Identifying risk factor(s) for thrombosis amenable to preventive strategies has been elusive. Epidemiological studies have attempted to define risk in terms of modifiable (drugs, dialysis modality, surgical procedure) and non-modifiable (age, diabetes mellitus, vascular anomalies) factors, or identify changes in coagulation or fibrinolysis promoting a more thrombotic state. Most recently the evolution of thrombophilia research has established the potential for inherited hypercoagulability to predispose to acute allograft thrombosis. Inheritance of the factor V Leiden (FVL), prothrombin G20210A mutation, or the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies (APA) may increase the risk of renal allograft thrombosis approximately 3-fold in selected patients. Patients with ESRD due to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) appear at particularly high risk of thrombosis, especially if they have either APA or detectable β2-glycoprotein-1. Data for other hypercoagulable states such as hyperhomocystinemia or the C677T polymorphism of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase gene are deficient. Patients with APA, FVL, or prothrombin G20210A mutation also appear to have greater graft loss due to vascular rejection, possibly reflecting immunological injury upon the vascular wall exacerbated or induced by the prothrombotic state. While substantial in vitro data suggest cyclosporine is prothrombotic, an independent clinical association with allograft thrombosis is unproven. Interventions to reduce thrombotic risk including heparin, warfarin, and aspirin have been evaluated in both selected high-risk groups (heparin and warfarin) and unselected populations (heparin and aspirin). In unselected patients at low clinical risk, aspirin (75–150 mg/day) with or without a short period of unfractionated heparin (5000U twice a day for 5 days) appears to reduce the risk of renal allograft thrombosis significantly with a low risk of bleeding, especially when compared with low molecular weight heparins which risk accumulation in renal failure. In high-risk groups (identified thrombophilic risk factor, previous thrombosis, or SLE) longer period of heparin, with or without aspirin and maintenance with warfarin, should be considered. Re-transplantation following graft loss due to vascular thrombosis can be undertaken with a low risk of recurrence. Further prospective studies evaluating both putative risk factors and intervention strategies are required to determine whether routine clinical screening for thrombophilic factors is justified.


Thrombosis Research | 2008

Hypercoagulability in chronic kidney disease is associated with coagulation activation but not endothelial function

Mj Adams; Ashley Irish; Gerald F. Watts; R Oostryck; Gursharan Dogra

INTRODUCTION Patients with chronic kidney disease exhibit features of a hypercoagulable state and have endothelial dysfunction, which may contribute to their increased cardiovascular risk. We examined the relationship between coagulation activation and vascular function in patients with chronic kidney disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS We measured parameters of the tissue factor pathway of blood coagulation (tissue factor, factor VIIc and factor X); natural inhibitors (tissue factor pathway inhibitor, protein C, free and total protein S, antithrombin III) and markers of coagulation activation (thrombin-antithrombin complexes, prothrombin fragment 1+2) in 66 stage 4&5 chronic kidney disease patients and 36 healthy controls. Their relationship with markers of vascular function (flow mediated dilatation, soluble E-selectin and thrombomodulin) and a mediator of inflammation (interleukin-6) was determined. RESULTS Up-regulation of the tissue factor pathway (increased tissue factor and factor VIIc), increased prothrombin fragment 1+2 and significant reductions in antithrombin III and the ratio of free protein S: total protein S were found in patients compared to healthy controls. Increased tissue factor antigen was significantly and independently correlated with creatinine and interleukin-6 (P<0.001). Factor X and antithrombin III were both reduced in chronic kidney disease and correlated (r=0.58; P<0.001). Changes in coagulation and anti-coagulation were independent of all measures of endothelial function. CONCLUSIONS Significant activation of the TF pathway of coagulation and depletion or reduction of some natural anticoagulants in chronic kidney disease was correlated with the degree of renal dysfunction, but not correlated with the abnormalities of vascular function. These data are consistent with a hypercoagulable state in chronic kidney disease that may be independent of endothelial based regulation but associated with an inflammatory state.


Nephrology | 2012

Incidence, risk factors and prognosis of acute kidney injury after transcatheter aortic valve implantation

Wai Y Kong; Gerald Yong; Ashley Irish

Aim:  Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) poses a significant risk of acute kidney injury (AKI). Little is known of the impact of TAVI and AKI on long‐term kidney function and health cost. We explored the predictive factors and prognostic implications of AKI following TAVI.


BMC Nephrology | 2009

Preventing AVF thrombosis: the rationale and design of the Omega-3 fatty acids (Fish Oils) and Aspirin in Vascular access OUtcomes in REnal Disease (FAVOURED) study.

