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Dive into the research topics where HoChong Gilles is active.

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Featured researches published by HoChong Gilles.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2011

The Multi-Dimensional Burden of Cirrhosis and Hepatic Encephalopathy on Patients and Caregivers

Jasmohan S. Bajaj; James B. Wade; Douglas P. Gibson; Douglas M. Heuman; Leroy R. Thacker; Richard K. Sterling; R. Todd Stravitz; Velimir A. Luketic; Michael Fuchs; Melanie B. White; Debulon E. Bell; HoChong Gilles; Katherine Morton; Nicole A. Noble; Puneet Puri; Arun J. Sanyal

OBJECTIVES:Cirrhosis and hepatic encephalopathy (HE) can adversely affect survival, but their effect on socioeconomic and emotional burden on the family is not clear. The aim was to study the emotional and socioeconomic burden of cirrhosis and HE on patients and informal caregivers.METHODS:A cross-sectional study in two transplant centers (Veterans and University) of cirrhotic patients and their informal caregivers was performed. Demographics for patient/caregivers, model-for-end-stage liver disease (MELD) score, and cirrhosis complications were recorded. Patients underwent a cognitive battery, sociodemographic, and financial questionnaires. Caregivers were given the perceived caregiver burden (PCB; maximum=155) and Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI)-Short Form (maximum=48) and questionnaires for depression, anxiety, and social support.RESULTS:A total of 104 cirrhotics (70% men, 44% previous HE, median MELD 12, 49% veterans) and their caregivers (66% women, 77% married, relationship duration 32±14 years) were included. Cirrhosis severely impacted the family unit with respect to work (only 56% employed), finances, and adherence. Those with previous HE had worse unemployment (87.5 vs. 19%, P=0.0001) and financial status (85 vs. 61%, P=0.019) and posed a higher caregiver burden; PCB (75 vs. 65, P=0.019) and ZBI (16 vs. 11, P=0.015) compared with others. Cognitive performance and MELD score were significantly correlated with employment and caregiver burden. Veterans and non-veterans were equally affected. On regression, depression score, MELD, and cognitive tests predicted both PCB and ZBI score.CONCLUSIONS:Previous HE and cognitive dysfunction are associated with worse employment, financial status, and caregiver burden. Cirrhosis-related expenses impact the family units daily functioning and medical adherence. A multidisciplinary approach to address this burden is required.


Liver Transplantation | 2007

MELD-XI: A rational approach to “sickest first” liver transplantation in cirrhotic patients requiring anticoagulant therapy

Douglas M. Heuman; Anastasios A. Mihas; Adil Habib; HoChong Gilles; R. Todd Stravitz; Arun J. Sanyal; Robert A. Fisher

Priority for “sickest first” liver transplantation (LT) in the United States is determined by the model for end‐stage liver disease (MELD). MELD is a good predictor of short‐term mortality in cirrhosis, but it can overestimate risk when international normalized ratio (INR) is artificially elevated by anticoagulation. An alternate prognostic index omitting INR is needed in this situation. We retrospectively analyzed survival data for 554 cirrhotic veterans referred for consideration of LT prior to December 1, 2003 (training group). Using logistic regression we derived a predictive formula for 90‐day pretransplant mortality incorporating bilirubin and creatinine but omitting INR. We normalized this formula to the same scale as MELD using linear regression. This yielded MELD‐XI (for MELD excluding INR) = 5.11 Ln(bilirubin) + 11.76 Ln(creatinine) + 9.44. Accuracy of MELD‐XI was validated in a holdout group of 278 cirrhotic veterans referred after December 1, 2003, and in an independent validation dataset of 7,203 cirrhotic adults listed for LT in the United States between May 1, 2001, and October 31, 2001. MELD‐XI and MELD correlated well in training, holdout, and independent validation cohorts (r = 0.930, 0.954, and 0.902, respectively). In the holdout cohort, c‐statistics of MELD vs. MELD‐XI for mortality were, respectively, 0.939 vs. 0.906 at 30 days;0.860 vs. 0.841 at 60 days; 0.842 vs. 0.829 at 90 days; and 0.795 vs. 0.797 at 180 days. In the independent validation dataset, c‐statistics for MELD vs. MELD‐XI as predictors of 90‐day survival were, respectively, 0.857 vs. 0.843 in noncholestatic liver diseases and 0.905 vs. 0.894 in cholestatic liver diseases. Comparable MELD and MELD‐XI scores were associated with comparable prognosis. In conclusion, MELD‐XI, despite omission of INR, is nearly as accurate as MELD in predicting short‐term survival in cirrhosis. In patients treated with oral anticoagulants, substitution of MELD‐XI for MELD may permit more accurate assessment of risk and more rational assignment of “sickest first” priority for LT. Liver Transpl, 2007.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2014

