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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly Lowe is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly Lowe.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2015

Clinical Outcomes after Parathyroidectomy in a Nationwide Cohort of Patients on Hemodialysis

Areef Ishani; Jiannong Liu; James B. Wetmore; Kimberly Lowe; Thy P. Do; Brian D. Bradbury; Geoffrey A. Block; Allan J. Collins

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Patients receiving dialysis undergo parathyroidectomy to improve laboratory parameters in resistant hyperparathyroidism with the assumption that clinical outcomes will also improve. However, no randomized clinical trial data demonstrate the benefits of parathyroidectomy. This study aimed to evaluate clinical outcomes up to 1 year after parathyroidectomy in a nationwide sample of patients receiving hemodialysis. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Using data from the US Renal Data System, this study identified prevalent hemodialysis patients aged ≥18 years with Medicare as primary payers who underwent parathyroidectomy from 2007 to 2009. Baseline characteristics and comorbid conditions were assessed in the year preceding parathyroidectomy; clinical events were identified in the year preceding and the year after parathyroidectomy. After parathyroidectomy, patients were censored at death, loss of Medicare coverage, kidney transplant, change in dialysis modality, or 365 days. This study estimated cause-specific event rates for both periods and rate ratios comparing event rates in the postparathyroidectomy versus preparathyroidectomy periods. RESULTS Of 4435 patients who underwent parathyroidectomy, 2.0% died during the parathyroidectomy hospitalization and the 30 days after discharge. During the 30 days after discharge, 23.8% of patients were rehospitalized; 29.3% of these patients required intensive care. In the year after parathyroidectomy, hospitalizations were higher by 39%, hospital days by 58%, intensive care unit admissions by 69%, and emergency room/observation visits requiring hypocalcemia treatment by 20-fold compared with the preceding year. Cause-specific hospitalizations were higher for acute myocardial infarction (rate ratio, 1.98; 95% confidence interval, 1.60 to 2.46) and dysrhythmia (rate ratio 1.4; 95% confidence interval1.16 to 1.78); fracture rates did not differ (rate ratio 0.82; 95% confidence interval 0.6 to 1.1). CONCLUSIONS Parathyroidectomy is associated with significant morbidity in the 30 days after hospital discharge and in the year after the procedure. Awareness of clinical events will assist in developing evidence-based risk/benefit determinations for the indication for parathyroidectomy.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013

CKD–Mineral and Bone Disorder and Risk of Death and Cardiovascular Hospitalization in Patients on Hemodialysis

Geoffrey A. Block; Ryan D. Kilpatrick; Kimberly Lowe; Wenli Wang; Mark D. Danese

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphate have been independently associated with cardiovascular event risk. Because these parameters may be on the same causal pathway and have been proposed as quality measures, an integrated approach to estimating event risks is needed. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Prevalent dialysis patients were followed from August 31, 2005 to December 31, 2006. A two-stage modeling approach was used. First, the 16-month probabilities of death and composite end point of death or cardiovascular hospitalization were estimated and adjusted for potential confounders. Second, patients were categorized into 1 of 36 possible phenotypes using average parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphate values over a 4-month baseline period. Associations among phenotypes and outcomes were estimated and adjusted for the underlying event risk estimated from the first model stage. RESULTS Of 26,221 patients, 98.5% of patients were in 22 groups with at least 100 patients and 20% of patients were in the reference group defined using guideline-based reference ranges for parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphate. Within the 22 most common phenotypes, 20% of patients were in groups with significantly (P<0.05) higher risk of death and 54% of patients were in groups with significantly higher risk of the composite end point relative to the in-target reference group. Increased risks ranged from 15% to 47% for death and from 8% to 55% for the composite. More than 40% of all patients were in the three largest groups with elevated composite end point risk (high parathyroid hormone, target calcium, and high phosphate; target high parathyroid hormone, target calcium, and high phosphate; and target high parathyroid hormone, target calcium, and target phosphate). CONCLUSION After adjusting for baseline risk, phenotypes defined by categories of parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphate identify patients at higher risk of death and cardiovascular hospitalization. Identifying common high-risk phenotypes may inform clinical interventions and policies related to quality of care.


