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Dive into the research topics where C. Imai is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Imai.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

Whole Blood Genomic Biomarkers of Acute Cardiac Allograft Rejection

David Lin; Zsuzsanna Hollander; Raymond T. Ng; C. Imai; Andrew Ignaszewski; Robert Balshaw; Gabriela V. Cohen Freue; J. Wilson-McManus; Pooran Qasimi; Anna Meredith; Alice Mui; Timothy J. Triche; R. McMaster; Paul Keown; Bruce M. McManus

BACKGROUND Significant progress has been made in cardiac transplantation over the past 30 years; however, the means for detection of acute cardiac allograft rejection remains in need of improvement. At present, the endomyocardial biopsy, an invasive and inconvenient procedure for patients, is required for the surveillance and diagnosis of acute cardiac allograft rejection. In the Biomarkers in Transplantation initiative, we investigated gene expression profiles in peripheral blood of cardiac transplant subjects as potential biomarkers for diagnosis of allograft rejection. METHODS Whole blood samples were obtained from 28 cardiac transplant subjects who consented to the study. Serial samples were collected from pre-transplant through 3 years post-transplant according to the standard protocol. Temporally correspondent biopsies were also collected, reviewed in a blinded manner, and graded according to current ISHLT guidelines. Blood samples were analyzed using Affymetrix microarrays. Genomic profiles were compared in subjects with acute rejection (AR; ISHLT Grade > or =2R) and no rejection (NR; Grade 0R). Biomarker panel genes were identified using linear discriminant analysis. RESULTS We found 1,295 differentially expressed probe-sets between AR and NR samples and developed a 12-gene biomarker panel that classifies our internal validation samples with 83% sensitivity and 100% specificity. CONCLUSIONS Based on our current results, we believe whole blood genomic biomarkers hold great potential in the diagnosis of acute cardiac allograft rejection. A prospective, Canada-wide trial will be conducted shortly to further evaluate the classifier panel in diverse patients and a range of clinical programs.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2013

Plasma Protein Biosignatures for Detection of Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy

David Lin; Gabriela V. Cohen Freue; Zsuzsanna Hollander; G.B. John Mancini; Mayu Sasaki; Alice Mui; J. Wilson-McManus; Andrew Ignaszewski; C. Imai; Anna Meredith; Robert Balshaw; Raymond T. Ng; Paul Keown; W. Robert McMaster; Ron Carere; John G. Webb; Bruce M. McManus

BACKGROUND Coronary angiography remains the most widely used tool for routine screening and diagnosis of cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV), a major pathologic process that develops in 50% of cardiac transplant recipients beyond the first year after transplant. Given the invasiveness, expense, discomfort, and risk of complications associated with angiography, a minimally invasive alternative that is sensitive and specific would be highly desirable for monitoring CAV in patients. METHODS Plasma proteomic analysis using isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation-matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization double time-of-flight mass spectrometry was carried out on samples from 40 cardiac transplant patients (10 CAV, 9 non-significant CAV, 21 possible CAV). Presence of CAV was defined as left anterior descending artery diameter stenosis ≥ 40% by digital angiography and quantitatively measured by blinded expert appraisal. Moderated t-test robust-linear models for microarray data were used to identify biomarkers that are significantly differentially expressed between patient samples with CAV and with non-significant CAV. A proteomic panel for diagnosis of CAV was generated using the Elastic Net classification method. RESULTS We identified an 18-plasma protein biomarker classifier panel that was able to classify and differentiate patients with angiographically significant CAV from those without significant CAV, with an 80% sensitivity and 89% specificity, while providing insight into the possible underlying immune and non-alloimmune contributory mechanisms of CAV. CONCLUSION Our results support of the potential utility of proteomic biomarker panels as a minimally invasive means to identify patients with significant, angiographically detectable coronary artery stenosis in the cardiac allograft, in the context of post-cardiac transplantation monitoring and screening for CAV. The potential biologic significance of the biomarkers identified may also help improve our understanding of CAV pathophysiology.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2013

Predicting acute cardiac rejection from donor heart and pre-transplant recipient blood gene expression

Zsuzsanna Hollander; Virginia Chen; Keerat Sidhu; David Lin; Raymond T. Ng; Robert Balshaw; Gabriela Cohen-Freue; Andrew Ignaszewski; C. Imai; A. Kaan; Scott J. Tebbutt; J. Wilson-McManus; R. McMaster; Paul Keown; Bruce M. McManus

