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Dive into the research topics where Elliott Vichinsky is active.

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Featured researches published by Elliott Vichinsky.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1998

Prevention of a First Stroke by Transfusions in Children with Sickle Cell Anemia and Abnormal Results on Transcranial Doppler Ultrasonography

Robert J. Adams; Virgil C. McKie; Lewis L. Hsu; Files B; Elliott Vichinsky; Charles H. Pegelow; Miguel R. Abboud; Dianne Gallagher; Abdullah Kutlar; Fenwick T. Nichols; Duane Bonds; Donald Brambilla

BACKGROUND Blood transfusions prevent recurrent stroke in children with sickle cell anemia, but the value of transfusions in preventing a first stroke is unknown. We used transcranial Doppler ultrasonography to identify children with sickle cell anemia who were at high risk for stroke and then randomly assigned them to receive standard care or transfusions to prevent a first stroke. METHODS To enter the study, children with sickle cell anemia and no history of stroke had to have undergone two transcranial Doppler studies that showed that the time-averaged mean blood-flow velocity in the internal carotid or middle cerebral artery was 200 cm per second or higher. The patients were randomly assigned to receive standard care or transfusions to reduce the hemoglobin S concentration to less than 30 percent of the total hemoglobin concentration. The incidence of stroke (cerebral infarction or intracranial hemorrhage) was compared between the two groups. RESULTS A total of 130 children (mean [+/-SD] age, 8.3+/-3.3 years) were enrolled; 63 were randomly assigned to receive transfusions and 67 to receive standard care. At base line, the transfusion group had a slightly lower mean hemoglobin concentration (7.2 vs. 7.6 g per deciliter, P=0.001) and hematocrit (20.4 vs. 21.7 percent, P=0.002). Ten patients dropped out of the transfusion group, and two patients crossed over from the standard-care group to the transfusion group. There were 10 cerebral infarctions and 1 intracerebral hematoma in the standard-care group, as compared with 1 infarction in the transfusion group -- a 92 percent difference in the risk of stroke (P<0.001). This result led to the early termination of the trial. CONCLUSIONS Transfusion greatly reduces the risk of a first stroke in children with sickle cell anemia who have abnormal results on transcranial Doppler ultrasonography.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1986

Prophylaxis with oral penicillin in children with sickle cell anemia. A randomized trial

Marilyn H. Gaston; Joel Verter; Gerald M. Woods; Charles H. Pegelow; John Kelleher; Presbury G; Harold S. Zarkowsky; Elliott Vichinsky; Rathi V. Iyer; Jeffrey S. Lobel

Children with sickle cell anemia have an increased susceptibility to bacterial infections, especially to those caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. We therefore conducted a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial to test whether the regular, daily administration of oral penicillin would reduce the incidence of documented septicemia due to S.pneumoniae in children with sickle cell anemia who were under the age of three years at the time of entry. The children were randomly assigned to receive either 125 mg of penicillin V potassium (105 children) or placebo (110 children) twice daily. The trial was terminated 8 months early, after an average of 15 months of follow-up, when an 84 percent reduction in the incidence of infection was observed in the group treated with penicillin, as compared with the group given placebo (13 of 110 patients vs. 2 of 105; P = 0.0025), with no deaths from pneumococcal septicemia occurring in the penicillin group but three deaths from the infection occurring in the placebo group. On the basis of these results, we conclude that children should be screened in the neonatal period for sickle cell hemoglobinopathy and that those with sickle cell anemia should receive prophylactic therapy with oral penicillin by four months of age to decrease the morbidity and mortality associated with pneumococcal septicemia.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Alloimmunization in Sickle Cell Anemia and Transfusion of Racially Unmatched Blood

Elliott Vichinsky; Ann Earles; R. A. Johnson; M. S. Hoag; A. Williams; B. Lubin

Transfusion therapy for sickle cell anemia is limited by the development of antibodies to foreign red cells. To evaluate the frequency and risk factors associated with such alloimmunization, we determined the transfusion history, red-cell phenotype, and development of alloantibodies in 107 black patients with sickle cell anemia who received transfusions. We compared the results with those from similar studies in 51 black patients with sickle cell disease who had not received transfusions and in 19 nonblack patients who received transfusions for other forms of chronic anemia. We assessed the effect that racial differences might have on the frequency of alloimmunization by comparing the red-cell phenotypes of patients and blood-bank donors (n = 200, 90 percent white). Although they received transfusions less frequently, 30 percent of the patients with sickle cell anemia became alloimmunized, in contrast to 5 percent of the comparison-group patients with other forms of anemia (P less than 0.001). Of the 32 alloimmunized patients with sickle cell anemia, 17 had multiple antibodies and 14 had delayed transfusion reactions. Antibodies against the K, E, C, and Jkb antigens accounted for 82 percent of the alloantibodies. Comparison of red-cell phenotypes in the three study groups (the patients with sickle cell anemia, the patients with other forms of anemia, and the blood donors) revealed statistically significant differences between the patients with sickle cell anemia and the donors but not between the patients with other forms of anemia and the donors. These differences are most likely racial. We conclude that alloimmunization is a common, clinically serious problem in sickle cell anemia and that it is partly due to racial differences between the blood-donor and recipient populations.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1995

Risk of recurrent stroke in patients with sickle cell disease treated with erythrocyte transfusions

Charles H. Pegelow; Robert J. Adams; Virgil C. McKie; Miguel R. Abboud; Brian Berman; Scott T. Miller; Nancy F. Olivieri; Elliott Vichinsky; Winfred C. Wang; Donald Brambilla

OBJECTIVE To determine the effect of a transfusion program on risk of stroke recurrence in children with sickle cell disease. DESIGN The clinical course and experience with transfusion therapy at eight centers were reviewed for subjects whose initial stroke occurred after January 1988. RESULTS Sixty subjects were observed for 191.7 patient-years. Eight had a single recurrent stroke (two intracranial hemorrhages and six infarctions) for a prevalence of 13.3%, or one recurrence for each 24 patient-years of observation. Thirteen subjects had 15 transient neurologic events; two of these had subsequent strokes, but the overall risk was similar for those who did and those did not have transient events. Hemoglobin S levels were greater than the desired maximum of 30% at the time of 7 of 16 transient events and five of six recurrent infarctions. The stroke recurrence rate was similar to those in previous reports of children receiving long-term transfusion therapy but significantly less than that reported for children who did not receive transfusions (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS We conclude that maintenance of hemoglobin S at a level less than 30% appears to be effective in reducing the rate of recurrent infarction but does not prevent transient neurologic events. Transient neurologic events are common but do not appear to be related to recurrent stroke.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Pulmonary complications of sickle cell disease.

Mark T. Gladwin; Elliott Vichinsky

From the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine and the Hemostasis and Vascular Biology Research Institute, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, (M.T.G.); and Children’s Hospital and Research Center at Oakland, Oakland, CA (E.V.). Address reprint requests to Dr. Gladwin at the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, NW 168 Montefiore Hospital, 354 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, or at [email protected].


Transfusion | 2001

Prospective RBC phenotype matching in a stroke-prevention trial in sickle cell anemia: a multicenter transfusion trial

Elliott Vichinsky; Naomi L.C. Luban; Elizabeth C. Wright; Nancy F. Olivieri; Catherine Driscoll; Charles H. Pegelow; Robert J. Adams

BACKGROUND: Most sickle cell anemia patients undergo transfusion therapy to prevent complications. The Stroke Prevention Trial in Sickle Cell Anemia showed that transfusion therapy is effective in the primary prevention of stroke. Despite its efficacy, transfusion therapy is limited by alloimmunization. The purpose of this study was to determine if a multicenter trial could implement a transfusion program utilizing phenotypically matched blood to reduce alloimmunization.


British Journal of Haematology | 2007

A randomised comparison of deferasirox versus deferoxamine for the treatment of transfusional iron overload in sickle cell disease

Elliott Vichinsky; Onyinye Onyekwere; John B. Porter; Paul Swerdlow; James R. Eckman; Peter W Lane; Beatrice Files; Kathryn A Hassell; Patrick Kelly; Felicia Wilson; Françoise Bernaudin; Gian Luca Forni; Iheanyi Okpala; Catherine Ressayre-Djaffer; Daniele Alberti; Jaymes Holland; Peter W. Marks; Ellen B. Fung; Roland Fischer; Brigitta U. Mueller; Thomas D. Coates

Deferasirox is a once‐daily, oral iron chelator developed for treating transfusional iron overload. Preclinical studies indicated that the kidney was a potential target organ of toxicity. As patients with sickle cell disease often have abnormal baseline renal function, the primary objective of this randomised, open‐label, phase II trial was to evaluate the safety and tolerability of deferasirox in comparison with deferoxamine in this population. Assessment of efficacy, as measured by change in liver iron concentration (LIC) using biosusceptometry, was a secondary objective. A total of 195 adult and paediatric patients received deferasirox (n = 132) or deferoxamine (n = 63). Adverse events most commonly associated with deferasirox were mild, including transient nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain and skin rash. Abnormal laboratory studies with deferasirox were occasionally associated with mild non‐progressive increases in serum creatinine and reversible elevations in liver function tests. Discontinuation rates from deferasirox (11·4%) and deferoxamine (11·1%) were similar. Over 1 year, similar dose‐dependent LIC reductions were observed with deferasirox and deferoxamine. Once‐daily oral deferasirox has acceptable tolerability and appears to have similar efficacy to deferoxamine in reducing iron burden in transfused patients with sickle cell disease.


European Journal of Haematology | 2007

Relative response of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes and other transfusion-dependent anaemias to deferasirox (ICL670): a 1-yr prospective study

John B. Porter; Renzo Galanello; Giuseppe Saglio; Ellis J. Neufeld; Elliott Vichinsky; Maria Domenica Cappellini; Nancy F. Olivieri; Antonio Piga; Melody J. Cunningham; Denis Soulières; Norbert Gattermann; Gilbert Tchernia; Johan Maertens; Patricia J. Giardina; Janet L. Kwiatkowski; Giovanni Quarta; Michael Jeng; Gian Luca Forni; Michael Stadler; Holger Cario; Louise Debusscher; Matteo G. Della Porta; Mario Cazzola; Peter L. Greenberg; Giuliana Alimena; Bertrand Rabault; Insa Gathmann; John M. Ford; Daniele Alberti; Christian Rose

Objectives/methods:  This 1‐yr prospective phase II trial evaluated the efficacy of deferasirox in regularly transfused patients aged 3–81 yrs with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS; n = 47), Diamond–Blackfan anaemia (DBA; n = 30), other rare anaemias (n = 22) or β‐thalassaemia (n = 85). Dosage was determined by baseline liver iron concentration (LIC).


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1982

Concurrent sickle-cell anemia and α-thalassemia: effect on severity of anemia.

Stephen H. Embury; Andrée M. Dozy; Judy Z. Miller; Julian R. Davis; Klara Kleman; Haiganoush K. Preisler; Elliott Vichinsky; William N. Lande; Bertram H. Lubin; Yuet Wai Kan; William C. Mentzer

Abstract We studied 47 patients with sickle-cell anemia to determine the effect of α-thalassemia on the severity of their hemolytic anemia. We diagnosed α-thalassemia objectively by using α-globin-gene mapping to detect α-globin-gene deletions, studying 25 subjects with the normal four α-globin genes, 18 with three, and four with two. The mean hemoglobin, hematocrit, and absolute reticulocyte levels (±S.D.) were 7.9±0.9 g per deciliter (4.9±0.6 mmol per liter), 22.9±2.9 per cent, and 501,000±126,000 per cubic millimeter, respectively, in the non-thalassemic group; 9.8±1.6 g per deciliter (6.1±1.0 mmol per liter), 29.0±5.0 per cent, and 361,000±51,000 per cubic millimeter in the group with three α-globin genes; and 9.2±1.0 g per deciliter (5.7±0.6 mmol per liter), 27.5±3.0 per cent, and 100,000±15,000 per cubic millimeter in the group with two α-globin genes. Deletion of α-globin genes was also accompanied by a decreased mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) in post-reticulocyte erythrocytes and...


British Journal of Haematology | 2006

Oxidative stress and inflammation in iron‐overloaded patients with β‐thalassaemia or sickle cell disease

Patrick B. Walter; Ellen B. Fung; David W. Killilea; Qing Jiang; Mark Hudes; Jacqueline Madden; John B. Porter; Patricia Evans; Elliott Vichinsky; Paul Harmatz

Blood transfusion therapy is life‐saving for patients with β‐thalassaemia and sickle cell disease (SCD), but often results in severe iron overload. This pilot study examined whether the biomarkers of tissue injury or inflammation differ in these two diseases. Plasma malondialdehyde (MDA) was significantly increased 1·8‐fold in thalassaemia relative to control patients. In contrast, MDA in SCD was not significantly different from controls. In multivariate analysis, the strongest predictors of elevated MDA were liver iron concentration (P < 0·001) and specific diagnosis (P = 0·019). A significant 2‐fold elevation of non‐transferrin bound iron (NTBI) was observed in thalassaemia relative to SCD. NTBI was not a significant predictor of high MDA in multivariate analysis. SCD patients showed a significant 2·2‐fold elevation of the inflammatory marker interleukin (IL)‐6 relative to controls, and a 3·6‐ and 1·7‐fold increase in IL‐5 and IL‐10 relative to thalassaemia. Although α‐tocopherol was significantly decreased by at least 32% in both thalassaemia and SCD, indicating ongoing oxidant stress and antioxidant consumption, γ‐tocopherol, a nitric oxide‐selective antioxidant, was increased 36% in SCD relative to thalassaemia. These results demonstrate that thalassaemia patients have increased MDA and circulating NTBI relative to SCD patients and lower levels of some cytokines and γ‐tocopherol. This supports the hypothesis that the biology of SCD may show increased inflammation and increased levels of protective antioxidants compared with thalassaemia.

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Paul Harmatz

Children's Hospital Oakland

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Nancy F. Olivieri

Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute

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Janet L. Kwiatkowski

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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John B. Porter

University College London

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Frans A. Kuypers

Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute

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Lynne Neumayr

Boston Children's Hospital

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Sylvia T. Singer

Boston Children's Hospital

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Lori Styles

Boston Children's Hospital

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Claudia R. Morris

Boston Children's Hospital

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