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Featured researches published by Li-Jung Liang.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997

Phase II study of liposomal doxorubicin in refractory ovarian cancer: antitumor activity and toxicity modification by liposomal encapsulation.

Franco M. Muggia; J D Hainsworth; Susan Jeffers; P Miller; Susan Groshen; M Tan; Lynda D. Roman; B Uziely; Laila I. Muderspach; Agustin A. Garcia; A Burnett; F A Greco; C P Morrow; L J Paradiso; Li-Jung Liang

PURPOSE A phase II study of liposomal doxorubicin was conducted in patients with ovarian cancer who failed to respond to platinum- and paclitaxel-based regimens. Liposomal doxorubicin was selected as a result of its superior activity against ovarian cancer xenografts relative to free doxorubicin and activity in refractory ovarian cancer patients that was noted during the phase I study. PATIENTS AND METHODS Thirty-five consecutive patients were accrued in two institutions (22 in one and 13 in the other). All had progressive disease after either cisplatin or carboplatin and paclitaxel, or at least one platinum-based and one paclitaxel-based regimen. Patients received intravenous (I.V.) liposomal doxorubicin 50 mg/m2 every 3 weeks with a dose reduction to 40 mg/m2 in the event of grade 3 or 4 toxicities, or a lengthening of the interval to 4 weeks (and occasionally to 5 weeks) with persistence of grade 1 or 2 toxicities beyond 3 weeks. RESULTS Nine clinical responses (one complete response [CR], eight partial responses [PRs]) were observed in 35 patients (25.7%), with seven of these having been confirmed by two consecutive computed tomographic (CT) measurements. The median progression-free survival was 5.7 months with an overall survival of 1.5 to 24+ months (median, 11 months). Although 13 patients experienced grade 3 or 4 nonhematologic skin and mucosal toxicities (either hand-foot syndrome or stomatitis), with dose modifications, the treatment was very well tolerated. Nausea that was clearly attributable to the drug, hair loss, extravasation necrosis, or decreases in ejection fraction did not occur. CONCLUSION Liposomal doxorubicin has substantial activity against ovarian cancer refractory to platinum and paclitaxel. The responses achieved with liposomal doxorubicin were durable and maintained with minimal toxicity. This liposomal formulation should be evaluated further in combination with other drugs in less refractory patients.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2013

Effect of Emergency Department Crowding on Outcomes of Admitted Patients

Benjamin C. Sun; Renee Y. Hsia; Robert E. Weiss; David S. Zingmond; Li-Jung Liang; Weijuan Han; Heather McCreath; Steven M. Asch

STUDY OBJECTIVE Emergency department (ED) crowding is a prevalent health delivery problem and may adversely affect the outcomes of patients requiring admission. We assess the association of ED crowding with subsequent outcomes in a general population of hospitalized patients. METHODS We performed a retrospective cohort analysis of patients admitted in 2007 through the EDs of nonfederal, acute care hospitals in California. The primary outcome was inpatient mortality. Secondary outcomes included hospital length of stay and costs. ED crowding was established by the proxy measure of ambulance diversion hours on the day of admission. To control for hospital-level confounders of ambulance diversion, we defined periods of high ED crowding as those days within the top quartile of diversion hours for a specific facility. Hierarchic regression models controlled for demographics, time variables, patient comorbidities, primary diagnosis, and hospital fixed effects. We used bootstrap sampling to estimate excess outcomes attributable to ED crowding. RESULTS We studied 995,379 ED visits resulting in admission to 187 hospitals. Patients who were admitted on days with high ED crowding experienced 5% greater odds of inpatient death (95% confidence interval [CI] 2% to 8%), 0.8% longer hospital length of stay (95% CI 0.5% to 1%), and 1% increased costs per admission (95% CI 0.7% to 2%). Excess outcomes attributable to periods of high ED crowding included 300 inpatient deaths (95% CI 200 to 500 inpatient deaths), 6,200 hospital days (95% CI 2,800 to 8,900 hospital days), and


Journal of Nutrition | 2003

School Snacks Containing Animal Source Foods Improve Dietary Quality for Children in Rural Kenya

Suzanne P. Murphy; Constance Gewa; Li-Jung Liang; Monika Grillenberger; No Bwibo; Charlotte G. Neumann

17 million (95% CI


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2011

Hospital Determinants of Emergency Department Left Without Being Seen Rates

Renee Y. Hsia; Steven M. Asch; Robert E. Weiss; David S. Zingmond; Li-Jung Liang; Weijuan Han; Heather McCreath; Benjamin C. Sun

11 to


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Randomized Clinical Trial of an Emergency Department Observation Syncope Protocol Versus Routine Inpatient Admission

Benjamin C. Sun; Heather McCreath; Li-Jung Liang; Stephen J. Bohan; Christopher W. Baugh; Luna Ragsdale; Sean O. Henderson; Carol A. M. Clark; Aveh Bastani; Emmett B. Keeler; Ruopeng An; Carol M. Mangione

23 million) in costs. CONCLUSION Periods of high ED crowding were associated with increased inpatient mortality and modest increases in length of stay and costs for admitted patients.