BACKGROUND Acute rejection in cardiac transplant patients remains a contributory factor to limited survival of implanted hearts. Currently, there are no biomarkers in clinical use that can predict, at the time of transplantation, the likelihood of post-transplant acute cellular rejection. Such a development would be of great value in personalizing immunosuppressive treatment. METHODS Recipient age, donor age, cold ischemic time, warm ischemic time, panel-reactive antibody, gender mismatch, blood type mismatch and human leukocyte antigens (HLA-A, -B and -DR) mismatch between recipients and donors were tested in 53 heart transplant patients for their power to predict post-transplant acute cellular rejection. Donor transplant biopsy and recipient pre-transplant blood were also examined for the presence of genomic biomarkers in 7 rejection and 11 non-rejection patients, using non-targeted data mining techniques. RESULTS The biomarker based on the 8 clinical variables had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.53. The pre-transplant recipient blood gene-based panel did not yield better performance, but the donor heart tissue gene-based panel had an AUC = 0.78. A combination of 25 probe sets from the transplant donor biopsy and 18 probe sets from the pre-transplant recipient whole blood had an AUC = 0.90. Biologic pathways implicated include VEGF- and EGFR-signaling, and MAPK. CONCLUSIONS Based on this study, the best predictive biomarker panel contains genes from recipient whole blood and donor myocardial tissue. This panel provides clinically relevant prediction power and, if validated, may personalize immunosuppressive treatment and rejection monitoring.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2004

Safety and Efficacy of Rosuvastatin Therapy for the Prevention of Hyperlipidemia in Adult Cardiac Transplant Recipients

A. Samman; C. Imai; Lynn Straatman; J. Frolich; K.H. Humphries; Andrew Ignaszewski


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2008

372: Genomic Biomarkers of Chronic Heart Allograft Rejection

G. Cohen Freue; C. Imai; Andrew Ignaszewski; G.B.J. Mancini; Zsuzsanna Hollander; J. Wilson-McManus; Robert Balshaw; Raymond T. Ng; R. McMaster; Paul Keown; Bruce M. McManus


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2016

Cytomegalovirus Infection after Cardiac Transplantation

O. Kiamanesh; A. Khosla; C. Imai; E. Johansson; Sean A. Virani; M. Davis; Anson Cheung; Jamil Bashir; B. Munt; Andrew Ignaszewski; A. Kaan; Mustafa Toma


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2010

149: Combinatorial Biomarkers of Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy

David Lin; G. Cohen Freue; Zsuzsanna Hollander; Mayu Sasaki; Nina Opushneva; C. Imai; Andrew Ignaszewski; Alice Mui; J. Wilson-McManus; Robert Balshaw; Raymond T. Ng; Paul Keown; R. McMaster; Bruce M. McManus


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

371: Mycophenolic Trough Levels and Adverse Effects in Heart Transplant Population

Lillian S. L. Ting; J. Haymond; Nilufar Partovi; C. Imai; Andrew Ignaszewski; Mary H. H. Ensom


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

474: Combinatorial Diagnostic Biomarkers of Acute Cardiac Allograft Rejection

Zsuzsanna Hollander; G. Cohen Freue; David Lin; Andrew Ignaszewski; C. Imai; A. Kaan; J. Wilson-McManus; Robert Balshaw; Raymond T. Ng; R. McMaster; Paul Keown; Bruce M. McManus


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2009

341: Proteomic Biomarkers of Chronic Heart Allograft Rejection

G. Cohen Freue; David Lin; C. Imai; Andrew Ignaszewski; J. Mancini; Zsuzsanna Hollander; Axel Bergman; Mayu Sasaki; J. Wilson-McManus; Robert Balshaw; Raymond T. Ng; Christoph H. Borchers; Paul Keown; Bruce M. McManus; R. McMaster

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Andrew Ignaszewski

University of British Columbia

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Bruce M. McManus

University of British Columbia

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J. Wilson-McManus

University of British Columbia

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Paul Keown

University of British Columbia

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Raymond T. Ng

University of British Columbia

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Robert Balshaw

BC Centre for Disease Control

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Zsuzsanna Hollander

University of British Columbia

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David Lin

University of British Columbia

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R. McMaster

University of British Columbia

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