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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly A. Brown is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly A. Brown.


Transplantation | 1996

Two-dimensional and dobutamine stress echocardiography in the preoperative assessment of patients with end-stage liver disease prior to orthotopic liver transplantation.

Carolyn L Donovan; Pamela A. Marcovitz; Jeffrey D. Punch; David S. Bach; Kimberly A. Brown; Michael R. Lucey; William F. Armstrong

Orthotopic liver transplantation is an established therapy for end-stage liver disease. This study evaluated the range of cardiovascular abnormalities in patients undergoing evaluation for orthotopic liver transplantation and determined the prognostic implications of abnormal echocardiographic features, including ischemia during dobutamine stress echocardiography, in predicting postoperative cardiac events. Two-dimensional echocardiography was performed in 190 patients for assessment of left ventricular function, valvular pathology, and pulmonary hypertension. Dobutamine stress echocardiography was performed in 165 patients for evaluation of inducible ischemia. Contrast echocardiography for detection of intrapulmonary shunting was performed in 125 patients at rest and in 99 during dobutamine stress. Left ventricular dysfunction, significant valvular regurgitation, and inducible ischemia were identified in <1O% of patients. Pulmonary hypertension, left ventricular hypertrophy and > or = moderate intrapulmonary shunting were present in 12%, 16%, and 26% of patients, respectively. Severe intrapulmonary shunting predicted death prior to transplantation (P=0.01). Of the 71 transplanted patients, major perioperative events included global left ventricular dysfunction in four patients and myocardial infarction in one patient with normal coronary arteries. No preoperative echocardiographic parameters, including ischemia on dobutamine echocardiography, predicted these perioperative events. No cardiac events related to obstructive coronary artery disease occurred in the 154 patients without ischemia on dobutamine stress echocardiography. The majority of patients with end-stage liver disease, including those with alcoholic cirrhosis, have normal cardiac function on two-dimensional echocardiography. Severe intrapulmonary shunting portends a poor prognosis in patients awaiting transplantation. A negative dobutamine stress echocardiogram appears useful in excluding patients at risk for perioperative cardiac events related to obstructive coronary artery disease.


Hepatology | 2014

Randomized, double-blind, controlled study of glycerol phenylbutyrate in hepatic encephalopathy

Don C. Rockey; John M. Vierling; Parvez S. Mantry; Marwan Ghabril; Robert S. Brown; Olga Alexeeva; Igor A. Zupanets; Vladimir Grinevich; Andrey Baranovsky; Larysa Dudar; Galyna Fadieienko; Nataliya Kharchenko; Iryna Klaryts'ka; Vyacheslav Morozov; Priya Grewal; Timothy M. McCashland; K. Gautham Reddy; K. Rajender Reddy; Vasyl Syplyviy; Nathan M. Bass; Klara Dickinson; Catherine Norris; Dion F. Coakley; Masoud Mokhtarani; Bruce F. Scharschmidt; Aijaz Ahmed; Luis A. Balart; B. Berk; Kimberly A. Brown; A. Frolov

Glycerol phenylbutyrate (GPB) lowers ammonia by providing an alternate pathway to urea for waste nitrogen excretion in the form of phenylacetyl glutamine, which is excreted in urine. This randomized, double‐blind, placebo‐controlled phase II trial enrolled 178 patients with cirrhosis, including 59 already taking rifaximin, who had experienced two or more hepatic encephalopathy (HE) events in the previous 6 months. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with HE events. Other endpoints included the time to first event, total number of events, HE hospitalizations, symptomatic days, and safety. GPB, at 6 mL orally twice‐daily, significantly reduced the proportion of patients who experienced an HE event (21% versus 36%; P = 0.02), time to first event (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.56; P < 0.05), as well as total events (35 versus 57; P = 0.04), and was associated with fewer HE hospitalizations (13 versus 25; P = 0.06). Among patients not on rifaximin at enrollment, GPB reduced the proportion of patients with an HE event (10% versus 32%; P < 0.01), time to first event (HR = 0.29; P < 0.01), and total events (7 versus 31; P < 0.01). Plasma ammonia was significantly lower in patients on GPB and correlated with HE events when measured either at baseline or during the study. A similar proportion of patients in the GPB (79%) and placebo groups (76%) experienced adverse events. Conclusion: GPB reduced HE events as well as ammonia in patients with cirrhosis and HE and its safety profile was similar to placebo. The findings implicate ammonia in the pathogenesis of HE and suggest that GPB has therapeutic potential in this population. (Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT00999167). (Hepatology 2014;59:1073‐1083)


American Journal of Transplantation | 2015

Solid Organ Transplantation From Hepatitis B Virus–Positive Donors: Consensus Guidelines for Recipient Management

Shirish Huprikar; Lara Danziger-Isakov; Joseph Ahn; S. Naugler; Emily A. Blumberg; Robin K. Avery; C. Koval; Erika D. Lease; Anjana Pillai; Karen Doucette; J. Levitsky; Michele I. Morris; K. Lu; J. K. McDermott; T. Mone; J. P. Orlowski; Darshana Dadhania; Kevin C. Abbott; Simon Horslen; B. L. Laskin; A. Mougdil; V. L. Venkat; K. Korenblat; Vineeta Kumar; Paolo Grossi; Roy D. Bloom; Kimberly A. Brown; Camille N. Kotton; Deepali Kumar

Use of organs from donors testing positive for hepatitis B virus (HBV) may safely expand the donor pool. The American Society of Transplantation convened a multidisciplinary expert panel that reviewed the existing literature and developed consensus recommendations for recipient management following the use of organs from HBV positive donors. Transmission risk is highest with liver donors and significantly lower with non‐liver (kidney and thoracic) donors. Antiviral prophylaxis significantly reduces the rate of transmission to liver recipients from isolated HBV core antibody positive (anti‐HBc+) donors. Organs from anti‐HBc+ donors should be considered for all adult transplant candidates after an individualized assessment of the risks and benefits and appropriate patient consent. Indefinite antiviral prophylaxis is recommended in liver recipients with no immunity or vaccine immunity but not in liver recipients with natural immunity. Antiviral prophylaxis may be considered for up to 1 year in susceptible non‐liver recipients but is not recommended in immune non‐liver recipients. Although no longer the treatment of choice in patients with chronic HBV, lamivudine remains the most cost‐effective choice for prophylaxis in this setting. Hepatitis B immunoglobulin is not recommended.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2014

Belatacept-Based Immunosuppression in De Novo Liver Transplant Recipients: 1-Year Experience From a Phase II Randomized Study

Goran B. Klintmalm; Sandy Feng; John R. Lake; Hugo E. Vargas; Thomas Wekerle; Salvatore Agnes; Kimberly A. Brown; Björn Nashan; L. Rostaing; S. Meadows-Shropshire; M. Agarwal; M. B. Harler; J.C. Garcia-Valdecasas

This exploratory phase II study evaluated the safety and efficacy of belatacept in de novo adult liver transplant recipients. Patients were randomized (N = 260) to one of the following immunosuppressive regimens: (i) basiliximab + belatacept high dose [HD] + mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), (ii) belatacept HD + MMF, (iii) belatacept low dose [LD] + MMF, (iv) tacrolimus + MMF, or (v) tacrolimus alone. All received corticosteroids. Demographic characteristics were similar among groups. The proportion of patients who met the primary end point (composite of acute rejection, graft loss, death by month 6) was higher in the belatacept groups (42–48%) versus tacrolimus groups (15–38%), with the highest number of deaths and grafts losses in the belatacept LD group. By month 12, the proportion surviving with a functioning graft was higher with tacrolimus + MMF (93%) and lower with belatacept LD (67%) versus other groups (90%: basiliximab + belatacept HD; 83%: belatacept HD; 88%: tacrolimus). Mean calculated GFR was 15–34 mL/min higher in belatacept‐treated patients at 1 year. Two cases of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease and one case of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy occurred in belatacept‐treated patients. Follow‐up beyond month 12 revealed an increase in death and graft loss in another belatacept group (belatacept HD), after which the study was terminated.


Hepatology | 2011

Racial Differences in Hepatitis C Treatment Eligibility

Michael T. Melia; Andrew J. Muir; Jonathan McCone; Mitchell L. Shiffman; John W. King; Steven K. Herrine; Greg Galler; Joseph R. Bloomer; Frederick A. Nunes; Kimberly A. Brown; Kevin D. Mullen; Natarajan Ravendhran; Reem Ghalib; Navdeep Boparai; Ruiyun Jiang; Stephanie Noviello; Clifford A. Brass; Janice K. Albrecht; John G. McHutchison; Mark S. Sulkowski

Black Americans are disproportionally infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and are less likely than whites to respond to treatment with peginterferon (PEG‐IFN) plus ribavirin (RBV). The impact of race on HCV treatment eligibility is unknown. We therefore performed a retrospective analysis of a phase 3B multicenter clinical trial conducted at 118 United States community and academic medical centers to evaluate the rates of and reasons for HCV treatment ineligibility according to self‐reported race. In all, 4,469 patients were screened, of whom 1,038 (23.2%) were treatment ineligible. Although blacks represented 19% of treated patients, they were more likely not to be treated due to ineligibility and/or failure to complete required evaluations (40.2%) than were nonblack patients (28.5%; P < 0.001). After the exclusion of persons not treated due to undetectable HCV RNA or nongenotype 1 infection, blacks were 65% less likely than nonblacks to be eligible for treatment (28.1% > 17.0%; relative risk, 1.65; 95% confidence interval, 1.46‐1.87; P < 0.001). Blacks were more likely to be ineligible due to neutropenia (14% versus 3%, P < 0.001), anemia (7% versus 4%, P = 0.02), elevated glucose (8% versus 3%, P < 0.001), and elevated creatinine (5% versus 1%, P < 0.001). Conclusion: Largely due to a higher prevalence of neutropenia and uncontrolled medical conditions, blacks were significantly less likely to be eligible for HCV treatment. Increased access to treatment may be facilitated by less conservative neutrophil requirements and more effective care for chronic diseases, namely, diabetes and renal insufficiency. (HEPATOLOGY 2011;)


