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Dive into the research topics where Joan E. Blake is active.

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Featured researches published by Joan E. Blake.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1987

Long-term treatment of alcoholic liver disease with propylthiouracil

Hector Orrego; Joan E. Blake; Laurence M. Blendis; Kathleen V. Compton; Yedy Israel

Propylthiouracil has been shown experimentally to protect against alcohol-induced hepatocellular necrosis in hypoxic conditions. An earlier, short-term study of patients with alcoholism and liver disease indicated clinical improvement with propylthiouracil, but the effect on mortality could not be assessed. In the present study, we investigated the effect of propylthiouracil on mortality in patients with alcoholic liver disease in a long-term, double-blind, randomized clinical trial involving 310 compliant patients who received propylthiouracil (n = 157) or placebo (n = 153) for a maximum of two years. There were no differences between the two groups in demographic and clinical characteristics and biopsy-confirmed diagnoses at randomization, or in daily urinary alcohol levels during the study. The cumulative dropout rate over two years was not significantly different (propylthiouracil group, 0.68; placebo group, 0.60). The group receiving propylthiouracil (300 mg per day) had a cumulative mortality rate half that in the group receiving placebo (0.13 vs. 0.25 [P less than 0.05] in the total sample, and 0.25 vs. 0.55 [P less than 0.03] in a subgroup of severely ill patients [propylthiouracil group, n = 56; placebo group, n = 41]). Proportional-hazards stepwise regression analyses indicated that only propylthiouracil treatment, prothrombin time, hemoglobin levels, and mean daily urinary alcohol levels significantly affected mortality. The hazards ratio for the complete group indicated that mortality in the propylthiouracil group was 0.38 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.20 to 0.83) that of the placebo group. Protection by propylthiouracil was not observed in patients with high morning urinary alcohol levels. No clinically important side effects of propylthiouracil were observed at the dose used. We conclude that the administration of propylthiouracil can reduce mortality due to alcoholic liver disease.


Gastroenterology | 1979

Effect of Short-Term Therapy with Propylthiouracil in Patients with Alcoholic Liver Disease

Hector Orrego; H. Kalant; Y. Israel; Joan E. Blake; Alan Medline; J.G. Rankin; A. Armstrong; B. Kapur

The effect of propylthiouracil (PTU; 300 mg/day) on alcoholic liver disease was evaluated in 133 patients in a short-term randomized double-blind trial. Severity of the disease was assessed by a composite clinical and laboratory index (CCLI). A normalization rate (NR) representing the rate of improvement in CCLI was calculated. Patients with alcoholic hepatitis, with and without cirrhosis, showed a significantly higher NR on PTU (43.6 +/- 4.6) than on placebo (19.8 +/- 3.3; P less than 0.001). A similar effect was observed in patients with abnormal prothrombin (no biopsy): NR was 32.9 +/- 6.9 on PTU and 2.6 +/- 3.7 on placebo (P less than 0.005). The effect of PTU on each clinical and laboratory component of the CCLI was also compared in these two groups. In 38 patients with alcoholic hepatitis and in 25 with abnormal prothrombin, those on PTU showed a greater improvement in 15 of 15 items (P less than 0.001) and 14 of 15 (P less than 0.01), respectively. When patients were divided according to the severity of the disease into those in the lower and upper halves of the CCLI range (81 and 52 patients, respectively), PTU was shown to have a significant effect only in the latter: The NR was 41.4 +/- 3.8 on PTU and 22.5 +/- 4.2 on placebo (P less than 0.005). PTU was ineffective in patients with inactive cirrhosis.


Gastroenterology | 1979

Thyroid hormones in alcoholic liver disease. Effect of treatment with 6-n-propylthiouracil.

