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Dive into the research topics where Jodi Skiles is active.

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Featured researches published by Jodi Skiles.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2013

Salvage therapy of refractory hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis with alemtuzumab

Rebecca A. Marsh; Carl E. Allen; Kenneth L. McClain; Joanna Weinstein; Julie Kanter; Jodi Skiles; Nadine D. Lee; Shakila P. Khan; Julia Lawrence; Jun Q. Mo; Jack Bleesing; Alexandra H. Filipovich; Michael B. Jordan

Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a life‐threatening hyperinflammatory syndrome that remains difficult to treat. Even with current standard HLH therapy, only approximately half of patients will experience complete resolution of disease, and early mortality remains a significant problem. Salvage therapies have been described only in limited case reports, and there are no large studies of second‐line therapies.


Journal of The Peripheral Nervous System | 2015

Patterns and severity of vincristine‐induced peripheral neuropathy in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Ellen M. Lavoie Smith; Lang Li; ChienWei Chiang; Karin Thomas; Raymond J. Hutchinson; Elizabeth M. Wells; Richard Ho; Jodi Skiles; Arindom Chakraborty; Celia M. Bridges; Jamie L. Renbarger

Vincristine, a critical component of combination chemotherapy treatment for pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), can lead to vincristine‐induced peripheral neuropathy (VIPN). Longitudinal VIPN assessments were obtained over 12 months from newly diagnosed children with ALL (N = 128) aged 1–18 years who received vincristine at one of four academic childrens hospitals. VIPN assessments were obtained using the Total Neuropathy Score‐Pediatric Vincristine (TNS©‐PV), National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE©), Balis© grading scale, and Pediatric Neuropathic Pain Scale©–Five (PNPS©‐5). Of children who provided a full TNS©‐PV score, 85/109 (78%) developed VIPN (TNS©‐PV ≥4). Mean TNS©‐PV, grading scale, and pain scores were low. CTCAE©‐derived grades 3 and 4 sensory and motor VIPN occurred in 1.6%/0%, and 1.9%/0% of subjects, respectively. VIPN did not resolve in months 8–12 despite decreasing dose density. VIPN was worse in older children. Partition cluster analysis revealed 2–3 patient clusters; one cluster (n = 14) experienced severe VIPN. In this population, VIPN occurs more commonly than previous research suggests, persists throughout the first year of treatment, and can be severe.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2014

Abandonment of childhood cancer treatment in Western Kenya

Festus Njuguna; Saskia Mostert; A. Slot; Sandra Langat; Jodi Skiles; Mei Neni Sitaresmi; P.M. van de Ven; J. Musimbi; H. Muliro; Rachel C. Vreeman; G. J. L. Kaspers

Background The most important reason for childhood cancer treatment failure in low-income countries is treatment abandonment. Objective The aim of this study was to explore reasons for childhood cancer treatment abandonment and assess the clinical condition of these children. Design This was a descriptive study using semistructured questionnaires. Home visits were conducted to interview families of childhood cancer patients, diagnosed between January 2007 and January 2009, who had abandoned treatment at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital (MTRH). Results Between January 2007 and January 2009, 222 children were newly diagnosed with a malignancy at MTRH. Treatment outcome was documented in 180 patients. Of these 180 patients, 98 (54%) children abandoned treatment. From December 2011 until August 2012, 53 (54%) of the 98 families were contacted. Due to lack of contact information, 45 families were untraceable. From 53 contacted families, 46 (87%) families agreed to be interviewed. Reasons for abandonment were reported by 26 families, and they were diverse. Most common reasons were financial difficulties (46%), inadequate access to health insurance (27%) and transportation difficulties (23%). Most patients (72%) abandoned treatment after the first 3 months had been completed. Of the 46 children who abandoned treatment, 9 (20%) were still alive: 6 (67%) of these children looked healthy and 3 (33%) ill. The remaining 37 (80%) children had passed away. Conclusions Prevention of childhood cancer treatment abandonment requires improved access to health insurance, financial or transportation support, proper parental education, psychosocial guidance and ameliorated communication skills of healthcare providers.


