Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mark B. Lockwood is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mark B. Lockwood.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2005

Incidence of BK with Tacrolimus Versus Cyclosporine and Impact of Preemptive Immunosuppression Reduction

Daniel C. Brennan; Irfan Agha; Daniel L. Bohl; Mark A. Schnitzler; Karen L. Hardinger; Mark B. Lockwood; Stephanie Torrence; Rebecca Schuessler; Tiffany Roby; Monique Gaudreault-Keener; Gregory A. Storch

Our purposes were to determine the incidence of BK viruria, viremia or nephropathy with tacrolimus (FK506) versus cyclosporine (CyA) and whether intensive monitoring and discontinuation of mycophenolate (MMF) or azathioprine (AZA), upon detection of BK viremia, could prevent BK nephropathy.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2006

Prophylactic versus preemptive oral valganciclovir for the management of cytomegalovirus infection in adult renal transplant recipients

J. A. Khoury; Gregory A. Storch; Daniel L. Bohl; Rebecca Schuessler; S. M. Torrence; Mark B. Lockwood; M. Gaudreault-Keener; Matthew J. Koch; Brent W. Miller; K. L. Hardinger; Mark A. Schnitzler; Daniel C. Brennan

Prophylaxis reduces cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease, but is associated with increased costs and risks for side effects, viral resistance and late onset CMV disease. Preemptive therapy avoids drug costs but requires frequent monitoring and may not prevent complications of asymptomatic CMV replication. Kidney transplant recipients at risk for CMV (D+/R−, D+/R+, D−/R+) were randomized to prophylaxis (valganciclovir 900 mg q.d. for 100 days, n = 49) or preemptive therapy (900 mg b.i.d. for 21 days, n = 49) for CMV DNAemia (CMV DNA level >2000 copies/mL in ≥ 1 whole blood specimens by quantitative PCR) assessed weekly for 16 weeks and at 5, 6, 9 and 12 months. More patients in the preemptive group, 29 (59%) than in the prophylaxis group, 14 (29%) developed CMV DNAemia, p = 0.004. Late onset of CMV DNAemia (>100 days after transplant) occurred in 11 (24%) randomized to prophylaxis, and none randomized to preemptive therapy. Symptomatic infection occurred in five patients, four (3 D+/R− and 1 D+/R+) in the prophylactic group and one (D+/R−) in the preemptive group. Peak CMV levels were highest in the D+/R− patients. Both strategies were effective in preventing symptomatic CMV. Overall costs were similar and insensitive to wide fluctuations in costs of either monitoring or drug.


Transplantation | 2005

A randomized, prospective, pharmacoeconomic trial of tacrolimus versus cyclosporine in combination with thymoglobulin in renal transplant recipients.

Karen L. Hardinger; Daniel L. Bohl; Mark A. Schnitzler; Mark B. Lockwood; Gregory A. Storch; Daniel C. Brennan

Background. To date, the clinical trials of tacrolimus (TAC) versus cyclosporine modified (CsA), have not defined which agent is more cost-effective for immunosuppression in renal transplant recipients especially in a quadruple immunosuppressive regimen. Methods. The objective of this randomized, prospective study was to compare the clinical and economic outcomes of TAC versus CsA, in a regimen that consisted of Thymoglobulin induction, an antimetabolite, and prednisone. Between December 2000 and October 2002, 200 patients were enrolled and randomized in a 2:1 fashion (TAC n=134, CsA n=66). Results. At 1 year, acute rejection (4% TAC vs. 6% CsA), patient survival (TAC 99% vs. CsA 100%), and graft survival (95% TAC versus 100% CsA, P=0.059) were similar. Serum creatinine levels were lower in the TAC group compared with the CsA group (1.3±0.3 vs. 1.6±0.7 mg/dL, P=0.03). The incidence of CMV infection was similar between the groups and two patients, both in the TAC arm, developed malignancy. Anti-hypertensive requirement (32% TAC vs. 32% CsA) and the incidence of posttransplant diabetes mellitus (4% TAC vs. 2% CsA) were similar. Pretransplant, fewer TAC patients received dyslipidemia treatment (40% TAC vs. 67% CsA, P=0.0005), while more CsA patients were able to discontinue these medications posttransplant (absolute change 25% TAC vs. 47% CsA). Total 12-month medication costs were similar (


Progress in Transplantation | 2013

Kidney Transplant and the Digital Divide: Is Information and Communication Technology a Barrier or a Bridge to Transplant for African Americans?