Covert Hepatic Encephalopathy Is Independently Associated With Poor Survival and Increased Risk of Hospitalization

Kavish R. Patidar; Leroy R. Thacker; James B. Wade; Richard K. Sterling; Arun J. Sanyal; Mohammad S. Siddiqui; Scott Matherly; R. Todd Stravitz; Puneet Puri; Velimir A. Luketic; Michael Fuchs; Melanie B. White; Nicole A. Noble; Ariel Unser; HoChong Gilles; Douglas M. Heuman; Jasmohan S. Bajaj

OBJECTIVES:Despite the high prevalence of covert hepatic encephalopathy (CHE) in cirrhotics without previous overt HE (OHE), its independent impact on predicting clinically relevant outcomes is unclear. The aim of this study was to define the impact of CHE on time to OHE, hospitalization, and death/transplant in prospectively followed up patients without previous OHE.METHODS:Outpatient cirrhotics without OHE were enrolled and were administered a standard paper–pencil cognitive battery for CHE diagnosis. They were systematically followed up and time to first OHE development, hospitalization (liver-related/unrelated), and transplant/death were compared between CHE and no-CHE patients at baseline using Cox regression.RESULTS:A total of 170 cirrhotic patients (55 years, 58% men, 14 years of education, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD 9), 53% hepatitis C virus (HCV), 20% nonalcoholic etiology) were included, of whom 56% had CHE. The entire population was followed up for 13.0±14.6 months, during which time 30% developed their first OHE episode, 42% were hospitalized, and 19% had a composite death/transplant outcome. Age, gender, etiology, the MELD score, and CHE status were included in Cox regression models for time to first OHE episode, hospitalization, death, and composite death/transplant outcomes. On Cox regression, despite controlling for MELD, those with CHE had a higher risk of developing OHE (hazard ratio: 2.1, 95% confidence interval 1.01–4.5), hospitalization (hazard ratio: 2.5, 95% confidence interval 1.4–4.5), and death/transplant (hazard ratio: 3.4, 95% confidence interval 1.2–9.7) in the follow-up period.CONCLUSIONS:Covert HE is associated with worsened survival and increased risk of hospitalization and OHE development, despite controlling for the MELD score. Strategies to detect and treat CHE may improve these risks.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2010

Predictors of the recurrence of hepatic encephalopathy in lactulose-treated patients

Jasmohan S. Bajaj; Arun J. Sanyal; Debulon E. Bell; HoChong Gilles; Douglas M. Heuman

Aliment Pharmacol Ther 31, 1012–1017


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2015

Validation of EncephalApp, Smartphone-Based Stroop Test, for the Diagnosis of Covert Hepatic Encephalopathy

Jasmohan S. Bajaj; Douglas M. Heuman; Richard K. Sterling; Arun J. Sanyal; Muhammad S. Siddiqui; Scott Matherly; Velimir A. Luketic; R. Todd Stravitz; Michael Fuchs; Leroy R. Thacker; HoChong Gilles; Melanie B. White; Ariel Unser; James Hovermale; Edith A. Gavis; Nicole A. Noble; James B. Wade

