Jennifer Kalina
New York University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jennifer Kalina.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2016
L Zhovtis Ryerson; Teresa C. Frohman; John Foley; Ilya Kister; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman; Carlo Tornatore; Krupa Pandey; S Donnelly; S Pawate; Roberto Bomprezzi; D Smith; Channa Kolb; Sara S. Qureshi; Darin T. Okuda; Jennifer Kalina; Z Rimler; Rivka Green; Nancy L. Monson; T Hoyt; M Bradshaw; Julia Fallon; E Chamot; M Bucello; Shin C. Beh; Gary Cutter; Eugene O. Major; Joseph Herbert; Elliot M. Frohman
Background Natalizumab (NTZ), a monoclonal antibody to human α4β1/β7 integrin, is an effective therapy for multiple sclerosis (MS), albeit associated with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). Clinicians have been extending the dose of infusions with a hypothesis of reducing PML risk. The aim of the study is to evaluate the clinical consequences of reducing NTZ frequency of infusion up to 8 weeks 5 days. Methods A retrospective chart review in 9 MS centres was performed in order to identify patients treated with extended interval dosing (EID) regimens of NTZ. Patients were stratified into 3 groups based on EID NTZ treatment schedule in individual centres: early extended dosing (EED; n=249) every 4 weeks 3 days to 6 weeks 6 days; late extended dosing (LED; n=274) every 7 weeks to 8 weeks 5 days; variable extended dosing (n=382) alternating between EED and LED. These groups were compared with patients on standard interval dosing (SID; n=1093) every 4 weeks. Results 17% of patients on SID had new T2 lesions compared with 14% in EID (p=0.02); 7% of patients had enhancing T1 lesions in SID compared with 9% in EID (p=0.08); annualised relapse rate was 0.14 in the SID group, and 0.09 in the EID group. No evidence of clinical or radiographic disease activity was observed in 62% of SID and 61% of EID patients (p=0.83). No cases of PML were observed in EID group compared with 4 cases in SID cohort. Conclusions Dosing intervals up to 8 weeks 5 days did not diminish effectiveness of NTZ therapy. Further monitoring is ongoing to evaluate if the risk of PML is reduced in patients on EID.
Neurodegenerative disease management | 2015
Robert J. Fox; Tamar E. Bacon; Eric Chamot; Amber Salter; Gary Cutter; Jennifer Kalina; Ilya Kister
The North American Research Committee on Multiple Sclerosis is a voluntary patient registry with more than 38,000 registrants as of 2015. In a recent collaborative project, longitudinal data on patient-perceived impairment in 11 domains commonly affected by multiple sclerosis were examined and tabulated as a function of disease duration. The patterns of disability accumulation differed by domain. Certain symptoms (sensory, fatigue) were particularly prevalent early in the disease. Other symptoms (mobility, hand function, fatigue, bowel/bladder dysfunction, spasticity) were progressively more common with longer disease duration. Some symptoms (vision, cognition, sensory, pain, depression) were relatively common early on in multiple sclerosis, but did not appear to be more frequent with longer disease duration. Ongoing research includes studies of the impact of disease-modifying therapy and symptomatic treatment on patient-perceived impairment over the disease course.
Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders | 2016
Lana Zhovtis Ryerson; Rivka Green; Gladyne Confident; Krupa Pandey; Benjamin Richter; Tamar E. Bacon; Carrie Sammarco; Lisa Laing; Jennifer Kalina; Ilya Kister
Background: Dimethyl fumarate (DMF) was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treatment of relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) based on two phase III randomized clinical trials (RCTs). There were not enough non-White patients enrolled in these RCTs to allow for subgroup analysis based on race. Efficacy and tolerability of DMF therapy across various racial groups is unknown. Methods: Retrospective chart review was performed on all patients with RRMS who were started on DMF in two tertiary multiple sclerosis (MS) clinics. Efficacy and tolerability of DMF was compared across three self-identified racial groups: White-American (WA), African-American (AA) and Hispanic-American (HA). Results: A total of 390 RRMS patients were included in the study: 261 (66.9%) WA, 69 (17.7%) AA and 52 (13.3%) HA. When comparing ‘pre-DMF’ (1 year) and ‘on DMF’ (mean follow up of 14 months) periods, statistically significant reduction in rates of annualized relapses (WA from 0.44 to 0.19, AA from 0.39 to 0.15, and HA from 0.39 to 0.14; no differences between groups), new T2 lesions (WA from 45% to 23%, AA from 39% to 23%, HA from 52% to 26%; no difference between groups), and Gd+ lesions (WA from 25% to 13%, AA from 24% to 7%, HA from 23% to 12%; no difference between groups) were seen. DMF was relatively well tolerated across all groups, with an overall discontinuation rate of 20% (no difference between the three groups). Conclusion: Efficacy of DMF in our clinic population did not differ across three major ethnic groups, WA, AA and HA, and was comparable with results observed in the pivotal studies. These ‘real-life’ data suggest that race is not a factor that needs to be taken into account when initiating DMF.
Occupational Therapy in Mental Health | 2016
Jennifer Kalina; Jim Hinojosa
ABSTRACT Loneliness is a subjective and unpleasant emotional state that occurs when people feel social networks or social relationships are deficient in some way. People with multiple sclerosis are often lonely and frequently withdraw from participating in meaningful social activities. Common symptoms, such as cognitive changes, decreased physical functioning, fatigue, incontinence, visual changes, or depression, may contribute to decreased social participation, which can lead to loneliness. This article presents an intervention protocol for improving loneliness in people with multiple sclerosis. This protocol is based on Bandura’s Social Learning Theory, which focuses on improving self-efficacy to reduce loneliness in people with multiple sclerosis.
Applied Neuropsychology | 2017
Rivka Green; Jennifer Kalina; R. Ford; K. Pandey; Ilya Kister
ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to describe SymptoMScreen, an in-house developed tool for rapid assessment of MS symptom severity in routine clinical practice, and to validate SymptoMScreen against Performance Scales (PS). MS patients typically experience symptoms in many neurologic domains. A tool that would enable MS patients to efficiently relay their symptom severity across multiple domains to the healthcare providers could lead to improved symptom management. We developed “SymptoMScreen,” a battery of 7-point Likert scales for 12 distinct domains commonly affected by MS: mobility, dexterity, body pain, sensation, bladder function, fatigue, vision, dizziness, cognition, depression, and anxiety. We administered SymptoMScreen and PS scales to consecutive MS patients at a specialty MS Care Center. We assessed the criterion and construct validity of SymptoMScreen by calculating Spearmen rank correlations between the SymptoMScreen composite score and PS composite score, and between SymptoMScreen subscale and the respective PS subscale scores, where applicable. A total of 410 patients with MS (age 46.6 ± 12.9 years; 74% female; mean disease duration 12.2 ± 8.7 years) completed the SymptoMScreen and PSs during their clinic visit. Composite SymptoMScreen score correlated strongly with combined PS score (r = 0.88, p < 0.0001). SymptoMScreen sub scores correlated strongly with the criterion measures of the respective PS (r = 0.69–0.87, p < 0.0001). Test-retest reliability of SymptoMScreen and its subscales was excellent (r = 0.71–0.94, p < .0001). SymptoMScreen is a single-page battery of Likert scales that assesses symptom impact in 12 domains commonly affected in MS. It has excellent criterion and construct validity. SymptoMScreen is patient and clinician friendly, takes approximately one minute to complete, and can help better document, understand, and manage patients’ symptoms in routine clinical practice. SymptoMScreen is freely available to clinicians and researchers.
International journal of MS care | 2013
Ilya Kister; Tamar E. Bacon; Eric Chamot; Amber Salter; Gary Cutter; Jennifer Kalina; Joseph Herbert
Journal of Headache and Pain | 2010
Ilya Kister; A. B. Caminero; T. S. Monteith; A. Soliman; Tamar E. Bacon; J. H. Bacon; Jennifer Kalina; Matilde Inglese; J. Herbert; Richard B. Lipton
Neurology | 2016
Jennifer Kalina
Journal of Intellectual Disability - Diagnosis and Treatment | 2015
Rivka Green; Jennifer Kalina; Krupa Pandey
Neurology | 2014
Mark Gudesblatt; Myassar Zarif; Barbara Bumstead; Marijean Buhse; Smitha Thotam; Lori Fafard; Jennifer Kalina; Cynthia Sullivan; Jeffrey Wilken; Glen M. Doniger