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Featured researches published by Kathleen A. Lane.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2004

Comparison of Endoscopic Ultrasonography and Multidetector Computed Tomography for Detecting and Staging Pancreatic Cancer

John M. DeWitt; Benedict M. Devereaux; Melissa Chriswell; Kathleen McGreevy; Thomas J. Howard; Thomas F. Imperiale; Donato Ciaccia; Kathleen A. Lane; Dean D. T. Maglinte; Kenyon K. Kopecky; Julia K. Leblanc; Lee McHenry; James A. Madura; Alex M. Aisen; Harvey Cramer; Oscar W. Cummings; Stuart Sherman

Context Clinicians often use multidetector computed tomography or endoscopic ultrasonography to detect and stage pancreatic cancer. Contribution This prospective study found that, among 80 adults with proven pancreatic cancer, the sensitivity of multidetector computed tomography and endoscopic ultrasonography for detecting a pancreatic mass was 86% (CI, 77% to 93%) and 98% (CI, 91% to 100%), respectively. Among 53 patients undergoing surgery, endoscopic ultrasonography was more accurate for staging local tumor spread, but both tests showed similar accuracy for nodal staging and detecting resectability. Cautions Optimal strategies to detect and stage pancreatic cancer may vary across sites depending on the expertise of radiologists and endosonographers. The Editors In the United States for the year 2003, it was estimated that pancreatic cancer would be diagnosed in approximately 30700 patients and contribute to 30000 deaths (1). Complete surgical removal with negative histologic margins (R0 resection) is an independent predictor of postoperative survival (2-4) and remains the only potential curative treatment for pancreatic cancer. At surgical exploration, however, only 5% to 25% of the tumors are amenable to resection (5-8). Therefore, the principle goal of preoperative evaluation is to identify patients with potentially resectable disease while avoiding surgical exploration in those with unresectable disease. There is no evidence-based consensus on the optimal preoperative imaging assessment of patients with suspected pancreatic cancer. Because of widespread availability, helical computed tomography (CT) is usually the initial study for this indication (9, 10). Dual-phase helical CT, during which postinjection contrast image acquisition is obtained in both the pancreatic (arterial) and portal venous phases, has improved detection rate and assessment of resectability in patients with suspected pancreatic cancer (11, 12). Current state-of-the-art CT imaging uses a multiple-row detector with narrow detector collimation, wide x-ray beam, and rapid table translation; these features offer faster acquisition and thinner image slices compared with single-detector CT (13-15). Whether multidetector CT offers improved detection and staging of pancreatic cancer, however, is unknown. Endoscopic ultrasonography has been shown to be superior to conventional CT for the detection (16-20) and staging (19, 20) of pancreatic cancer. When compared with helical CT, however, endoscopic ultrasonography is reported to be either equivalent for detection (21, 22) or superior for detection or staging (23-25). To date, no comparative studies of multidetector CT with other imaging tests, including endoscopic ultrasonography, for suspected pancreatic cancer have been performed. Therefore, we conducted a prospective trial to compare endoscopic ultrasonography and multidetector CT for the detection, staging, and resectability of suspected locoregional pancreatic cancer. Methods Patients The institutional review board at Indiana University Medical Center approved this study, and all patients signed written informed consent. Eligible patients were referred to our hospital with clinically suspected or recently diagnosed solid or cystic pancreatic cancer within the previous 8 weeks. The referral base for our hospital consists of gastroenterologists and surgeons from Indiana and the surrounding contiguous states. Patients were eligible only if they agreed to undergo endoscopic ultrasonography, CT, and surgery (if necessary) at our institution. Patients were excluded if they had previously undergone endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography or endoscopic ultrasonography at our institution for suspected pancreatic cancer; declined or remained undecided about potential surgical intervention; were referred to our institution by surgeons outside our hospital system. Patients were also excluded if they were pregnant, were incarcerated, could not independently provide informed consent, or were considered high surgical risk (American Society of Anesthesiology class III to V). In addition, we excluded patients with known or suspected periampullary masses, cholangiocarcinomas, or cancer with suspected locally advanced arterial (superior mesenteric, hepatic, or celiac) involvement or metastatic disease (ascites, suspicious liver or pulmonary lesions, distant enlarged lymph nodes) detected by previous imaging studies. Patients with suspected nonocclusive involvement of the superior mesenteric vein or portal vein were considered eligible for enrollment. Study Design This was a prospective, single-center, observational study. All enrolled patients had to respond to an initial health and medical questionnaire, which was followed by same-day endoscopic ultrasonography. Computed tomography was performed within 1 week. Within 3 weeks after CT, a surgeon examined the patient and reviewed the results of endoscopic ultrasonography and CT to determine eligibility for potential resection. After surgery or the decision to pursue nonoperative management, we telephoned patients to assess quality of life at 1 month, 3 months, and every 6 months until death or until 24 months if clinical disease remained stable. Endoscopic Ultrasonography Technique Conscious sedation was performed with various combinations of intravenously administered propofol, meperidine, fentanyl, or midazolam. Initially, we examined all patients with a radial echoendoscope (Olympus GF-UM130 [Olympus America Inc., Melville, New York]). We then examined patients with a linear echoendoscope (using either Pentax FG-36UX [Pentax Precision Instruments, Orangeburg, New York] or Olympus GF-UC140P [Olympus America Inc.]). Unless cancer had been definitively confirmed previously, endoscopic ultrasonographyguided fine-needle aspiration was performed with a 22-gauge needle (Wilson-Cook Medical Inc., Winston-Salem, North Carolina) in all patients, when applicable. A cytotechnologist or cytopathologist was on-site for preliminary interpretations of all aspirations. One of 3 experienced gastroenterologists, each of whom had performed at least 1000 pancreatic examinations, performed all procedures. The operator was not blinded to previous radiographic data. Recorded information included the presence or absence, size, echocharacteristics, location, or locoregional extension of any visualized pancreatic mass, lymph nodes, or distant metastases. Lymph nodes that were not accessible to endoscopic ultrasonographyguided fine-needle aspiration were considered malignant if 3 or more of the following criteria were present: diffuse hypoechoic echogenicity, short-axis diameter of 5 mm or greater, well-defined borders, round shape, or location within 5 mm of the tumor. Well-defined hypoechoic or hyperechoic lesions within the liver with a short-axis diameter of 10 mm or greater and not accessible to fine-needle aspiration were defined as metastases. We considered vascular involvement by the tumor to be present if any 1 of the following were noted: loss of the normal hyperechoic interface between tumor and vessel for at least 5 mm (adherence), irregular tumor and vessel interface, tumor within vessel lumen (invasion), vessel encasement, and perigastric or periduodenal collaterals with associated venous occlusion. Immediately after the examination, any visualized mass was designated by the endosonographer as surgically resectable or unresectable and assigned a tumor, node, metastasis (TNM) staging according to the 1997 American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) classification (Appendix Table) for staging of pancreatic cancer (26). Multidetector CT Technique We performed multidetector CT with a quad-channel scanner (MX 8000 Quad, Philips Medical Systems, Cleveland, Ohio) by using 0.5-second gantry rotation time and acquisition of 4 sections per rotation. All patients drank 500 mL of tap water as nonopaque oral intraluminal contrast media. A total of 150 mL (300 mg of iodine/mL) of low-osmolar contrast media (Isovue-300, Bracco Diagnostics, Princeton, New Jersey) was injected with a power injector (CT Envision Injector, Medrad, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) at a rate of 4.0 mL/s into an antecubital vein by using either an 18- or 20-gauge cannula. Examination was performed in a dual-phase mode. Image acquisition was first done during the pancreatic phase (35 seconds after the start of contrast infusion) from the top to the bottom of the pancreas with 4.0-mm beam collimation (nominal section thickness, 1.0 mm; effective section thickness, 1.3 mm), 0.5-mm reconstruction interval, 120 kVp, 205 mAs, and a pitch of 1.0 during a single breath-hold of 15 to 20 seconds. The second phase was performed during the portal venous phase (65 seconds after the start of contrast infusion) from the top of the liver to the iliac crests with 10-mm beam collimation (nominal section thickness, 2.5 mm; effective section thickness, 3.2 mm), 1.3-mm reconstruction interval, 120 kVp, 250 mAs, and a pitch of 0.875 during a single breath-hold of 15 seconds. Multiplanar (2-dimensional) reformatting was not routinely performed; however, when it was used, the entire data set was transferred to a workstation (MX View, Philips Medical Systems) for evaluation. No 3-dimensional (volume rendering) postprocessing was used in this study. One of 3 experienced gastrointestinal radiologists who were blinded to the results of the previous endoscopic ultrasonography examination interpreted all scans. Patient information provided to the interpreting radiologist included presenting symptoms; the size, location, and vascular involvement (if known) of any visualized pancreatic mass from previous CT; and the results of any previous endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (for example, presence or absence of ductal strictures) or pathology (for example, endoscopic brush cytology). Locoregional and distant adenopathy were considered malignant if they were greater than 10 mm in


Quality of Life Research | 2001

Social support and health-related quality of life in chronic heart failure patients

Susan J. Bennett; Susan M. Perkins; Kathleen A. Lane; Melissa Deer; D.C. Brater; Michael D. Murray

Objectives: Objectives of this study were to: (1) describe perceived social support during a baseline hospitalization and 12 months later among heart failure patients; (2) examine differences in social support as a function of gender and age (less than 65 and 65 years or older); and (3) examine social support as a predictor of health-related quality of life. Background: Social support is a predictor of well-being and mortality, but little is known about support patterns among heart failure patients and how they influence quality of life. Methods: The sample included 227 hospitalized patients with heart failure who completed the Social Support Survey and the Chronic Heart Failure Questionnaire at baseline; 147 patients completed these questionnaires again 12 months after baseline. Results: Mean baseline and 12-month total support scores were 56 and 53, respectively, with a score of 76 indicating the most positive perceptions of support. The ANOVA indicated significant interactions of gender by age for total (F = 5.04; p = 0.03) and emotional/informational support (F = 4.87; p = 0.03) and for positive social interactions (F = 4.43; p = 0.04), with men under age 65 perceiving less support than men aged 65 and older and women in either age group. Baseline support did not predict 12-month health-related quality of life, but changes in social support significantly predicted changes in health-related quality of life (R2 = 0.14). Conclusions: Overall, perceptions of support were moderate to high, but there was wide variation in perceptions over time. Men under age 65 reported less support than other groups of patients. Importantly, changes in social support were significant predictors of changes in health-related quality of life.


The American Journal of Medicine | 2001

Open-label randomized trial of torsemide compared with furosemide therapy for patients with heart failure

Michael D. Murray; Melissa Deer; Jeffrey A. Ferguson; Paul R. Dexter; Susan J. Bennett; Susan M. Perkins; Faye Smith; Kathleen A. Lane; Laurie D Adams; William M. Tierney; D. Craig Brater

PURPOSE Because the bioavailability of oral furosemide is erratic and often incomplete, we tested the hypothesis that patients with heart failure who were treated with torsemide, a predictably absorbed diuretic, would have more favorable clinical outcomes than would those treated with furosemide. PATIENTS AND METHODS We conducted an open-label trial of 234 patients with chronic heart failure (mean [+/- SD] age, 64 +/- 11 years) from an urban public health care system. Patients received oral torsemide (n = 113) or furosemide (n = 121) for 1 year. The primary endpoint was readmission to the hospital for heart failure. Secondary endpoints included readmission for all cardiovascular causes and for all causes, numbers of hospital days, and health-related quality of life. RESULTS Compared with furosemide-treated patients, torsemide-treated patients were less likely to need readmission for heart failure (39 [32%] vs. 19 [17%], P <0.01) or for all cardiovascular causes (71 [59%] vs. 50 [44%], P = 0.03). There was no difference in the rate of admissions for all causes (92 [76%] vs. 80 [71%], P = 0.36). Patients treated with torsemide had significantly fewer hospital days for heart failure (106 vs. 296 days, P = 0.02). Improvements in dyspnea and fatigue scores from baseline were greater among patients treated with torsemide, but the differences were statistically significant only for fatigue scores at months 2, 8, and 12. CONCLUSIONS Compared with furosemide-treated patients, torsemide-treated patients were less likely to be readmitted for heart failure and for all cardiovascular causes, and were less fatigued. If our results are confirmed by blinded trials, torsemide may be the preferred loop diuretic for patients with chronic heart failure.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2001

Effect of alignment of the medial tibial plateau and x-ray beam on apparent progression of osteoarthritis in the standing anteroposterior knee radiograph

Steven A. Mazzuca; Kenneth D. Brandt; Paul Dieppe; Michael Doherty; Barry P. Katz; Kathleen A. Lane

OBJECTIVE Previous studies of knee osteoarthritis (OA) have yielded variable estimates of the rate of joint space narrowing (JSN) in the standing anteroposterior (AP) radiograph, due largely to longitudinal changes in the alignment of the medial tibial plateau (MTP) and x-ray beam. To characterize this bias, we examined serial radiographs of subjects with knee OA in population-based and clinical OA cohorts from 3 locations in the United States and the United Kingdom. METHODS Radiographic features of knee OA (e.g., osteophytosis, JSN) and MTP alignment in 428 OA knees were evaluated by consensus of 2 readers. Alignment was considered satisfactory if the anterior and posterior margins of the MTP were superimposed within 1 mm. Readers were blinded to subject identity, and films were read in random order. The minimum medial joint space width was also measured manually (standard error of repeated measurements 0.20 mm) in serial knee images. RESULTS Only 14% of serial radiographs exhibited alignment of the MTP in both images. In OA knees with satisfactory alignment in both images, the mean rate of JSN over 2-3 years (0.26 mm/year) was significantly larger (P = 0.004) than that in OA knees with misalignment in 1 or both radiographs and was 86% more rapid than the mean JSN in all OA knees. Moreover, the within-group standard deviation of JSN was significantly smaller among knees with reproduced alignment of the MTP than in knees in which misalignment occurred in 1 or both images (P = 0.006). CONCLUSION Poor standardization of knee positioning in serial standing AP radiographs in previous studies of OA progression has obscured the rate and variability of articular cartilage loss in subjects with knee OA. True JSN (i.e., JSN that is not attributable to longitudinal changes in the alignment of the MTP with the x-ray beam in serial radiographic examinations) may occur more rapidly, and with less between-subject variability, than that previously thought to be characteristic of knee OA.


Circulation | 2009

Perioperative Risk Predictors of Cardiac Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Liver Transplantation Surgery

Anas Safadi; Mohamed Homsi; Waddah Maskoun; Kathleen A. Lane; Inder M. Singh; Stephen G. Sawada; Jo Mahenthiran

Background— Cardiac risk assessment for perioperative outcomes of liver transplantation patients is limited. We examined the outcomes of an older intermediate-cardiac-risk group of patients undergoing liver transplantation surgery. Methods and Results— Patients who had liver transplantation surgery between 2001 and 2005 were studied. The 3 outcomes analyzed were nonfatal myocardial infarction, death, and either outcome within the first 30 days after the liver transplantation surgery. Of 403 patients (mean age, 52±9 years; 67% male), 106 (26%) were diabetic, 84 (21%) were hypertensive, and 173 (43%) had a history of smoking. There were 48 total events (12%), 25 myocardial infarctions (7%), and 38 deaths (9%) recorded during the perioperative period. From the final multivariate model, history of coronary artery disease, prior stroke, and postoperative sepsis predicted greater risk (P=0.014; odds ratio [OR], 4.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3 to 11.8; P=0.025; OR, 6.6; 95% CI, 1.3 to 33.8; and P<0.001; OR, 7.5; 95% CI, 3.3 to 17.1, respectively). Use of perioperative β-blockers was protective (P=0.004; OR, 0.20; 95% CI, 0.1 to 0.6) for combined cardiac outcomes. For the outcome of death on multivariate analysis, postoperative sepsis and increased interventricular septal thickness predicted risk (P<0.001; OR, 8.6; 95% CI, 3.5 to 20.9; and P=0.027; OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.1 to 7.2, respectively), whereas the use of perioperative β-blockers was again protective (P=0.012; OR, 0.07; 95% CI, 0.01 to 0.56). Conclusions— In our study of cardiac risk assessment for liver transplantation surgery, history of stroke, coronary artery disease, postoperative sepsis, and increased interventricular septal thickness were markers of adverse perioperative cardiac outcomes, whereas use of perioperative β-blockers was significantly protective.


Annals of Neurology | 2006

APOE ε4 is not associated with Alzheimer's disease in elderly Nigerians

Oye Gureje; Adesola Ogunniyi; Olusegun Baiyewu; Brandon M. Price; R. Evans; Valerie Smith-Gamble; Kathleen A. Lane; Sujuan Gao; Kathleen S. Hall; Hugh C. Hendrie; Jill R. Murrell

Since 1992, research teams from Indiana University and the University of Ibadan have been collecting and comparing data from two diverse, elderly populations to identify risk factors for dementia and Alzheimers disease. Apolipoprotein E (APOE) was genotyped in 2,245 Nigerian samples. Of these, 830 had a diagnosis: 459 were normal, and 140 had dementia including 123 diagnosed with Alzheimers disease. In contrast with other populations, the APOE ε4 allele was not significantly associated with Alzheimers disease or dementia. This lack of association in the Yoruba might reflect genetic variation, environmental factors, as well as genetic/environmental interactions. Ann neurol 2006


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2012

Comorbidity Profile and Healthcare Utilization in Elderly Patients with Serious Mental Illnesses

Hugh C. Hendrie; Donald Lindgren; Donald P. Hay; Kathleen A. Lane; Sujuan Gao; Christianna Purnell; Stephanie Munger; Faye Smith; J. Dickens; Malaz Boustani; Christopher M. Callahan

OBJECTIVES Patients with serious mental illness are living longer. Yet, there remain few studies that focus on healthcare utilization and its relationship with comorbidities in these elderly mentally ill patients. DESIGN Comparative study. Information on demographics, comorbidities, and healthcare utilization was taken from an electronic medical record system. SETTING Wishard Health Services senior care and community mental health clinics. PARTICIPANTS Patients age 65 years and older-255 patients with serious mental illness (schizophrenia, major recurrent depression, and bipolar illness) attending a mental health clinic and a representative sample of 533 nondemented patients without serious mental illness attending primary care clinics. RESULTS Patients having serious mental illness had significantly higher rates of medical emergency department visits (p = 0.0027) and significantly longer lengths of medical hospitalizations (p <0.0001) than did the primary care control group. The frequency of medical comorbidities such as diabetes, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, thyroid disease, and cancer was not significantly different between the groups. Hypertension was lower in the mentally ill group (p <0.0001). Reported falls (p <0.0001), diagnoses of substance abuse (p = 0.02), and alcoholism (p = 0.0016) were higher in the seriously mentally ill. The differences in healthcare utilization between the groups remained significant after adjusting for comorbidity levels, lifestyle factors, and attending primary care. CONCLUSIONS Our findings of higher rates of emergency care, longer hospitalizations, and increased frequency of falls, substance abuse, and alcoholism suggest that seriously mentally ill older adults remain a vulnerable population requiring an integrated model of healthcare.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2002

Field test of the reproducibility of the semiflexed metatarsophalangeal view in repeated radiographic examinations of subjects with osteoarthritis of the knee

Steven A. Mazzuca; Kenneth D. Brandt; Kenneth A. Buckwalter; Kathleen A. Lane; Barry P. Katz

OBJECTIVE To estimate the reproducibility of the semiflexed metatarsophalangeal (MTP) view in repeat radiographic examinations of the knee of subjects with osteoarthritis (OA) with respect to radioanatomic alignment of the medial tibial plateau and the central x-ray beam and the precision of measurements of minimum medial tibiofemoral joint space width (JSW). METHODS Thirty-eight subjects with definite knee OA underwent 2 semiflexed MTP examinations on the same day. Radioanatomic alignment of the medial tibial plateau and the x-ray beam (distance between anterior and posterior margins of the plateau) was measured manually (Lequesne method). Manual measurements of the JSW in repeat radiographs also were obtained. The reproducibility of JSW measurements was estimated by the method of Bland and Altman. RESULTS Only 29% of the initial semiflexed MTP radiographs exhibited satisfactory radioanatomic alignment (intermargin distance < or =1 mm). However, intermargin distances in initial and repeat radiographs were highly correlated (r = 0.86, P < 0.01). In 89% of knees, the intermargin distance in the first examination was reproduced (+/- 1 mm) in the second examination. The standard error of measurement (mean of within-knee standard deviations of repeat JSW values) was 0.30 mm. The magnitude of discrepancy between repeat measurements of JSW was related positively to overall radiographic severity of knee OA (P < 0.05). CONCLUSION The semiflexed MTP protocol affords highly reproducible radioanatomic positioning of the knee, although misalignment of the medial tibial plateau and the x-ray beam occurs in >70% of cases. Precision of measurement of JSW in the semiflexed MTP view approaches that associated with fluoroscopically assisted positioning protocols. However, the consequences of poor, albeit reproducible, alignment of the knee in serial semiflexed MTP radiographs in longitudinal studies of OA progression are currently unknown.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2009

Prevalence rates for dementia and Alzheimer's disease in African Americans: 1992 versus 2001.

Kathleen S. Hall; Sujuan Gao; Olusegun Baiyewu; Kathleen A. Lane; Oye Gureje; Jianzhao Shen; Adesola Ogunniyi; Jill R. Murrell; J. Dickens; Valerie Smith-Gamble; Hugh C. Hendrie

This study compares age‐specific and overall prevalence rates for dementia and Alzheimers disease (AD) in two nonoverlapping, population‐based cohorts of elderly African Americans in Indianapolis in 2001 and 1992.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2005

The Stick Design test: A new measure of visuoconstructional ability

Olusegun Baiyewu; Kathleen A. Lane; Oye Gureje; Adesola Ogunniyi; Beverly S. Musick; Sujuan Gao; Kathleen S. Hall; Hugh C. Hendrie

Visuoconstructional ability is an important domain for assessment in dementia. Use of graphomotor measures dominate this area; however, participants with low education produce results that cannot be easily interpreted. Our objective was to develop and validate a nongraphomotor assessment of visuoconstructional ability for use in dementia evaluations in persons with low or no education. In a longitudinal, population-based study of dementia among Yoruba residents of Ibadan, Nigeria aged 65 years and older, participants underwent clinical assessment with a battery of cognitive tests and consensus diagnosis. Performance on two visuoconstructional tests, Constructional Praxis and Stick Design, were compared. Gender, age, and education affected performance on both tests. The Stick Design test was more acceptable than Constructional Praxis as measured by the number of participants with total test failure (3.9% vs. 15.1%). The Stick Design test was significantly more sensitive to cognitive impairment and dementia than the Constructional Praxis test. We conclude that Stick Design is a reasonable test of visuoconstructional ability in older cohorts with very limited educational exposure and literacy.

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Oye Gureje

University College Hospital

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