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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly Bischoff is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly Bischoff.


Diabetes Care | 2011

Long-Term Impact of Neonatal Breastfeeding on Childhood Adiposity and Fat Distribution Among Children Exposed to Diabetes In Utero

Tessa L. Crume; Lorraine G. Ogden; Marybeth Maligie; Shelly Sheffield; Kimberly Bischoff; Robert S. McDuffie; Stephen R. Daniels; Richard F. Hamman; Jill M. Norris; Dana Dabelea

OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether breastfeeding attenuates increased childhood adiposity associated with exposure to diabetes in utero. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Retrospective cohort study of 89 children exposed to diabetes in utero and 379 unexposed youth with measured BMI, waist circumference, skinfolds, visceral (VAT) and subcutaneous (SAT) abdominal fat. A measure of breast milk–months was derived from maternal self-report and used to categorize breastfeeding status as low (<6) and adequate (≥6 breast milk–months). Multiple linear regression was used to model the relationship between exposure to diabetes in utero and offspring adiposity outcomes among youth stratified according to breastfeeding status. RESULTS Adequate (vs. low) breastfeeding status was associated with significantly lower BMI, waist circumference, SAT, and VAT at ages 6–13 years. Among youth in the low breastfeeding category, exposure to diabetes in utero was associated with a 1.7 kg/m2 higher BMI (P = 0.03), 5.8 cm higher waist circumference (P = 0.008), 6.1 cm2 higher VAT (P = 0.06), 44.6 cm2 higher SAT (P = 0.03), and 0.11 higher ratio of subscapular-to-triceps skinfold ratio (P = 0.008). Among those with adequate breastfeeding in infancy, the effect of prenatal exposure to diabetes on childhood adiposity outcomes was not significant. CONCLUSIONS Adequate breastfeeding protects against childhood adiposity and reduces the increased adiposity levels associated with exposure to diabetes in utero. These data provide support for mothers with diabetes during pregnancy to breastfeed their infants in order to reduce the risk of childhood obesity.


Obesity | 2014

The long-term impact of intrauterine growth restriction in a diverse U.S. cohort of children: the EPOCH study

Tessa L. Crume; Ann Scherzinger; Elizabeth R. Stamm; Robert S. McDuffie; Kimberly Bischoff; Richard F. Hamman; Dana Dabelea

To explore the long‐term impact of intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) among a diverse, contemporary cohort of US children.


International Journal of Obesity | 2012

The impact of neonatal breast-feeding on growth trajectories of youth exposed and unexposed to diabetes in utero : the EPOCH Study

Tessa L. Crume; Lorraine G. Ogden; Elizabeth J. Mayer-Davis; Richard F. Hamman; Jill M. Norris; Kimberly Bischoff; Robert S. McDuffie; Dana Dabelea

Objective:To evaluate the influence of breast-feeding on the body mass index (BMI) growth trajectory from birth through 13 years of age among offspring of diabetic pregnancies (ODP) and offspring of non-diabetic pregnancies (ONDP) participating in the Exploring Perinatal Outcomes Among Children Study.Subjects:There were 94 ODP and 399 ONDP who had multiple BMI measures obtained from birth throughout childhood. A measure of breast milk-months was derived from maternal self-report to categorize breast-feeding status as adequate (⩾6 breast milk-months) or low (<6 breast milk-months). Mixed linear-effects models were constructed to assess the impact of breast-feeding on the BMI growth curves during infancy (birth to 27 months) and childhood (27 months to 13 years).Results:ODP who were adequately breast-fed had a slower BMI growth trajectory during childhood (P=0.047) and slower period-specific growth velocity with significant differences between 4 and 6 years of age (P=0.03) and 6 to 9 years of age (P=0.01) compared with ODP with low breast-feeding. A similar pattern was seen in the ONDP, with adequate breast-feeding associated with lower average BMI in infancy (P=0.03) and childhood (P=0.0002) and a slower growth trajectory in childhood (P=0.0002). Slower period-specific growth velocity was seen among the ONDP associated with adequate breast-feeding with significant differences between 12–26 months (P=0.02), 4–6 years (P=0.03), 6–9 years (P=0.0001) and 9–13 years of age (P<0.0001).Conclusion:Our study provides novel evidence that breast-feeding is associated with long-term effects on childhood BMI growth that extend beyond infancy into early and late childhood. Importantly, these effects are also present in the high-risk offspring, exposed to overnutrition during pregnancy. Breast-feeding in the early postnatal period may represent a critical opportunity to reduce the risk of childhood obesity.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2014

Maternal obesity, gestational weight gain, and offspring adiposity: the exploring perinatal outcomes among children study.

Jill L. Kaar; Tessa L. Crume; John T. Brinton; Kimberly Bischoff; Robert S. McDuffie; Dana Dabelea

OBJECTIVE To determine whether adequate vs excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) attenuated the association between maternal obesity and offspring outcomes. STUDY DESIGN Data from 313 mother-child pairs participating in the Exploring Perinatal Outcomes among Children study were used to test this hypothesis. Maternal prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) and weight measures throughout pregnancy were abstracted from electronic medical records. GWG was categorized according to the 2009 Institute of Medicine criteria as adequate or excessive. Offspring outcomes were obtained at a research visit (average age 10.4 years) and included BMI, waist circumference (WC), subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) and visceral adipose tissue, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride levels. RESULTS More overweight/obese mothers exceeded the Institute of Medicine GWG recommendations (68%) compared with normal-weight women (50%) (P < .01). Maternal prepregnancy BMI was associated with worse childhood outcomes, particularly among offspring of mothers with excessive GWG (increased BMI [20.34 vs 17.80 kg/m(2)], WC [69.23 vs 62.83 cm], SAT [149.30 vs 90.47 cm(2)], visceral adipose tissue [24.11 vs 17.55 cm(2)], and homeostatic model assessment [52.52 vs 36.69], all P < .001). The effect of maternal prepregnancy BMI on several childhood outcomes was attenuated for offspring of mothers with adequate vs excessive GWG (P < .05 for the interaction between maternal BMI and GWG status on childhood BMI, WC, SAT, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol). CONCLUSION Our findings lend support for pregnancy interventions aiming at controlling GWG to prevent childhood obesity.


BMC Research Notes | 2014

Feasibility of self-collection of fecal specimens by randomly sampled women for health-related studies of the gut microbiome

Heather Spencer Feigelson; Kimberly Bischoff; Mary-Anne E Ardini; Jacques Ravel; Mitchell H. Gail; Roberto Flores; James J. Goedert

BackgroundThe field of microbiome research is growing rapidly. We developed a method for self-collection of fecal specimens that can be used in population-based studies of the gut microbiome. We conducted a pilot study to test the feasibility of our methods among a random sample of healthy, postmenopausal women who are members of Kaiser Permanente Colorado (KPCO). We aimed to collect questionnaire data, fecal and urine specimens from 60 women, aged 55–69, who recently had a normal screening mammogram. We designed the study such that all questionnaire data and specimens could be collected at home.ResultsWe mailed an invitation packet, consent form and opt-out postcard to 300 women, then recruited by telephone women who did not opt-out. Verbally consented women were mailed an enrollment package including a risk factor questionnaire, link to an online diet questionnaire, specimen collection kit, and instructions for collecting stool and urine. Specimens were shipped overnight to the biorepository. Of the 300 women mailed an invitation packet, 58 (19%) returned the opt-out postcard. Up to 3 attempts were made to telephone the remaining women, of whom 130 (43%) could not be contacted, 23 (8%) refused, and 12 (4%) were ineligible. Enrollment packages were mailed to 77 women, of whom 59 returned the risk factor questionnaire and specimens. We found no statistically significant differences between enrolled women and those who refused participation or could not be contacted.ConclusionsWe demonstrated that a representative sample of women can be successfully recruited for a gut microbiome study; however, significant personal contact and carefully timed follow-up from the study personnel are required. The methods employed by our study could successfully be applied to analytic studies of a wide range of clinical conditions that have been postulated to be influenced by the gut microbial population.


BMC Cancer | 2012

Improving quality of breast cancer surgery through development of a national breast cancer surgical outcomes (BRCASO) research database

Erin J. Aiello Bowles; Heather Spencer Feigelson; Tom Barney; Katherine Broecker; Andrew Sterrett; Kimberly Bischoff; Jessica M. Engel; Gabrielle Gundersen; Johanna Sheehey-Jones; Richard M. Single; Adedayo A. Onitilo; Ted A. James; Laurence E. McCahill

