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Dive into the research topics where Jay E. Menitove is active.

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Featured researches published by Jay E. Menitove.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Increased preoperative collection of autologous blood with recombinant human erythropoietin therapy.

Lawrence T. Goodnough; S. Rudnick; Thomas H. Price; Ballas Sk; Collins Ml; Crowley Jp; Kosmin M; M. S. Kruskall; Lenes Ba; Jay E. Menitove

To study whether the administration of recombinant human erythropoietin increases the amount of autologous blood that can be collected before surgery, we conducted a randomized, controlled trial of erythropoietin in 47 adults scheduled for elective orthopedic procedures. The patients received either erythropoietin (600 units per kilogram of body weight) or placebo intravenously twice a week for 21 days, during which time up to 6 units of blood was collected. Patients were excluded from donation when their hematocrit values were less than 34 percent. All patients received iron sulfate (325 mg orally three times daily). The mean number of units collected per patient (+/- SE) was 5.4 +/- 0.2 for the erythropoietin group and 4.1 +/- 0.2 for the placebo group. The mean red-cell volume donated by the patients who received erythropoietin was 41 percent greater than that donated by the patients who received placebo (961 vs. 683 ml, P less than 0.05). Only 1 of the 23 patients treated with erythropoietin was unable to donate greater than or equal to 4 units (4 percent) as compared with 7 of the 24 patients who received placebo (29 percent). No adverse effects were attributed to erythropoietin. We conclude that recombinant human erythropoietin increases the ability of patients about to undergo elective surgery to donate autologous blood.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Successful Allogeneic Transplantation of T-Cell–Depleted Bone Marrow from Closely HLA-Matched Unrelated Donors

Robert C. Ash; James T. Casper; Christopher R. Chitambar; Richard M. Hansen; Nancy Bunin; Robert L. Truitt; Colleen A. Lawton; Kevin Murray; Jay B. Hunter; L.A. Baxter-Lowe; Jerome L. Gottschall; Katalin Oldham; T. J. Anderson; Bruce M. Camitta; Jay E. Menitove

We describe a four-year experience with bone marrow transplantation involving closely HLA-matched unrelated donors and 55 consecutive patients with hematologic disease who were seven months to 48.6 years old (median, 18 years). An intensive pretransplantation conditioning regimen and graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis with CD3-directed T-cell depletion and cyclosporine were employed. Durable engraftment was achieved in 50 of 53 patients who could be evaluated (94 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 83 to 98 percent). Acute GVHD of Grade II to IV developed in 46 percent of the patients (confidence interval, 27 to 66 percent). The incidence and severity of acute GVHD were increased in recipients of HLA-mismatched marrow as compared with recipients of phenotypically matched marrow (incidence of 53 percent [confidence interval, 37 to 68 percent] vs. 17 percent [confidence interval, 5 to 45 percent]; P less than 0.05). Extensive chronic GVHD and deaths not due to relapse also tended to be more frequent when HLA-mismatched marrow was used, but not significantly so. With a median follow-up of more than 19 months (range, greater than 9 to greater than 39), the actuarial disease-free survival of transplant recipients with leukemia and a relatively good prognosis (acute leukemia in first remission and chronic myelogenous leukemia in chronic phase) was 48 percent (confidence interval, 24 to 73 percent), and that of recipients with more aggressive leukemia was 32 percent (confidence interval, 18 to 51 percent); the actuarial survival of recipients with non-neoplastic disease was 63 percent (confidence interval, 31 to 86 percent). We conclude that marrow transplantation with closely HLA-matched unrelated donors can be effective treatment for neoplastic and non-neoplastic diseases. Although transplants from phenotypically HLA-matched unrelated donors appear to be most effective, transplants with limited HLA disparity can also be successful in some patients.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Prevalence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 p24 Antigen in U.S. Blood Donors — An Assessment of the Efficacy of Testing in Donor Screening

Harvey J. Alter; Jay S. Epstein; Sally G. Swenson; Mark J. VanRaden; John W. Ward; Richard A. Kaslow; Jay E. Menitove; Harvey G. Klein; S. Gerald Sandler; Merlin H. Sayers; Indira Hewlett; Amoz I. Chernoff; Mark A. Popovsky; Hilda McDonald; Jay H. Herman; William Sherwood; Jan Forey; Kate Rothko; Paul C. Van Ness; Sandy Ellisor; Gerald I. Shulman; Alfred J. Grindon; Steven H. Kleinman; Bruce A. Lenes; Peter Tomasulo; Ron Gilcher; Linda Chandler; Linda Belcher; Pablo Fortes; David Fortenberry

Abstract Background. We performed a multicenter study in 1989 to determine whether screening whole-blood donors for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) p24 antigen would improve transfusion safety by identifying carriers of the virus who are seronegative for HIV-1 antibody. Methods. More than 500,000 donations were tested at 13 U.S. blood centers with test kits from two manufacturers. Units found repeatedly reactive were retested in a central laboratory; if the results were positive, they were confirmed by a neutralization assay. A subgroup of units was also tested for HIV-1 by the polymerase chain reaction. Selected donors confirmed or not confirmed as having p24 antigen were contacted for follow-up interviews to identify risk factors and undergo retesting for HIV-1 markers. Results. Positive tests for p24 antigen were confirmed by neutralization in five donors (0.001 percent of all donations tested), all of whom were also positive for HIV-1 antibody and HIV-1 by polymerase chain reaction. Three ...


Transfusion | 2002

A historical cohort study of the effect of lowering body iron through blood donation on incident cardiac events

David G. Meyers; Kelly C. Jensen; Jay E. Menitove

BACKGROUND : Low body iron may protect against atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease through limiting oxidation of low‐density lipoprotein cholesterol. Observational studies suggest that donation of whole blood might be associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular events.


Transfusion | 2006

A randomized, controlled Phase III trial of therapeutic plasma exchange with fresh-frozen plasma (FFP) prepared with amotosalen and ultraviolet A light compared to untreated FFP in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura

Paul D. Mintz; Anne T. Neff; Malcolm R. MacKenzie; Lawrence T. Goodnough; Christopher D. Hillyer; Craig M. Kessler; Keith R. McCrae; Jay E. Menitove; Barry S. Skikne; Lloyd E. Damon; Ileana Lopez-Plaza; Charles Rouault; Kendall P. Crookston; Richard J. Benjamin; James N. George; Jin Sying Lin; Laurence Corash; Maureen G. Conlan

BACKGROUND: Photochemical treatment of fresh‐frozen plasma (FFP) with amotosalen and ultraviolet (UV) A light (PCT FFP) results in inactivation of a broad spectrum of pathogens while retaining coagulation factor activity, antithrombotic proteins, and von Willebrand factor–cleaving protease (VWF‐CP) activity.


Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics | 2011

Umbilical cord blood banking: an update

Merlin G. Butler; Jay E. Menitove

BackgroundUmbilical cord blood is a potential vast source of primitive hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells available for clinical application to reconstitute the hematopoietic system and/or restore immunological function in affected individuals requiring treatment. Cord blood can be used as an alternative source for bone marrow transplantation and its use is developing into a new field of treatment for pediatric and adult patients presenting with hematological disorders, immunological defects and specific genetic diseases.DiscussionMore than 25,000 allogeneic cord blood transplantations have been performed worldwide since the first cord blood transplantation in 1988. There are two banking options for storing umbilical cord blood [private (family) and public]. Cord blood stored in private banks are used for either autologous or allogeneic transplants for the infant donor or related family members but private cord blood banks are not searchable or available to the public. More than 780,000 cord blood units are stored in over 130 private cord blood banks, worldwide, and over 400,000 units in more than 100 quality controlled public cord blood banks.ConclusionsResearchers continue to evaluate the usefulness of cord blood cells in treating human diseases or disorders for purposes other than hematological disorders including heart disease, strokes, brain or spinal cord injuries and cancer. This review summarizes the status of umbilical cord blood banking, its history and current and potential use in the treatment of human disease.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1986

Urgent Treatment of Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura with Single-Dose Gammaglobulin Infusion Followed by Platelet Transfusion

Michael Baumann; Jay E. Menitove; Richard H. Aster; T. J. Anderson

Excerpt Intravenous administrations of high-dose gammaglobulin increases the peripheral blood platelet counts of most patients with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (1-8). The mechanism of this ...


British Journal of Haematology | 2007

Monoclonal B‐cell lymphocytosis in blood donors

Jane M. Rachel; Marjorie L. Zucker; Christopher M. Fox; Fred V. Plapp; Jay E. Menitove; Fatima Abbasi; Gerald E. Marti

Monoclonal B‐cell populations have been detected in the peripheral blood of apparently healthy individuals by flow cytometry. In 2005, the term monoclonal B‐cell lymphocytosis (MBL) was proposed to describe these findings. MBL may be immunophenotypically similar to chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) and, like CLL, the prevalence is higher in males and older individuals. We studied the prevalence of MBL in blood donors from the Midwestern United States. Samples from 5141 donors were examined and seven (0·14%) were found to have immunophenotypic characteristics of MBL or CLL. Immunoglobulin heavy chain analysis yielded monoclonality or oligoclonality. Prior and subsequent to the study, an additional undetermined number of blood donors were screened and seven of these expressed immunophenotypic characteristics of MBL or CLL. We thus found a total of 14 healthy blood donors with monoclonal expansions of B‐lymphocyte populations. Of these, 12 were presumptively classified as MBL and two as CLL. All but two of the donors were male; the mean age was 59 years. The clinical importance of these findings with regard to transfusion medicine has not been established.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Mumps Antibody Levels Among Students Before a Mumps Outbreak: In Search of a Correlate of Immunity

Margaret M. Cortese; Albert E. Barskey; Gary E. Tegtmeier; Cheryl Zhang; Laurie Ngo; Moe H. Kyaw; Andrew L. Baughman; Jay E. Menitove; Carole J. Hickman; William J. Bellini; Gustavo H. Dayan; Gail R. Hansen; Steven Rubin

BACKGROUND In 2006, a mumps outbreak occurred on a university campus despite ≥ 95% coverage of students with 2 doses of measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine. Using plasma samples from a blood drive held on campus before identification of mumps cases, we compared vaccine-induced preoutbreak mumps antibody levels between individuals who developed mumps (case patients) and those who did not develop mumps (nonpatients). METHODS Preoutbreak samples were available from 11 case patients, 22 nonpatients who reported mumps exposure but no mumps symptoms, and 103 nonpatients who reported no known exposure and no symptoms. Antibody titers were measured by plaque reduction neutralization assay using Jeryl Lynn vaccine virus and the outbreak virus Iowa-G/USA-06 and by enzyme immunoassay (EIA). RESULTS Preoutbreak Jeryl Lynn virus neutralization titers were significantly lower among case patients than unexposed nonpatients (P = .023), and EIA results were significantly lower among case patients than exposed nonpatients (P = .007) and unexposed nonpatients (P = .009). Proportionately more case patients than exposed nonpatients had a preoutbreak anti-Jeryl Lynn titer < 31 (64% vs 27%, respectively; P = .065), an anti-Iowa-G/USA-06 titer < 8 (55% vs 14%; P = .033), and EIA index standard ratio < 1.40 (64% vs 9%; P = .002) and < 1.71 (73% vs 14%, P = .001). DISCUSSION Case patients generally had lower preoutbreak mumps antibody levels than nonpatients. However, titers overlapped and no cutoff points separated all mumps case patients from all nonpatients.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1983

Generalized lymphadenopathy and T cell abnormalities in hemophilia A

Joan Cox Gill; Jay E. Menitove; Dana Wheeler; Richard H. Aster; Robert R. Montgomery

Two patients with hemophilia A had generalized lymphadenopathy, lymphopenia, elevated IgG values, depressed T4 (helper) lymphocytes, elevated T8 (suppressor) lymphocytes, and abnormally low T4/T8 ratios. One of the patients, who also had hepatosplenomegaly, underwent cervical lymph node biopsy; the node contained 43% T8-lymphocytes, a marked elevation over the small fraction of T8 cells usually found in lymph nodes. These patients may have a form of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome described in male homosexuals, Haitians, intravenous drug abusers, and recently, in patients with hemophilia. We studied T cell phenotypes in 43 patients with hemophilia. Fourteen of 28 patients given commercial factor VIII concentrates had abnormal T4/T8 ratios; none of nine patients who used cryoprecipitate had abnormal values. T4 helper cells were significantly lower, T8 suppressor cells significantly elevated, and T4/T8 ratios significantly lower in the lyophilized concentrate users and in patients with hemophilia as a total group. The type of therapeutic factor VIII replacement may alter the risk of developing T4/T8 abnormalities or AIDS.

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Richard H. Aster

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Geri A. Venable

Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center

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James T. Casper

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Joan Cox Gill

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Robert R. Montgomery

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Dana Wheeler

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Terri A. Frame-Brown

Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center

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Gary E. Tegtmeier

Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center

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Jerome L. Gottschall

Medical College of Wisconsin

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