Ashley Irish; Gursharan Dogra; Trevor A. Mori; Elaine Beller; Stephanie R Heritier; Carmel M. Hawley; Peter G. Kerr; Amanda Robertson; Johan B. Rosman; Peta-Anne Paul-Brent; Melissa Starfield; Kevan R. Polkinghorne; Alan Cass

BackgroundHaemodialysis (HD) is critically dependent on the availability of adequate access to the systemic circulation, ideally via a native arteriovenous fistula (AVF). The Primary failure rate of an AVF ranges between 20–54%, due to thrombosis or failure of maturation. There remains limited evidence for the use of anti-platelet agents and uncertainty as to choice of agent(s) for the prevention of AVF thrombosis. We present the study protocol for a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, clinical trial examining whether the use of the anti-platelet agents, aspirin and omega-3 fatty acids, either alone or in combination, will effectively reduce the risk of early thrombosis in de novo AVF.Methods/DesignThe study population is adult patients with stage IV or V chronic kidney disease (CKD) currently on HD or where HD is planned to start within 6 months in whom a planned upper or lower arm AVF is to be the primary HD access. Using a factorial-design trial, patients will be randomised to aspirin or matching placebo, and also to omega-3 fatty acids or matching placebo, resulting in four treatment groups (aspirin placebo/omega-3 fatty acid placebo, aspirin/omega-3 fatty acid placebo, aspirin placebo/omega-3 fatty acid, aspirin/omega-3 fatty acid). Randomisation will be achieved using a dynamic balancing method over the two stratification factors of study site and upper versus lower arm AVF. The medication will be commenced pre-operatively and continued for 3 months post surgery. The primary outcome is patency of the AVF at three months after randomisation. Secondary outcome measures will include functional patency at six and twelve months, primary patency time, secondary (assisted) patency time, and adverse events, particularly bleeding.DiscussionThis multicentre Australian and New Zealand study has been designed to determine whether the outcome of surgery to create de novo AVF can be improved by the use of aspirin and/or omega-3 fatty acids. Recently a placebo-controlled trial has shown that clopidogrel is effective in safely preventing primary AVF thrombosis, but ineffective at increasing functional patency. Our study presents significant differences in the anti-platelet agents used, the study design, and surgical and patient demographics that should contribute further evidence regarding the efficacy of anti-platelet agents.Trial RegistrationAustralia & New Zealand Clinical Trials Register (ACTRN12607000569404).


Transplant Immunology | 2013

Pre-transplant donor specific anti-HLA antibody is associated with antibody-mediated rejection, progressive graft dysfunction and patient death

Samantha Fidler; Ashley Irish; Wai H. Lim; Paolo Ferrari; C. Witt; Frank T. Christiansen

BACKGROUND The long term effect of donor specific antibodies (DSA) detected by Luminex Single Antigen Bead (SAB) assay in the absence of a positive complement-dependant cytotoxicity (CDC) crossmatch is unclear. DSA at the time of transplant were determined retrospectively in 258 renal transplant recipients from 2003 to 2007 and their relationship with rejection and graft function prospectively evaluated. After a median of 5.6 years follow-up 9% of patients had antibody mediated rejection (AMR) (DSA 11/37 (30%), DSA-Neg 13/221 (6%), HR 6.6, p<0.001). Patients with anti-HLA class II (HR 6.1) or both class I+II (HR 10.1) DSA had the greatest risk for AMR. The Mean Fluorescent Intensity (MFI) of the DSA was significantly higher in patients with AMR than those with no rejection (p=0.006). Moreover, the strength of the antibody was shown to be important, with the risk of AMR significantly greater in those with DSA >8000 MFI than those with DSA <8000 MFI (HR 23, p<0.001). eGFR progressively declined in patients with DSA but was stable in those without DSA (35.7 ± 20.4 mls/min vs 48.5 ± 22.7) and composite patient and graft survival was significantly worse in those with class II (HR 2.9) or both class I+II (HR 3.7) but not class I DSA. Class II DSA alone, or in combination with class I DSA had the strongest association with graft loss and patient death. Patients with DSA not only have increased rates of acute AMR, but also chronic graft dysfunction, graft loss and death. Antibody burden quantified by SAB assay may identify patients at highest immunological risk and therefore influence patient management and improve long-term patient outcome.


Nephrology | 2005

Efficacy and safety of oral versus intravenous ascorbic acid for anaemia in haemodialysis patients.

Doris T. Chan; Ashley Irish; Gursharan Dogra

Background:  Intravenous (i.v.) ascorbic acid (AA) improves anaemia in iron‐overloaded, erythropoietin (rEPO) hyporesponsive haemodialysis patients. While oral AA is readily attainable, the efficacy and safety of oral versus i.v. AA has not been examined.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ashley Irish's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerald F. Watts

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gursharan Dogra

Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Trevor A. Mori

University of Western Australia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David W. Johnson

Princess Alexandra Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Doris T. Chan

Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wai H. Lim

Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge