Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jessica K. Devin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jessica K. Devin.


Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 2004

The Efficacy of Linear Accelerator Radiosurgery in the Management of Patients with Cushing’s Disease

Jessica K. Devin; George S. Allen; Anthony J. Cmelak; Dennis M. Duggan; Lewis S. Blevins

We identified 35 patients who had undergone stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) for their biochemically proven Cushing’s disease in order to assess the efficacy of SRS with regard to control of hypercortisolism, improvement of clinical features and prevention of tumor progression, and subsequent incidence of hypopituitarism. Seventeen (49%) patients achieved control of their cortisol levels following SRS; the mean time to normalization was 7.5 months (range: 1–33). Four (19%) patients experienced recurrent hypercortisolism at a mean time of 35.5 months following therapy (range: 17–64). Control of tumor progression was achieved in 91% patients. Fourteen (40%) patients demonstrated a new pituitary deficiency following SRS. Our results suggest that cortisol levels are normalized more efficiently and with a lower recurrence rate with SRS than with conventional fractionated external beam radiotherapy (EBT). We have confirmed the near 100% tumor control rate reported with SRS. The percentage of patients developing pituitary insufficiency following SRS is less than that of patients having undergone EBT; however, deficits occurred up to 10 years posttreatment. We advocate the use of SRS as the primary therapeutic modality in those patients who are poor surgical candidates, or as the adjunct treatment to microsurgery in eliminating residual tumor cells or disease that is not easily amenable to resection.


Endocrine Practice | 2008

Prevalence of valvular heart disease in a cohort of patients taking cabergoline for management of hyperprolactinemia.

Jessica K. Devin; Vipul Lakhani; Benjamin Byrd; Lewis S. Blevins

OBJECTIVE To determine the prevalence of valvular heart disease in a cohort of patients taking cabergoline for the management of hyperprolactinemia. METHODS A retrospective review of medical records identified patients with hyperprolactinemia who underwent evaluation at Vanderbilt University Medical Center between January and June 2007. The medical records of those patients who were prescribed cabergoline and who underwent elective echocardiography were reviewed for details pertaining to cardiac valvular abnormalities and cabergoline use. RESULTS Forty-five patients (mean age, 41 +/- 10 years [SD]) taking 0.91 +/- 0.96 mg of cabergoline per week for a mean duration of 39 +/- 29 months underwent echocardiography. Abnormalities of the cardiac valves were present in 3 patients (7%): 1 patient exhibited mild mitral regurgitation, 1 patient had focal aortic valve thickening, and 1 patient demonstrated mitral valve thickening. We found no significant difference in either the cumulative dose of cabergoline (P = .800) or the duration of cabergoline therapy (P = .745) between those patients with and those without these echocardiographic abnormalities. CONCLUSION We found echocardiographic valve abnormalities in 3 of 45 patients (7%) who had been prescribed cabergoline for the management of hyperprolactinemia. This prevalence of valvular heart disease after approximately 3 years of cabergoline treatment is no different from that previously reported in normal populations as determined by echocardiography.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2007

Transgenic overexpression of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 promotes the development of polycystic ovarian changes in female mice

Jessica K. Devin; Joyce E. Johnson; Mesut Eren; Linda A. Gleaves; William Bradham; John R. Bloodworth; Douglas E. Vaughan

Reproductive age women (5-10%) are affected by the polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), a diagnosis which confers lifelong cardiovascular and reproductive health implications. Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), the main physiological inhibitor of plasminogen activation, is consistently elevated in women with PCOS, regardless of metabolic status. Interestingly, the plasminogen system has long been implicated in proteolytic processes within the dynamic ovary. A non-physiologic elevation in PAI-1 may thus contribute systemically to endothelial dysfunction and locally to abnormal ovarian phenotype and function. We herein characterize the phenotypic alterations in ovaries from transgenic mice, which constitutively express a stable form of human PAI-1 and determine the plasma testosterone level in these mice as opposed to their unaffected counterparts. Over half of the ovaries from transgenic mice were found to contain large cystic structures, in contrast to wild-type controls of the same genetic background (53% (N = 17) vs 5% (N = 22); P = 0.001). Plasma testosterone was nearly twofold elevated in transgenic female mice versus wild-type females (0.312 ng/ml +/- 0.154 (N = 10) vs 0.181 ng/ml +/- 0.083 (N = 8); P = 0.014). An elevation in PAI-1 therefore appears to predispose mice to the development of this abnormal architecture, which in turn is associated with an increase in plasma testosterone. Therefore, we propose that an inappropriate elevation in PAI-1 contributes to the development of polycystic structures; these findings may thus reorient the efforts aimed at the development of therapeutic agents for the treatment of this increasingly common syndrome.


Neurosurgery | 2010

Utility of the immediate postoperative cortisol concentrations in patients with Cushing's disease.

Michael E. Sughrue; Jugal K. Shah; Jessica K. Devin; Sandeep Kunwar; Lewis S. Blevins

BACKGROUNDSeveral investigators have recommended serial measurements of serum cortisol in the days following pituitary surgery to identify patients at risk of recurrence. OBJECTIVEWe systematically reviewed the literature on this topic and analyzed the usefulness of this test in our own patient population. METHODSWe identified studies publishing data regarding recurrence rates after transsphenoidal surgery for Cushings disease, focusing on studies with data regarding patients with early postoperative cortisol levels. We determined a cumulative relative risk of having a subnormal vs normal cortisol level postoperatively using a fixed-effects meta-analysis model. Additionally, we analyzed our own patients with Cushings disease undergoing transsphenoidal surgery and performed Kaplan-Meier analysis of recurrence-free survival for patients with undetectable, subnormal but detectable, and normal immediate 8 AM serum cortisol levels. RESULTSFourteen studies met inclusion criteria. The length of follow-up varied between 32 and 115 months. The cumulative rate of recurrence in the group of patients with subnormal cortisol levels was 9% (95% confidence interval: 6%–12%). The cumulative rate of recurrence in the group with normal cortisol levels was 24% (95% confidence interval: 17%–31%). We analyzed 73 of our own patients and found similar recurrence rates in patients with subnormal vs normal early postoperative cortisol levels (4% vs 22%, χ2 test, P < .05). CONCLUSIONAlthough a subnormal early postoperative cortisol level is predictive of improved outcome after transsphenoidal surgery for Cushings disease, it is not analogous with cure, nor is a normal level completely predictive of future failure.


Growth Hormone & Igf Research | 2008

Low-dose growth hormone administration mobilizes endothelial progenitor cells in healthy adults

Jessica K. Devin; Douglas E. Vaughan; Lewis S. Blevins; Qingxia Chen; Joseph W. Covington; Denise K. Verity; Pampee P. Young

OBJECTIVE Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) mobilize from the bone marrow secondary to a stimulus and home to sites of injury, where they differentiate into endothelial cells and contribute to the repair of damaged vasculature. We hypothesized that growth hormone (GH) administration would increase the number of circulating EPCs in adults and thereby represent a mechanism to enhance vascular health. DESIGN A prospective trial of low-dose GH (0.03mg/kg/week for 4 weeks followed by 0.06mg/kg/week for a maximum of four additional weeks) in 10 healthy adults (6 males and 4 females; mean age 37 years, range 26-65). Primary outcomes measured included the number of circulating EPCs as assessed by colony-forming unit (CFU) assay and flow cytometry. Secondary outcomes included plasma measurements of known mediators of EPC mobilization and indices of nitric oxide (NO). Outcomes were measured at baseline and at study completion. RESULTS GH administration increased serum IGF-1 (143ng/mL [IQR 121-164] to 222 [IQR 194-244]; P=0.005). The increase in early-outgrowth EPCs (13 CFU per high-power field [IQR 6-24] to 19 [IQR 13-40]; P=0.005) correlated with the peak IGF-1 after adjustment for the baseline number of early-outgrowth EPCs (r=0.719 [95% CI 0.06, 0.93]; P=0.027). The number of late-outgrowth EPCs as well as CD34+, VEGFR2(KDR)+, and AC133+ cells did not significantly change. Other mediators of EPC mobilization were stable while plasma nitrite trended upwards (1.3micromol/L [IQR 0-2.5] to 3.7 [IQR 2.2-8.9]; P=0.052). CONCLUSIONS GH administration selectively augments the early-outgrowth EPC population in healthy individuals. These findings both support GH replacement in the setting of GH deficiency to maintain vascular integrity and have implications for the use of GH in future regenerative cell-based therapies. Furthermore, the decrease in EPCs observed with aging may in part be explained by the declining somatotropic axis, and thereby contribute to cardiovascular senescence.


Endocrine Practice | 2011

Random postoperative day-3 cortisol concentration as a predictor of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis integrity after transsphenoidal surgery

Maryam I. Khan; Mouhammed Amir Habra; Ian E. McCutcheon; Graciela M. Nogueras-Gonzalez; Jessica K. Devin; Naifa L. Busaidy; Nicholas B. Levine; Wayne A. Lindstrom; David Kagan; Camilo Jimenez; Steven G. Waguespack

OBJECTIVE To determine whether a random postoperative day-3 cortisol value of 10 μg/dL or greater is predictive of adrenal sufficiency 3 to 10 weeks after transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) and during long-term clinical follow-up. METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the case records of patients who underwent TSS at our institution between 1991 and 2008. Inclusion criteria were as follows: random cortisol measured on the morning of postoperative day 3, adrenal dynamic testing performed 3 to 10 weeks after TSS, and clinical assessment of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis at least 6 months after TSS. RESULTS A total of 466 patients underwent TSS at our institution during the study period. Eighty-three patients met study inclusion criteria. Sensitivity of a random postoperative day-3 serum cortisol value of 10 μg/dL or greater for the prediction of adrenal sufficiency at a median follow-up of 42 days was 64.81% (95% confidence interval, 50.6%-77.32%), with an odds ratio of 3.1 (95% confidence interval, 1.08-8.58). Specificity was 62.1% (95% confidence interval, 42.3%-79.3%). At a median follow-up of 500 days, only 2 patients with a postoperative day-3 cortisol value of 10 μg/dL or greater required hydrocortisone replacement, both of whom had multiple anterior pituitary hormone deficiencies and evidence of pituitary dysfunction during the perioperative period. CONCLUSIONS In the appropriate clinical context, a postoperative day-3 cortisol value of 10 μg/dL or greater accurately predicts the integrity of the HPA axis. The final decision regarding corticosteroid replacement should be personalized, considering the postoperative day-3 cortisol level, the clinical context in which the measurement was obtained, and any evidence of concomitant pituitary dysfunction in the perioperative period.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007

Markedly Impaired Fibrinolytic Balance Contributes to Cardiovascular Risk in Adults with Growth Hormone Deficiency

Jessica K. Devin; Lewis S. Blevins; Denise K. Verity; Qingxia Chen; John R. Bloodworth; Joseph W. Covington; Douglas E. Vaughan


Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2009

An approach to the management of patients with residual Cushing's disease

Lewis S. Blevins; Nader Sanai; Sandeep Kunwar; Jessica K. Devin


Current opinion in investigational drugs | 2008

The effects of growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-1 on the aging cardiovascular system and its progenitor cells.

Jessica K. Devin; Pampee P. Young


Pituitary | 2012

Phospho-histone H3 (pHH3) immuno-reactivity as a prognostic marker in non-functioning pituitary adenomas

Erica Hightower; Maria E. Cabanillas; Gregory N. Fuller; Ian E. McCutcheon; Kenneth R. Hess; Komal Shah; Steven G. Waguespack; Lynda J. Corley; Jessica K. Devin

Collaboration


Dive into the Jessica K. Devin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anthony J. Cmelak

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frederic T. Billings

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nancy J. Brown

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge