Lori E. Heath
Eli Lilly and Company
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lori E. Heath.
Journal of Hematology & Oncology | 2013
Ted Wun; Denis Soulières; Lakshmanan Krishnamurti; Enrico M. Novelli; Abdullah Kutlar; Kenneth I. Ataga; Charles Knupp; Lillian McMahon; John J. Strouse; Chunmei Zhou; Lori E. Heath; Chuke E. Nwachuku; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Jeffrey S. Riesmeyer; Kenneth J. Winters
BackgroundPlatelet activation has been implicated in the pathogenesis of sickle cell disease (SCD) suggesting antiplatelet agents may be therapeutic. To evaluate the safety of prasugrel, a thienopyridine antiplatelet agent, in adult patients with SCD, we conducted a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study.MethodsThe primary endpoint, safety, was measured by hemorrhagic events requiring medical intervention. Patients were randomized to prasugrel 5 mg daily (n = 41) or placebo (n = 21) for 30 days. Platelet function by VerifyNow® P2Y12 and vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein assays at days 10 and 30 were significantly inhibited in prasugrel- compared with placebo-treated SCD patients.ResultsThere were no hemorrhagic events requiring medical intervention in either study arm. Mean pain rate (percentage of days with pain) and intensity in the prasugrel arm were decreased compared with placebo. However, these decreases did not reach statistical significance. Platelet surface P-selectin and plasma soluble P-selectin, biomarkers of in vivo platelet activation, were significantly reduced in SCD patients receiving prasugrel compared with placebo. In sum, prasugrel was well tolerated and not associated with serious hemorrhagic events.ConclusionsDespite the small size and short duration of this study, there was a decrease in platelet activation biomarkers and a trend toward decreased pain.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016
Matthew M. Heeney; Carolyn Hoppe; Miguel R. Abboud; Baba Inusa; Julie Kanter; Bernhards Ogutu; Patricia B. Brown; Lori E. Heath; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Chunmei Zhou; Dmitry Zamoryakhin; Tsiri Agbenyega; Raffaella Colombatti; Hoda M Hassab; Videlis N. Nduba; Janet Oyieko; Nancy Robitaille; Catherine I. Segbefia; David C. Rees
BACKGROUND Sickle cell anemia is an inherited blood disorder that is characterized by painful vaso-occlusive crises, for which there are few treatment options. Platelets mediate intercellular adhesion and thrombosis during vaso-occlusion in sickle cell anemia, which suggests a role for antiplatelet agents in modifying disease events. METHODS Children and adolescents 2 through 17 years of age with sickle cell anemia were randomly assigned to receive oral prasugrel or placebo for 9 to 24 months. The primary end point was the rate of vaso-occlusive crisis, a composite of painful crisis or acute chest syndrome. The secondary end points were the rate of sickle cell-related pain and the intensity of pain, which were assessed daily with the use of pain diaries. RESULTS A total of 341 patients underwent randomization at 51 sites in 13 countries across the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Africa. The rate of vaso-occlusive crisis events per person-year was 2.30 in the prasugrel group and 2.77 in the placebo group (rate ratio, 0.83; 95% confidence interval, 0.66 to 1.05; P=0.12). There were no significant differences between the groups in the secondary end points of diary-reported events. The safety end points, including the frequency of bleeding events requiring medical intervention, of hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic adverse events that occurred while patients were taking prasugrel or placebo, and of discontinuations due to prasugrel or placebo, did not differ significantly between the groups. CONCLUSIONS Among children and adolescents with sickle cell anemia, the rate of vaso-occlusive crisis was not significantly lower among those who received prasugrel than among those who received placebo. There were no significant between-group differences in the safety findings. (Funded by Daiichi Sankyo and Eli Lilly; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01794000.).
Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 2015
Lori Styles; Darell Heiselman; Lori E. Heath; Brian A. Moser; David S. Small; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Chunmei Zhou; Rupa Redding-Lallinger; Matthew M. Heeney; Charles T. Quinn; Sohail Rana; Julie Kanter; Kenneth J. Winters
Introduction: This phase 2 study was designed to characterize the relationship among prasugrel dose, prasugrel’s active metabolite (Pras-AM), and platelet inhibition while evaluating safety in children with sickle cell disease. It was open-label, multicenter, adaptive design, dose ranging, and conducted in 2 parts. Part A: Patients received escalating single doses leading to corresponding increases in Pras-AM exposure and VerifyNow®P2Y12 (VN) platelet inhibition and decreases in VNP2Y12 reaction units and vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein platelet reactivity index. Part B: Patients were assigned daily doses (0.06, 0.08, and 0.12 mg/kg) based on VN pharmacodynamic measurements at the start of 2 dosing periods, each 14±4 days. Platelet inhibition was significantly higher at 0.12 mg/kg (56.3%±7.4%; least squares mean±SE) compared with 0.06 mg/kg (33.8%±7.4%) or 0.08 mg/kg (37.9%±5.6%). Patients receiving 0.12 mg/kg achieved ≥30% platelet inhibition; only 1 patient receiving 0.06 mg/kg exceeded 60% platelet inhibition. High interpatient variability in response to prasugrel and the small range of exposures precluded rigorous characterization of the relationship among dose, Pras-AM, and platelet inhibition. Safety: No hemorrhagic events occurred in Part A; 3 occurred in Part B, all mild and self-limited. Conclusions: Most children with sickle cell disease may achieve clinically relevant platelet inhibition with titration of daily-dose prasugrel.
Clinical Trials | 2017
Lori E. Heath; Matthew M. Heeney; Carolyn Hoppe; Samuel Adjei; Tsiri Agbenyega; Mohamed Badr; Nicoletta Masera; Chunmei Zhou; Patricia B. Brown; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Carlton Dampier
Background/Aims: Patients with sickle cell anemia can experience recurrent pain episodes, which affect quality of life. The reported prevalence of pain is higher in studies using patient diaries than in healthcare facility utilization data. Determining Effects of Platelet Inhibition on Vaso-Occlusive Events was a multinational study that assessed the efficacy and safety of prasugrel in reducing the rate of vaso-occlusive events in children with sickle cell anemia (NCT01794000) and included an electronic patient-reported outcome diary to record pain occurrence. We aimed to capture diary completion rates and compliance in children who used the electronic patient-reported outcome diary during the Determining Effects of Platelet Inhibition on Vaso-Occlusive Events study and examine factors contributing to diary completion rates and compliance. Methods: Daily electronic patient-reported outcome diary data were collected for up to 9 months in Determining Effects of Platelet Inhibition on Vaso-Occlusive Events participants aged 4 to <18 years in Africa, the Americas, Europe, and the Middle East. The questionnaires were available in 11 languages/dialects for collecting subjective (pain intensity, activity interference) and objective (study drug use, analgesic use, school attendance) data. Pain intensity was measured using the Faces Pain Scale–Revised. Data were entered by participants or caregivers and transferred wirelessly each day to a central database. Diary completion rates were the number of daily diary entries divided by the total number of expected daily diary entries. Percentages of participants who were compliant with the diary (≥80% diary completion) were calculated. Results: A total of 311 participants received a diary; 268 provided diary data through Month 9. Diary completion rates and compliance were high throughout the collection period and across all groups and regions, despite no games being included on the device. For subjective data, the overall completion rate was 94.4%, and 92.6% of participants were compliant. For objective data, the overall completion rate was 93.3%, and 89.7% of participants were compliant. Completion rates and compliance differed significantly by age and region and were higher for 4 to <12 year olds and very much higher for participants from Africa and the Middle East. Caregivers almost always entered data for participants <6 years and rarely entered data for participants ≥12 years. Comparing participant-entered and caregiver-entered data, pain intensity score data were more consistent for 4 to <12 year olds than older children, but pain intensity scores for older children were higher when entered by caregivers. Conclusion: With appropriate design, participant training, and sufficient monitoring, an electronic patient-reported outcome diary can capture daily sickle cell–related pain data in large multinational studies. Providing a mechanism for caregiver reporting is particularly valuable for participants <6 years and may also facilitate compliance in older children who experience high levels of pain.
British Journal of Haematology | 2018
Julie Kanter; Lori E. Heath; Jack Knorr; E. Tsiri Agbenyega; Raffaella Colombatti; Carlton Dampier; Hoda M Hassab; Deepa Manwani; Nancy Robitaille; Patricia B. Brown; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Suqin Yao; Carolyn Hoppe
Primitive or Secondary Autoimmune Cytopenias: a single centre experience. British Journal of Haematology, 171, 247–253. Park, J.A., Lee, H.H., Kwon, H.S., Baik, C.R., Song, S.A. & Lee, J.N. (2016) Sirolimus for refractory autoimmune hemolytic anemia after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: a case report and literature review of the treatment of post-transplant autoimmune hemolytic anemia. Transfusion Medicine Reviews, 30, 6–14. Teachey, D.T., Greiner, R., Seif, A., Attiyeh, E., Bleesing, J., Choi, J., Manno, C., Rappaport, E., Schwabe, D., Sheen, C., Sullivan, K.E., Zhuang, H., Wechsler, D.S. & Grupp, S.A. (2009) Treatment with sirolimus results in complete responses in patients with autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome. British Journal of Haematology, 145, 101–106. Zhang, P., Tey, S.K., Koyama, M., Kuns, R.D., Olver, S.D., Lineburg, K.E., Lor, M., Teal, B.E., Raffelt, N.C., Raju, J., Leveque, L., Markey, K.A., Varelias, A., Clouston, A.D., Lane, S.W., MacDonald, K.P. & Hill, G.R. (2013) Induced regulatory T cells promote tolerance when stabilized by rapamycin and IL-2 in vivo. Journal of Immunology, 191, 5291–5303.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2016
Carolyn Hoppe; Lori Styles; Lori E. Heath; Chunmei Zhou; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Kenneth J. Winters; Patricia B. Brown; David C. Rees; Matthew M. Heeney
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2016
Carolyn Hoppe; Lori Styles; Lori E. Heath; Chunmei Zhou; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Kenneth J. Winters; Patricia B. Brown; David C. Rees; Matthew M. Heeney
The Patient: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research | 2016
Neehar Gupta; April N. Naegeli; Diane M. Turner-Bowker; Emuella Flood; Lori E. Heath; Shelley M. Mays; Carlton Dampier
Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2016
Joseph A. Jakubowski; Carolyn Hoppe; Chunmei Zhou; Brendan E. Smith; Patricia B. Brown; Lori E. Heath; Baba Inusa; David C. Rees; David S. Small; Neehar Gupta; Suqin Yao; Matthew M. Heeney; Julie Kanter
Blood | 2016
Baba Inusa; Raffaella Colombatti; David C. Rees; Matthew M. Heeney; Carolyn Hoppe; Bernhards Ogutu; Hoda M Hassab; Chunmei Zhou; Suqin Yao; Patricia B. Brown; Lori E. Heath; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Miguel R. Abboud