Mary A. Atia
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Mary A. Atia.
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2013
Kamyar Shahedi; Garth Fuller; Roger Bolus; Erica R. Cohen; Michelle Vu; Rena Shah; Nikhil Agarwal; Marc Kaneshiro; Mary A. Atia; Victoria Sheen; Nicole Kurzbard; Martijn G. van Oijen; Linnette Yen; Paul Hodgkins; M. Haim Erder; Brennan M. Spiegel
BACKGROUND & AIMS Colonic diverticulosis is the most common finding during routine colonoscopy, and patients often question the significance of these lesions. Guidelines state that these patients have a 10% to 25% lifetime risk of developing acute diverticulitis. However, this value was determined based on limited data, collected before population-based colonoscopy, so the true number of cases of diverticulosis was not known. We measured the long-term risk of acute diverticulitis among patients with confirmed diverticulosis discovered incidentally on colonoscopy. METHODS We performed a retrospective study using administrative and clinical data from the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, collecting data on patients who underwent colonoscopies from January 1996 through January 2011. We identified patients diagnosed with diverticulosis, determined incidence rates per 1000 patient-years, and analyzed a subgroup of patients with rigorously defined events confirmed by imaging or surgery. We used a Cox proportional hazards model to identify factors associated with the development of diverticulitis. RESULTS We identified 2222 patients with baseline diverticulosis. Over an 11-year follow-up period, 95 patients developed diverticulitis (4.3%; 6 per 1000 patient-years); of these, 23 met the rigorous definition of diverticulitis (1%; 1.5 per 1000 patient-years). The median time-to-event was 7.1 years. Each additional decade of age at time of diagnosis reduced the risk for diverticulitis by 24% (hazard ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.6-0.9). CONCLUSIONS Based on a study of the Veterans Affairs Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, only about 4% of patients with diverticulosis develop acute diverticulitis, contradicting the common belief that diverticulosis has a high rate of progression. We also found that younger patients have a higher risk of diverticulitis, with risk increasing per year of life. These results can help inform patients with diverticulosis about their risk of developing acute diverticulitis.
Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2013
Hank S. Wang; Joseph R. Pisegna; Rusha Modi; Li-Jung Liang; Mary A. Atia; Minh Nguyen; Hartley Cohen; Gordon V. Ohning; Martijn G. van Oijen; Brennan M. Spiegel
BACKGROUND Endoscopist quality is benchmarked by the adenoma detection rate (ADR)-the proportion of cases with 1 or more adenomas removed. However, the ADR rewards the same credit for 1 versus more than 1 adenoma. OBJECTIVE We evaluated whether 2 endoscopist groups could have a similar ADR but detect significantly different total adenomas. DESIGN We retrospectively measured the ADR and multiple measures of total adenoma yield, including a metric called ADR-Plus, the mean number of incremental adenomas after the first. We plotted ADR versus ADR-Plus to create 4 adenoma detection patterns: (1) optimal (↑ADR/↑ADR-Plus); (2) one and done (↑ADR/↓ADR-Plus); (3) all or none (↓ADR/↑ADR-Plus); (4) none and done (↓ADR/↓ADR-Plus). SETTING Tertiary-care teaching hospital and 3 nonteaching facilities servicing the same patient pool. PATIENTS A total of 3318 VA patients who underwent screening between 2005 and 2009. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS ADR, mean total adenomas detected, advanced adenomas detected, ADR-Plus. RESULTS The ADR was 28.8% and 25.7% in the teaching (n = 1218) and nonteaching groups (n = 2100), respectively (P = .052). Although ADRs were relatively similar, the teaching site achieved 23.5%, 28.7%, and 29.5% higher mean total adenomas, advanced adenomas, and ADR-Plus versus nonteaching sites (P < .001). By coupling ADR with ADR-Plus, we identified more teaching endoscopists as optimal (57.1% vs 8.3%; P = .02), and more nonteaching endoscopists in the none and done category (42% vs 0%; P = .047). LIMITATIONS External generalizability, nonrandomized study. CONCLUSION We found minimal ADR differences between the 2 endoscopist groups, but substantial differences in total adenomas; the ADR missed this difference. Coupling the ADR with other total adenoma metrics (eg, ADR-Plus) provides a more comprehensive assessment of adenoma clearance; implementing both would better distinguish high- from low-performing endoscopists.
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2013
Erica R. Cohen; Garth Fuller; Roger Bolus; Rusha Modi; Michelle Vu; Kamyar Shahedi; Rena Shah; Mary A. Atia; Nicole Kurzbard; Victoria Sheen; Nikhil Agarwal; Marc Kaneshiro; Linnette Yen; Paul Hodgkins; M. Haim Erder; Brennan M. Spiegel
BACKGROUND & AIMS Individuals with diverticulosis frequently also have irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but there are no longitudinal data to associate acute diverticulitis with subsequent IBS, functional bowel disorders, or related emotional distress. In patients with postinfectious IBS, gastrointestinal disorders cause long-term symptoms, so we investigated whether diverticulitis might lead to IBS. We compared the incidence of IBS and functional bowel and related affective disorders among patients with diverticulitis. METHODS We performed a retrospective study of patients followed up for an average of 6.3 years at a Veterans Administration medical center. Patients with diverticulitis were identified based on International Classification of Diseases, 9th revision codes, selected for the analysis based on chart review (cases, n = 1102), and matched with patients without diverticulosis (controls, n = 1102). We excluded patients with prior IBS, functional bowel, or mood disorders. We then identified patients who were diagnosed with IBS or functional bowel disorders after the diverticulitis attack, and controls who developed these disorders during the study period. We also collected information on mood disorders, analyzed survival times, and calculated adjusted hazard ratios. RESULTS Cases were 4.7-fold more likely to be diagnosed later with IBS (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.6-14.0; P = .006), 2.4-fold more likely to be diagnosed later with a functional bowel disorder (95% CI, 1.6-3.6; P < .001), and 2.2-fold more likely to develop a mood disorder (CI, 1.4-3.5; P < .001) than controls. CONCLUSIONS Patients with diverticulitis could be at risk for later development of IBS and functional bowel disorders. We propose calling this disorder postdiverticulitis IBS. Diverticulitis appears to predispose patients to long-term gastrointestinal and emotional symptoms after resolution of inflammation; in this way, postdiverticulitis IBS is similar to postinfectious IBS.
World Journal of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2015
Mary A. Atia; Francisco C. Ramirez; Suryakanth R. Gurudu
Colonoscopy is the gold standard test for colorectal cancer screening. The primary advantage of colonoscopy as opposed to other screening modalities is the ability to provide therapy by removal of precancerous lesions at the time of detection. However, colonoscopy may miss clinically important neoplastic polyps. The value of colonoscopy in reducing incidence of colorectal cancer is dependent on many factors including, the patient, provider, and facility level. A high quality examination includes adequate bowel preparation, optimal colonoscopy technique, meticulous inspection during withdrawal, identification of subtle flat lesions, and complete polypectomy. Considerable variation among institutions and endoscopists has been reported in the literature. In attempt to diminish this disparity, various approaches have been advocated to improve the quality of colonoscopy. The overall impact of these interventions is not yet well defined. Implementing optimal education and training and subsequently analyzing the impact of these endeavors in improvement of quality will be essential to augment the utility of colonoscopy for the prevention of colorectal cancer.
Gastroenterology | 2012
Hank S. Wang; Scott Kubomoto; Aaron Lee; Luis H. Ocampo; Michael D. Baek; Gobind N. Sharma; Jessica Liu; Rusha Modi; Nattapaun N. Thepyasuwan; Alexander Levy; Michelle Vu; Victoria Sheen; Mary A. Atia; Kamyar Shahedi; Bradley J. Snyder; Poyrung Poysophon; Brennan M. Spiegel
Less Experienced Endoscopists are More Likely to Report “Sub-Optimal” Bowel Preparation Quality vs. More Experienced Endoscopists Hank S. Wang, Scott Kubomoto, Aaron Lee, Luis H. Ocampo, Michael D. Baek, Gobind N. Sharma, Jessica Liu, Rusha Modi, Nattapaun N. Thepyasuwan, Alexander Levy, Michelle Vu, Victoria Sheen, Mary A. Atia, Kamyar Shahedi, Bradley J. Snyder, Poyrung Poysophon, Brennan M. Spiegel
Gastroenterology | 2012
Kamyar Shahedi; Garth Fuller; Roger Bolus; Bradley J. Snyder; Erica R. Cohen; Michelle Vu; Rena Shah; Rusha Modi; Mary A. Atia; Nicole Kurzbard; Victoria Sheen; Nikhil Agarwal; Marc Kaneshiro; Linnette Yen; Paul Hodgkins; Moshe H. Erder; Poyrung Poysophon; Brennan M. Spiegel
Gastroenterology | 2012
Erica R. Cohen; Garth Fuller; Roger Bolus; Bradley J. Snyder; Michelle Vu; Kamyar Shahedi; Rena Shah; Rusha Modi; Mary A. Atia; Nicole Kurzbard; Victoria Sheen; Nikhil Agarwal; Marc Kaneshiro; Linnette Yen; Paul Hodgkins; Moshe H. Erder; Poyrung Poysophon; Brennan M. Spiegel
Gastroenterology | 2012
Michelle Vu; Garth Fuller; Roger Bolus; Bradley J. Snyder; Erica R. Cohen; Kamyar Shahedi; Rena Shah; Rusha Modi; Mary A. Atia; Nicole Kurzbard; Victoria Sheen; Nikhil Agarwal; Marc Kaneshiro; Linnette Yen; Paul Hodgkins; Moshe H. Erder; Poyrung Poysophon; Brennan M. Spiegel
/data/revues/00165107/unassign/S0016510715000188/ | 2015
Mary A. Atia; Neal C. Patel; Shiva K. Ratuapli; Erika S. Boroff; Michael D. Crowell; Suryakanth R. Gurudu; Douglas O. Faigel; Jonathan A Leighton; Francisco C. Ramirez
Journal of interventional gastroenterology | 2014
Neal C. Patel; Mary A. Atia; Rafiul S. Islam; Francisco C. Ramirez; Michael D. Crowell; Suryakanth R. Gurudu