Gerard Vockley
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Gerard Vockley.
Genetics in Medicine | 2015
Brendan Lee; George A. Diaz; William J. Rhead; Uta Lichter-Konecki; Annette Feigenbaum; Susan A. Berry; Cindy Le Mons; J. Bartley; Nicola Longo; Sandesh C.S. Nagamani; William E. Berquist; Renata C. Gallagher; Dennis Bartholomew; Cary O. Harding; Mark S. Korson; Shawn E. McCandless; Wendy Smith; Stephen D. Cederbaum; Derek Wong; J. Lawrence Merritt; Andreas Schulze; Gerard Vockley; David Kronn; Roberto T. Zori; Marshall Summar; Douglas A. Milikien; Miguel Marino; Dion F. Coakley; Masoud Mokhtarani; Bruce F. Scharschmidt
Purpose:The aim of this study was to examine predictors of ammonia exposure and hyperammonemic crises in patients with urea cycle disorders.Methods:The relationships between fasting ammonia, daily ammonia exposure, and hyperammonemic crises were analyzed in >100 patients with urea cycle disorders.Results:Fasting ammonia correlated strongly with daily ammonia exposure (r = 0.764; P < 0.001). For patients with fasting ammonia concentrations <0.5 upper limit of normal (ULN), 0.5 to <1.0 ULN, and ≥1.0 ULN, the probability of a normal average daily ammonia value was 87, 60, and 39%, respectively, and 10.3, 14.1, and 37.0% of these patients, respectively, experienced ≥1 hyperammonemic crisis over 12 months. Time to first hyperammonemic crisis was shorter (P = 0.008) and relative risk (4.5×; P = 0.011) and rate (~5×, P = 0.006) of hyperammonemic crises were higher in patients with fasting ammonia ≥1.0 ULN vs. <0.5ULN; relative risk was even greater (20×; P = 0.009) in patients ≥6 years old. A 10- or 25-µmol/l increase in ammonia exposure increased the relative risk of a hyperammonemic crisis by 50 and >200% (P < 0.0001), respectively. The relationship between ammonia and hyperammonemic crisis risk seemed to be independent of treatment, age, urea cycle disorder subtype, dietary protein intake, or blood urea nitrogen. Fasting glutamine correlated weakly with daily ammonia exposure assessed as 24-hour area under the curve and was not a significant predictor of hyperammonemic crisis.Conclusion:Fasting ammonia correlates strongly and positively with daily ammonia exposure and with the risk and rate of hyperammonemic crises, suggesting that patients with urea cycle disorder may benefit from tight ammonia control.Genet Med 17 7, 561–568.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009
Michael E. Talkowski; Lora McClain; Trina B. Allen; L. DiAnne Bradford; Monica E. Calkins; Neil B. Edwards; Lyudmila Georgieva; Rodney C.P. Go; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur; George Kirov; Kodavali V. Chowdari; Joseph Kwentus; Paul D. Lyons; Hader Mansour; Joseph P. McEvoy; Michael Conlon O'Donovan; Judith R. O'Jile; Michael John Owen; Alberto B. Santos; Robert M. Savage; Draga Toncheva; Gerard Vockley; Joel Wood; Bernie Devlin; Vishwajit L. Nimgaonkar
Recessive mutations in the phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) gene predispose to phenylketonuria (PKU) in conjunction with dietary exposure to phenylalanine. Previous studies have suggested PAH variations could confer risk for schizophrenia, but comprehensive follow‐up has not been reported. We analyzed 15 common PAH “tag” SNPs and three exonic variations that are rare in Caucasians but common in African‐Americans among four independent samples (total n = 5,414). The samples included two US Caucasian cohorts (260 trios, 230 independent cases, 474 controls), Bulgarian families (659 trios), and an African‐American sample (464 families, 401 controls). Analyses of both US Caucasian samples revealed associations with five SNPs; most notably the common allele (G) of rs1522305 from case–control analyses (z = 2.99, P = 0.006). This SNP was independently replicated in the Bulgarian cohort (z = 2.39, P = 0.015). A non‐significant trend was also observed among African‐American families (z = 1.39, P = 0.165), and combined analyses of all four samples were significant (rs1522305: χ2 = 23.28, 8 d.f., P = 0.003). Results for rs1522305 met our a priori criteria for statistical significance, namely an association that was robust to multiple testing correction in one sample, a replicated risk allele in multiple samples, and combined analyses that were nominally significant. Case–control results in African‐Americans detected an association with L321L (P = 0.047, OR = 1.46). Our analyses suggest several associations at PAH, with consistent evidence for rs1522305. Further analyses, including additional variations and environmental influences such as phenylalanine exposure are warranted.
