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Dive into the research topics where Jason Swindle is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason Swindle.


Transplantation | 2007

Diabetic Complications Associated With New-onset Diabetes Mellitus in Renal Transplant Recipients

Thomas E. Burroughs; Jason Swindle; Steven K. Takemoto; Krista L. Lentine; Gerardo Machnicki; William Irish; Daniel C. Brennan; Mark A. Schnitzler

Background. Data are scarce regarding the incidence and risk factors for complications of new-onset diabetes mellitus (NODM) in renal transplant patients. Methods. United States Renal Data System (USRDS) data from primary renal transplant recipients during 1995–2001 who developed NODM was used to examine diabetic complications over the first three years posttransplant. Prognostic models were used to evaluate patient characteristics and treatment choices associated with risk of each class of complications. Propensity scores for choice of calcineurin inhibitor were included in multivariate analyses. Results. The analysis included 21,489 patients, of whom 4,105 developed NODM by 3 years posttransplant. One or more NODM complications developed in 2,393 patients (58.3% of all patients with NODM), comprising ketoacidosis (334, 8.1%), hyperosmolarity (131, 3.2%), renal complications (1,286, 31.3%), ophthalmic complications (340, 8.3%), neurological complications (665, 16.2%), peripheral circulatory disorders (170, 4.1%) and hypoglycemia/shock (301, 7.3%). Complications developed within a mean of 500 to 600 days from diagnosis of NODM. Multivariate analysis showed that increased recipient age, higher body mass index, African-American race, hepatitis C infection, hypertension as cause of end-stage renal disease, cold ischemia ≥30 hours, and use of tacrolimus each increased risk of complications. Conclusion. NODM is associated with similar complications to those seen in the general population, but these appear to develop at an accelerated rate. Obesity and use of tacrolimus are the only modifiable factors that appear to affect risk of NODM or its complications.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

The Economic Impact of the Utilization of Liver Allografts with High Donor Risk Index

David A. Axelrod; Mark A. Schnitzler; Paolo R. Salvalaggio; Jason Swindle; Michael Abecassis

The disparity between the organ supply and the demand for liver transplantation (LT) has resulted in the growing utilization of ‘marginal donor’ organs. While economic outcomes for subsets of ‘marginal’ organs have been described for renal transplantation, similar analyses have not been performed for LT. Using UNOS data for 17 710 LTs performed between 2002 and 2005, we assessed the relationship between recipient model for end‐stage liver disease (MELD) score, organ quality as defined by donor risk index (DRI, Feng et al. 2005) and hospital length of stay (LOS). Single‐center cost‐accounting data for 338 liver transplants were then analyzed with a multivariate linear regression model to determine the estimated cost associated with a day of LOS. Overall, 8.4% of donor organs were classified as high risk (DRI > 2–2.5) and 1.9% as very high risk (DRI > 2.5). In the lowest MELD group (0–10), the LOS difference between ‘ideal’ donors (DRI < 1.0) and very high risk (DRI > 2.5) was 10.6 days which was associated with an estimated incremental cost of


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2010

Implantable Cardiac Device Procedures in Older Patients: Use and In-Hospital Outcomes

Jason Swindle; Michael W. Rich; Patrick McCann; Thomas E. Burroughs; Paul J. Hauptman

47 986. For patients with MELD >35, the average LOS increased from 23.2 to 41.8 days when very high DRI donors were used, resulting in an estimated increase in cost of nearly


American Heart Journal | 2008

Resource utilization in patients hospitalized with heart failure: Insights from a contemporary national hospital database

Paul J. Hauptman; Jason Swindle; Thomas E. Burroughs; Mark A. Schnitzler

84 000. We conclude that the use of marginal liver grafts results in increased hospital costs independent of recipient risk factors.


