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Dive into the research topics where Kenneth A. Ault is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenneth A. Ault.


Transfusion | 1991

Progressive platelet activation with storage: evidence for shortened survival of activated platelets after transfusion

Henry M. Rinder; M. Murphy; Jane Mitchell; J. Stocks; Kenneth A. Ault; Robert S. Hillman

Platelets are known to become activated during storage, but it is unclear whether such activation affects recovery or survival after platelet concentrate (PC) transfusion. With the use of flow cytometry to determine the percentage of platelets expressing the alpha‐granule membrane protein 140 (GMP‐140), a known adhesive ligand appearing on the platelet surface after activation, several studies were conducted. These investigations evaluated 1) the occurrence of significant platelet activation over time in PCs (n = 46) stored under standard blood bank conditions; 2) the correlation between platelet activation and platelet recovery in normal subjects after PC storage (n = 12), as assessed by the recovery of Indium‐labeled platelets; and 3) the recovery of activated and unactivated platelets in thrombocytopenic cancer patients transfused with standard PCs (n = 11). It was determined 1) that an increasing duration of storage of PC was associated with increasing platelet activation as measured by the percentage of platelets expressing GMP‐140, progressing from a mean of 4 +/− 2 percent (SD) on the day of collection to a mean of 25 +/− 8 percent by 5 days of storage: 2) that, in normal subjects, posttransfusion recovery of autologous platelets stored for 2 to 4 days and then labeled with In111 was inversely correlated with the percentage of activated platelets in the transfused PC (r = ‐0.55, p = 0.05); and 3) that, when thrombocytopenic patients were transfused with standard PCs, the recovery of the activated platelets in the transfused PCs averaged only 38 +/− 15 percent of the number predicted by the absolute platelet increment. It can be concluded that significant platelet activation occurs with standard platelet storage over 5 days and that activated platelets that express GMP‐140 are preferentially cleared from the circulation after transfusion.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1999

Platelet activation in patients after an acute coronary syndrome: results from the TIMI-12 trial ☆

Kenneth A. Ault; Christopher P. Cannon; Jane Mitchell; John McCahan; Russell P. Tracy; William Novotny; James D. Reimann; Eugene Braunwald

UNLABELLED This study was designed to determine the magnitude and time course of platelet activation during therapy of acute coronary syndromes with an oral platelet antagonist. BACKGROUND Platelet activation and aggregation are central to the pathogenesis of the acute coronary syndromes (ACS). However, few data are available on levels of platelet activation over time in patients with ACS, especially in the setting of chronic glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa inhibition. METHODS The Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) 12 trial was a phase II, double-blind trial evaluating the effects of sibrafiban, an oral, selective antagonist of the platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa receptor in patients stabilized after an ACS. A subset of 90 of the 329 patients in the study had measurement of platelet activation as assessed by the expression of platelet associated P-Selectin on days 0, 7 and 28. Platelet activation was measured in blood samples that were fixed either immediately (spontaneous activation) or after 5 minute incubation with 0, 1 microM or 5 microM ADP in order to assess platelet responsiveness to very low or moderate stimulation. RESULTS At baseline there was a significant elevation of spontaneous platelet activation as compared to samples obtained from normal donors or from patients who did not have acute coronary syndromes (ACS patients 27.6+/-18.7%, Normal controls 8.5+/-4.4%, Patient controls 10.9+/-7.1%, p < 0.005 for both). In addition, there was a significant decrease in the levels of platelet activation with time during the 28 days of treatment with sibrafiban. Nevertheless, even on day 28, the TIMI-12 patients continued to show elevated platelet activation in comparison to the control groups (p < 0.05 for both). CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that platelets remain activated long after clinical stabilization post ACS. Although platelet activation decreased after one month of oral GPIIb/IIIa inhibition, levels remained higher than normal, suggesting the need for long-term antiplatelet therapy following ACS.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Cyclophosphamide, carmustine, and etoposide with autologous bone marrow transplantation in refractory Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: a dose-finding study.

C Wheeler; Joseph H. Antin; W.H. Churchill; Steven E. Come; Brian R. Smith; Glenn J. Bubley; David S. Rosenthal; J M Rappaport; Kenneth A. Ault; Lowell E. Schnipper

Cyclophosphamide, carmustine (BCNU), and etoposide (VP-16) (CBV) is a widely used conditioning regimen in autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT) of patients with refractory and relapsed lymphoma. However, the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) of these agents when used in combination has not been systematically explored. We treated 58 patients (28 with non-Hodgkins lymphoma [NHL], 30 with Hodgkins disease [HD]) at seven dose levels of CBV. Doses were cyclophosphamide 4,500 to 7,200 mg/m2, BCNU 450 to 600 g/m2, and VP-16 1,200 to 2,000 mg/m2. The MTD was cyclophosphamide 7,200 mg/m2, BCNU 450 mg/m2, and VP-16 2,000 mg/m2. Six hundred milligrams per square meter of BCNU was associated with five of 18 cases of interstitial pneumonitis versus two of 40 at 450 mg/m2 (P = .02). Treatment-related mortality was 5% at dose levels less than or equal to the MTD and 22% at the highest dose. In this heavily pretreated patient population, most of whom had high volume residual disease, complete responses (CRs) to CBV and ABMT occurred in 25% of assessable patients with NHL and 43% of patients with HD. Thirteen of 28 patients with NHL and 14 of 30 with HD remain free from disease progression with median follow-up of 212 and 215 days, respectively. CBV can be administered with acceptable toxicity over a wide range of doses to patients with refractory and relapsed lymphoma.


Anesthesiology | 1991

Modulation of Platelet Surface Adhesion Receptors during Cardiopulmonary Bypass

Christine S. Rinder; Joseph P. Mathew; Henry M. Rinder; Jl Bonan; Kenneth A. Ault; Brian R. Smith

Alterations in platelet receptors critical to adhesion may play a role in the pathogenesis of the qualitative platelet defect associated with cardiopulmonary bypass. Using flow cytometry, we measured changes in the following platelet surface adhesive proteins: the von Willebrand factor receptor, glycoprotein Ib; the fibrinogen receptor, glycoprotein IIb/IIIa; the thrombospondin receptor, glycoprotein IV; the adhesive glycoprotein granule membrane protein 140, whose expression also reflects platelet activation and alpha-granule release; and, as a control, the nonreceptor protein HLA, A,B,C. Glycoprotein Ib decreased during cardiopulmonary bypass (P less than 0.05) and reached a nadir at 72% (P less than 0.05) of its baseline value at 2-4 h after bypass. This decrease correlated (r = 0.76) with the magnitude of platelet activation (alpha-granule release) in any given patient, but even platelets that were not activated demonstrated a decrease in glycoprotein Ib expression. Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa also decreased in both the activated (47% of baseline, P less than 0.01) and unactivated (63% of baseline, P less than 0.01) subsets of platelets at the end of cardiopulmonary bypass. Glycoprotein IV and HLA A,B,C did not decrease, but instead increased 2-4 h after cardiopulmonary bypass (P less than 0.05). We conclude that cardiopulmonary bypass produces selective decreases in surface glycoproteins Ib and IIb/IIIa as well as in platelet activation; that these two alterations are temporally but not necessarily mechanistically linked; and that these changes have the potential to adversely affect platelet function.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1979

Detection of Small Numbers of Monoclonal B Lymphocytes in the Blood of Patients with Lymphoma

Kenneth A. Ault

The definition of complete remission and early relapse in patients with lymphoid malignancy is complicated by the difficulty of recognizing the presence of small numbers of malignant lymphocytes in a population of normal lymphocytes. We have used a method based on the cytofluorometric detection of lymphocytes having homogeneous amounts of surface immunoglobulin of one light-chain class to study blood from patients with lymphomas. The test is capable of reliably detecting 10 per cent or less of monoclonal B lymphocytes in normal blood, and it shows a high incidnece (30 to 40 per cent) of previously unsuspected monoclonal B lymphocytes in patients who were though to have no abnormal blood cells according to standard morphologic technics. The ability to estimate the number of such cells may facilitate the planning of therapy and make more meaningful the concept of complete remission.


Immunological Reviews | 1986

Phenotypic and Functional Characterization of Human LEUI (CD5) B Cells

Nancy Gadol; Kenneth A. Ault

Leu1 B cells have been observed in high numbers in CLL patients, fetal spleen, and in bone marrow transplant recipients. We studied these cells in normal peripheral blood, spleen, and tonsil. They were phenotypically and functionally similar to conventional B cells. Leu1 B cells in the spleen and blood displayed a mature phenotype similar to the Leu1 B cells in the fetus, some expressing high levels of both sIgM and sIgD, and some expressing high levels of sIgD but little sIgM. Most Leu1 B cells in the tonsil also expressed high levels of both sIgM and sIgD, although some tonsil Leu1 B cells had high levels of sIgM but little sIgD. The significance of the Leu1 B cell is unknown, although it may be involved in the humoral immunoincompetence of the fetus, of CLL patients, and of transplant recipients. In our data there is no evidence to suggest that these cells are activated, immature, or capable of an immunoregulatory function.


Transplantation | 1990

The flow cytometric crossmatch and early renal transplant loss.

Richard J. Mahoney; Kenneth A. Ault; Shelley R. Given; Roberta J. Adams; Anne Breggia; Patti A. Paris; Glenn E. Palomaki; Shelly A. Hitchcox; Bruce W. White; Jonathan Himmelfarb; Donald A. Leeber

Data from this retrospective study indicate that a positive two-color T and/or B cell flow cytometric crossmatch (FCXM) is predictive of early renal allograft loss (less than 2 months) in cadaveric kidney donor recipients who had a negative crossmatch by the antihuman globulin complement-dependent cytotoxicity technique. Among 90 cadaveric kidney donor recipients (67 primary, 23 regrafts), 14 (8 primary, 6 regrafts) lost their renal allografts within 2 months, and 10 of the 14 were FCXM positive and HLA sensitized. The remaining 76 allografts survived beyond 2 months, 12 of which were FCXM-positive. Thus, the FCXM sensitivity rate for detecting early graft loss was 71%, and the specificity rate was 84%. Cadaveric graft-loss rates at 2 months were 33% for primary and 60% for FCXM-positive regrafts in contrast to 7% for primary and 0% for FCXM-negative regrafts. The difference in early graft loss between FCXM-positive and FCXM-negative recipients was statistically significant (P less than 0.0001). Subset analyses of FCXM-positive graft recipients indicate: (1) previous early graft loss contraindicates transplantation of an FXCM-positive regraft (P = 0.03); and (2) panel reactive antibody (PRA) less than or equal to 10% at crossmatch is not associated with early graft loss (P = 0.04). There was no significant difference in 1-year graft survival between primary and regrafts in either FCXM-negative recipients (85% vs. 77%, respectively) or FCXM-positive recipients (67% vs. 40%). All 12 of the FCXM-positive primary and regrafts that survived 2 months continued to function at 2 years. Stepwise logistic regression analysis of 5 independent predictor variables (FCXM status, gender, primary vs. regraft status, PRA level, and HLA mismatched antigens) indicated that the FCXM test was the best predictor of early graft loss. When FCXM results of the 90 cadaveric graft recipients were ranked in three groups, an FCXM channel shift of 29 or greater (third tertile) on a 1024 channel log scale was associated with a 7.0-fold (95% confidence interval 1.9-25.5) increased risk of early graft failure when compared to the first two tertiles. These data indicate that the FCXM offers an additional approach for identifying sensitized patients at risk of early renal allograft loss.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2001

Platelet Counting by the RBC/Platelet Ratio Method: A Reference Method

George G. Klee; Guiseppe D'Onofrio; Onno W. van Assendelft; Brian S. Bull; Ahnond Bunyaratvej; M. Buttarello; George Colella; Bruce H. Davis; Keiji Fujimoto; Warren Groner; Berend Houwen; Luc van Hove; John A. Koepke; Mitchell Lewis; Samuel J. Machin; Robert Raynor; Martin Rowan; Noriyuki Tatsumi; Kenneth A. Ault; Paul J. Harrison; Jolanta E. Kunicka; Francis Lacombe; Didier Lakomsky

The International Council for Standardization in Haematology (ICSH) and the International Society of Laboratory Hematology (ISLH) recommend the counting of specifically labeled platelets relative to the RBCs with a fluorescence flow cytometer, together with an accurate RBC count determined with a semiautomated, single-channel aperture-impedance counter as a reference method for the enumeration of platelets. Fresh EDTA-anticoagulated venous blood specimens are measured within 4 hours of the draw. The specimen is prediluted (1:20) and the platelets labeled with two monoclonal antibodies specific to a cluster of differentiation common to all platelets. A final 1:1,000 dilution is made and at least 50,000 events with a minimum of 1,000 platelet events are counted with a flow cytometer to determine the RBC/platelet ratio. The platelet count is then calculated from this ratio and the RBC concentration of the original blood specimen.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2001

An Interlaboratory Study of a Candidate Reference Method for Platelet Counting

Paul Harrison; Kenneth A. Ault; Sabrinah Chapman; Lori A. Charie; Bruce H. Davis; Keiji Fujimoto; Berend Houwen; Jolanta Kunicka; Francis Lacombe; Samuel J. Machin; Robert Raynor; Luc van Hove; Onno W. van Assendelft

A multinational interlaboratory task force explored the important variables of platelet reference counting and developed a candidate flow cytometric reference method based on the RBC/platelet ratio. A multicenter comparison was performed to determine whether the method met the necessary criteria and was precise enough to be recommended as a new reference method. Each laboratory analyzed serial dilutions of normal specimens, stabilized material, and at least 60 patient specimens with a range of platelet counts from 1 to 400 x 10(3)/microL (1-400 x 10(9)/L). Pooled analysis of the serial dilutions showed that RBC-platelet and RBC-RBC coincidence events became negligible at sufficiently high dilutions (i.e., > 1:1,000). All laboratories demonstrated excellent intra-assay and acceptable interlaboratory precision. Two antibodies (CD61 and CD41) were used for identifying platelets and individually gave acceptable results, but in a minority of samples, staining differences were observed. The optimum method thus uses a double-labeling procedure with a final dilution factor of 1:1,000. The study demonstrated that this method meets the criteria for a reference platelet count.


Circulation | 2000

High levels of platelet inhibition with abciximab despite heightened platelet activation and aggregation during thrombolysis for acute myocardial infarction: results from TIMI (thrombolysis in myocardial infarction) 14.

Stephanie A. Coulter; Christopher P. Cannon; Kenneth A. Ault; Elliott M. Antman; Frans Van de Werf; A.A.Jennifer Adgey; C. Michael Gibson; Robert P. Giugliano; Mary Ann Mascelli; Joel Scherer; Elliot S. Barnathan; Eugene Braunwald; Neal S. Kleiman

BACKGROUND We evaluated platelet activation and aggregation in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) treated with thrombolytic therapy alone or with reduced-dose thrombolysis and concomitant abciximab. METHODS AND RESULTS The study was performed in 20 control subjects and 51 patients with AMI before and after reperfusion with either alteplase or reteplase or reduced doses of these agents with concomitant abciximab. Platelet activation was assayed by platelet surface expression of P-selectin. Turbidometric platelet aggregation in response to ADP was measured in patients before thrombolytic therapy and 90 minutes and 24 hours after the beginning of thrombolytic therapy. P-selectin expression was greater at baseline in patients than normal control subjects (30.4% versus 9. 8%, P<0.0001) but was identical between the 2 groups after stimulation with ADP (64.4% versus 69.3%, P=0.37). However, at 24 hours, basal P-selectin expression declined in patients (P=0.0025 versus baseline), whereas ADP-stimulated P-selectin expression was lower in patients than in control subjects (48% versus 69%, P=0. 0004). When combined with reduced doses of either alteplase or reteplase, abciximab achieved 91% and 83% inhibition of 5 and 20 micromol/L ADP-induced platelet aggregation, which decreased to 46% and 40%, respectively, at 24 hours. No appreciable difference in the platelet inhibition profile of abciximab was observed between the 2 thrombolytics. CONCLUSIONS Platelet activation and aggregation are heightened in the setting of thrombolysis for AMI. Despite this enhanced level of platelet activation, abciximab, combined with a reduced-dose thrombolytic, inhibited platelet aggregation similarly to the level reported in elective settings.

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Howard L. Weiner

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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