BackgroundCommon measures of surgical quality are 30-day morbidity and mortality, which poorly describe breast cancer surgical quality with extremely low morbidity and mortality rates. Several national quality programs have collected additional surgical quality measures; however, program participation is voluntary and results may not be generalizable to all surgeons. We developed the Breast Cancer Surgical Outcomes (BRCASO) database to capture meaningful breast cancer surgical quality measures among a non-voluntary sample, and study variation in these measures across providers, facilities, and health plans. This paper describes our study protocol, data collection methods, and summarizes the strengths and limitations of these data.MethodsWe included 4524 women ≥18 years diagnosed with breast cancer between 2003-2008. All women with initial breast cancer surgery performed by a surgeon employed at the University of Vermont or three Cancer Research Network (CRN) health plans were eligible for inclusion. From the CRN institutions, we collected electronic administrative data including tumor registry information, Current Procedure Terminology codes for breast cancer surgeries, surgeons, surgical facilities, and patient demographics. We supplemented electronic data with medical record abstraction to collect additional pathology and surgery detail. All data were manually abstracted at the University of Vermont.ResultsThe CRN institutions pre-filled 30% (22 out of 72) of elements using electronic data. The remaining elements, including detailed pathology margin status and breast and lymph node surgeries, required chart abstraction. The mean age was 61 years (range 20-98 years); 70% of women were diagnosed with invasive ductal carcinoma, 20% with ductal carcinoma in situ, and 10% with invasive lobular carcinoma.ConclusionsThe BRCASO database is one of the largest, multi-site research resources of meaningful breast cancer surgical quality data in the United States. Assembling data from electronic administrative databases and manual chart review balanced efficiency with high-quality, unbiased data collection. Using the BRCASO database, we will evaluate surgical quality measures including mastectomy rates, positive margin rates, and partial mastectomy re-excision rates among a diverse, non-voluntary population of patients, providers, and facilities.


Clinical Medicine & Research | 2011

PS2-03: Improving Quality Of Breast Cancer Surgery Through Development of a National Breast Cancer Surgical Outcomes Database

Erin J. Aiello Bowles; Heather Spencer Feigelson; Andrew Sterrett; Tom Barney; Kathy Broecker; Kimberly Bischoff; Jessica M. Engel; Gabrielle Gundersen; Ted A. James; Adedayo A. Onitilo; Laurence E. McCahill

Background/Aims Surgical quality is typically measured using 30-day morbidity and mortality statistics – measures that are not very meaningful for procedures such as lumpectomies and mastectomies that have extremely high survival rates. The University of Vermont previously developed a single-site Breast Cancer Surgical Outcomes (BRCASO) database to capture meaningful quality measures such as breast conservation rates, positive margins rates, and number of procedures to complete breast cancer surgery. We extended the BRCASO database to three Cancer Research Network (CRN) institutions to study variation in breast cancer surgical quality across providers, facilities, and health plans. Methods The University of Vermont BRCASO data were collected on women diagnosed with breast cancer between 2003–2008 via medical record abstraction. In order to efficiently extend this work to CRN institutions, we collected electronic administrative data from each health plan (Group Health, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, and Marshfield Clinic) on women diagnosed with breast cancer between 2003–2008. Electronic administrative data included tumor registry information, Current Procedure Terminology codes for all breast cancer surgeries, study IDs for surgeons and surgical facilities, and demographic information including geocoded data. We supplemented the electronic administrative data with medical record abstraction to collect detailed information on surgical margins and lymph nodes. All medical record data were entered into a secure, online database developed using Silverlight. Results Using electronic administrative data, we determined 5,673 women met the study inclusion criteria. The CRN institutions pre-filled 30% (22 out of 72) of elements using electronic data. The remaining 50 elements required chart abstraction, which took approximately 45–60 minutes per record. Conclusions Electronic administrative data, while useful for research, have limitations and may not suit the needs of all studies. In our study, using electronic administrative data substantially decreased the amount of chart abstraction required at the CRN institutions; however, was not exclusively sufficient for all abstraction. Although manual abstraction was necessary for high quality data, the use of an electronic system greatly facilitated this effort and helped expand the BRCASO database to become the only multi-site source of detailed surgical quality information in the country.


Diabetes Care | 2005

Increasing Prevalence of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) Over Time and by Birth Cohort: Kaiser Permanente of Colorado GDM Screening Program

Dana Dabelea; Janet K. Snell-Bergeon; Cynthia L. Hartsfield; Kimberly Bischoff; Richard F. Hamman; Robert S. McDuffie


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2005

Cervical Cancer in Women With Comprehensive Health Care Access: Attributable Factors in the Screening Process

Wendy A. Leyden; M. Michele Manos; Ann M. Geiger; Sheila Weinmann; Judy Mouchawar; Kimberly Bischoff; Marianne Ulcickas Yood; Joyce Gilbert; Stephen H. Taplin


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2005

Reason for Late-Stage Breast Cancer: Absence of Screening or Detection, or Breakdown in Follow-up?

Stephen H. Taplin; Laura Ichikawa; Marrianne Ulcickas Yood; M. Michele Manos; Ann M. Geiger; Sheila Weinmann; Joyce Gilbert; Judy Mouchawar; Wendy A. Leyden; Robin Altaras; Robert K. Beverly; Deborah Casso; Emily O. Westbrook; Kimberly Bischoff; Jane G. Zapka; William E. Barlow

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Dana Dabelea

Colorado School of Public Health

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Richard F. Hamman

Colorado School of Public Health

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Tessa L. Crume

Colorado School of Public Health

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Erin J. Aiello Bowles

Group Health Research Institute

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