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Featured researches published by Carol A. Mancuso.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2006

Impact of Health Literacy on Longitudinal Asthma Outcomes

Carol A. Mancuso; Melina Rincon

BACKGROUND: The impact of health literacy on longitudinal asthma outcomes is not known.OBJECTIVES: To measure the association between health literacy and asthma outcomes and to assess how health literacy affects outcomes through covariates.DESIGN: Longitudinal cohort.PATIENTS: One hundred and seventy-five adult asthma patients.MEASUREMENTS: Independent variables measured at enrollment included demographic and asthma characteristics, depressive symptoms, self-efficacy, and asthma knowledge. Health literacy was measured with the Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults. Outcomes were Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire and SF-36 scores and emergency department utilization for asthma measured every 3 to 6 months for 2 years. The effects of health literacy on outcomes and interactions between health literacy and covariates were measured with multivariable models.RESULTS: The mean age of study participants was 42 years, and 83% were women. Less health literacy was associated with worse quality of life, worse physical function, and more emergency department utilization for asthma over 2 years (P ≤.05 for all comparisons). In multivariable analysis, health literacy did not remain statistically significant with any of the outcomes. Although the magnitude of its effect on emergency department utilization remained relatively intact, its effects on quality of life and functional status became attenuated with the sequential addition of covariates, particularly asthma knowledge.CONCLUSIONS: Less health literacy was associated with poor longitudinal asthma outcomes. This relationship was both direct and indirect through effects on other independent variables, particularly patients’ knowledge of asthma and self-management. Efforts to improve asthma outcomes should focus on improving literacy skills that are required to learn, understand, and implement effective self-management.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 1996

Indications for total hip and total knee arthroplasties. Results of orthopaedic surveys.

Carol A. Mancuso; Chitranjan S. Ranawat; John M. Esdaile; Norman A. Johanson; Mary E. Charlson

A lack of consensus regarding the indications for total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) has been cited as one reason for the variations in the rates of THA and TKA across the United States. The purposes of this study were to survey orthopaedists in a specific geographic area (New York City) regarding the candidacy of patients with osteoarthritis for THA or TKA and to compare indications for THA between orthopaedists at two academic medical centers, The Hospital for Special Surgery in the United States and McGill University in Canada. Orthopaedists were sent mail surveys asking about indications, factors affecting outcomes, and factors that might modify decisions for surgery. Approximately 45% of orthopaedists who performed THA and TKA in New York City in 1992 completed the surveys. Although there were wide variations among surgeons, most surgeons required at least severe pain daily, rest pain several days per week, transfer pain either several days per week (THA) or daily (TKA), and destruction of most of the joint space on radiograph. Younger age, comorbidity, technical difficulties, and lack of motivation modified the decision against surgery, whereas the desire to be independent and return to work swayed the decision for surgery. Most surgeons rated that patients with severe pain, osteoarthritis, or rheumatoid arthritis would have a high likelihood of an excellent outcome, whereas those with comorbidity and certain technical factors would have only a moderate likelihood of an excellent outcome. In the U.S.-Canadian survey of THA, in which more than 90% of surgeons responded, Canadian surgeons tended to require more frequent pain and use of assistive devices for walking. Although there was a majority of opinion for several indications, there was no clear consensus among surgeons regarding the indications for THA and TKA. Possible explanations for this are that isolated indications are not as important as integrating and weighing several indications and that the patients desire to proceed with THA or TKA is an important driving force in the decision to operate.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2000

Effects of Depressive Symptoms on Health‐Related Quality of Life in Asthma Patients

Carol A. Mancuso; Margaret Peterson; Mary E. Charlson

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of depressive symptoms on asthma patients’ reports of functional status and health-related quality of life.DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.SETTING: Primary care internal medicine practice at a tertiary care center in New York City.PATIENTS: We studied 230 outpatients between the ages of 18 and 62 years with moderate asthma.MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Patients were interviewed in person in English or Spanish with two health-related quality-of-life measures, the disease-specific Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ) (possible score range, 1 to 7; higher scores reflect better function) and the generic Medical Outcomes Study SF-36 (general population mean is 50 for both the Physical Component Summary [PCS] score and Mental Component Summary [MCS] score). Patients also completed a screen for depressive symptoms, the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), and a global question regarding current disease activity. Stepwise multivariate analyses were conducted with the AQLQ and SF-36 scores as the dependent variables and depressive symptoms, comorbidity, asthma, and demographic characteristics as independent variables. The mean age of patients was 41 ± SD 11 years and 83% were women. The mean GDS score was 11 ± SD 8 (possible range, 0 to 30; higher scores reflect more depressive symptoms), and a large percentage of patients, 45%, scored above the threshold considered positive for depression screening. Compared with patients with a negative screen for depressive symptoms, patients with a positive screen had worse composite AQLQ scores (3.9±SD 1.3 vs 2.8±SD 0.8, P<.0001) and worse PCS scores (40±SD 11 vs 34±SD 8, P<.0001) and worse MCS scores (48±SD 11 vs 32±SD 10, P<.0001) scores. In stepwise analyses, current asthma activity and GDS scores had the greatest effects on patient-reported health-related quality of life, accounting for 36% and 11% of the variance, respectively, for the composite AQLQ, and 11% and 38% of the variance, respectively, for the MCS in multivariate analyses.CONCLUSIONS: Nearly half of asthma patients in this study had a positive screen for depressive symptoms. Asthma patients with more depressive symptoms reported worse health-related quality of life than asthma patients with similar disease activity but fewer depressive symptoms. Given the new emphasis on functional status and health-related quality of life measured by disease-specific and general health scales, we conclude that psychological status indicators should also be considered when patient-derived measures are used to assess outcomes in asthma.


Annals of Surgery | 2013

Identifying important predictors for anastomotic leak after colon and rectal resection: prospective study on 616 patients.

Koianka Trencheva; Kevin P. Morrissey; Martin T. Wells; Carol A. Mancuso; Sang W. Lee; Toyooki Sonoda; Fabrizio Michelassi; Mary E. Charlson; Jeffrey W. Milsom

Objective:The purpose of this study was to identify patient, clinical, and surgical factors that may predispose patients to anastomotic leak (AL) after large bowel surgery. Background:Anastomotic leak is still one of the most devastating complications following colorectal surgery. Knowledge about factors predisposing patients to AL is vital to its early detection, decision making for surgical time, managing preoperative risk factors, and postoperative complications. Methods:This was a prospective observational, quality improvement study in a cohort of 616 patients undergoing colorectal resection in a single institution with the main outcome being AL within 30 days postoperatively. Some of the predictor variables were age, sex, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), radiation and chemotherapy, immunomodulator medications, albumin, preoperative diagnoses, surgical procedure(s), surgical technique (laparoscopic vs open), anastomotic technique (staple vs handsewn), number of major arteries ligated at surgery, surgeons experience, presence of infectious condition at surgery, intraoperative adverse events, and functional status using 36-Item Short Form General Health Survey. Results:Of the 616 patients, 53.4% were female. The median age of the patients was 63 years and the mean body mass index was 25.9 kg/m2. Of them, 80.3% patients had laparoscopic surgery and 19.5% had open surgery. AL occurred in 5.7% (35) patients. In multivariate analysis, significant independent predictors for leak were anastomoses less than 10 cm from the anal verge, CCI of 3 or more, high inferior mesenteric artery ligation (above left colic artery), intraoperative complications, and being of the male sex. Conclusions:Multiple risk factors exist that predispose patients to ALs. These risk factors should be considered before and during the surgical care of colorectal patients.


Anesthesiology | 1999

Randomized Trial of Hypotensive Epidural Anesthesia in Older Adults

Pamela Williams-Russo; Nigel E. Sharrock; Steven Mattis; Gregory A. Liguori; Carol A. Mancuso; Margaret G. E. Peterson; James P. Hollenberg; Chitranjan S. Ranawat; Eduardo A. Salvati; Thomas P. Sculco

BACKGROUND Data are sparse on the incidence of postoperative cognitive, cardiac, and renal complications after deliberate hypotensive anesthesia in elderly patients. METHODS This randomized, controlled clinical trial included 235 older adults with comorbid medical illnesses undergoing elective primary total hip replacement with epidural anesthesia. The patients were randomly assigned to one of two levels of intraoperative mean arterial blood pressure management: either to a markedly hypotensive mean arterial blood pressure range of 45-55 mmHg or to a less hypotensive range of 55-70 mmHg. Cognitive outcome was assessed by within-patient change on 10 neuropsychologic tests assessing memory, psychomotor, and language skills from before surgery to 1 week and 4 months after surgery. Prospective standardized surveillance was performed for cardiovascular and renal outcomes, delirium, thromboembolism, and blood loss and replacement. RESULTS The two groups were similar at baseline in terms of age (mean, 72 yr), sex (50% women), comorbid conditions, and cognitive function. After operation, no significant differences in the incidence of early or long-term cognitive dysfunction were observed between the two blood pressure management groups. There were no significant differences in the rates of other adverse consequences, including cardiac, renal, and thromboembolic complications. In addition, no differences occurred in the duration of surgery, intraoperative estimated blood loss, or transfusion rates. CONCLUSIONS Elderly patients can safely receive controlled hypotensive epidural anesthesia with this protocol. There was no evidence of greater risks, or early benefits, with the use of the more markedly hypotensive range.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2003

Development and evaluation of a medication adherence self-efficacy scale in hypertensive African-American patients

Gbenga Ogedegbe; Carol A. Mancuso; John P. Allegrante; Mary E. Charlson

Self-efficacy, a known predictor of a wide range of health behaviors, has not been investigated in studies of adherence to antihypertensive medications. A medication adherence self-efficacy scale was developed and evaluated in ambulatory hypertensive African-American patients in two sequential phases. For the item-generation phase, open-ended interviews with 106 patients were used to elicit their experiences with taking antihypertensive medications. Using qualitative techniques, responses were recorded verbatim, coded, and sorted into nine categories of barriers and facilitators of medication adherence. Concepts from categories were formatted into an initial 43-item self-efficacy questionnaire, which was administered to another group of 72 patients for the item analyses phase. Twenty-six items were retained for the final self-efficacy scale based on item-to-total correlation coefficient >0.5, kappa >0.4, and clinical relevance of individual items. Clinicians and researchers can use this scale to identify situations in which patients have low self-efficacy in adhering to prescribed medications.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2009

Fulfillment of Patients' Expectations for Total Hip Arthroplasty

Carol A. Mancuso; Jennifer Jout; Eduardo A. Salvati; Thomas P. Sculco

BACKGROUND Fulfillment of patient expectations is an important outcome of total hip arthroplasty. The objective of the present study was to determine the proportion of expectations that were fulfilled following total hip arthroplasty as well as how the fulfillment of expectations relates to patient and clinical characteristics. METHODS Preoperatively, patients completed the Hospital for Special Surgery Hip Replacement Expectations Survey, measuring physical and psychological expectations, and the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Lower Limb Core Scale, measuring symptoms and function. Approximately four years after surgery, patients were interviewed by telephone and were asked whether each expectation that they had cited preoperatively had been fulfilled. RESULTS Four hundred and five patients were interviewed. The mean age of the patients was sixty-six years, and 58% of the patients were women. Forty-three percent of the patients reported that all of their expectations had been fulfilled completely. For the entire sample, the mean proportion of expectations that had been fulfilled completely was 87%. Patients who were younger, who were employed, who had a body mass index of <35 kg/m(2), who did not have complications, who did not have a postoperative limp, and who had better preoperative and postoperative Lower Limb Core scores had a greater proportion of expectations fulfilled (p <or= 0.05). CONCLUSIONS A better postoperative Lower Limb Core score was most closely associated with the fulfillment of expectations following total hip arthroplasty. Not having a postoperative limp was independent of the postoperative Lower Limb Core score, indicating that the impact of a limp is greater than its manifestation as a physical disability. Better preoperative status also was an independent predictor, indicating that patient expectations are more likely to be fulfilled if the patient is not the most severely impaired at the time of surgery.


Medical Care | 2001

Self-efficacy, depressive symptoms, and patients' expectations predict outcomes in asthma.

Carol A. Mancuso; Melina Rincon; Charles E. McCulloch; Mary E. Charlson

Background.Certain psychosocial variables are relatively unexplored as possible predictors of asthma outcomes. Objective. To determine if asthma self-efficacy, depressive symptoms, and unrealistic expectations predict urgent care use and change in health-related quality of life measured by the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire and the SF-36 during 2 years. Research Design. Prospective cohort study in a primary care internal medicine practice at a tertiary care center in New York City. Patients. Adults with moderate asthma who were fluent in either English or Spanish. Measurements. At enrollment patients were interviewed in-person and completed a series of questionnaires including the Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (AQLQ), the SF-36, the Asthma Self-efficacy Scale, the Geriatric Depression Scale, and open-ended questions regarding their expectations of treatment. Patients also completed the AQLQ and SF-36 at various time intervals throughout the study and were interviewed by telephone every 3 months to record recent hospitalizations, emergency department visits and nonroutine office visits for asthma. Results. A total of 224 patients were followed for a mean of 23.8 months. In hierarchical analysis, independent predictors of lower AQLQ scores were less self-efficacy, more depressive symptoms, expecting to be cured of asthma, requiring methylxanthines, being Hispanic or black, and having difficult or very difficult access to asthma care (all at P <0.05). Similar predictors were found for lower SF-36 scores. Another outcome, use of urgent care, was required by 60% of patients during the study period. Predictors of using urgent care were having more depressive symptoms, expecting a cure, being female, requiring oral &bgr;-agonists, and having a history of prior hospitalizations for asthma (all at P <0.05). Conclusions. Less asthma self-efficacy, more depressive symptoms, and unrealistic expectations predict worse asthma outcomes. These relatively unexplored patient-centered variables in asthma are potentially modifiable and may offer new ways to intervene to improve asthma outcomes.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 1992

Geographic variations in the rates of elective total hip and knee arthroplasties among Medicare beneficiaries in the United States.

Margaret Peterson; James P. Hollenberg; T P Szatrowski; N A Johanson; Carol A. Mancuso; Mary E. Charlson

We analyzed the variations in the rates of elective total hip and total knee arthroplasties for 1988 in the United States to determine whether the rates correlated with the numbers of surgeons. There were 56,204 total hip arthroplasties and 68,491 total knee arthroplasties, performed in the home states of the patients among all of the Medicare beneficiaries. Medicare beneficiaries include most people who are more than sixty-five years old in the United States and a small proportion of younger people who are eligible for Medicare for other reasons. Seventy-nine per cent of the patients who had had a total hip arthroplasty and 89 per cent of those who had had a total knee arthroplasty had been managed with the operation because of osteoarthrosis. Both operations were most common in the seventy to seventy-four-year age-group. We calculated the rate of operations per 100 beneficiaries for each state and age-adjusted the results. Across all of the states, bilateral procedures constituted 1.6 per cent of the total hip arthroplasties and 4.8 per cent of the total knee arthroplasties. The in-hospital rates of mortality were 0.72 per cent for total hip arthroplasties and 0.45 per cent for total knee arthroplasties. The destinations after discharge from the hospital were similar for the two groups of patients, with more than 65 per cent of the patients being discharged directly to their homes. There were no significant differences among states in terms of the length of stay in the hospital or reimbursement of the hospital.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism | 2010

Anakinra's Efficacy is Variable in Refractory Gout: Report of Ten Cases

Kun Chen; Theodore R. Fields; Carol A. Mancuso; Anne R. Bass; Lisa Vasanth

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the efficacy of anakinra for patients with acute gout. METHODS We reviewed the charts of 10 patients who received anakinra for urate crystal-induced arthritis at the Hospital for Special Surgery since 2007. Demographic information, comorbidities, short-term treatment outcomes, and subsequent flares were reviewed. RESULTS Patients in our study had a high prevalence of comorbidities. All patients received corticosteroids before anakinra treatment. The mean number of anakinra injections was 3.2 per patient (100 mg subcutaneously per day). Six patients had a good response. Three patients had a partial response and 1 patient had no response. Nine patients had documented recurrent flares after discontinuing anakinra (ranging from 3 to 45 days after). CONCLUSION Anakinra is a therapeutic option for patients with acute urate crystal-induced arthritis who do not respond to or have a contraindication to traditional treatments. Although a short course of anakinra resulted in favorable outcomes for some of our patients, response rates were poorer in our study than in previously published reports, and relapses were common.

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Federico P. Girardi

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Roland Duculan

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Alexander P. Hughes

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Andrew A. Sama

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Frank P. Cammisa

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Darren R. Lebl

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Laura Robbins

Hospital for Special Surgery

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