Marie E. Edwards
Mayo Clinic
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marie E. Edwards.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016
Binu Porath; Vladimir G. Gainullin; Emilie Cornec-Le Gall; Elizabeth K. Dillinger; Christina M. Heyer; Katharina Hopp; Marie E. Edwards; Charles D. Madsen; Sarah R. Mauritz; Carly J. Banks; Saurabh Baheti; Bharathi Reddy; José Ignacio Herrero; Jesus M. Banales; Marie C. Hogan; Velibor Tasic; Terry Watnick; Arlene B. Chapman; Cécile Vigneau; Frédéric Lavainne; Marie Pierre Audrezet; Claude Férec; Yannick Le Meur; Vicente E. Torres; Peter C. Harris
Autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a common, progressive, adult-onset disease that is an important cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD), which requires transplantation or dialysis. Mutations in PKD1 or PKD2 (∼85% and ∼15% of resolved cases, respectively) are the known causes of ADPKD. Extrarenal manifestations include an increased level of intracranial aneurysms and polycystic liver disease (PLD), which can be severe and associated with significant morbidity. Autosomal-dominant PLD (ADPLD) with no or very few renal cysts is a separate disorder caused by PRKCSH, SEC63, or LRP5 mutations. After screening, 7%-10% of ADPKD-affected and ∼50% of ADPLD-affected families were genetically unresolved (GUR), suggesting further genetic heterogeneity of both disorders. Whole-exome sequencing of six GUR ADPKD-affected families identified one with a missense mutation in GANAB, encoding glucosidase II subunit α (GIIα). Because PRKCSH encodes GIIβ, GANAB is a strong ADPKD and ADPLD candidate gene. Sanger screening of 321 additional GUR families identified eight further likely mutations (six truncating), and a total of 20 affected individuals were identified in seven ADPKD- and two ADPLD-affected families. The phenotype was mild PKD and variable, including severe, PLD. Analysis of GANAB-null cells showed an absolute requirement of GIIα for maturation and surface and ciliary localization of the ADPKD proteins (PC1 and PC2), and reduced mature PC1 was seen in GANAB(+/-) cells. PC1 surface localization in GANAB(-/-) cells was rescued by wild-type, but not mutant, GIIα. Overall, we show that GANAB mutations cause ADPKD and ADPLD and that the cystogenesis is most likely driven by defects in PC1 maturation.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2015
Timothy L. Kline; Panagiotis Korfiatis; Marie E. Edwards; Joshua D. Warner; Maria V. Irazabal; Bernard F. King; Vicente E. Torres; Bradley J. Erickson
BACKGROUND Renal imaging examinations provide high-resolution information about the anatomic structure of the kidneys and are used to measure total kidney volume (TKV) in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) patients. TKV has become the gold-standard image biomarker for ADPKD progression at early stages of the disease and is used in clinical trials to characterize treatment efficacy. Automated methods to segment the kidneys and measure TKV are desirable because of the long time requirement for manual approaches such as stereology or planimetry tracings. However, ADPKD kidney segmentation is complicated by a number of factors, including irregular kidney shapes and variable tissue signal at the kidney borders. METHODS We describe an image processing approach that overcomes these problems by using a baseline segmentation initialization to provide automatic segmentation of follow-up scans obtained years apart. We validated our approach using 20 patients with complete baseline and follow-up T1-weighted magnetic resonance images. Both manual tracing and stereology were used to calculate TKV, with two observers performing manual tracings and one observer performing repeat tracings. Linear correlation and Bland-Altman analysis were performed to compare the different approaches. RESULTS Our automated approach measured TKV at a level of accuracy (mean difference ± standard error = 0.99 ± 0.79%) on par with both intraobserver (0.77 ± 0.46%) and interobserver variability (1.34 ± 0.70%) of manual tracings. All approaches had excellent agreement and compared favorably with ground-truth manual tracing with interobserver, stereological and automated approaches having 95% confidence intervals ∼ ± 100 mL. CONCLUSIONS Our method enables fast, cost-effective and reproducible quantification of ADPKD progression that will facilitate and lower the costs of clinical trials in ADPKD and other disorders requiring accurate, longitudinal kidney quantification. In addition, it will hasten the routine use of TKV as a prognostic biomarker in ADPKD.