International Journal of Nephrology | 2015

International Burden of Chronic Kidney Disease and Secondary Hyperparathyroidism: A Systematic Review of the Literature and Available Data

Elizabeth Hedgeman; Loren Lipworth; Kimberly Lowe; Rajiv Saran; Thy P. Do; Jon P. Fryzek

The international burden of secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) is unknown, but it may be estimable through the available chronic kidney disease and SHPT literature. Structured reviews of biomedical literature and online data systems were performed for selected countries to ascertain recent estimates of the incidence, prevalence, and survival of individuals with CKD and SHPT. International societies of nephrology were contacted to seek additional information regarding available data. Estimates were abstracted from 35 sources reporting estimates of CKD in 25 countries. Population prevalence estimates of CKD stages 3–5 in adults ranged from approximately 1 to 9% (China, Mexico, resp.). Estimates of the population prevalence of maintenance dialysis therapy ranged from 79 per million population (pmp; China) to 2385 pmp (Japan); incidence rates ranged from 91 pmp (United Kingdom) to 349 pmp (United States). Prevalence of SHPT among stage 5D populations was highly variable and dependent upon the disease definition used. Among the few nations reporting, approximately 30–50% of stage 5D patients had serum parathyroid hormone levels >300 pg/mL. Reported incidence and prevalence estimates across the individual nations were variable, likely reflecting differing population demographics, risk factors, etiologies, and availability of treatment through all stages of CKD.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2016

Changes in secondary hyperparathyroidism-related biochemical parameters and medication use following parathyroidectomy

James B. Wetmore; Jiannong Liu; Thy P. Do; Kimberly Lowe; Areef Ishani; Brian D. Bradbury; Geoffrey A. Block; Allan J. Collins

BACKGROUND Little is known about changes in parathyroid hormone (PTH), calcium and phosphorous levels after parathyroidectomy in hemodialysis patients. We studied the effects of parathyroidectomy on these biochemical values in a large cohort of patients receiving maintenance hemodialysis. METHODS This retrospective cohort study included patients identified in both the United States Renal Data System and the database of a large dialysis organization who underwent parathyroidectomy in 2007-09, were aged ≥ 18 years, had Medicare Parts A and B as primary payer and had received hemodialysis for ≥ 1 year pre-parathyroidectomy. Descriptive statistics were calculated for continuous variables; categorical variables were used to characterize the population and evaluate monthly laboratory and medication use; median values were calculated for laboratory measures. RESULTS Among 1402 parathyroidectomy patients, mean age was 48.9 years, 52.4% were males, 58.8% were African American and mean dialysis duration was 7.5 years. Median PTH levels increased over the year before parathyroidectomy from 1039 to 1661 pg/mL and decreased afterward to 98 pg/mL at 1 month; levels remained ≥ 897 pg/mL for 10% of patients. Median calcium levels fell from 9.6 mg/dL before to 7.9 mg/dL 1 month after parathyroidectomy; levels were ≤ 7.1 mg/dL for 25% and remained ≤ 7.2 mg/dL for the lowest 25% at 3 months. Median phosphorous level was 6.8 mg/dL immediately before parathyroidectomy, decreased to 3.8 mg/dL immediately after and reached 5.8 mg/dL at 1 year. CONCLUSIONS While PTH levels dropped after parathyroidectomy for most patients, surgery was sometimes ineffective in reducing levels and sometimes led to over-suppression. Hypocalcemia could be profound and long lasting, suggesting the need for prolonged vigilance.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2015

Refining the definition of clinically important mineral and bone disorder in hemodialysis patients

Mark D. Danese; Marc Halperin; Kimberly Lowe; Brian D. Bradbury; Thy P. Do; Geoffrey A. Block

Background It is important to identify an easily defined subset of patients at increased risk of adverse clinical outcomes associated with mineral and bone disorder (MBD) biomarkers (parathyroid hormone, calcium and phosphate). Methods Observational cohort study of 26 221 prevalent hemodialysis patients in Davita clinics as of 31 August 2005 and followed up until 31 December 2006 (16 months). Predictors were 12 possible definitions of ‘clinically important’ MBD based on all 3 biomarkers, and 18 alternative definitions based on only 1 or 2 biomarkers. Events were death alone and a composite of cardiovascular hospitalization or death. Excess events were calculated based on a multivariate Cox model using 5224 patients in target for all MBD biomarkers and applied to 20 997 patients out of target for at least one biomarker. Excess events attributable to MBD were estimated by subtracting the multivariate model-derived predicted number from the actual number. Outcomes were the proportion of excess events attributable to MBD captured by each definition (threshold ≥70%) and the reduction in the population size considered to have clinically important MBD (threshold ≥30%). The excess fraction was excess events divided by actual events. Results Patients with more biochemical markers out of target tended to be younger, black and have longer times since starting dialysis. The excess fraction associated with MBD ranged from ∼10 to 26% depending on the clinical endpoint and definition. The only definition to meet the thresholds required at least two of the three MBD biomarkers to be out of target (high or low). It captured 82% of excess composite endpoints and 74% of excess deaths and reduced the at-risk population by 46%. Conclusions Patients with at least two of three MBD biomarkers out of target represent a subgroup of patients at elevated risk of adverse clinical events.


International Scholarly Research Notices | 2012

A Multisource Approach to Improving Epidemiologic Estimates: Application to Global B-Cell Malignancies

Meghan E. Mitchell; Kimberly Lowe; Jon Fryzek

The compilation of comprehensive, worldwide epidemiologic data can inform hypotheses on cancer etiology and guide future drug development. These statistics are reported by a multitude of sources using varying methods; thus, compiling a complete database of these statistics is a challenge. To this end, this paper examined the usefulness of a novel, multisource approach—extracting data from the peer-reviewed literature, online reports, and query systems from cancer registries and health agencies and directly contacting cancer registry personnel—for building a comprehensive, multinational epidemiologic cancer database. The major B-cell malignancies were chosen as the cancer subtype to test this approach largely because their epidemiology has not been well characterized in the peer-reviewed literature. We found that a multisource approach yields a more comprehensive epidemiologic database than what would have been possible with the use of literature searches alone. In addition, our paper revealed that cancer registries vary considerably in their methodology, comprehensiveness, and ability to gather information on specific B-cell malignancy subtypes. Collectively, this paper demonstrates the feasibility and value of a multisource approach to gathering epidemiologic data.


BMC Nephrology | 2015

Parathyroid hormone change after cinacalcet initiation and one-year clinical outcome risk: a retrospective cohort study.

Wendy L. St. Peter; Akeem A. Yusuf; Thy P. Do; Kimberly Lowe; Jiannong Liu; Kimberly Nieman; Brian D. Bradbury; Allan J. Collins


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Preemptive versus reactive management of EGFR rash among mCRC patients treated with panitumumab: Results of a national survey of treating oncologists in the United States.

Kimberly Lowe; Kristina Hool; Tamer Garawin; Rachel Bergstresser; George Kafatos; Michelle McNamara; Seth Collins; Bruce A. Bach


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Regional and practice setting differences in the management of EGFR rash among mCRC patients treated with panitumumab: Results of a national survey in the United States.

Kristina Hool; Kimberly Lowe; Tamer Garawin; Rachel Bergstresser; George Kafatos; Michelle McNamara; Seth Collins; Bruce A. Bach


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Trends in biomarker testing among metastatic colorectal cancer patients: A temporal description of KRAS, NRAS, and BRAF testing in the EU5.

Kimberly Lowe; Xin Niu; George Kafatos

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Jiannong Liu

Hennepin County Medical Center

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Areef Ishani

University of Minnesota

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