Neurology | 2013

Neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage and mortality after stroke

Arleen F. Brown; Li-Jung Liang; Stefanie D. Vassar; Sharon Stein Merkin; W. T. Longstreth; Bruce Ovbiagele; Tingjian Yan; José J. Escarce

Provision of a snack at school could help alleviate the micronutrient malnutrition that is common among schoolchildren in developing countries. The Child Nutrition Project was designed to compare the efficacy of three school snacks in improving growth and cognitive function of children in rural Kenya. The snacks provided approximately 20% of the childrens energy requirement, and were composed of equicaloric portions of githeri (a vegetable stew) alone (Energy group), githeri plus milk (Milk group) or githeri plus meat (Meat group). A fourth group of children served as Controls. When nutrient intakes from three, 24-h dietary recalls collected before feeding were compared to three, 24-h recalls conducted after feeding began, intakes of vitamin B-12, riboflavin, vitamin A and calcium increased more in the Milk group than in the Control group, whereas intakes of vitamin B-12, vitamin A, calcium, available iron and available zinc increased more than those of Controls for children in the Meat group. At most of the time points examined, total energy intake increased more for the Meat group than for the other two feeding groups, because the additional energy provided by the Milk and Energy snacks was partially balanced by a decrease in the energy content of foods consumed at home. This decrease did not occur to the same extent for the Meat group, so both dietary quantity and dietary quality improved. For the Milk group, only dietary quality improved. For the Energy group, there were no significant changes in the total days diet compared to the Control group.


AIDS | 2010

HIV prevention intervention to reduce HIV-related stigma: evidence from China

Li Li; Li-Jung Liang; Chunqing Lin; Zunyou Wu; Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus

STUDY OBJECTIVE The proportion of patients who leave without being seen in the emergency department (ED) is an outcome-oriented measure of impaired access to emergency care and represents the failure of an emergency care delivery system to meet its goals of providing care to those most in need. Little is known about variation in the amount of left without being seen or about hospital-level determinants. Such knowledge is necessary to target hospital-level interventions to improve access to emergency care. We seek to determine whether hospital-level socioeconomic status case mix or hospital structural characteristics are predictive of ED left without being seen rates. METHODS We performed a cross-sectional study of all acute-care, nonfederal hospitals in California that operated an ED in 2007, using data from the California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development database and the US census. Our outcome of interest was whether a visit to a given hospital ED resulted in left without being seen. The proportion of left without being seen was measured by the number of left without being seen cases out of the total number of visits. RESULTS We studied 9.2 million ED visits to 262 hospitals in California. The percentage of left without being seen varied greatly over hospitals, ranging from 0% to 20.3%, with a median percentage of 2.6%. In multivariable analyses adjusting for hospital-level socioeconomic status case mix, visitors to EDs with a higher proportion of low-income and poorly insured patients experienced a higher risk of left without being seen. We found that the odds of an ED visit resulting in left without being seen increased by a factor of 1.15 for each 10-percentage-point increase in poorly insured patients, and odds of left without being seen decreased by a factor of 0.86 for each


International Journal of Psychology | 2009

Individual attitudes and perceived social norms: Reports on HIV/AIDS-related stigma among service providers in China.

Li Li; Li-Jung Liang; Chunqing Lin; Zunyou Wu; Yi Wen

10,000 increase in household income. When hospital structural characteristics were added to the model, county ownership, trauma center designation, and teaching program affiliation were positively associated with increased probability of left without being seen (odds ratio 2.09; 1.62, and 2.14, respectively), and these factors attenuated the association with insurance status. CONCLUSION Visitors to different EDs experience a large variation in their probability of left without being seen, and visitors to hospitals serving a high proportion of low-income and poorly insured patients are at disproportionately higher risk of leaving without being seen. Our findings suggest that there is room for substantial improvement in this outcome, and regional interventions can be targeted toward certain at-risk hospitals to improve access to emergency care.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1998

Amphotericin B colloidal dispersion for treatment of candidemia in immunocompromised patients

Gary A. Noskin; Larry Pietrelli; Gwen Coffey; Marc Gurwith; Li-Jung Liang

STUDY OBJECTIVE Older adults are frequently hospitalized from the emergency department (ED) after an episode of unexplained syncope. Current admission patterns are costly, with little evidence of benefit. We hypothesize that an ED observation syncope protocol will reduce resource use without adversely affecting patient-oriented outcomes. METHODS This randomized trial at 5 EDs compared an ED observation syncope protocol to inpatient admission for intermediate-risk adults (≥50 years) presenting with syncope or near syncope. Primary outcomes included inpatient admission rate and length of stay. Secondary outcomes included 30-day and 6-month serious outcomes after hospital discharge, index and 30-day hospital costs, 30-day quality-of-life scores, and 30-day patient satisfaction. RESULTS Study staff randomized 124 patients. Observation resulted in a lower inpatient admission rate (15% versus 92%; 95% confidence interval [CI] difference -88% to -66%) and shorter hospital length of stay (29 versus 47 hours; 95% CI difference -28 to -8). Serious outcome rates after hospital discharge were similar for observation versus admission at 30 days (3% versus 0%; 95% CI difference -1% to 8%) and 6 months (8% versus 10%; 95% CI difference -13% to 9%). Index hospital costs in the observation group were


Stroke | 2011

Neighborhood Disadvantage and Ischemic Stroke: The Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS)

Arleen F. Brown; Li-Jung Liang; Stefanie D. Vassar; Sharon Stein-Merkin; W. T. Longstreth; Bruce Ovbiagele; Tingjian Yan; José J. Escarce

629 (95% CI difference -

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Guoping Ji

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Zunyou Wu

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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