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Dive into the research topics where Julianna F. Lampropulos is active.

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Featured researches published by Julianna F. Lampropulos.


Open Heart | 2014

Trends in left ventricular assist device use and outcomes among Medicare beneficiaries, 2004-2011.

Julianna F. Lampropulos; Nancy Kim; Yun Wang; Mayur M. Desai; José Augusto Barreto-Filho; John A. Dodson; Daniel L. Dries; Abeel A. Mangi; Harlan M. Krumholz

Objective To characterise the trends in the left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation rates and outcomes between 2004 and 2011 in the Medicare population. Since the approval of the HeartMate II in 2008, the use of LVADs has steadily climbed. Given the increase in LVAD use, issues around discharge disposition, post-implant hospitalisations and costs require further understanding. Methods We examined LVAD implantation rates and short-term and long-term outcomes among Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries hospitalised for LVAD implantation. We also conducted analyses among survivors 1-year post-discharge to examine rehospitalisation rates. Lastly, we reported Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) payments for both index hospitalisation and rehospitalisations 1 year post-discharge. Results A total of 2152 LVAD implantations were performed with numbers increasing from 107 in 2004 to 612 in 2011. The 30-day mortality rate decreased from 52% to 9%, and 1-year mortality rate decreased from 69% to 31%. We observed no change in overall length of stay, but post-procedure length of stay increased. We also found an increase in home discharge dispositions from 26% to 53%. Between 2004 and 2010, the rehospitalisation rate increased and the number of hospital days decreased. The adjusted CMS payment for the index hospitalisation increased from


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2013

Time to publication among completed clinical trials.

Joseph S. Ross; Marian Mocanu; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Tony Tse; Harlan M. Krumholz

188 789 to


Circulation | 2015

The Variation in Recovery: Role of Gender on Outcomes of Young AMI Patients (VIRGO) Classification System: A Taxonomy for Young Women With Acute Myocardial Infarction.

Erica S. Spatz; Leslie Curry; Frederick A. Masoudi; Shengfan Zhou; Kelly M. Strait; Cary P. Gross; Jeptha P. Curtis; Alexandra J. Lansky; José Augusto Barreto-Filho; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Héctor Bueno; Sarwat I. Chaudhry; Gail D'Onofrio; Basmah Safdar; Rachel P. Dreyer; Karthik Murugiah; John A. Spertus; Harlan M. Krumholz

225 697 over time but decreased for rehospitalisation from


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2012

Most Important Articles on Cardiovascular Disease Among Racial and Ethnic Minorities

Purav Mody; Aakriti Gupta; Behnood Bikdeli; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Kumar Dharmarajan

60 647 to


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2012

Most Important Outcomes Research Papers on Anticoagulation for Cardiovascular Disease

Behnood Bikdeli; Aakriti Gupta; Purav Mody; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Kumar Dharmarajan

53 630. Conclusions LVAD implantations increased over time. We found decreasing 30-day and 1-year mortality rates and increasing home discharge disposition. The proportion of patients rehospitalised among 1-year survivors remained high with increasing index hospitalisation cost, but decreasing post-implantation costs over time.


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2013

Most Important Outcomes Research Papers on Variation in Cardiovascular Disease

Julianna F. Lampropulos; Aakriti Gupta; Vivek T. Kulkarni; Purav Mody; Ruijun Chen; Behnood Bikdeli; Kumar Dharmarajan

To the Editor: Prior studies have shown that 25% to 50% of clinical trials are never published.1–4 However, among those published, we know little about the length of time required for publication in the peer-reviewed biomedical literature after study completion. Ioannidis previously demonstrated that a sample of randomized phase 2 and 3 trials conducted between 1986 and 1996 required nearly 2.5 years for publication,5 while our more recent study of National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded trials found that average time to publication was almost two years.4 We sought to determine time to publication for a recent and representative sample of trials published in 2009.


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2013

Most Important Outcomes Research Papers on Treatment of Stable Coronary Artery Disease

Behnood Bikdeli; Isuru Ranasinghe; Ruijun Chen; Aakriti Gupta; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Vivek T. Kulkarni; Purav Mody; Kumar Dharmarajan

Background— Current classification schemes for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) may not accommodate the breadth of clinical phenotypes in young women. Methods and Results— We developed a novel taxonomy among young adults (⩽55 years) with AMI enrolled in the Variation in Recovery: Role of Gender on Outcomes of Young AMI Patients (VIRGO) study. We first classified a subset of patients (n=600) according to the Third Universal Definition of MI using a structured abstraction tool. There was heterogeneity within type 2 AMI, and 54 patients (9%; including 51 of 412 women) were unclassified. Using an inductive approach, we iteratively grouped patients with shared clinical characteristics, with the aims of developing a more inclusive taxonomy that could distinguish unique clinical phenotypes. The final VIRGO taxonomy classified 2802 study participants as follows: class 1, plaque-mediated culprit lesion (82.5% of women; 94.9% of men); class 2, obstructive coronary artery disease with supply-demand mismatch (2a: 1.4% women; 0.9% men) and without supply-demand mismatch (2b: 2.4% women; 1.1% men); class 3, nonobstructive coronary artery disease with supply-demand mismatch (3a: 4.3% women; 0.8% men) and without supply-demand mismatch (3b: 7.0% women; 1.9% men); class 4, other identifiable mechanism (spontaneous dissection, vasospasm, embolism; 1.5% women, 0.2% men); and class 5, undetermined classification (0.8% women, 0.2% men). Conclusions— Approximately 1 in 8 young women with AMI is unclassified by the Universal Definition of MI. We propose a more inclusive taxonomy that could serve as a framework for understanding biological disease mechanisms, therapeutic efficacy, and prognosis in this population.


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2012

Most Important Outcomes Research Papers in Cardiovascular Disease in the Elderly

Aakriti Gupta; Purav Mody; Behnood Bikdeli; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Kumar Dharmarajan

The following are highlights from the new series, Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes Topic Review. This series will summarize the most important manuscripts, as selected by the Editor, that have published in the Circulation portfolio. The objective of this new series is to provide our readership with a timely, comprehensive selection of important papers that are relevant to the quality and outcomes, and general cardiology audience. The studies included in this article represent the most significant research in the area of cardiovascular disease among racial and ethnic minorities.


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2012

Most Important Outcomes Research Papers on Valvular Heart Disease

Julianna F. Lampropulos; Behnood Bikdeli; Aakriti Gupta; Purav Mody; Vivek T. Kulkarni; Ruijun Chen; Kumar Dharmarajan

The following are highlights from the new series, Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes Topic Review. This series will summarize the most important manuscripts, as selected by the Editor, that have been published in the Circulation portfolio. The objective of this new series is to provide our readership with a timely, comprehensive selection of important papers that are relevant to the quality and outcomes, and general cardiology audience. The studies included in this article represent the most significant research in the area of anticoagulation for cardiovascular disease.


Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2012

Most Important Papers in Health Costs, Cost-Effectiveness, and Resource Utilization

Kumar Dharmarajan; Julianna F. Lampropulos; Behnood Bikdeli; Purav Mody; Aakriti Gupta

The topic of variation in health care has garnered significant attention since Wennberg and Gittelsohn in 19731 identified up to 10-fold variation in use of tonsillectomy and other surgical procedures in small towns within Maine and Vermont. Wennberg and others further described large differences in the propensity to hospitalize patients in Boston and New Haven that were unrelated to case-fatality but highly related to bed supply.2 These findings suggested that regional treatment variation is in part driven by differences in physician preferences and heath resource capacity rather than the health status of patients. These observations of extensive geographic variation in treatment were most extensively formalized in the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, a massive undertaking that used Medicare claims data to describe differences in cost and utilization across more than 300 hospital referral regions (HRRs) that were built from zip codes and hospital service areas. The Dartmouth Atlas has been published by Wennberg and colleagues since 1996. More recently, greater attention has been directed to variation in treatment and outcomes at the hospital level. Health care payers including the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have motivated the creation of performance measures that describe hospital variation in longitudinal outcomes such as rehospitalization and death.3–7 These measures have been endorsed by the National Quality Forum and are currently being used to direct financial penalties to hospitals with higher-than-expected rates of adverse outcomes for common conditions such as heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, and pneumonia. In the future, Medicare will likely assess hospital variation in outcomes for specific cardiovascular treatments including percutaneous coronary intervention and percutaneous valve replacement. Given the increased focus on treatment and outcomes variation at both regional and hospital levels, we have dedicated the reviews in this issue of Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes …

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Purav Mody

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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