Y. Israel; P.G. Walfish; Hector Orrego; Joan E. Blake; H. Kalant

The relationship between alcoholic liver disease and circulating thyroid hormones was investigated in 124 hospitalized patients treated with placebo or propylthiouracil (PTU) for a maximum of 46 days in a double-blind study. Serum triiodothyronine (T3) levels on admission were significantly (P less than 10(-6) and inversely correlated with the severity of alcoholic liver disease. After hospitalization, changes in T3-levels in patients with low admission T3 significantly correlated (P less than 0.001) with the degree of spontaneous improvement of liver function (placebo group). Treatment with 300 mg of PTU daily (Orrego et al. Gastroenterology 76:105--115, 1979) markedly increased the rate of improvement in severely ill patients with low T3 on admission. In this group, serum T3-levels were also increased after PTU, but this increase did not correlate with the change in the patients condition. It is suggested that the known inhibitory effect of PTU on peripheral deiodination of T4 to T3 is marked by a more marked improvement in liver function in this group. PTU treatment in this group reduced the free T4-index and increased TSH levels markedly (16%; P less than 0.02) toward levels found in hypothyroidism. PTU did not improve the condition of mildly ill patients with normal admission T3-levels, nor did it alter free T4-index or serum TSH levels in these patients. Serum T3-levels provide a sensitive indicator of the severity of alcoholic liver disease and of its response to conventional treatment. Serum T3-levels also distinguish between a group of patients, in whom low-dose PTU administration results in a beneficial effect, and another group, in whom no therapeutic effect of PTU is observed.


Journal of Hepatology | 1994

Long-term treatment of alcoholic liver disease with propylthiouracil. Part 2: Influence of drop-out rates and of continued alcohol consumption in a clinical trial

Hector Orrego; Joan E. Blake; Laurence M. Blendis; Kathleen V. Compton; Robert Volpé; Yedy Israel

Although propylthiouracil has previously been shown to reduce the risk of mortality in alcoholic liver disease by 60%, generalized use of propylthiouracil for this condition has not occurred. Additional data are therefore presented on four aspects to provide a better assessment of its therapeutic effectiveness. First, the characteristics and the prognosis of dropouts were virtually identical in both the drug and placebo groups. Also the methodology and analysis employed, were designed to control for dropouts, thus providing an accurate interpretation of the outcome. Secondly, since 97% of the patients continued to drink, abstinence was not a precondition for the beneficial effect of propylthiouracil. However, the beneficial effect was observed most clearly in those patients who continued to drink at lower levels, whereas lower level drinking per se did not afford protection in placebo patients. Thirdly, serious side effects or clinical hypothyroidism occurred extremely rarely in these patients, many of whom have now received propylthiouracil for over 4 years. Fourthly, we discuss why the outcome in long-term clinical trials in alcoholic liver disease cannot be compared with effects observed in clinical trials lasting only a few weeks. Journal of Hepatology.


The Lancet | 1988

Long-Term Treatment of Alcoholic Liver Disease with Propylthiouracil

Hector Orrego; Joan E. Blake; Laurence M. Blendis; Kathleen V. Compton; Yedy Israel

Abstract Propylthiouracil has been shown experimentally to protect against alcohol-induced hepatocellular necrosis in hypoxic conditions. An earlier, short-term study of patients with alcoholism and liver disease indicated clinical improvement with propylthiouracil, but the effect on mortality could not be assessed. In the present study, we investigated the effect of propylthiouracil on mortality in patients with alcoholic liver disease in a long-term, double-blind, randomized clinical trial involving 310 compliant patients who received propylthiouracil (n = 157) or placebo (n = 153) for a maximum of two years. There were no differences between the two groups in demographic and clinical characteristics and biopsy-confirmed diagnoses at randomization, or in daily urinary alcohol levels during the study. The cumulative dropout rate over two years was not significantly different (propylthiouracil group, 0.68; placebo group, 0.60). The group receiving propylthiouracil (300 mg per day) had a cumulative mortali...


Hepatology | 2007

Assessment of Prognostic Factors in Alcoholic Liver Disease: Toward a Global Quantitative Expression of Severity

Hector Orrego; Yedy Israel; Joan E. Blake; Alan Medline


Gastroenterology | 1987

Prognosis of alcoholic cirrhosis in the presence and absence of alcoholic hepatitis

Hector Orrego; Joan E. Blake; Laurie Blendis; Alan Medline


Hepatology | 1997

Serum IgA, IgG, and IgM antibodies directed against acetaldehyde‐derived epitopes: Relationship to liver disease severity and alcohol consumption

Katja Viitala; Yedy Israel; Joan E. Blake; Onni Niemelä


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1996

Sensitivity and specificity of carbohydrate-deficient transferrin as a marker of alcohol abuse are significantly influenced by alterations in serum transferrin : Comparison of two methods

Katja Sorvajärvi; Joan E. Blake; Yedy Israel; Onni Niemelä


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 1985

Relationship between γ-Glutamyl Transpeptidase and Mean Urinary Alcohol Levels in Alcoholics While Drinking and after Alcohol Withdrawal

Hector Orrego; Joan E. Blake; Y. Israel

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Y. Israel

University of Toronto

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