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2010

Underutilization of β-Blockers in Patients Undergoing Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillator and Cardiac Resynchronization Procedures

Paul J. Hauptman; Jason Swindle; Frederick A. Masoudi; Thomas E. Burroughs

BACKGROUND Although the effectiveness of implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) and cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) alone or in combination is well established, limited data are available on device use and short-term outcomes in older patients. We sought to characterize age-specific practices and outcomes among patients with heart failure undergoing device implantation using a large nationally representative administrative database. METHODS The cohort comprised patients older than 18 years with a diagnosis of heart failure who underwent implantation of an ICD or CRT between January 1, 2004, and December 31, 2005. Data included patient demographics, comorbidities, type of device, procedural complications, length of stay, total cost of hospitalization, and hospital characteristics. Multivariate stepwise logistic regression analysis was used to identify risk factors for in-hospital mortality. RESULTS We identified 26 887 patients who received an implantable device. The median age was 70.0 years (17.5% were > or =80 years), 72.6% were male, and 31.3% were of nonwhite race/ethnicity. Compared with younger patients, those 80 years or older were more likely to receive CRT alone. In-hospital mortality increased from 0.7% among patients younger than 80 years to 1.2% among those aged 80 to 85 years and 2.2% among those older than 85 years (P < .001). Independent predictors of in-hospital mortality included age 80 years or older, elevated comorbidity score, inotrope use, and procedure-related complications. CONCLUSIONS Despite the fact that most device trials have excluded patients 80 years or older, more than one-fifth of ICD and CRT devices are implanted in this age group. Advanced age is an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality following device implantation, suggesting that additional study is needed to define criteria for appropriate device use in older patients.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2007

Influence of Early Posttransplantation Prednisone and Calcineurin Inhibitor Dosages on the Incidence of New-Onset Diabetes

Thomas E. Burroughs; Krista L. Lentine; Steve K. Takemoto; Jason Swindle; Gerardo Machnicki; Karen L. Hardinger; Daniel C. Brennan; William Irish; Mark A. Schnitzler

BACKGROUND Heterogeneity of disease severity and clinical trajectory has been described among patients hospitalized with heart failure (HF). However, little is known about the variability in and contributors to costs associated with HF hospitalizations. We examined the distribution of costs associated with a HF diagnosis in a large contemporary hospital database. METHODS Diagnosis and procedure codes were systematically used to identify primary inpatient HF admissions to hospitals participating in the PREMIER database 2004-2005. Average costs per day and division of costs among hospital departments were evaluated based on patient and hospitalization characteristics. RESULTS Total number of hospitalizations was 278,214; 36% had a length of stay (LOS) >5 days. There was a clear association between type of intravenous therapy, LOS, inhospital mortality, and cost. For example, patients initiated on a single intravenous inotrope had a longer mean LOS (9.6 days), greater inhospital mortality rate (14.7%), and higher mean total cost (


Transplantation | 2009

Increasing incidence of new-onset diabetes after transplant among pediatric renal transplant patients.

Thomas E. Burroughs; Jason Swindle; Paolo R. Salvalaggio; Krista L. Lentine; Steven K. Takemoto; Suphamai Bunnapradist; Daniel C. Brennan; Mark A. Schnitzler

18,411) than any other medical therapy administered during hospitalization. The single largest contributor to cost was room and board. Forty-six percent of hospitalizations with diagnosis-related group code 127 (n = 234,204) exceeded average Medicare reimbursement. Variables on admission associated with highest cost hospitalizations were age <75 years, non-black race, male sex, and urban teaching hospital status. CONCLUSIONS Length of stay is the determinant of cost for HF hospitalizations. Use of vasoactive therapy is a marker for longer LOS, higher mortality, and greater costs. Improved reimbursement rates or improved therapeutic options that lessen LOS are required if the costs of HF care are to be minimized.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2009

Electrocardiography Screening for Cardiotoxicity after Modified Vaccinia Ankara Vaccination

Junko Sano; Bernard R. Chaitman; Jason Swindle; Sharon E. Frey

Background—Current guidelines emphasize the need for optimal medical therapy before implantation of cardiac devices (implantable cardioverter-defibrillator, cardiac resynchronization therapy). Our objective was to evaluate use of β-blockers (BB) among patients with heart failure undergoing a cardiac device procedure. Methods and Results—We used a large, multistate, managed-care database (January 2003 to December 2006) to identify adults admitted with an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) procedurecode for cardiac device, continuous enrollment for 180 days before and 180 days after device procedure, and a primary or secondary ICD-9 diagnosis code for heart failure during that period. Our primary measures were use of BB before device procedure and changes after discharge. A total of 2766 beneficiaries (78.8% men; median age, 61 years) underwent a device procedure for primary prevention. The median number of days on BB therapy in the 90 days before device procedure was 46. Beneficiaries who did not have a pharmacy fill for BB during that time (n=925, 33.4%) were more elderly and had fewer antecedent outpatient visits with a cardiologist. There was a shift toward greater use of BB after device procedure; 83.4% had at least 1 pharmacy fill for a BB during follow-up. Conclusions—BB are underused before and after cardiac device procedures. There is a modest increase in use after the procedure. Strategies are required to ensure that patients are on optimal medical therapy before device therapy is selected.


American Heart Journal | 2008

Short-term mortality and cost associated with cardiac device implantation in patients hospitalized with heart failure

Jason Swindle; Thomas E. Burroughs; Mark A. Schnitzler; Paul J. Hauptman

Risk for new-onset diabetes (NOD) after renal transplantation is higher with tacrolimus (Tac) than with cyclosporine (CsA), but the extent to which the diabetogenic effect of Tac is dosage dependent or steroid dependent remains uncertain. Patients who received a transplant between 1995 and 2002 were drawn from the United Network for Organ Sharing registry and prescription records and NOD diagnoses from Medicare claims, both provided by the United States Renal Data System. Patients were divided into six groups of steroid and Tac doses at 30 d after transplantation and referenced against CsA. Relative hazards of NOD with Cox proportional hazards regression were estimated incorporating propensity scores for Tac and nonimmunosuppressive factors related to NOD. A total of 8839 patients with valid immunosuppression records and without pretransplantation evidence of diabetes were included in the study. Unadjusted, cumulative, NOD incidence 1 yr after transplantation was 14.6% with CsA and 22.2% with Tac and at 3 yr after transplantation was 23.4% with CsA and 32.9% with Tac (P < 0.0001). Neither higher CsA nor higher steroid dosages were associated with NOD in CsA-treated patients. However, NOD hazard was significantly higher with Tac than with CsA in all six steroid/Tac dosing groups, including the cohort with the lowest dosages of Tac (dosage thresholds at 30 d after transplantation <0.12 mg/kg per d [mean 0.07 mg/kg per d] and steroids (<0.75 mg/kg per d; hazard ratio 1.28; 95% confidence interval 1.10 to 1.48; P = 0.0012). Whereas the incidence of NOD is greatest with high Tac dosages, the increased risk versus CsA is sustained with lower Tac dosages. Higher steroid dosages increase the early diabetogenic effect of Tac but not of CsA.


Therapeutic Advances in Cardiovascular Disease | 2013

Clinical and economic outcomes associated with amlodipine/renin-angiotensin system blocker combinations.

Carlos M. Ferrario; Sumeet Panjabi; Paul Buzinec; Jason Swindle

Background. Risk of new-onset diabetes after transplant (NODAT) is well characterized for adults but much less understood in pediatric transplant. This study examines the incidence and risk factors of NODAT in pediatric renal transplant patients. Methods. The incidence of NODAT over the first 3 years after transplant was examined with the United States Renal Data System data for primary renal transplant recipients (ages 0–21 years, transplanted between 1995 and 2004) with Medicare primary. Patients had no evidence of diabetes before transplant. We estimated the cumulative incidence rate and used Cox proportional hazards regression to identify the risk factors for NODAT. Propensity scores were calculated for immunosuppression choice to adjust for potential confounding factors. Results. Two thousand one hundred sixty-eight recipients with valid immunosuppression records and without pretransplant evidence of diabetes were included. Unadjusted, cumulative NODAT incidence at 3 years posttransplant was 7.1%. Significant factors for increased risk of NODAT included cytomegalovirus D+/R− serostatus (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR]=1.60), age 13 to 18 years (aHR=2.18), age 19 to 21 years (aHR=2.60), body mass index more than or equal to 30 kg/m2 (aHR=2.17), and use of tacrolimus (aHR=1.51). We failed to find any significant relationships between NODAT and graft failure or death. Conclusions. Although the incidence of NODAT among patients aged 0 to 21 years is lower than that for adult patients, it is higher than suggested by earlier research and may represent an increase over time. The lack of association between NODAT and graft or failure death has important implications for posttransplant care. A clearer understanding of risk factors can help guide posttransplant monitoring and clinical decision making.

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