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Dive into the research topics where Dawn Walter is active.

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Featured researches published by Dawn Walter.


Urology | 2013

National Trends in the Utilization of Partial Nephrectomy Before and After the Establishment of AUA Guidelines for the Management of Renal Masses

Marc A. Bjurlin; Dawn Walter; Glen B. Taksler; William C. Huang; James S. Wysock; Ganesh Sivarajan; Stacy Loeb; Samir S. Taneja; Danil V. Makarov

OBJECTIVE To assess the impact of the American Urological Association (AUA) guidelines advocating partial nephrectomy for T1 tumors guidelines on the likelihood of undergoing partial nephrectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS We analyzed the Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS), a dataset encompassing 20% of all United States inpatient hospitalizations, from 2007 through 2010. Our dependent variable was receipt of radical vs partial nephrectomy (55.50, 55.51, 55.52, and 55.54 vs 55.4) for a renal mass (International Classification of Disease, 9th Revision [ICD-9] code 189.0). The independent variable of interest was time of surgery (before or after the establishment of AUA guidelines); covariates included a diagnosis of chronic kidney disease (CKD), overall comorbidity, age, race, gender, geographic region, income, and hospital characteristics. Bivariate and multivariable adjusted logistic regression was used to determine the association between receipt of partial nephrectomy and time of guideline establishment. RESULTS We identified 26,165 patients with renal tumors who underwent surgery. Before the guidelines, 4031 patients (27%) underwent partial nephrectomy compared to 3559 (32%) after. On multivariable analysis, undergoing surgery after the establishment of guidelines (odds ratio [OR] 1.20, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.08-1.32, P <.01) was an independent predictor of partial nephrectomy. Other factors associated with partial nephrectomy were urban location, surgery at a teaching hospital, large hospital bed size, Northeast location, and Black race. Female gender and CKD were not associated with partial nephrectomy. CONCLUSION Although adoption of partial nephrectomy increased after establishment of new guidelines on renal masses, partial nephrectomy remains an underutilized procedure. Future research must focus on barriers to adoption of partial nephrectomy and how to overcome them.


The Journal of Urology | 2013

Surgical Decompression is Associated with Decreased Mortality in Patients with Sepsis and Ureteral Calculi

Michael S. Borofsky; Dawn Walter; Ojas Shah; David S. Goldfarb; Adam C. Mues; Danil V. Makarov

PURPOSE The combination of sepsis and ureteral calculus is a urological emergency. Traditional teaching advocates urgent decompression with nephrostomy tube or ureteral stent placement, although published outcomes validating this treatment are lacking. National practice patterns for such scenarios are currently undefined. Using a retrospective study design, we defined the surgical decompression rate in patients admitted to the hospital with severe infection and ureteral calculi. We determined whether a mortality benefit is associated with this intervention. MATERIALS AND METHODS Patient demographics and hospital characteristics were extracted from the 2007 to 2009 Nationwide Inpatient Sample. We identified 1,712 patients with ureteral calculi and sepsis. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to determine the association between mortality and surgical decompression. RESULTS Of the patients 78% underwent surgical decompression. Mortality was higher in those not treated with surgical decompression (19.2% vs 8.82%, p <0.001). Lack of surgical decompression was independently associated with an increased OR of mortality even when adjusting for patient demographics, comorbidities and geographic region of treatment (OR 2.6, 95% CI 1.9-3.7). CONCLUSIONS Absent surgical decompression is associated with higher odds of mortality in patients with sepsis and ureteral calculi. Further research to determine predictors of surgical decompression is necessary to ensure that all patients have access to this life saving therapy.


Medical Care | 2015

The Effect of the Diffusion of the Surgical Robot on the Hospital-level Utilization of Partial Nephrectomy.

Ganesh Sivarajan; Glen B. Taksler; Dawn Walter; Cary P. Gross; Raul E. Sosa; Danil V. Makarov

IntroductionThe rapid diffusion of the surgical robot has been controversial because of the technology’s high costs and its disputed marginal benefit. Some, however, have suggested that adoption of the robot may have improved care for patients with renal malignancy by facilitating partial nephrectomy, an underutilized, technically challenging procedure believed to be less morbid than radical nephrectomy. We sought to determine whether institutional acquisition of the robot was associated with increased utilization of partial nephrectomy. Methods:We used all payer data from 7 states to identify 21,569 nephrectomies. These patient-level records were aggregated to the hospital-level then merged with the American Hospital Association Annual Survey and publicly available data on timing of robot acquisition. We used a multivariable difference-in-difference model to assess at the hospital-level whether robot acquisition was associated with an increase in the proportion of partial nephrectomy, adjusting for hospital nephrectomy volume, year of surgery, and several additional hospital-level factors. Results:In the multivariable-adjusted differences-in-differences model, hospitals acquiring a robot between 2001 and 2004 performed a greater proportion of partial nephrectomy in both 2005 (29.9% increase) and 2008 (34.9% increase). Hospitals acquiring a robot between 2005 and 2008 also demonstrated a greater proportion of partial nephrectomy in 2008 (15.5% increase). In addition, hospital nephrectomy volume and urban location were also significantly associated with increased proportion of partial nephrectomy. Conclusions:Hospital acquisition of the surgical robot is associated with greater proportion of partial nephrectomy, an underutilized, guideline-encouraged procedure. This is one of the few studies to suggest robot acquisition is associated with improvement in quality of patient care.


The Journal of Urology | 2015

Institutional Characteristics Associated with Receipt of Emergency Care for Obstructive Pyelonephritis at Community Hospitals

Michael S. Borofsky; Dawn Walter; Huilin Li; Ojas Shah; David S. Goldfarb; R. Ernest Sosa; Danil V. Makarov

PURPOSE Delivering the recommended care is an important quality measure that has been insufficiently studied in urology. Obstructive pyelonephritis is a suitable case study for this focus because many patients do not receive such care, although guidelines advocate decompression. We determined the influence of hospital factors, particularly familiarity with urolithiasis, on the likelihood of decompression in such patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS We used the NIS from 2002 to 2011 to retrospectively identify patients admitted to community hospitals with severe infection and ureteral calculi. Hospital familiarity with nephrolithiasis was estimated by calculating hospital stone volume (divided into quartiles) and hospital treatment intensity (the decompression rate in patients with ureteral calculi and no infection). After calculating national estimates we performed logistic regression to determine the association between the receipt of decompression and hospital stone volume, controlling for treatment intensity and other covariates thought to be associated with receiving recommended care. RESULTS Of an estimated 107,848 patients with obstructive pyelonephritis 27.4% failed to undergo decompression. Discrepancies were greatest between hospitals with the highest and lowest stone volumes (76% vs 25%, OR 2.77, 95% CI 1.94-3.96, p <0.01) as well as high and low treatment intensity (78% vs 37%, p <0.01). CONCLUSIONS High hospital stone volume and treatment intensity were associated with an increased likelihood of receiving decompression. Such findings might be useful to identify hospitals and regions where access to quality urological care should be augmented.


JAMA Network Open | 2018

Association Between Guideline-Discordant Prostate Cancer Imaging Rates and Health Care Service Among Veterans and Medicare Recipients

Danil V. Makarov; Shannon Ciprut; Dawn Walter; Matthew Kelly; Heather T. Gold; Xiao-Hua Zhou; Scott E. Sherman; Ronald Scott Braithwaite; Cary P. Gross; Steven B. Zeliadt

This cohort study compares receipt of National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guideline–discordant prostate cancer imaging (radionuclide, CT, or MRI) to stage incident prostate cancer among men being treated in the Veterans Health Administration system vs those receiving Medicare-covered services vs a combination of the two.


Inquiry | 2018

New Breast Cancer Radiotherapy Technology Confers Higher Complications and Costs Before Effectiveness Proven: A Medicare Data Analysis

Heather T. Gold; Dawn Walter; Eleni A. Tousimis; Mary Katherine Hayes

A new breast cancer treatment, brachytherapy-based accelerated partial breast radiotherapy (RT), was adopted before long-term effectiveness evidence, potentially increasing morbidity and costs compared with whole breast RT. The aim of this study was to estimate complication rates and RT-specific and 1-year costs for a cohort of female Medicare beneficiaries diagnosed with breast cancer (N = 47 969). We analyzed 2005-2007 Medicare claims using multivariable logistic regression for complications and generalized linear models (log link, gamma distribution) for costs. Overall, 11% (n = 5296) underwent brachytherapy-based RT; 9.4% had complications. Odds of any complication were higher (odds ratio [OR]: 1.62; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.49-1.76) for brachytherapy versus whole breast RT, similarly to seroma (OR: 2.85; 95% CI: 1.97-4.13), wound complication/infection (OR: 1.72; 95% CI: 1.52-1.95), cellulitis (OR: 1.48; 95% CI: 1.27-1.73), and necrosis (OR: 2.07; 95% CI: 1.55-2.75). Mean RT-specific and 1-year total costs for whole breast RT were


BJUI | 2018

Crowdfunding for prostate cancer and breast cancer

Stacy Loeb; Sorab Taneja; Dawn Walter; Sarah Zweifach; Nataliya Byrne

6375, and


Urology Practice | 2017

Burden of Disease for Urethral Stricture Managed by Repeat Endoscopic Treatment versus Single Endoscopic Treatment or Urethroplasty in the Veterans Affairs Population

Temitope Rude; Kiranpreet Khurana; Yuka Yamaguchi; Dawn Walter; Danil V. Makarov; Lee C. Zhao

19 917,


The Journal of Urology | 2016

MP52-03 BURDEN OF DISEASE FOR URETHRAL STRICTURE MANAGED BY REPEAT ENDOSCOPIC TREATMENT VERSUS SINGLE ENDOSCOPIC TREATMENT OR URETHROPLASTY IN THE VETERANS AFFAIRS POPULATION

Kiranpreet Khurana; Yuka Yamaguchi; Dawn Walter; Danil V. Makarov; Lee C. Zhao

4886, and


The Journal of Urology | 2016

How Active is Active Surveillance? Intensity of Followup during Active Surveillance for Prostate Cancer in the United States

Stacy Loeb; Dawn Walter; Caitlin Curnyn; Heather T. Gold; Herbert Lepor; Danil V. Makarov

4803 lower than brachytherapy (P < .0001). Multivariable analyses indicated brachytherapy yielded 76% higher RT costs (risk ratio: 1.76; 95% CI: 1.74-1.78, P < .0001) compared with whole breast RT. Brachytherapy had higher complications and costs before long-term evidence proved its effectiveness. Policies should require treatment registries with reimbursement incentives to capture surveillance data for new technologies.

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