BACKGROUND & AIMS Detection of covert hepatic encephalopathy (CHE) is difficult, but point-of-care testing could increase rates of diagnosis. We aimed to validate the ability of the smartphone app EncephalApp, a streamlined version of Stroop App, to detect CHE. We evaluated face validity, test-retest reliability, and external validity. METHODS Patients with cirrhosis (n = 167; 38% with overt HE [OHE]; mean age, 55 years; mean Model for End-Stage Liver Disease score, 12) and controls (n = 114) were each given a paper and pencil cognitive battery (standard) along with EncephalApp. EncephalApp has Off and On states; results measured were OffTime, OnTime, OffTime+OnTime, and number of runs required to complete 5 off and on runs. Thirty-six patients with cirrhosis underwent driving simulation tests, and EncephalApp results were correlated with results. Test-retest reliability was analyzed in a subgroup of patients. The test was performed before and after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt placement, and before and after correction for hyponatremia, to determine external validity. RESULTS All patients with cirrhosis performed worse on paper and pencil and EncephalApp tests than controls. Patients with cirrhosis and OHE performed worse than those without OHE. Age-dependent EncephalApp cutoffs (younger or older than 45 years) were set. An OffTime+OnTime value of >190 seconds identified all patients with CHE with an area under the receiver operator characteristic value of 0.91; the area under the receiver operator characteristic value was 0.88 for diagnosis of CHE in those without OHE. EncephalApp times correlated with crashes and illegal turns in driving simulation tests. Test-retest reliability was high (intraclass coefficient, 0.83) among 30 patients retested 1-3 months apart. OffTime+OnTime increased significantly (206 vs 255 seconds, P = .007) among 10 patients retested 33 ± 7 days after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt placement. OffTime+OnTime decreased significantly (242 vs 225 seconds, P = .03) in 7 patients tested before and after correction for hyponatremia (126 ± 3 to 132 ± 4 meq/L, P = .01) 10 ± 5 days apart. CONCLUSIONS A smartphone app called EncephalApp has good face validity, test-retest reliability, and external validity for the diagnosis of CHE.


Journal of Hepatology | 2015

Correction of hyponatraemia improves cognition, quality of life, and brain oedema in cirrhosis

Vishwadeep Ahluwalia; Douglas M. Heuman; George M. Feldman; James B. Wade; Leroy R. Thacker; Edith A. Gavis; HoChong Gilles; Ariel Unser; Melanie B. White; Jasmohan S. Bajaj

BACKGROUND & AIMS Hyponatraemia in cirrhosis is associated with impaired cognition and poor health-related quality of life (HRQOL). However, the benefit of hyponatraemia correction is unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of tolvaptan on serum sodium (Na), cognition, HRQOL, companion burden, and brain MRI (volumetrics, spectroscopy, and diffusion tensor imaging) in cirrhotics with hyponatraemia. METHODS Cirrhotics with Na <130 mEq/L were included for a four-week trial. At screening, patients underwent cognitive and HRQOL testing, serum/urine chemistries and companion burden assessment. Patients then underwent fluid restriction and diuretic withdrawal for two weeks after which cognitive tests were repeated. If Na was still <130 mEq/L, brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed and tolvaptan was initiated for 14 days with frequent clinical/laboratory monitoring. After 14 days of tolvaptan, all tests were repeated. Comparisons were made between screen, pre-and post-drug periods Na, urine/serum laboratories, cognition, HRQOL and companion burden. RESULTS 24 cirrhotics were enrolled; seven normalized Na without tolvaptan with improvement in cognition. The remaining 17 received tolvaptan of which 14 completed the study over 13 ± 2 days (age 58 ± 6 years, MELD 17, 55% HCV, median 26 mg/day of tolvaptan). Serum Na and urine free water clearance increased with tolvaptan without changes in mental status or liver function. Cognitive function, HRQOL and companion burden only improved in these 14 patients after tolvaptan, along with reduced total brain and white matter volume, increase in choline on magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and reduced cytotoxic oedema. CONCLUSIONS Short-term tolvaptan therapy is well tolerated in cirrhosis. Hyponatraemia correction is associated with cognitive, HRQOL, brain MRI and companion burden improvement.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

Differential impact of hyponatremia and hepatic encephalopathy on health-related quality of life and brain metabolite abnormalities in cirrhosis

Vishwadeep Ahluwalia; James B. Wade; Leroy R. Thacker; Kenneth A. Kraft; Richard K. Sterling; R. Todd Stravitz; Michael Fuchs; Iliana Bouneva; Puneet Puri; Velimir A. Luketic; Arun J. Sanyal; HoChong Gilles; Douglas M. Heuman; Jasmohan S. Bajaj

BACKGROUND & AIMS Hyponatremia (HN) and hepatic encephalopathy (HE) together can impair health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and cognition in cirrhosis. We aimed at studying the effect of hyponatremia on cognition, HRQOL, and brain MR spectroscopy (MRS) independent of HE. METHODS Four cirrhotic groups (no HE/HN, HE alone, HN alone (sodium <130 mEq/L), HE+HN) underwent cognitive testing, HRQOL using Sickness Impact Profile (SIP: higher score is worse; has psychosocial and physical sub-scores) and brain MRS (myoinositol (mI) and glutamate+glutamine (Glx)), which were compared across groups. A subset underwent HRQOL testing before/after diuretic withdrawal. RESULTS 82 cirrhotics (30 no HE/HN, 25 HE, 17 HE+HN, and 10 HN, MELD 12, 63% hepatitis C) were included. Cirrhotics with HN alone and without HE/HN had better cognition compared to HE groups (median abnormal tests no-HE/HN: 3, HN: 3.5, HE: 6.5, HE+HN: 7, p=0.008). Despite better cognition, HN only patients had worse HRQOL in total and psychosocial SIP while both HN groups (with/without HE) had a significantly worse physical SIP (p<0.0001, all comparisons). Brain MRS showed the lowest Glx in HN and the highest in HE groups (p<0.02). mI levels were comparably decreased in the three affected (HE, HE+HN, and HN) groups compared to no HE/HN and were associated with poor HRQOL. Six HE+HN cirrhotics underwent diuretic withdrawal which improved serum sodium and total/psychosocial SIP scores. CONCLUSIONS Hyponatremic cirrhotics without HE have poor HRQOL despite better cognition than those with concomitant HE. Glx levels were lowest in HN without HE but mI was similar across affected groups. HRQOL improved after diuretic withdrawal. Hyponatremia has a complex, non-linear relationship with brain Glx and mI, cognition and HRQOL.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

Asymmetric dimethylarginine is strongly associated with cognitive dysfunction and brain MR spectroscopic abnormalities in cirrhosis

Jasmohan S. Bajaj; Vishwadeep Ahluwalia; James B. Wade; Arun J. Sanyal; Melanie B. White; Nicole A. Noble; Pamela Monteith; Michael Fuchs; Richard K. Sterling; Velimir A. Luketic; Iliana Bouneva; Richard T. Stravitz; Puneet Puri; Kenneth A. Kraft; HoChong Gilles; Douglas M. Heuman

BACKGROUND & AIMS Asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) is an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase that accumulates in liver disease and may contribute to hepatic encephalopathy (HE). We aimed at evaluating the association of ADMA with cognition and brain MR spectroscopy (MRS) in cirrhosis. METHODS Cirrhotic patients with/without prior HE and non-cirrhotic controls underwent cognitive testing and ADMA determination. A subgroup underwent brain MRS [glutamine/glutamate (Glx), myoinositol (mI), N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA) in parietal white, occipital gray, and anterior cingulated (ACC)]. Cognition and ADMA in a cirrhotic subgroup before and one month after transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunting (TIPS) were also tested. Cognition and MRS values were correlated with ADMA and compared between groups using multivariable regression. ADMA levels were compared between those who did/did not develop post-TIPS HE. RESULTS Ninety cirrhotics (MELD 13, 54 prior HE) and 16 controls were included. Controls had better cognition and lower ADMA, Glx, and higher mI compared to cirrhotics. Prior HE patients had worse cognition, higher ADMA and Glx and lower mI compared to non-HE cirrhotics. ADMA was positively correlated with MELD (r=0.58, p<0.0001), abnormal cognitive test number (r=0.66, p<0.0001), and Glx and NAAA (white matter, ACC) and negatively with mI. On regression, ADMA predicted number of abnormal tests and mean Z-score independent of prior HE and MELD. Twelve patients underwent TIPS; 7 developed HE post-TIPS. ADMA increased post-TIPS in patients who developed HE (p=0.019) but not in others (p=0.89). CONCLUSIONS A strong association of ADMA with cognition and prior HE was found independent of the MELD score in cirrhosis.


Liver Transplantation | 2017

Liver transplant modulates gut microbial dysbiosis and cognitive function in cirrhosis

Jasmohan S. Bajaj; Andrew Fagan; Masoumeh Sikaroodi; Melanie B. White; Richard K. Sterling; HoChong Gilles; Douglas M. Heuman; Richard T. Stravitz; Scott Matherly; Mohammed S. Siddiqui; Puneet Puri; Arun J. Sanyal; Velimir A. Luketic; Binu John; Michael Fuchs; Vishwadeep Ahluwalia; Patrick M. Gillevet

Liver transplantation (LT) improves daily function and cognition in patients with cirrhosis, but a subset of patients can remain impaired. Unfavorable microbiota or dysbiosis is observed in patients with cirrhosis, but the effect of LT on microbial composition, especially with poor post‐LT cognition, is unclear. The aims were to determine the effect of LT on gut microbiota and to determine whether gut microbiota are associated with cognitive dysfunction after LT. We enrolled outpatient patients with cirrhosis on the LT list and followed them until 6 months after LT. Cognition (Psychometric Hepatic Encephalopathy score [PHES]), health‐related quality of life (HRQOL), and stool microbiota (multitagged sequencing for diversity and taxa) tests were performed at both visits. Persistent cognitive impairment was defined as a stable/worsening PHES. Both pre‐/post‐LT data were compared with age‐matched healthy controls. We enrolled 45 patients (56 ± 7 years, Model for End‐Stage Liver Disease score 26 ± 8). They received LT 6 ± 3 months after enrollment and were re‐evaluated 7 ± 2 months after LT with a stable course. A significantly improved HRQOL, PHES, with increase in microbial diversity, increase in autochthonous, and decrease in potentially pathogenic taxa were seen after LT compared with baseline. However, there was continued dysbiosis and HRQOL/cognitive impairment after LT compared with controls in 29% who did not improve PHES after LT. In these, Proteobacteria relative abundance was significantly higher and Firmicutes were lower after LT, whereas the reverse occurred in the group that improved. Delta PHES was negatively correlated with delta Proteobacteria and positively with delta Firmicutes. In conclusion, LT improves gut microbiota diversity and dysbiosis compared with pre‐LT baseline but residual dysbiosis remains compared with controls. There is cognitive and HRQOL enhancement in general after LT, but a higher Proteobacteria relative abundance change is associated with posttransplant cognitive impairment. Liver Transplantation 23 907–914 2017 AASLD.


Liver Transplantation | 2016

Liver Transplantation Significantly Improves Global Functioning and Cerebral Processing.

Vishwadeep Ahluwalia; James B. Wade; Melanie B. White; HoChong Gilles; Douglas M. Heuman; Michael Fuchs; Edith A. Gavis; Andrew J. Fagan; Felicia Tinsley; Dinesh Ganapathy; Leroy R. Thacker; Richard K. Sterling; R. Todd Stravitz; Puneet Puri; Arun J. Sanyal; Muhammad S. Siddiqui; Scott Matherly; Velimir A. Luketic; Joel L. Steinberg; F. Gerard Moeller; Jasmohan S. Bajaj

The functional basis of cognitive and quality of life changes after liver transplant is unclear. We aimed to evaluate the neurometabolic and functional brain changes as modulators of cognition and quality of life after transplant in patients with cirrhosis who were with/without pretransplant cognitive impairment and hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Patients with cirrhosis underwent detailed cognitive and quality of life assessment at enrollment and 6 months after transplant. A subset underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging (functional magnetic resonance imaging [fMRI], diffusion tensor imaging [DTI], and magnetic resonance spectroscopy [MRS]) before and after transplant. Changes before and after transplant were analyzed in all patients and by dividing groups in those with/without pretransplant cognitive impairment or with/without pretransplant HE. MRS evaluated ammonia‐related metabolites; fMRI studied brain activation for correct lure inhibition on the inhibitory control test; and DTI studied white matter integrity. Sixty‐six patients (mean Model for End‐Stage Liver Disease score, 21.8; 38 HE patients and 24 cognitively impaired [CI] patients) were enrolled. Quality of life was significantly worse in CI and HE groups before transplant, which improved to a lesser extent in those with prior cognitive impairment. In the entire group after transplant, there was (1) significantly lower brain activation needed for lure inhibition (shown on fMRI); (2) reversal of pretransplant ammonia‐associated changes (shown on MRS); and (3) improved white matter integrity (shown on DTI). Importantly, study findings suggest that pretransplant cognitive impairment serves as a marker for clinical outcomes. Regardless of pretransplant history of HE, it was the pretransplant cognitive impairment that was predictive of both posttransplant cognitive and psychosocial outcomes. Therefore, when working with patients and their families, a clinician may rely on the pretransplant cognitive profile to develop expectations regarding posttransplant neurobehavioral recovery. We conclude that functional brain changes after liver transplant depend on pretransplant cognitive impairment and are ultimately linked with posttransplant cognition and quality of life in cirrhosis. Liver Transplantation 22 1379–1390 2016 AASLD.

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Douglas M. Heuman

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Jasmohan S. Bajaj

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Michael Fuchs

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Arun J. Sanyal

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Melanie B. White

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Richard K. Sterling

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Velimir A. Luketic

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Leroy R. Thacker

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Puneet Puri

Virginia Commonwealth University

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