Hepatology | 2016
Myrte K. Neijenhuis; Tom J. G. Gevers; Marie C. Hogan; Patrick S. Kamath; T.F. Wijnands; Ralf C.P.M. van den Ouweland; Marie E. Edwards; Jeff A. Sloan; Wietske Kievit; Joost P. H. Drenth
Treatment of polycystic liver disease (PLD) focuses on symptom improvement. Generic questionnaires lack sensitivity to capture PLD‐related symptoms, a prerequisite to determine effectiveness of therapy. We developed and validated a disease‐specific questionnaire that assesses symptoms in PLD (PLD‐Q). We identified 16 PLD‐related symptoms (total score 0‐100 points) by literature review and interviews with patients and clinicians. The developed PLD‐Q was validated in Dutch (n = 200) and United States (US; n = 203) PLD patients. We assessed the correlation of PLD‐Q total score with European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) symptom scale, global health visual analogue scale (VAS) of EQ‐5D, and liver volume. To test discriminative validity, we compared PLD‐Q total scores of patients with different PLD severity stages (Gigot classification) and PLD‐Q total scores of PLD patients with general controls and polycystic kidney disease patients without PLD. Reproducibility was tested by comparing original test scores with 2‐week retest scores. In total, 167 Dutch and 124 US patients returned the questionnaire. Correlation between PLD‐Q total score and EORTC symptom scale (The Netherlands [NL], r = 0.788; US, r = 0.811) and global health VAS (NL, r = −0.517; US, r = −0.593) was good. There was no correlation of PLD‐Q total score with liver volume (NL, r = 0.138; P = 0.236; US, r = 0.254; P = 0.052). Gigot type III individuals scored numerically higher than type II patients (NL, 46 vs. 40; P = 0.089; US, 48 vs. 36; P = 0.055). PLD patients scored higher on the PLD‐Q total score than general controls (NL, 42 vs. 17; US, 40 vs. 13 points) and polycystic kidney disease patients without PLD (22 points). Reproducibility of PLD‐Q was excellent (NL, r = 0.94; US, 0.96). Conclusion: PLD‐Q is a valid, reproducible, and sensitive disease‐specific questionnaire that can be used to assess PLD‐related symptoms in clinical care and future research. (Hepatology 2016;64:151–160)
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2016
Timothy L. Kline; Marie E. Edwards; Panagiotis Korfiatis; Zeynettin Akkus; Vicente E. Torres; Bradley J. Erickson
OBJECTIVE The objective of the present study is to develop and validate a fast, accurate, and reproducible method that will increase and improve institutional measurement of total kidney volume and thereby avoid the higher costs, increased operator processing time, and inherent subjectivity associated with manual contour tracing. MATERIALS AND METHODS We developed a semiautomated segmentation approach, known as the minimal interaction rapid organ segmentation (MIROS) method, which results in human interaction during measurement of total kidney volume on MR images being reduced to a few minutes. This software tool automatically steps through slices and requires rough definition of kidney boundaries supplied by the user. The approach was verified on T2-weighted MR images of 40 patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease of varying degrees of severity. RESULTS The MIROS approach required less than 5 minutes of user interaction in all cases. When compared with the ground-truth reference standard, MIROS showed no significant bias and had low variability (mean ± 2 SD, 0.19% ± 6.96%). CONCLUSION The MIROS method will greatly facilitate future research studies in which accurate and reproducible measurements of cystic organ volumes are needed.
