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Dive into the research topics where Helen Healy is active.

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Featured researches published by Helen Healy.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2004

Effects of Early and Late Intervention with Epoetin α on Left Ventricular Mass among Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease (Stage 3 or 4): Results of a Randomized Clinical Trial

Simon D. Roger; Lawrence P. McMahon; Anthony R. Clarkson; Alexander Patrick Suffe Disney; David C.H. Harris; Carmel M. Hawley; Helen Healy; Peter G. Kerr; Kelvin L. Lynn; Alan Parnham; Roess Pascoe; David Voss; Robert J. Walker; Adeera Levin

It is not known whether prevention of anemia among patients with chronic kidney disease would affect the development or progression of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy. A randomized controlled trial was performed with 155 patients with chronic kidney disease (creatinine clearance, 15 to 50 ml/min), with entry hemoglobin concentrations ([Hb]) of 110 to 120 g/L (female patients) or 110 to 130 g/L (male patients). Patients were monitored for 2 yr or until they required dialysis; the patients were randomized to receive epoetin alpha as necessary to maintain [Hb] between 120 and 130 g/L (group A) or between 90 and 100 g/L (group B). [Hb] increased for group A (from 112 +/- 9 to 121 +/- 14 g/L, mean +/- SD) and decreased for group B (from 112 +/- 8 to 108 +/- 13 g/L) (P < 0.001, group A versus group B). On an intent-to-treat analysis, the changes in LV mass index for the groups during the 2-yr period were not significantly different (2.5 +/- 20 g/m(2) for group A versus 4.5 +/- 20 g/m(2) for group B, P = NS). There was no significant difference between the groups in 2-yr mean unadjusted systolic BP (141 +/- 14 versus 138 +/- 13 mmHg) or diastolic BP (80 +/- 6 versus 79 +/- 7 mmHg). The decline in renal function in 2 yr, as assessed with nuclear estimations of GFR, also did not differ significantly between the groups (8 +/- 9 versus 6 +/- 8 ml/min per 1.73 m(2)). In conclusion, maintenance of [Hb] above 120 g/L, compared with 90 to 100 g/L, had similar effects on the LV mass index and did not clearly affect the development or progression of LV hypertrophy. The maintenance of [Hb] above 100 g/L for many patients in group B might have been attributable to the relative preservation of renal function.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005

Superiority of Icodextrin Compared with 4.25% Dextrose for Peritoneal Ultrafiltration

Frederick O. Finkelstein; Helen Healy; Ali K. Abu-Alfa; Suhail Ahmad; Fiona Brown; Todd W.B. Gehr; Kevin Nash; Michael Sorkin; Salim Mujais

Several clinical observations suggest the superiority of icodextrin compared with 4.25% dextrose in optimizing peritoneal ultrafiltration (UF), but no rigorous controlled evaluation has hitherto been performed. For comparing icodextrin and 4.25% dextrose during the long dwell of automated peritoneal dialysis, a multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial was conducted in 92 patients (control, 45; icodextrin, 47) with 4-h dialysate to plasma ratio creatinine >0.70 and D/D(0) glucose <0.34. Long-dwell net UF and the UF efficiency ratio (net UF volume per gram of dialysate carbohydrate absorbed) were determined at baseline, week 1, and week 2. The control and treatment groups were comparable at baseline (all patients using 4.25% dextrose for the long dwell) with regard to mean (+/-SEM) net UF (201.7 +/- 103.1 versus 141.6 +/- 75.4 ml, respectively; P = 0.637) and the percentage of patients with negative net UF (control, 37.8%; treatment, 42.6%; P = 0.641). During the study period, net UF was unchanged from baseline in the control group but increased significantly (P < 0.001) in the icodextrin group from 141.6 +/- 75.4 to 505.8 +/- 46.8 ml at week 1 and 540.2 +/- 46.8 ml at week 2. In the icodextrin group, the incidence of negative net UF was significantly lower (P < 0.0001) than in the control group. Findings were similar for UF efficiency ratio. Rash was reported significantly more often in the icodextrin group. This study showed that in high-average and high transporters, icodextrin is superior to 4.25% dextrose for long-dwell fluid and solute removal.


Kidney International | 2014

Taming the chronic kidney disease epidemic: a global view of surveillance efforts

Jai Radhakrishnan; Giuseppe Remuzzi; Rajiv Saran; Desmond E. Williams; Nilka Rios-Burrows; Neil R. Powe; Katharina Brück; Christoph Wanner; Vianda S. Stel; S. K. Venuthurupalli; Wendy E. Hoy; Helen Healy; A. Salisbury; Robert G. Fassett; Donal J. O'Donoghue; Paul Roderick; Seiichi Matsuo; Akira Hishida; Enyu Imai; Satoshi Iimuro

Chronic kidney disease is now recognized to be a worldwide problem associated with significant morbidity and mortality and there is a steep increase in the number of patients reaching end-stage renal disease. In many parts of the world, the disease affects younger people without diabetes or hypertension. The costs to family and society can be enormous. Early recognition of CKD may help prevent disease progression and the subsequent decline in health and longevity. Surveillance programs for early CKD detection are beginning to be implemented in a few countries. In this article, we will focus on the challenges and successes of these programs with the hope that their eventual and widespread use will reduce the complications, deaths, disabilities, and economic burdens associated with CKD worldwide.


Atherosclerosis | 1997

Oxidation of low density lipoprotein in hemodialysis patients: effect of dialysis and comparison with matched controls

Justin Westhuyzen; David Saltissi; Helen Healy

End stage renal failure is associated with lipoprotein abnormalities and a high prevalence of premature atherosclerosis. Oxidative modification of low density lipoprotein (LDL) may be promoted by hemodialysis increasing its atherogenicity. The oxidative status of LDL was therefore examined in female subjects before and after routine hemodialysis (HD; n = 10) and compared with women of similar age without significant renal disease (n = 19). There were no significant differences between the groups in the LDL fatty acid composition, or in the content of reactive amino acid groups (lysine) before or after exposure to Cu2+. The kinetics of LDL oxidation by Cu2+ showed no significant differences between the groups with respect to the lag time, the level of conjugated dienes before and after oxidation, or the maximal rate of oxidation during the propagation phase. No acute effects of HD were demonstrated. The present study provides no evidence that circulating LDL isolated from HD patients is more extensively modified or more susceptible to oxidation in vitro than gender-matched controls without renal failure.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2011

The emerging role of nuclear factor kappa B in renal cell carcinoma

Christudas Morais; Glenda C. Gobe; David W. Johnson; Helen Healy

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC), the commonest type of kidney cancer, is a highly metastatic and the deadliest of all urologic cancers. Despite the development of many novel chemotherapeutics in recent years, metastatic RCC remains an incurable and lethal disease. The imperative for the identification of novel molecular targets and more effective therapeutics for metastatic RCC remain. One promising target is the transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB). NF-κB is unique in the sense that it regulates all important aspects of RCC biology that pose challenge to conventional therapy - resistance to apoptosis, angiogenesis and multi-drug resistance. Aberrations in the von Hippel Lindau gene (VHL) are the most important risk factor for the development of RCC, especially the clear cell type, which constitutes 70-80% of RCC. VHL is a negative regulator of NF-κB. In the absence of a functional VHL, the expression and activity of NF-κB are enhanced, which subsequently confer drug resistance and promote epithelial-mesenchymal-transition of RCC. This review provides an overview of RCC, its molecular mechanisms, the role of NF-κB in carcinomas including RCC, and the rationale for NF-κB as a target molecule.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2013

Increased tubulointerstitial recruitment of human CD141hi CLEC9A+ and CD1c+ myeloid dendritic cell subsets in renal fibrosis and chronic kidney disease

Andrew J. Kassianos; Xiangju Wang; Sandeep Sampangi; Kimberly A. Muczynski; Helen Healy; Ray Wilkinson

Dendritic cells (DCs) play critical roles in immune-mediated kidney diseases. Little is known, however, about DC subsets in human chronic kidney disease, with previous studies restricted to a limited set of pathologies and to using immunohistochemical methods. In this study, we developed novel protocols for extracting renal DC subsets from diseased human kidneys and identified, enumerated, and phenotyped them by multicolor flow cytometry. We detected significantly greater numbers of total DCs as well as CD141(hi) and CD1c(+) myeloid DC (mDCs) subsets in diseased biopsies with interstitial fibrosis than diseased biopsies without fibrosis or healthy kidney tissue. In contrast, plasmacytoid DC numbers were significantly higher in the fibrotic group compared with healthy tissue only. Numbers of all DC subsets correlated with loss of kidney function, recorded as estimated glomerular filtration rate. CD141(hi) DCs expressed C-type lectin domain family 9 member A (CLEC9A), whereas the majority of CD1c(+) DCs lacked the expression of CD1a and DC-specific ICAM-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN), suggesting these mDC subsets may be circulating CD141(hi) and CD1c(+) blood DCs infiltrating kidney tissue. Our analysis revealed CLEC9A(+) and CD1c(+) cells were restricted to the tubulointerstitium. Notably, DC expression of the costimulatory and maturation molecule CD86 was significantly increased in both diseased cohorts compared with healthy tissue. Transforming growth factor-β levels in dissociated tissue supernatants were significantly elevated in diseased biopsies with fibrosis compared with nonfibrotic biopsies, with mDCs identified as a major source of this profibrotic cytokine. Collectively, our data indicate that activated mDC subsets, likely recruited into the tubulointerstitium, are positioned to play a role in the development of fibrosis and, thus, progression to chronic kidney disease.