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2004

The Efficacy and Limitations of Sirolimus Conversion in Liver Transplant Patients Who Develop Renal Dysfunction on Calcineurin Inhibitors

Patrick Lam; Atsushi Yoshida; Kimberly A. Brown; Marwan Abouljoud; Iman E. Bajjoka; Fadi Dagher; Dilip K. Moonka

This study evaluates sirolimus in preserving renal function in 28 patients who developed renal insufficiency after liver transplantation. Patients with a creatinine level higher than 1.8 mg/ml were eligible for conversion. Of the 28 patients, 7 (25%) did not tolerate sirolimus, 6 (21%) progressed to end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and 14 (50%) have been maintained on sirolimus with stable renal function. The 28 patients overall had a decline in creatinine of 0.38 mg/dl (P D 0:029) at week 4, with a small increase by week 24. However, the subset of 14 patients who did not develop ESRD had a decline in creatinine that persisted to week 48. While the differences between those who developed ESRD and those with stable renal function were not statistically significant, the patients who developed ESRD had a higher creatinine at conversion (2.8 vs 2.3) and a lower creatinine clearance (36 vs 53 ml/min). Patients receiving sirolimus had a persistent rise in cholesterol (P < 0:05). The use of sirolimus to preserve renal function was limited by patients unable to tolerate drug (25%) and patients who developed ESRD (21%). A subgroup of patients (50%) had an improvementin creatinine that persisted for 48 weeks.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2010

Risk for renal cell carcinoma in chronic hepatitis C infection.

Stuart C. Gordon; Dilip Moonka; Kimberly A. Brown; Craig G. Rogers; Mary Ann Y. Huang; Neal Bhatt; Lois Lamerato

Background: Chronic infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) confers increased risk for chronic renal disease, and numerous reports suggest an association with renal cell carcinoma (RCC), a cancer with rapidly rising global incidence. We sought to determine whether HCV infection confers an increased risk for developing RCC. Methods: With the use of administrative data from a large, integrated, and ethnically diverse healthcare system, we did a cohort study of 67,063 HCV-tested patients between 1997 and 2006 who were followed for the development of RCC until April 2008. Results: A search of the health system cancer registry for patients with the diagnosis of kidney cancer showed that RCC was diagnosed in 0.6% (17 of 3,057) of HCV-positive patients versus 0.3% (177 of 64,006) of HCV-negative patients. The mean age at RCC diagnosis was much younger in HCV-positive individuals (54 versus 63; P < 0.001). The univariate hazard ratio for RCC among HCV patients was 2.20 (95% confidence interval, 1.32-3.67; P = 0.0025). In a multivariate model that included the risk factors age, African-American race, male gender, and chronic kidney disease, the overall hazard ratio for RCC among HCV patients was 1.77 (95% confidence interval, 1.05-2.98; P = 0.0313). Conclusion: Chronic HCV infection confers a risk for the development of RCC. Impact: Clinicians should consider newly identified renal lesions in patients with chronic HCV infection with a heightened suspicion for neoplasm, and newly diagnosed cases of RCC may require more careful surveillance for the presence of HCV infection. Additional studies are required to confirm these findings and to explore potential mechanisms of oncogenesis. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev; 19(4); 1066–73. ©2010 AACR.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2010

The Influence of Induction Therapy on Graft and Patient Survival in Patients with and without Hepatitis C after Liver Transplantation

D. K. Moonka; D. Kim; A. Kapke; Kimberly A. Brown; Atsushi Yoshida

We used the United Network for Organ Sharing Database to determine the influence of antibody‐based induction therapy on patient and graft survival in orthotopic liver transplant (OLT) recipients with and without hepatitis C (HCV). We identified all initial OLT patients with HCV serology. Patients were divided into four groups: HCV positive without induction (17 362), HCV positive with induction (3479), HCV negative without induction (20 417) and HCV negative with induction (4357). Both HCV positive and negative patients who received induction did better than those who did not. For HCV positive patients, 5‐year patient survival was 70.8% versus 68.7% (p = 0.004) and graft survival was 65.2% versus 62.1% (p < 0.001). For HCV negative patients, 5‐year patient survival was 78.8% versus 76.7% (p < 0.001) and graft survival was 74.0% versus 70.8% (p < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, induction was associated with improved patient (HR = 0.91: p = 0.024) and graft (HR = 0.88: p < 0.001) survival in HCV positive patients and improved patient (HR = 0.87: p = 0.003) and graft survival (HR = 0.87: p < 0.001) in HCV negative patients. The benefit of induction occurred early and largely dissipated when patients with death within a year were censored. The benefit of induction therapy appeared most pronounced in patients with renal insufficiency or on organ‐perfusion support at transplant.


Liver Transplantation | 2008

Preserving renal function in liver transplant recipients with rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin and delayed initiation of calcineurin inhibitors

Iman Bajjoka; Lama Hsaiky; Kimberly A. Brown; Marwan Abouljoud

Early renal dysfunction following liver transplantation is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. To evaluate the impact of delayed initiation of calcineurin inhibitor on renal function, we conducted a retrospective study comparing 118 liver transplant recipients who received rabbit anti‐thymocyte globulin and delayed initiation of calcineurin inhibitor with 80 liver transplant recipients who received no antibody and early initiation of calcineurin inhibitor (control group). All patients received mycophenolate mofetil and steroids. Delayed calcineurin inhibitor initiation with anti‐thymocyte globulin was associated with significant improvement in renal function throughout the first year post‐transplant. At 12 months post‐transplant, patients treated with this regimen experienced lower serum creatinine (1.4 ± 0.5 versus 1.7 ± 0.5 mg/dL, P < 0.001), a higher estimated glomerular filtration rate (57.4 ± 20.5 versus 43.7 ± 14.4 mL/min/1.73 m2, P < 0.001), and less dependence on dialysis (0.8% versus 13%, P < 0.001) in comparison with no antibody and early calcineurin inhibitor initiation. Patient survival and graft survival were similar between groups; however, there was a trend of a lower incidence of early biopsy‐proven acute rejection with anti‐thymocyte globulin. Overall infection and cytomegalovirus infection were significantly lower in anti‐thymocyte globulin–treated patients, and there was no increased incidence of hepatitis C recurrence in comparison with controls. In conclusion, delayed initiation of calcineurin inhibitor with anti‐thymocyte globulin in liver transplant recipients is safe and is associated with improvements in renal function and a lower incidence of early acute rejection in comparison with no antibody and early initiation of calcineurin inhibitor. Liver Transpl 14:66–72, 2008.


Liver Transplantation | 2013

Entecavir and hepatitis B immune globulin in patients undergoing liver transplantation for chronic hepatitis B.

Robert P. Perrillo; Maria Buti; François Durand; Michael R. Charlton; Adrián Gadano; Guido Cantisani; Che Chuan Loong; Kimberly A. Brown; Wenhua Hu; Juan Carlos Lopez-Talavera; Cyril Llamoso

For patients undergoing liver transplantation (LT) for hepatitis B virus (HBV)–related liver disease, the current standard of care for preventing reinfection of the allograft is nucleoside analogue therapy combined with hepatitis B immune globulin (HBIG). Entecavir has demonstrated high efficacy and a favorable safety profile for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) treatment, but data for patients undergoing HBV‐related LT are limited. This study assessed the safety and efficacy of entecavir combined with various HBIG regimens after CHB‐related LT. In this phase 3b, single‐arm, open‐label study, 65 patients undergoing LT for CHB‐related liver disease with an HBV DNA load <172 IU/mL at LT received entecavir (1.0 mg daily) for 72 weeks after LT. The primary endpoint was the proportion of evaluable patients (treated for ≥4 weeks) with virological recurrence (HBV DNA level ≥50 IU/mL) through week 72. Concomitant HBIG therapy was received by 64 of the 65 enrolled patients, and 44% of these patients received high‐dose HBIG (any HBIG dose in the specified interval ≥10,000 IU). Through week 72, all 61 patients evaluable for the efficacy analysis had undetectable HBV DNA. The Kaplan‐Meier estimate of patients without hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) recurrence at week 72 was 0.9655. Two patients experienced a reappearance of HBsAg, but both remained HBV DNA− until the last follow‐up. The frequency and nature of adverse events were consistent with those expected for this patient population. Serum creatinine increments ≥0.3 mg/dL and ≥0.5 mg/dL occurred in 62% and 39% of the patients, respectively, and all of these patients received calcineurin inhibitor therapy. In conclusion, in this population of patients treated with entecavir after CHB‐related LT, entecavir was well tolerated and effective in maintaining viral suppression, even in individuals who experienced a reappearance of HBsAg. Liver Transpl 19:887–895, 2013.

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Michael R. Lucey

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Bryce D. Smith

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Eileen M. Burd

Medical College of Wisconsin

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