BMJ Open | 2018
Annette Wong; Carly Mannix; Jared J. Grantham; Margaret Allman-Farinelli; Sunil V. Badve; Neil Boudville; Karen Byth; Jessie Chan; Susan Coulshed; Marie E. Edwards; Bradley J. Erickson; Mangalee Fernando; Sheryl Foster; Imad Haloob; David C.H. Harris; Carmel M. Hawley; Julie Hill; Kirsten Howard; Martin Howell; Simon H Jiang; David W. Johnson; Timothy L. Kline; Karthik Kumar; Vincent W.S. Lee; Maureen Lonergan; Jun Mai; Philip McCloud; Anthony Peduto; Anna Rangan; Simon D. Roger
Introduction Maintaining fluid intake sufficient to reduce arginine vasopressin (AVP) secretion has been hypothesised to slow kidney cyst growth in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD). However, evidence to support this as a clinical practice recommendation is of poor quality. The aim of the present study is to determine the long-term efficacy and safety of prescribed water intake to prevent the progression of height-adjusted total kidney volume (ht-TKV) in patients with chronic kidney disease (stages 1–3) due to ADPKD. Methods and analysis A multicentre, prospective, parallel-group, open-label, randomised controlled trial will be conducted. Patients with ADPKD (n=180; age ≤65 years, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≥30 mL/min/1.73 m2) will be randomised (1:1) to either the control (standard treatment+usual fluid intake) or intervention (standard treatment+prescribed fluid intake) group. Participants in the intervention arm will be prescribed an individualised daily fluid intake to reduce urine osmolality to ≤270 mOsmol/kg, and supported with structured clinic and telephonic dietetic review, self-monitoring of urine-specific gravity, short message service text reminders and internet-based tools. All participants will have 6-monthly follow-up visits, and ht-TKV will be measured by MRI at 0, 18 and 36 months. The primary end point is the annual rate of change in ht-TKV as determined by serial renal MRI in control vs intervention groups, from baseline to 3 years. The secondary end points are differences between the two groups in systemic AVP activity, renal disease (eGFR, blood pressure, renal pain), patient adherence, acceptability and safety. Ethics and dissemination The trial was approved by the Human Research Ethics Committee, Western Sydney Local Health District. The results will inform clinicians, patients and policy-makers regarding the long-term safety, efficacy and feasibility of prescribed fluid intake as an approach to reduce kidney cyst growth in patients with ADPKD. Trial registration number ANZCTR12614001216606.
Kidney International | 2017
Timothy L. Kline; Panagiotis Korfiatis; Marie E. Edwards; Kyongtae T. Bae; Alan Yu; Arlene B. Chapman; Michal Mrug; Jared J. Grantham; Douglas Landsittel; William M. Bennett; Bernard F. King; Peter C. Harris; Vicente E. Torres; Bradley J. Erickson
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examinations provide high-resolution information about the anatomic structure of the kidneys and are used to measure total kidney volume (TKV) in patients with Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD). Height-adjusted TKV (HtTKV) has become the gold-standard imaging biomarker for ADPKD progression at early stages of the disease when estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) is still normal. However, HtTKV does not take advantage of the wealth of information provided by MRI. Here we tested whether image texture features provide additional insights into the ADPKD kidney that may be used as complementary information to existing biomarkers. A retrospective cohort of 122 patients from the Consortium for Radiologic Imaging Studies of Polycystic Kidney Disease (CRISP) study was identified who had T2-weighted MRIs and eGFR values over 70 mL/min/1.73m2 at the time of their baseline scan. We computed nine distinct image texture features for each patient. The ability of each feature to predict subsequent progression to CKD stage 3A, 3B, and 30% reduction in eGFR at eight-year follow-up was assessed. A multiple linear regression model was developed incorporating age, baseline eGFR, HtTKV, and three image texture features identified by stability feature selection (Entropy, Correlation, and Energy). Including texture in a multiple linear regression model (predicting percent change in eGFR) improved Pearson correlation coefficient from -0.51 (using age, eGFR, and HtTKV) to -0.70 (adding texture). Thus, texture analysis offers an approach to refine ADPKD prognosis and should be further explored for its utility in individualized clinical decision making and outcome prediction.
Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2018
Marie E. Edwards; Fouad T. Chebib; Maria V. Irazabal; Troy G. Ofstie; Lisa A. Bungum; Andrew J. Metzger; Sarah R. Senum; Marie C. Hogan; Ziad M. El-Zoghby; Timothy L. Kline; Peter C. Harris; Frank S. Czerwiec; Vicente E. Torres
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES In the 3-year Tolvaptan Efficacy and Safety in Management of ADPKD and Its Outcomes (TEMPO) 3:4 and 1-year Replicating Evidence of Preserved Renal Function: an Investigation of Tolvaptan Safety and Efficacy in ADPKD (REPRISE) trials, tolvaptan slowed the decline of eGFR in patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease at early and later stages of CKD, respectively. Our objective was to ascertain whether the reduction associated with the administration of tolvaptan is sustained, cumulative, and likely to delay the need for kidney replacement therapy. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS One hundred and twenty-eight patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease participated in clinical trials of tolvaptan at the Mayo Clinic. All had the opportunity to enroll into open-label extension studies. Twenty participated in short-term studies or received placebo only. The remaining 108 were analyzed for safety. Ninety seven patients treated with tolvaptan for ≥1 year (mean±SD, 4.6±2.8; range, 1.1-11.2) were analyzed for efficacy using three approaches: (1) comparison of eGFR slopes and outcome (33% reduction from baseline eGFR) to controls matched by sex, age, and baseline eGFR; (2) Stability of eGFR slopes with duration of follow-up; and (3) comparison of observed and predicted eGFRs at last follow-up. RESULTS Patients treated with tolvaptan had lower eGFR slopes from baseline (mean±SD, -2.20±2.18 ml/min per 1.73 m2 per year) and from month 1 (mean±SD, -1.97±2.44 ml/min per 1.73 m2 per year) compared with controls (mean±SD, -3.50±2.09 ml/min per 1.73 m2 per year; P<0.001), and lower risk of a 33% reduction in eGFR (risk ratio, 0.63; 95% confidence interval, 0.38 to 0.98 from baseline; risk ratio, 0.53; 95% confidence interval, 0.31 to 0.85 from month 1). Annualized eGFR slopes of patients treated with tolvaptan did not change during follow-up and differences between observed and predicted eGFRs at last follow-up increased with duration of treatment. CONCLUSIONS Follow-up for up to 11.2 years (average 4.6 years) showed a sustained reduction in the annual rate of eGFR decline in patients treated with tolvaptan compared with controls and an increasing separation of eGFR values over time between the two groups.
Ndt Plus | 2018
Marie E. Edwards; Jaime D. Blais; Frank S Czerwiec; Bradley J. Erickson; Vicente E. Torres; Timothy L. Kline
Abstract Background The ability of unstandardized methods to track kidney growth in clinical trials for autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) has not been critically evaluated. Methods The Tolvaptan Efficacy and Safety Management of ADPKD and its Outcomes (TEMPO) 3:4 study involved baseline and annual magnetic resonance follow-up imaging yearly for 3 years. Total kidney volume (TKV) measurements were performed on these four time points in addition to the baseline imaging in TEMPO 4:4, initially by Perceptive Informatics (Waltham, MA, USA) using planimetry (original dataset) and for this study by the Mayo Translational PKD Center using semiautomated and complementary automated methods (sequential dataset). In the original dataset, the same reader was assigned to all scans of individual patients in TEMPO 3:4, but readers were reassigned in TEMPO 4:4. Two placebo-treated cohorts were included. In the first (n = 158), intervals between the end of TEMPO 3:4 and the start of TEMPO 4:4 scan visits ranged from 12 to 403 days; in the second (n = 95), the same scan (measured twice) visit was used for both. Results Growth rates in TEMPO 3:4 were similar in the original and sequential datasets (5.5 and 5.9%/year). Growth rates during the TEMPO 3:4 to TEMPO 4:4 interval were higher in the original (13.7%/year) but were not different in the sequential dataset (4.0%/year). Comparing volumes from the same images, TKVs showed a bias of 2.2% [95% confidence interval (CI) −5.2–9.7] in the original and −0.16% (95% CI −1.91–1.58) in the sequential dataset. Conclusions Despite using the same software, TKV and growth rate changes were present, likely due to reader differences in the transition from TEMPO 3:4 to TEMPO 4:4 in the original but not in the sequential dataset. Robust, standardized methods are essential in ADPKD trials to minimize errors in serial TKV measurements.
Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2016
Fouad T. Chebib; Amber J. Harmon; Maria V. Irazabal Mira; Yeon Soon Jung; Marie E. Edwards; Marie C. Hogan; Patrick S. Kamath; Vicente E. Torres; David M. Nagorney
Journal of Digital Imaging | 2017
Timothy L. Kline; Panagiotis Korfiatis; Marie E. Edwards; Jaime D. Blais; Frank S. Czerwiec; Peter C. Harris; Bernard F. King; Vicente E. Torres; Bradley J. Erickson