BMC Nephrology | 2008

Astaxanthin vs placebo on arterial stiffness, oxidative stress and inflammation in renal transplant patients (Xanthin): a randomised controlled trial.

Robert G. Fassett; Helen Healy; Ritza Driver; Ik Robertson; Dp Geraghty; James E. Sharman; Jeff S. Coombes

BackgroundThere is evidence that renal transplant recipients have accelerated atherosclerosis manifest by increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The high incidence of atherosclerosis is, in part, related to increased arterial stiffness, vascular dysfunction, elevated oxidative stress and inflammation associated with immunosuppressive therapy. The dietary supplement astaxanthin has shown promise as an antioxidant and anti-inflammatory therapeutic agent in cardiovascular disease. The aim of this trial is to investigate the effects of astaxanthin supplementation on arterial stiffness, oxidative stress and inflammation in renal transplant patients.Method and DesignThis is a randomised, placebo controlled clinical trial. A total of 66 renal transplant recipients will be enrolled and allocated to receive either 12 mg/day of astaxanthin or an identical placebo for one-year. Patients will be stratified into four groups according to the type of immunosuppressant therapy they receive: 1) cyclosporine, 2) sirolimus, 3) tacrolimus or 4) prednisolone+/-azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil or mycophenolate sodium. Primary outcome measures will be changes in 1) arterial stiffness measured by aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV), 2) oxidative stress assessed by plasma isoprostanes and 3) inflammation by plasma pentraxin 3. Secondary outcomes will include changes in vascular function assessed using the brachial artery reactivity (BAR) technique, carotid artery intimal medial thickness (CIMT), augmentation index (AIx), left ventricular afterload and additional measures of oxidative stress and inflammation. Patients will undergo these measures at baseline, six and 12 months.DiscussionThe results of this study will help determine the efficacy of astaxanthin on vascular structure, oxidative stress and inflammation in renal transplant patients. This may lead to a larger intervention trial assessing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.Trial RegistrationACTRN12608000159358


Nephrology | 2013

ANZSN Renal Supportive Care Guidelines 2013

Mark A. Brown; Susan M. Crail; Rosemary Masterson; Celine Foote; Jennifer Robins; Ivor Katz; Elizabeth Josland; Frank Brennan; Elizabeth J Stallworthy; Brian Siva; Cathy Miller; A Katalin Urban; Cherian Sajiv; R Naida Glavish; Steven May; Robyn Langham; Robert J. Walker; Robert G. Fassett; Rachael L. Morton; Cameron Stewart; Lisa Phipps; Helen Healy; Ilse Berquier

• Nephrologists seek to provide dialysis to those who will benefit most while being honest and direct with those who are unlikely to benefit or even be harmed by dialysis; these can be difficult decisions. • A ‘conservative’ or ‘not for dialysis’ pathway is an important option for the management of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) patients who are elderly, have significant comorbidity, poor functional status, malnutrition or who reside in a nursing home. • Such a pathway is best underpinned by a specific renal supportive care programme in each unit. • Nephrologists need to lead realistic discussions about likely survival with patients and their families before dialysis is instituted. • Key ethics principles are a good aid in this decision-making process • A ‘non-dialysis’ renal supportive care programme is a very positive way of offering holistic care for patients and their families; many of these patients live much longer without dialysis than might have been expected. Perhaps the most difficult decision facing nephrologists today is that of ‘selecting’ which patients will benefit from dialysis in an overall person-centred sense, not just in terms of days survived or achievement of target haemoglobin, Phosphate, Kt/V or other outcomes. The overall aim is to help and direct patients and their families so as to encourage those who will benefit most from dialysis to have this while being honest and direct with those who are unlikely to benefit or even be harmed by dialysis. Consequently it is imperative that we have mechanisms in place that support those who do not receive dialysis in such a way that they have good symptom control and quality of life (QOL). While the discussions below apply to every potential dialysis patient regardless of age, in practice most ‘younger’ patients (below 70) are likely to be offered dialysis; these considerations below become far more relevant for discussions with patients who are over 70 years old with stage 4 or 5 end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). We are therefore looking at three potential pathways for patients with ESKD: 1 Not for dialysis or transplantation – a clear decision based on medicalandethicalgroundsincorporatingthepatient’swishes. 2 For dialysis or transplantation. 3 Indeterminate – that group for whom the treating nephrologist and the patient are unable to come to a clear decision. For people in this group, seeking a second opinion and ideally, discussing the case at a multidisciplinary team meeting (similar to those discussions surrounding acceptance onto the transplant waiting list) are paths to follow. A very important principle is that these planning discussions need to take place early in the course of a patient’s management, probably when estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR) reaches 25 mL/min. There are some key principles that can help nephrologists, patients and their families make these decisions: 1 Nephrologists need to lead these discussions – these are very difficult discussions but it is imperative that as nephrologists we do not shy away from them as this is to the ultimate detriment of the patient and their family. In some centres it may be that nephrologists do not see the same patients regularly and the temptation here will be either to use dialysis as the default choice for all patients or else to leave these discussions to other medical or nursing staff. It is inappropriate for these discussions to be delegated to more junior medical staff but advanced trainees and Junior Medical Officers (JMOs) should be present as part of their training. Initial discussions are generally best if done with the nephrologist and his/her medical team, and then followed by more detailed discussions with nursing staff and allied health staff. Ideally a renal supportive care (RSC) programme team will help facilitate these ongoing discussions with a patient and their family when a conservative not-for-dialysis pathway is chosen and a pre-dialysis team will assist those for whom dialysis is considered the correct management pathway. Many nephrologists have already made it part of their usual practice to offer a ‘non-dialysis’ pathway to selected patients but many are also understandably troubled when making such decisions. This issue has become more prominent because of the increasing number of aged patients with comorbidities, frailty, or poor functional status who present with end stage kidney disease, for whom decisions need be made as to the appropriateness of dialysis. 2 Nephrologists need to have realistic discussions about likely patient survival on dialysis – data are available from Australian and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Association (ANZDATA) to guide this. We need to be aware that these discussions are likely to be aimed at frail, ‘marginal’ patients of any age although most of the available data deal specifically with those over the age of 75 years: a. Current data show that patients starting dialysis in the 75–84 years age group, presumably already selected to some extent by their nephrologists as suitable bs_bs_banner


International Journal of Nephrology | 2011

Calcific uremic arteriolopathy in peritoneal dialysis populations.

Nicholas New; Janaki Mohandas; George T. John; Sharad Ratanjee; Helen Healy; Leo Francis; Dwarakanathan Ranganathan

Calciphylaxis or calcific uremic arteriolopathy is an infrequent complication of end stage kidney disease. It is characterized by arteriolar medial calcification, thrombotic cutaneous ischemia, tissue necrosis often leading to ulceration, secondary infection and increased mortality rates. Current, multimodality treatment involves local wound care, well-controlled calcium, phosphate and parathyroid hormone levels and combination therapy with sodium thiosulfate and hyperbaric oxygen therapy. This combination therapy may be changing the historically poor prognosis of calcific uremic arteriolopathy reported in the literature. Peritoneal dialysis is considered a risk factor based on limited publications, however this remains to be proven. Clinical presentation, diagnosis, pathogenesis and treatment of calcific uremic arteriolopathy in these patients are no different from other patients manifesting with this condition.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2012

CKD.QLD: chronic kidney disease surveillance and research in Queensland, Australia

S. K. Venuthurupalli; Wendy E. Hoy; Helen Healy; A. Salisbury; Robert G. Fassett

Background Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is recognized as a major public health problem in Australia with significant mortality, morbidity and economic burden. However, there is no comprehensive surveillance programme to collect, collate and analyse data on CKD in a systematic way. Methods We describe an initiative called CKD Queensland (CKD.QLD), which was established in 2009 to address this deficiency, and outline the processes and progress made to date. The foundation is a CKD Registry of all CKD patients attending public health renal services in Queensland, and patient recruitment and data capture have started. Results We have established through early work of CKD.QLD that there are over 11 500 CKD patients attending public renal services in Queensland, and these are the target population for our registry. Progress so far includes conducting two CKD clinic site surveys, consenting over 3000 patients into the registry and initiation of baseline data analysis of the first 600 patients enrolled at the Royal Brisbane and Womens Hospital (RBWH) site. In addition, research studies in dietary intake and CKD outcomes and in models of care in CKD patient management are underway. Conclusions Through the CKD Registry, we will define the distribution of CKD patients referred to renal practices in the public system in Queensland by region, remoteness, age, gender, ethnicity and socioeconomic status. We will define the clinical characteristics of those patients, and the CKD associations, stages, co-morbidities and current management. We will follow the course and outcomes in individuals over time, as well as group trends over time. Through our activities and outcomes, we are aiming to provide a nidus for other states in Australia to join in a national CKD registry and network.

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Dive into the Helen Healy's collaboration.

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Wendy E. Hoy

University of Queensland

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Z. Wang

University of Queensland

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A. Mallett

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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Ray Wilkinson

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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Xiangju Wang

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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Andrew J. Kassianos

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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A. Cameron

University of Queensland

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A. Kark

Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital

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