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Featured researches published by Jeanne Smith.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2000

Prediction of Adverse Outcomes in Children with Sickle Cell Disease

Scott T. Miller; Lynn A. Sleeper; Charles H. Pegelow; Laura Enos; Winfred C. Wang; Steven J. Weiner; Doris L. Wethers; Jeanne Smith; Thomas R. Kinney

BACKGROUND The ability to identify infants with sickle cell anemia who are likely to have severe complications later in life would permit accurate prognostication and tailoring of therapy to match disease-related risks and facilitate planning of clinical trials. We attempted to define the features of such babies by following the clinical course of 392 children with sickle cell disease from infancy to about the age of 10 years. METHODS We analyzed the records of 392 infants who received the diagnosis of homozygous sickle cell anemia or sickle cell-Beta(0)-thalassemia before the age of six months and for whom comprehensive clinical and laboratory data were recorded prospectively; data were available for a mean (+/-SD) of 10.0+/-4.8 years. Results obtained before the age of two years were evaluated to determine whether they predicted the outcome later in life. RESULTS Of the 392 infants in the cohort, 70 (18 percent) subsequently had an adverse outcome, defined as death (18 patients [26 percent]), stroke (25 [36 percent]) frequent pain (17 [24 percent]), or recurrent acute chest syndrome (10 [14 percent]). Using multivariate analysis, we found three statistically significant predictors of an adverse outcome: an episode of dactylitis before the age of one year (relative risk of an adverse outcome, 2.55; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.39 to 4.67), a hemoglobin level of less than 7 g per deciliter (relative risk, 2.47; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.14 to 5.33), and leukocytosis in the absence of infection (relative risk, 1.80; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.05 to 3.09). CONCLUSIONS Three easily identifiable manifestations of sickle cell disease that may appear in the first two years of life (dactylitis, severe anemia, and leukocytosis) can help to predict the possibility of severe sickle cell disease later in life.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991

Sickle cell disease as a cause of osteonecrosis of the femoral head.

Paul F. Milner; Alfred P. Kraus; Lynn A. Sleeper; Kimberly A. Dukes; Stephen H. Embury; Rita Bellevue; Mabel Koshy; John W. Moohr; Jeanne Smith

BACKGROUND AND METHODS Osteonecrosis of the femoral head is an important complication of sickle cell disease. We studied 2590 patients who were over 5 years of age at entry and followed them for an average of 5.6 years. Patients were examined twice a year, and radiographs of the hips were taken at least twice: at study entry and approximately three years later. RESULTS At study entry, 9.8 percent of patients were found to have osteonecrosis of one or both femoral heads. On follow-up, patients with the hemoglobin SS genotype and alpha-thalassemia were at the greatest risk for osteonecrosis (age-adjusted incidence rate, 4.5 cases per 100 patient-years, as compared with 2.4 in patients with the hemoglobin SS genotype without alpha-thalassemia and 1.9 in those with the hemoglobin SC genotype). Although the rate of osteonecrosis in patients with the hemoglobin SC genotype did not differ significantly from that in patients with the hemoglobin SS genotype without alpha-thalassemia, osteonecrosis tended to develop in these patients later in life. Intermediate rates of osteonecrosis were observed among patients with the hemoglobin S-beta zero-thalassemia and the hemoglobin S-beta(+)-thalassemia genotypes (3.6 and 3.3 cases per 100 patient-years, respectively). Osteonecrosis was found in patients as young as five years old (1.8 cases per 100 patient-years for all genotypes). The frequency of painful crises and the hematocrit were positively associated with osteonecrosis. The mean corpuscular volume and serum aspartate aminotransferase level were negatively associated. Twenty-seven patients had hip arthroplasty during the study; 10 were under 25 years of age. Five of the 27 required reoperation 11 to 53 months after the initial operation. CONCLUSIONS Osteonecrosis of the femoral head is common in patients with sickle cell disease, with an incidence ranging from about 2 to 4.5 cases per 100 patient-years. Patients with the hemoglobin SS genotype and alpha-thalassemia and those with frequent painful crises are at highest risk. The overall prevalence is about 10 percent. The results of hip arthroplasty are poor.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1991

The Efficacy in Navajo Infants of a Conjugate Vaccine Consisting of Haemophilus influenzae Type b Polysaccharide and Neisseria meningitidis Outer-Membrane Protein Complex

Mathuram Santosham; Mark Wolff; Raymond Reid; Matt Hohenboken; Massee Bateman; Julius G. Goepp; Margaret Mary Cortese; David A. Sack; Janné Hill; Wendy Newcomer; Linda Capriotti; Jeanne Smith; Marjorie Owen; Sheila Gahagan; Diana Hu; Renee Kling; Linda Lukacs; Ronald W. Ellis; Philip P. Vella; Gary B. Calandra; Holly Matthews; Vincent I. Ahonkhai

BACKGROUND AND METHODS Several conjugate vaccines against Haemophilus influenzae type b have been developed in the search for one that induces protection even in young infants. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of a conjugate vaccine that links the H. influenzae type b capsular polysaccharide to the outer-membrane protein complex (OMPC) of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B. We conducted a double-blind, placebo, controlled trial in Navajo infants, who are at high risk for systemic infections caused by H. influenzae type b. The infants were randomly assigned to receive the first dose of vaccine or placebo at 42 to 90 days of age and the second at 70 to 146 days of age. RESULTS Of the infants in the trial, 2588 were assigned to receive the vaccine and 2602 to receive placebo. The mean follow-up was 269 days in the vaccine group and 267 days in the placebo group. Before the age of 18 months, there was 1 systemic H. influenzae type b infection in the vaccine group, as compared with 22 in the placebo group (P less than 0.001; point estimate of efficacy, 95 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 72 to 99 percent). Of the 22 H. influenzae type b infections in the placebo group, 13 were meningitis. Among the children who received both doses, there was 1 H. influenzae type b infection in the vaccine group (n = 2056) and 14 in the placebo group (n = 2105) (P less than 0.001; point estimate of efficacy, 93 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 53 to 98 percent). The single infection in the vaccine group occurred at 15 1/2 months of age in an infant with osteomyelitis. Between the first and second doses there were no H. influenzae type b infections in the vaccine group and eight in the placebo group (P less than 0.005; point estimate of efficacy, 100 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 41 to 100 percent). CONCLUSIONS The H. influenzae type b OMPC vaccine, administered at 2 and 4 months of age, is safe and induces a high rate of protection against invasive disease caused by H. influenzae type b in infants under the age of 18 months. Protection begins after the first dose.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1997

Natural history of Blood pressure in sickle cell disease : Risks for stroke and death associated with relative hypertension in sickle cell anemia

Charles H. Pegelow; Linda Colangelo; Martin H. Steinberg; Elizabeth C. Wright; Jeanne Smith; George Phillips; Elliott Vichinsky

PURPOSE Blood pressure in individuals who have sickle cell disease has been reported to be lower than published normal values. We determine whether and to what degree this is true, using data obtained as part of a large natural history study. PATIENTS AND METHODS Blood pressure was measured annually for 3,317 subjects with sickle cell disease who were 2 years old or older. Values obtained were compared with those reported by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I and II (NHANES I and II). They were further analyzed with respect to age, sex, height, weight, hematologic diagnosis, blood urea nitrogen and creatinine, stroke, and death. RESULTS Blood pressure was significantly lower in subjects with sickle cell anemia than published norms for age, race, and sex, a difference that increased with age. It correlated with body mass index, hemoglobin, measures of renal function and age, but the strength of the correlation varied among age and sex subgroups. The risk for occlusive stroke increased with systolic but not diastolic pressure. Mortality was related to elevated blood pressure in males (P < 0.05) and to a lesser extent in females (P = 0.10). In subjects with hemoglobin SC disease, blood pressure also deviated from normal but to a lesser degree. CONCLUSION Blood pressure is generally lower than normal in individuals with sickle cell anemia. Those with high values relative to this population had an increased risk of stroke and death. Blood pressure should be monitored but values obtained must be assessed relative to the lower values expected for patients with this disease. Those with blood pressure values above 140/90 mm Hg should be evaluated and considered for treatment.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1996

Pregnancy in sickle cell disease: experience of the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease.

Jeanne Smith; Mark A. Espeland; Rita Bellevue; Duane Bonds; Audrey K. Brown; Mabel Koshy

Objective To determine the maternal and fetal outcomes of pregnancy in women with sickle cell disease. Methods The subjects were part of a cohort recruited from 19 centers for a prospective study of the clinical course of sickle cell disease. Each participant was evaluated using a structured protocol in which steady-state data and information on both sickle- and non-sickle-related events were colleted. The rates of antepartum and intrapartum complications were tallied for pregnancies carried to delivery. Fetal outcome was assessed according to gestational age, birth weight, and Apgar score. Differences among genotypes in event rates were assessed using Fisher exact test. Differences in gestational age and birth weight, and predictors of these outcomes, were assessed using analyses of covariance. Results Two hundred eighty-six of the 445 reported pregnacies proceeded to delivery. Non-sickle-related antepartum and intrapartum complication rates were comparable with those of African-American women who did not have sickle cell disease. One of the two deaths observed during this study was directly related to the presence of sickle cell disease. Rates of maternal morbidity from sickle cell disease were the same during pregancy as during the nonpregnant state. Ninety-nine percent of those pregnancies carried to delivery resulted in a live birth. Twenty-one percent of the infants born to women of the SS genotype were small for gestational age (SGA). Preclampsia and acute anemic events were identified as risk factors for SGA infants. Conclusion Those caring for women with sickle cell disease should support them if they desire to have children.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1992

Laboratory profile of sickle cell disease: A cross-sectional analysis

M. Stewart West; Doris L. Wethers; Jeanne Smith; Martin H. Steinberg

We have collected steady-state laboratory data for over 2600 patients, age 2 years and over, with sickle cell anemia (HbSS), HbSC disease, and HbS-beta(+)-thalassemia. The packed cell volume (PCV) is lower in males than in females until 17 or 18 years of age in HbSS and ages 13 to 15 in HbSC, but then becomes consistently higher in males. After age 40, the PCV falls in HbSS. The steady-state leukocyte count in HbSS is higher than that in normals, blunting the utility of this measurement in the assessment of infection. In HbSC and HbS-beta(+)-thalassemia, the leukocyte counts are more often within the range of normal. Platelet counts in HbSS are often found to be above normal and show a downward trend with age. There is a progressive rise in creatinine with age. In HbSS, this rise begins at age 14 and may be accounted for by the increased muscle mass that occurs with puberty. The further deterioration of renal function in patients over 20 may be a result of the known adverse effects of sickle cell disease upon the kidney. Our data provide a basis to compare perturbations caused by intercurrent complications and new therapies, as well as to contrast with similar information from other populations of patients with sickle cell disease.


Controlled Clinical Trials | 1987

Recruitment in the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease (CSSCD).

Marilyn H. Gaston; Jeanne Smith; Dianne Gallagher; Zanet Flournoy-Gill; Stewart West; Rita Bellevue; Marilyn D. Farber; Ranjeet Grover; Mabel Koshy; A. Kim Ritchey; Judith Wilimas; Joel Verter

The Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease (CSSCD) is a multiinstitutional investigation of the natural history of clinical course of sickle cell disease from birth through adulthood. The study is not a trial; rather, it involves data collection at 23 institutions in a uniform, standardized fashion on 3800 patients. Recruitment aspects that were addressed include issues related to recruitment of different age groups, ranging from newborns to pregnant women to patients over 50 years of age; the need to include mildly affected patients to ensure that the study would not reflect only a severe hospital-based population; recruitment from rural populations; and the need to screen and enter a newborn population at birth. The recruitment goal of entering 3200 patients, including 2100 patients with SS hemoglobinopathy, over a 24-month period was accomplished after 27 months.


Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research | 1993

Osteonecrosis of the humeral head in sickle cell disease

Paul F. Milner; Alfred P. Kraus; Jeno I. Sebes; Lynn A. Sleeper; Kimberly A. Dukes; Stephen H. Embury; Rita Bellevue; Mabel Koshy; John W. Moohr; Jeanne Smith

The prevalence and incidence of osteonecrosis (ON) of the humeral head in sickle cell disease was determined by a study of 2524 patients who were entered into a prospective study and followed for an average of 5.6 years. At entry, 5.6% had roentgenographic evidence of ON in one or both shoulders. There was little difference in age-adjusted prevalence among genotypes, but there were striking differences in age-specific rates. Observed at ages ranging from five to 24 years, 3.25% of sickle cell anemia (S/S) patients, but only 1.1% of sickle cell disease (S/C) patients, had ON. No S/beta+ thalassemia patients younger than 25 years of age had ON on entry. The highest age-adjusted incidence rate was found in S/S patients with concomitant alpha-thalassemia (4.85 per hundred patient-years), followed by S/beta zero-thalassemia (4.84 per hundred patient-years), S/beta+ thalassemia (2.61 per hundred patient-years), S/S without alpha-thalassemia (2.54 per hundred patient-years), and S/C (1.66 per hundred patient-years). Only 20.9% of patients reported pain or had limited range of movement at the time of diagnosis. Sickle cell disease is a frequent cause of ON of the humeral head, especially in children and young adults.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1976

Chronic intravascular coagulation associated with chronic myelocytic leukemia: Use of heparin in connection with a surgical procedure

Harold J. German; Jeanne Smith; John Lindenbaum

A women with Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelocytic leukemia lived nearly 12 years from the time of diagnosis. During most of this period she received no therapy, and marked cyclic oscillations in the white blood cell count were documented. The last two years of her illness were marked by a hemorrhagic disorder associated with hypofibrinogenemia, thrombocytopenia, increased plasma fibrinopeptide A concentration and markedly elevated serum levels of fibrin degradation products. The coagulation disorder was rapidly reversible on several occasions with heparin therapy. After treatment with heparin and platelet transfusions, the patient underwent successful resection of a large ovarian cyst with excellent hemostasis during the procedure. Postoperatively, the administration of heparin and platelets was discontinued and a large wound hematoma developed. After resumption of therapy with heparin and platelets, the remainder of her postoperative course was uneventful. The literature on the subject is reviewed and tentative guidelines are offered concerning the management of patients with intravascular coagulation who require diagnostic or therapeutic surgical procedures.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1989

Electron Microscopic Quantitation of Hemoglobin S Polymer in SS Red Blood Cells and Rheological Correlation

A. Anne Kaperonis; Robert G. King; Jeanne Smith; Shu Chien

Flow abnormalities of blood in sickle cell (SS) anemia mainly result from the polymerization of sickle hemoblogin (HbS) inside red cells (RBCs) with low O2 tension.’ The intracellular polymerization of HbS has been quantitated indirectly by using ”C nuclear resonance spectroscopy.‘ In our investigation, we attempted to quantitate the relationship between molecular changes of HbS during deoxygenation using electron micrographs of SS RBCs a t various O2 tensions, comparing this with the altered rheological behavior of the same SS RBC suspensions.

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Mabel Koshy

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Rita Bellevue

New York Methodist Hospital

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Lynn A. Sleeper

Boston Children's Hospital

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Paul F. Milner

Johns Hopkins University

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Audrey K. Brown

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

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