Mark B. Lockwood; Milda R. Saunders; Christopher S. Lee; Yolanda T. Becker; Michelle A. Josephson; W. Chon

17,723±11,647 TAC vs.


Progress in Transplantation | 2015

Determinants of Frequent Internet Use in an Urban Kidney Transplant Population in the United States: Characterizing the Digital Divide:

Mark B. Lockwood; Milda R. Saunders; Michelle A. Josephson; Yolanda T. Becker; Christopher S. Lee

16,515±10,189 CsA). Conclusions. When combined with Thymoglobulin induction, an antimetabolite, and corticosteroids, TAC and CsA are comparable in safety, efficacy, and cost in renal transplantation.


Progress in Transplantation | 2017

Patient-Reported Barriers to the Prekidney Transplant Evaluation in an At-Risk Population in the United States:

Mark B. Lockwood; Milda R. Saunders; Rachel Nass; Claire L. McGivern; Patrick N. Cunningham; W. James Chon; Michelle A. Josephson; Yolanda T. Becker; Christopher S. Lee

Context Barriers to kidney transplant for African Americans are well documented in the literature. Little information on ownership of information and communication technology and use of such technology in transplant populations has been published. Objective To characterize racial differences related to ownership and use of information and communication technology in kidney transplant patients. Design A single-center, cross-sectional survey study. Setting An urban Midwestern transplant center. Participants 78 pretransplant patients and 177 transplant recipients. Main Outcomes Measures The survey consisted of 6 demographic questions, 3 disease-related questions, and 9 technology-related questions. Dichotomous (yes/no) and Likert-scale items were the basis for the survey. Results Cell phone use was high and comparable between groups (94% in African Americans, 90% in whites, P = .22). A vast majority (75% of African Americans and 74% of whites) reported being “comfortable” sending and receiving text messages. Computer ownership (94.3% vs 79.3%) and Internet access (97.7% vs 80.7%) were greater among whites than African Americans (both P < .01). Fewer African Americans were frequent users of the Internet (27.1% vs 56.3%) and e-mail (61.6% vs 79.3%) than whites (both P < .01). More African Americans than whites preferred education in a classroom setting (77% vs 60%; P < .005) and educational DVDs (66% vs 46%; P < .002). Conclusion The use of cell phone technology and text messaging was ubiquitous and comparable between groups, but computer and Internet access and frequency of use were not. Reaching out to the African American community may best be accomplished by using cell phone/text messaging as opposed to Internet-based platforms.


Transplantation direct | 2017

Frequency of In-Home Internet Use Among Prekidney and Postkidney Transplant Patients—Facilitators and Barriers to Use and Trends Over Time

Mark B. Lockwood; Karen Dunn-Lopez; Larisa A. Burke; Yolanda T. Becker; Milda R. Saunders

Context The Internet is a staple of electronic communication and is essential to the emerging telemonitoring and health information technology interventions for adults with chronic diseases. Objective To identify determinants of frequent Internet use in an urban kidney transplant population in the United States. Design A single center, cross-sectional survey study Setting An urban Midwestern transplant center Participants 78 pretransplant and 177 posttransplant patients Main Outcome Measures Frequent Internet use, defined as using the Internet more than 5 hours per week. Results Only 38% of participants reported being frequent Internet users. Non-Hispanic blacks and participants who reported their race/ethnicity as “other” were significantly less likely than whites to report being frequent Internet users. Women were 59% less likely than men to be frequent users of the Internet. Those who reported having kidney disease for more than 3 years were more likely to report being frequent Internet users. As education increased, Internet use increased. As age increased, Internet use decreased. Conclusion Alternatives to electronic information sources and/or additional resources should be considered for those who may fall in the so-called digital divide.


JAMIA Open | 2018

If you build it, they may not come: modifiable barriers to patient portal use among pre- and post-kidney transplant patients

Mark B. Lockwood; Karen Dunn-Lopez; Heather Pauls; Larisa A. Burke; Sachin D. Shah; Milda A Saunders

Background: Despite our knowledge of barriers to the early stages of the transplant process, we have limited insight into patient-reported barriers to the prekidney transplant medical evaluation in populations largely at-risk for evaluation failure. Methods: One-hundred consecutive adults were enrolled at an urban, Midwestern transplant center. Demographic, clinical, and quality of life data were collected prior to patients visit with a transplant surgeon/nephrologist (evaluation begins). Patient-reported barriers to evaluation completion were collected using the Subjective Barriers Questionnaire 90-days after the initial medical evaluation appointment (evaluation ends), our center targeted goal for transplant work-up completion. Results: At 90 days, 40% of participants had not completed the transplant evaluation. Five barrier categories were created from the 85 responses to the Subjective Barriers Questionnaire. Patient-reported barriers included poor communication, physical health, socioeconomics, psychosocial influences, and access to care. In addition, determinants for successful evaluation completion included being of white race, higher income, free of dialysis, a lower comorbid burden, and reporting higher scores on the Kidney Disease Quality of Life subscale role-emotional. Conclusion: Poor communication between patients and providers, and among providers, was the most prominent patient-reported barrier identified. Barriers were more prominent in marginalized groups such as ethnic minorities and people with low income. Understanding the prevalence of patient-reported barriers may aid in the development of patient-centered interventions to improve completion rates.


44th Biennial Convention (28 October - 01 November 2017) | 2017

In-Home Internet Use Increases as the Number of Internet Users in the Household Increases

Mark B. Lockwood

Background As health-related communications become digitized, strategies to increase adoption of these Web-based platforms are needed. The purpose of this study was to assess facilitators and barriers to in-home Internet use among prekidney and postkidney transplant patients. Methods A single center, cross-sectional survey of 240 consecutive patients of all levels of technological proficiency who presented to an urban transplant center in the United States. The Patient Information and Technology Assessment consists of 6 demographic questions, 3 disease-related questions, and 8 technology-related questions. Results Much of the sample was African American, male with a mean age of 51 years, and median income of


Sigma Theta Tau International's 26th International Nursing Research Congress | 2016

There's an App for That, Is There an Audience for That?: Determinants of Smartphone Ownership and Comfort of Use in an Urban Pre and Post Renal Transplant Population

Mark B. Lockwood; Christopher S. Lee

53 800/year. Logistic regression analysis was undertaken, and after adjusting for covariates, we found Smartphone ownership (odds ratio [OR], 4.94; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.32-10.52), a higher number of Internet users in the home (OR, 2.00; 95% CI, 1.11-3.62), and having college education and beyond (OR, 4.88; 95% CI, 2.03-11.74) increased the likelihood of being a frequent Internet user. African American or Hispanic/Latino patients were less likely to be frequent Internet users compared with white patients (OR, 0.26 and 0.24, respectively, compared with whites, all P < 0.05). As the total number of people in the household increased, frequent Internet use decreased (OR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.29-0.92). As age increased, reports of frequent Internet use decreased. Conclusions Lower rates of Internet use among African Americans and Hispanic/Latinos in urban areas in the United States remains a problem despite a significant increase in access to the Internet and Smartphone ownership. The finding that Internet use increases as the number of Internet users in the household increases indicates that leveraging the patient’s social support network and/or the development of patient information champion programs may aid with patient’s adoption of health technology and patient engagement in self-care.

Collaboration


Dive into the Mark B. Lockwood's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel C. Brennan

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel L. Bohl

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gregory A. Storch

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Karen Dunn-Lopez

University of Illinois at Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge