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Dive into the research topics where Deborah L. Williams is active.

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Featured researches published by Deborah L. Williams.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1999

The REMATCH trial: rationale, design, and end points

Eric A. Rose; Alan J. Moskowitz; Milton Packer; Josephine A. Sollano; Deborah L. Williams; Anita Tierney; Daniel F. Heitjan; Paul Meier; Deborah D. Ascheim; Ronald G. Levitan; Alan D. Weinberg; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Peter A Shapiro; Ronald M. Lazar; John T. Watson; Daniel J. Goldstein; Annetine C. Gelijns

BACKGROUND Because left ventricular assist devices have recently been approved by the Food and Drug Administration to support the circulation of patients with end-stage heart failure awaiting cardiac transplantation, these devices are increasingly being considered as a potential alternative to biologic cardiac replacement. The Randomized Evaluation of Mechanical Assistance for the Treatment of Congestive Heart Failure (REMATCH) trial is a multicenter study supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to compare long-term implantation of left ventricular assist devices with optimal medical management for patients with end-stage heart failure who require, but do not qualify to receive cardiac transplantation. METHODS We discuss the rationale for conducting REMATCH, the obstacles to designing this and other randomized surgical trials, the lessons learned in conducting the multicenter pilot study, and the features of the REMATCH study design (objectives, target population, treatments, end points, analysis, and trial organization). CONCLUSIONS We consider what will be learned from REMATCH, expectations for expanding the use of left ventricular assist devices, and future directions for assessing clinical procedures.


Transplantation | 1995

Psychosocial evaluation and prediction of compliance problems and morbidity after heart transplantation.

Peter A. Shapiro; Deborah L. Williams; Ann T. Foray; Ilene S. Gelman; Nicholas Wukich; Robert R. Sciacca

We examined prospectively determined psychosocial evaluation data in 125 consecutive adult patients undergoing heart transplantation from January 1992 to April 1994 to determine their associations with morbidity, mortality, and compliance. Prospective ratings included age, sex, weight, education, social support, living arrangements, motivation, knowledge and expectations about transplantation, intercurrent social stressors, substance abuse, personality disorder, cognitive impairment, other psychiatric disorders, and the evaluating psychiatrists global assessment of psychosocial risk. Additional variables evaluated were support group attendance and waiting list time. We examined outcomes including patient survival, compliance, episodes of rejection and infection, development of transplant coronary artery disease, number of missed appointments, and maintenance of ideal body weight. The posttransplant follow-up period was 13.8 +/- 9.9 months (mean +/- SD). In univariate analyses, compliance problems were associated with substance abuse history (P = .0007), personality disorder (P = .007), living arrangements (P = .02), and global psychosocial risk (P = .001). The number of rejection episodes was associated with global psychosocial risk (P = .029), and transplant coronary artery disease was inversely associated with education (P = .01). Survival was not associated with any of the predictor variables. In stepwise multivariate analyses, the significant predictors of compliance were substance abuse (odds ratio 3.69, confidence limits 1.07-12.71) and global psychosocial risk (odds ratio 3.76, confidence intervals 1.18-11.97). These findings suggest that pretransplant evaluation of psychosocial risk factors can identify patients with increased risk of postoperative noncompliance and morbidity.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2000

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome: Valuing the survival

Deborah L. Williams; Annetine C. Gelijns; Alan J. Moskowitz; Alan D. Weinberg; Judy H. Ng; Emily Crawford; Constance J. Hayes; Jan M. Quaegebeur

OBJECTIVE To examine the survival, developmental status, quality of life, and direct medical costs of children with hypoplastic left heart syndrome who have undergone stage I, II, and III reconstructive surgery. METHODS A total of 106 children underwent staged repair for classic hypoplastic left heart syndrome between February 1990 and March 1999 (stage I: 106; stage II: 49; stage III: 25; 4 converted to heart transplantation). Survival was analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method. In a cross-sectional study, parents assessed quality of life by completing the Infant/Toddler Child Health Questionnaire or Child Health Questionnaire Parent Format-28; they assessed developmental progress by completing the Ages and Stages Questionnaire. The ratio-of-costs-to-charges method was used to derive hospital costs, and payments were used to capture physician time and wholesale pricing for outpatient medications. RESULTS Institutional 1-year and 5-year actuarial survivals were 58% and 54%. Birth weight, the need for preoperative inotropic drugs, and surgical experience were predictors of survival. Norwood I patients achieved fewer developmental benchmarks than those who survived to subsequent stages. Child Health Questionnaire Parent Format-28 mean summary scores for physical and psychosocial health were 48.5 +/- 6.3 and 42.8 +/- 9.9. The median inpatient costs for stage I, II, and III repairs were


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1996

Outpatient Left Ventricular Assist Device Support: A Destination Rather Than a Bridge

Katharine A. Catanese; Daniel J. Goldstein; Deborah L. Williams; Ann T. Foray; Christopher D. Illick; Michael Gardocki; Alan D. Weinberg; Howard R. Levin; Eric A. Rose; Mehmet C. Oz

51,000,


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Rate Control versus Rhythm Control for Atrial Fibrillation after Cardiac Surgery.

A. Marc Gillinov; Emilia Bagiella; Alan J. Moskowitz; Jesse M. Raiten; Mark A. Groh; Michael E. Bowdish; Gorav Ailawadi; Katherine A. Kirkwood; Louis P. Perrault; Michael K. Parides; Robert L. Smith; John A. Kern; Gladys Dussault; Amy E. Hackmann; Neal Jeffries; Marissa A. Miller; Wendy C. Taddei-Peters; Eric A. Rose; Richard D. Weisel; Deborah L. Williams; Ralph F. Mangusan; Michael Argenziano; Ellen Moquete; Karen L. O’Sullivan; Michel Pellerin; Kinjal J. Shah; James S. Gammie; Mary Lou Mayer; Pierre Voisine; Annetine C. Gelijns

33,892, and


Annals of Surgery | 1998

Cost-effectiveness of coronary artery bypass surgery in octogenarians.

Josephine A. Sollano; Eric A. Rose; Deborah L. Williams; Barbara Thornton; Eva Quint; Mark Apfelbaum; Hal S. Wasserman; Gregory A. Cannavale; Craig R. Smith; Keith Reemtsma; Richard J. Greene

52,183, respectively. Monthly outpatient and readmission costs were less than 10% of total costs. CONCLUSION A prospective, large-scale study of the comprehensive outcomes of staged repair and transplantation is needed. This study will need to address the longer-term developmental and quality-of-life outcomes, as well as the long-term cost effectiveness of these procedures.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1995

De novo solid malignancies after cardiac transplantation.

Daniel J. Goldstein; Deborah L. Williams; Mehmet C. Oz; Alan D. Weinberg; Eric A. Rose; Robert E. Michler

BACKGROUND To evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of outpatient left ventricular assist devices as a bridge to transplantation, we reviewed the initial clinical experience with this modality at our institution. METHODS During January 1993 to November 1995, 12 male and 2 female patients with an average age of 47 +/- 17 years were supported for an average of 117 +/- 24 days with the Thermo Cardiosystems VE wearable left ventricular assist device. Seven patients were discharged home an average of 35 +/- 4 days after implantation. RESULTS No device failures occurred, although 29 controller malfunctions were identified during 1,640 total support days. All patients were able to safely maintain their devices. Outflow graft bleeding and driveline infection were responsible for two readmissions. No long-term anticoagulation treatment was used; one small thromboembolic episode occurred, but without significant long-term sequelae. CONCLUSIONS None of the 7 patients released from the hospital died, and all were able to successfully maintain their devices at home. Hospital discharge of patients supported with left ventricular assist devices has allowed long-term evaluation of this technology, and the findings should prompt study of their use as a long-term alternative treatment to medical management for congestive heart failure.


Transplantation | 1996

Carcinoma of the lung after heart transplantation

Daniel J. Goldstein; John H. M. Austin; Nancy Zuech; Deborah L. Williams; Marc Stoopler; Robert E. Michler; Larry L. Schulman

BACKGROUND Atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery is associated with increased rates of death, complications, and hospitalizations. In patients with postoperative atrial fibrillation who are in stable condition, the best initial treatment strategy--heart-rate control or rhythm control--remains controversial. METHODS Patients with new-onset postoperative atrial fibrillation were randomly assigned to undergo either rate control or rhythm control. The primary end point was the total number of days of hospitalization within 60 days after randomization, as assessed by the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. RESULTS Postoperative atrial fibrillation occurred in 695 of the 2109 patients (33.0%) who were enrolled preoperatively; of these patients, 523 underwent randomization. The total numbers of hospital days in the rate-control group and the rhythm-control group were similar (median, 5.1 days and 5.0 days, respectively; P=0.76). There were no significant between-group differences in the rates of death (P=0.64) or overall serious adverse events (24.8 per 100 patient-months in the rate-control group and 26.4 per 100 patient-months in the rhythm-control group, P=0.61), including thromboembolic and bleeding events. About 25% of the patients in each group deviated from the assigned therapy, mainly because of drug ineffectiveness (in the rate-control group) or amiodarone side effects or adverse drug reactions (in the rhythm-control group). At 60 days, 93.8% of the patients in the rate-control group and 97.9% of those in the rhythm-control group had had a stable heart rhythm without atrial fibrillation for the previous 30 days (P=0.02), and 84.2% and 86.9%, respectively, had been free from atrial fibrillation from discharge to 60 days (P=0.41). CONCLUSIONS Strategies for rate control and rhythm control to treat postoperative atrial fibrillation were associated with equal numbers of days of hospitalization, similar complication rates, and similarly low rates of persistent atrial fibrillation 60 days after onset. Neither treatment strategy showed a net clinical advantage over the other. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02132767.).


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1997

Evolving Costs of Long-Term Left Ventricular Assist Device Implantation

Annetine C. Gelijns; Alexandra F. Richards; Deborah L. Williams; Mehmet C. Oz; Jason Oliveira; Alan J. Moskowitz

OBJECTIVE The objective of this retrospective cohort study was to determine whether coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is effective and cost-effective relative to medical management of coronary artery disease (CAD) in the elderly. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA The aging of the U.S population and the improvements in surgical techniques have resulted in increasing numbers of elderly patients who undergo this surgery. The three randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) that established the efficacy of CABG surgery completed patient enrollment from 19 to 24 years ago excluded patients older than 65 years. Although information regarding outcomes of CABG in this population is mainly available in case series, a major lacuna exists with respect to information on quality of life and cost effectiveness of surgery as compared with medical management. METHODS The authors retrospectively formed surgical and medically managed cohorts of octogenarians with significant multivessel CAD. More than 600 medical records of patients older than 80 years who underwent angiography at our institution were reviewed to identify 48 patients who were considered reasonable surgical candidates but had not undergone surgery. This cohort was compared with 176 patients who underwent surgery. RESULTS The cost per quality-adjusted life year saved was


Diabetes Care | 2016

Diabetes and the Association of Postoperative Hyperglycemia With Clinical and Economic Outcomes in Cardiac Surgery

Giampaolo Greco; Bart S. Ferket; David A. D’Alessandro; Wei Shi; Keith A. Horvath; Alexander Rosen; Stacey Welsh; Emilia Bagiella; Alexis E. Neill; Deborah L. Williams; Ann Greenberg; Jeffrey N. Browndyke; A. Marc Gillinov; Mary Lou Mayer; Jessica Keim-Malpass; Lopa Gupta; Samuel F. Hohmann; Annetine C. Gelijns; Patrick T. O'Gara; Alan J. Moskowitz

10,424. At 3 years, survival in the surgical group was 80% as compared with 64% in the entire medical cohort and 50% in a smaller subset of the medical cohort. Quality of life in patients who underwent surgery was measurably better than that of the medical cohort with utility index scores, as measured by the EuroQoL, (a seven-item quality of life questionnaire) of 0.84, 0.61, and 0.74, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Performing CABG surgery in octogenarians is highly cost-effective. The quality of life of the elderly who elect to undergo CABG surgery is greater than that of their cohorts and equal to that of an average 55-year-old person in the general population.

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Alan J. Moskowitz

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Annetine C. Gelijns

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Eric A. Rose

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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A. Marc Gillinov

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Daniel J. Goldstein

Newark Beth Israel Medical Center

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Emilia Bagiella

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Giampaolo Greco

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Mary Lou Mayer

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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