Journal of Hepatology | 2017
Kyle Soltys; Kentaro Setoyama; Edgar Tafaleng; Alejandro Soto Gutiérrez; Jason V. Fong; Ken Fukumitsu; Taichiro Nishikawa; Masaki Nagaya; Rachel Sada; Kimberly Haberman; Roberto Gramignoli; Kenneth Dorko; Veysel Tahan; Alexandra Dreyzin; Kevin M. Baskin; John J. Crowley; Mubina Quader; Melvin Deutsch; Chethan Ashokkumar; Benjamin L. Shneider; Robert H. Squires; Sarangarajan Ranganathan; Miguel Reyes-Múgica; Steven F. Dobrowolski; George V. Mazariegos; Rajavel Elango; Donna B. Stolz; Stephen C. Strom; Gerard Vockley; Jayanta Roy-Chowdhury
BACKGROUND & AIMS Hepatocyte transplantation partially corrects genetic disorders and has been associated anecdotally with reversal of acute liver failure. Monitoring for graft function and rejection has been difficult, and has contributed to limited graft survival. Here we aimed to use preparative liver-directed radiation therapy, and continuous monitoring for possible rejection in an attempt to overcome these limitations. METHODS Preparative hepatic irradiation was examined in non-human primates as a strategy to improve engraftment of donor hepatocytes, and was then applied in human subjects. T cell immune monitoring was also examined in human subjects to assess adequacy of immunosuppression. RESULTS Porcine hepatocyte transplants engrafted and expanded to comprise up to 15% of irradiated segments in immunosuppressed monkeys preconditioned with 10Gy liver-directed irradiation. Two patients with urea cycle deficiencies had early graft loss following hepatocyte transplantation; retrospective immune monitoring suggested the need for additional immunosuppression. Preparative radiation, anti-lymphocyte induction, and frequent immune monitoring were instituted for hepatocyte transplantation in a 27year old female with classical phenylketonuria. Post-transplant liver biopsies demonstrated multiple small clusters of transplanted cells, multiple mitoses, and Ki67+ hepatocytes. Mean peripheral blood phenylalanine (PHE) level fell from pre-transplant levels of 1343±48μM (normal 30-119μM) to 854±25μM (treatment goal ≤360μM) after transplant (36% decrease; p<0.0001), despite transplantation of only half the target number of donor hepatocytes. PHE levels remained below 900μM during supervised follow-up, but graft loss occurred after follow-up became inconsistent. CONCLUSIONS Radiation preconditioning and serial rejection risk assessment may produce better engraftment and long-term survival of transplanted hepatocytes. Hepatocyte xenografts engraft for a period of months in non-human primates and may provide effective therapy for patients with acute liver failure. LAY SUMMARY Hepatocyte transplantation can potentially be used to treat genetic liver disorders but its application in clinical practice has been impeded by inefficient hepatocyte engraftment and the inability to monitor rejection of transplanted liver cells. In this study, we first show in non-human primates that pretreatment of the host liver with radiation improves the engraftment of transplanted liver cells. We then used this knowledge in a series of clinical hepatocyte transplants in patients with genetic liver disorders to show that radiation pretreatment and rejection risk monitoring are safe and, if optimized, could improve engraftment and long-term survival of transplanted hepatocytes in patients.
WMJ : official publication of the State Medical Society of Wisconsin | 2007
van Calcar Sc; Gleason La; Lindh H; Gary L. Hoffman; William J. Rhead; Gerard Vockley; Jon A. Wolff; Maureen S. Durkin
Archive | 2013
Al-Walid Mohsen Mohamed; Gerard Vockley
Archive | 2018
Al-Walid Mohsen; Gerard Vockley
Journal of Hepatology | 2018
Patrick McKiernan; J.E. Squires; Robert H. Squires; Gerard Vockley; George V. Mazariegos; Q. Sun; Kyle Soltys; A. Ganoza; Rakesh Sindhi
Archive | 2017
Al-Walid Mohsen; Gerard Vockley; Yudong Wang; Peter Wipf
Archive | 2017
Gerard Vockley; Al-Walid Mohsen
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2017
Thomas J. Zimmer; Lisa Pan; Lora McClain; Anna Maria Segreti; David A. Brent; Gerard Vockley; David G. Peters; David N. Finegold