Psycho-oncology | 2014

Two overlooked contributors to abandonment of childhood cancer treatment in Kenya: parents' social network and experiences with hospital retention policies.

Saskia Mostert; Festus Njuguna; Sandra Langat; A. Slot; Jodi Skiles; Mei Neni Sitaresmi; P.M. van de Ven; J. Musimbi; R.C. Vreeman; G. J. L. Kaspers

The principal reason for childhood cancer treatment failure in low‐income countries is treatment abandonment, the most severe form of nonadherence. Two often neglected factors that may contribute to treatment abandonment are as follows: (a) lack of information and guidance by doctors, along with the negative beliefs of family and friends advising parents, which contributes to misconceptions regarding cancer and its treatment, and (b) a widespread policy in public hospitals by which children are retained after doctors discharge until medical bills are settled.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

Fluorosis because of prolonged voriconazole therapy in a teenager with acute myelogenous leukemia.

Jodi Skiles; Erik A. Imel; John C. Christenson; Jennifer E. Bell; Monica L. Hulbert

Introduction Voriconazole is a second-generation antifungal medication prescribed for the treatment of invasive fungal infections and for Aspergillus prophylaxis in high-risk populations. Voriconazole is generally well tolerated; however, it has recently been implicated in diffuse painful periostitis in adult solid organ and bone marrow transplant patients who received long-term voriconazole. Because voriconazole contains fluorine, the mechanism of toxicity is suspected to be the accumulation of fluoride. In this article, we report voriconazoleand posaconazole-associated fluorosis with diffuse periostitis and exostoses in a teenager with acute myelogenous leukemia. To our knowledge, this is the first pediatric nontransplant patient reported with this toxicity.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2015

Biomarkers for Diagnosis and Prognosis of Sinusoidal Obstruction Syndrome after Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation

Ayman Akil; Qing Zhang; Christen Mumaw; Nisha Raiker; Jeffrey Yu; Nieves Velez de Mendizabal; Laura S. Haneline; Kent A. Robertson; Jodi Skiles; Maribel Diaz-Ricart; Enric Carreras; Jamie L. Renbarger; Samir M. Hanash; Robert R. Bies; Sophie Paczesny

Reliable, noninvasive methods for diagnosing and prognosing sinusoidal obstruction syndrome (SOS) early after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) are needed. We used a quantitative mass spectrometry-based proteomics approach to identify candidate biomarkers of SOS by comparing plasma pooled from 20 patients with and 20 patients without SOS. Of 494 proteins quantified, we selected 6 proteins (L-Ficolin, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 [VCAM1], tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1, von Willebrand factor, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, and CD97) based on a differential heavy/light isotope ratio of at least 2 fold, information from the literature, and immunoassay availability. Next, we evaluated the diagnostic potential of these 6 proteins and 5 selected from the literature (suppression of tumorigenicity-2 [ST2], angiopoietin-2 (ANG2), hyaluronic acid [HA], thrombomodulin, and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1) in samples from 80 patients. The results demonstrate that together ST2, ANG2, L-Ficolin, HA, and VCAM1 compose a biomarker panel for diagnosis of SOS. L-Ficolin, HA, and VCAM1 also stratified patients at risk for SOS as early as the day of HCT. Prognostic Bayesian modeling for SOS onset based on L-Ficolin, HA, and VCAM1 levels on the day of HCT and clinical characteristics showed >80% correct prognosis of SOS onset. These biomarkers may provide opportunities for preemptive intervention to minimize SOS incidence and/or severity.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2014

Influence of health-insurance access and hospital retention policies on childhood cancer treatment in Kenya

Saskia Mostert; Festus Njuguna; P.M. van de Ven; Gilbert Olbara; L.J.P.A. Kemps; J. Musimbi; R.M. Strother; L.M. Aluoch; Jodi Skiles; N.G. Buziba; Mei Neni Sitaresmi; R.C. Vreeman; G. J. L. Kaspers

Kenyan national policies for public hospitals dictate that patients are retained on hospital wards until their hospital bills are paid, but this payment process differs for patients with or without access to National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) at diagnosis. Whether these differences impact treatment outcomes has not been described. Our study explores whether childhood cancer treatment outcomes in Kenya are influenced by health‐insurance status and hospital retention policies.


International Journal of Cancer | 2016

Factors influencing survival among Kenyan children diagnosed with endemic Burkitt lymphoma between 2003 and 2011: A historical cohort study

Geoffrey Buckle; Louise Maranda; Jodi Skiles; John M. Ong'echa; Joslyn Foley; Mara M. Epstein; Terry A. Vik; Andrew Schroeder; Jennifer Lemberger; Alan G. Rosmarin; Scot C. Remick; Jeffrey A. Bailey; John M. Vulule; Juliana A. Otieno; Ann M. Moormann

Discovering how to improve survival and establishing clinical reference points for children diagnosed with endemic Burkitt lymphoma (eBL) in resource‐constrained settings has recaptured international attention. Using multivariate analyses, we evaluated 428 children with eBL in Kenya for age, gender, tumor stage, nutritional status, hemoglobin, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), Epstein‐Barr virus (EBV) and Plasmodium falciparum prior to induction of chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, methotrexate and doxorubicin) to identify predictive and prognostic biomarkers of survival. During this 10 year prospective study period, 22% died in‐hospital and 78% completed six‐courses of chemotherapy. Of those, 16% relapsed or died later; 31% achieved event‐free‐survival; and 31% were lost to follow‐up; the overall one‐year survival was 45%. After adjusting for covariates, low hemoglobin (<8 g/dL) and high LDH (>400 mU/ml) were associated with increased risk of death (adjusted Hazard Ratio (aHR) = 1.57 [0.97–2.41]) and aHR = 1.84, [0.91–3.69], respectively). Anemic children with malaria were 3.55 times more likely to die [1.10–11.44] compared to patients without anemia or malarial infection. EBV load did not differ by tumor stage nor was it associated with survival. System‐level factors can also contribute to poor outcomes. Children were more likely to die when inadvertently overdosed by more than 115% of the correct dose of cyclophosphamide (aHR = 1.43 [0.84–2.43]) or doxorubicin (aHR = 1.25, [0.66–2.35]), compared with those receiving accurate doses of the respective agent in this setting. This study codifies risk factors associated with poor outcomes for eBL patients in Africa and provides a benchmark by which to assess improvements in survival for new chemotherapeutic approaches.


The Clinical Teacher | 2005

Teaching Professionalism: A Medical Student's Opinion

Jodi Skiles

S tudies repeatedly show that fourth-year medical students represent some of the most cynical members of the health care system. It seems that as we traverse the medical education system, we begin to lose the attributes that attracted us to medicine in the first place. As we are being taught within our formal curriculum how to be empathetic, kind, caring young physicians, we are somehow growing into cynical, jaded, less passionate senior students.


Infectious Agents and Cancer | 2013

Mentoring future Kenyan oncology researchers

Ann M. Moormann; Jodi Skiles; Emmanuel Koros; Fredrick Chite Asirwa; Naftali Busakhala; Patrick J. Loehrer

This is a summary of the 1st Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare (AMPATH) Oncology Institute research grant writing workshop organized in collaboration with the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) and held in Kisumu, Kenya from January 16th to 18th, 2013. The goal of this meeting was to mentor future Kenyan scientists and prioritize research topics that would lead to improved cancer care and survival for the citizens of Kenya.

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Saskia Mostert

VU University Medical Center

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P.M. van de Ven

VU University Medical Center

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G. J. L. Kaspers

VU University Medical Center

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