Matthew Gitlin
Amgen
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Featured researches published by Matthew Gitlin.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2010
Kirsten L. Johansen; Fredric O. Finkelstein; Dennis A. Revicki; Matthew Gitlin; Christopher J. Evans; Tracy J. Mayne
BACKGROUND The role of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) in treating the anemia of chronic kidney disease has been reevaluated in view of recent studies suggesting that the use of these agents may be associated with increased morbidity and mortality. This potential increased risk needs to be weighed against the potential benefit of ESAs in improving various aspects of health-related quality of life, in particular, exercise tolerance and physical functioning. STUDY DESIGN A systematic review and meta-analysis of exercise tolerance and physical functioning. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS Adults on maintenance dialysis therapy. SELECTION CRITERIA FOR STUDIES Outcomes measured before and after ESA treatment were required. Studies of physical function were required to include at least 25 participants. INTERVENTION Treatment with any ESA. OUTCOMES Exercise tolerance measured using VO(2peak) (oxygen consumption per minute at the peak workload during the test), duration of exercise, or 6-minute walk distance or physical functioning assessed using > or = 1 patient- or clinician-reported outcome measure that included a physical function domain. RESULTS 28 articles met criteria for inclusion for evaluation of exercise tolerance, and 14 articles, for physical function. Meta-analysis showed a 23.8% increase in VO(2peak) from before to after erythropoietin therapy initiation (15 studies) and a nonsignificant 8.2% increase comparing a higher with a lower hemoglobin target (3 studies). For physical functioning, 4 studies met criteria for inclusion in the meta-analysis: there was a 10.5% increase in Karnofsky score from before to after erythropoietin therapy initiation. LIMITATIONS Many studies of exercise tolerance did not include control groups. A wide variety of instruments was used to assess physical function. CONCLUSIONS Partial correction of anemia through ESA treatment has a consistent and positive impact on VO(2peak). ESA treatment improves patient- and clinician-assessed physical functioning.
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2012
Kirsten L. Johansen; Fredric O. Finkelstein; Dennis A. Revicki; Christopher J. Evans; Shaowei Wan; Matthew Gitlin; Irene Agodoa
BACKGROUND One of the cardinal symptoms of anemia in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients is fatigue. Recently, results from Trial to Reduce Cardiovascular Events with Aranesp Therapy (TREAT) raised questions about the role of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) in improving fatigue and the appropriate hemoglobin (Hb) target in anemic patients with CKD. These discussions should be considered with all available evidence to determine the level of benefits and risks associated with ESA therapy on fatigue among both early-stage CKD patients and end-stage renal disease patients on dialysis. METHODS The study was a systematic review of the literature on fatigue in adults on maintenance dialysis therapy. The requirement for inclusion in the review was the measurement of fatigue before and after ESA treatment. Outcomes that were assessed were fatigue as measured by the Kidney Disease Questionnaire, the 36-item Short-Form general health survey, the Nottingham Health Profile, the Profile of Mood States or the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue scale. Several different measures of fatigue were used in the studies. RESULTS Fifteen articles met the criteria for inclusion, including 10 distinct studies and one extension study. There was one placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial (RCT) and one extension, five single-arm, three high versus low, one intravenous versus subcutaneous and one switch from epoetin alfa to darbepoetin alfa. The only placebo-controlled RCT found a 22-26% improvement in fatigue. Single-arm cohort studies demonstrated a reduction in fatigue after a substantial increase in Hb. Studies with a baseline Hb <10 g/dL and partial correction to a minimum Hb ≥ 10 g/dL showed an average improvement in fatigue of 34.6%. Studies with a baseline Hb ≥ 11 g/dL and full correction to a minimum Hb ≥ 12 g/dL showed an average improvement in fatigue of 5.5%, while studies with no change in Hb (either placebo or control group) showed a decline of 0.7% in fatigue outcomes. CONCLUSION Partial correction of anemia with ESA results in improvement of fatigue among patients on dialysis, most strikingly in those patients with baseline Hb levels <10 g/dL.
BMC Nephrology | 2013
Juan C. Scornik; Jonathan S. Bromberg; Douglas J. Norman; Mayank Bhanderi; Matthew Gitlin; Jeffrey Petersen
BackgroundBlood transfusions have the potential to improve graft survival, induce sensitization, and transmit infections. Current clinical practice is to minimize transfusions in renal transplantation candidates, but it is unclear if the evidence continues to support pre-transplant transfusion avoidance. Changes in the Medicare prospective payment system may increase transfusion rates. Thus there is a need to re-evaluate the literature to improve the management options for renal transplant candidates.MethodsA review applying a systematic approach and conducted using MEDLINE®, Embase®, and the Cochrane Library for English-language publications (timeframe: 01/1984–03/2011) captured 180 studies and data from publically available registries and assessed the impact of transfusions on allosensitization and graft survival, and the impact of allosensitization on graft survival and wait time.ResultsBlood transfusions continued to be a major cause of allosensitization, with allosensitization associated with increased rejection and graft loss, and longer wait times to transplantation. Although older studies showed a beneficial effect of transfusion on graft survival, this benefit has largely disappeared in the post-cyclosporine era due to improved graft outcomes with current practice. Recent data suggested that it may be the donor-specific antibody component of allosensitization that carried the risk to graft outcomes.ConclusionsResults of this review indicated that avoiding transfusions whenever possible is a sound management option that could prevent detrimental effects in patients awaiting kidney transplantation.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2013
Steven M. Brunelli; Keri L. Monda; John M. Burkart; Matthew Gitlin; Peter J. Neumann; Grace S. Park; Margarita Symonian-Silver; Susan Yue; Brian D. Bradbury; Robert J. Rubin
BACKGROUND Launched in January 2011, the prospective payment system (PPS) for the US Medicare End-Stage Renal Disease Program bundled payment for services previously reimbursed independently. Small dialysis organizations may be particularly susceptible to the financial implications of the PPS. The ongoing Study to Evaluate the Prospective Payment System Impact on Small Dialysis Organizations (STEPPS) was designed to describe trends in care and outcomes over the period of PPS implementation. This report details early results between October 2010 and June 2011. STUDY DESIGN Prospective observational cohort study of patients from a sample of 51 small dialysis organizations. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS 1,873 adult hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis patients. OUTCOMES Secular trends in processes of care, anemia, metabolic bone disease management, and red blood cell transfusions. MEASUREMENTS Facility-level data are collected quarterly. Patient characteristics were collected at enrollment and scheduled intervals thereafter. Clinical outcomes are collected on an ongoing basis. RESULTS Over time, no significant changes were observed in patient to staff ratios. There was a temporal trend toward greater use of peritoneal dialysis (from 2.4% to 3.6%; P = 0.09). Use of cinacalcet, phosphate binders, and oral vitamin D increased; intravenous (IV) vitamin D use decreased (P for trend for all <0.001). Parathyroid hormone levels increased (from 273 to 324 pg/dL; P < 0.001). Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent doses decreased (P < 0.001 for IV epoetin alfa and IV darbepoetin alfa), particularly high doses. Mean hemoglobin levels decreased (P < 0.001), the percentage of patients with hemoglobin levels <10 g/dL increased (from 12.7% to 16.8%), and transfusion rates increased (from 14.3 to 19.6/100 person-years; P = 0.1). Changes in anemia management were more pronounced for African American patients. LIMITATIONS Limited data were available for the prebundle period. Secular trends may be subject to the ecologic fallacy and are not causal in nature. CONCLUSIONS In the period after PPS implementation, IV vitamin D use decreased, use of oral therapies for metabolic bone disease increased, erythropoiesis-stimulating agent use and hemoglobin levels decreased, and transfusion rates increased numerically.
Hemodialysis International | 2010
Paul Keown; David N. Churchill; Melanie Poulin-Costello; Lei Lei; Sandeep Gantotti; Irene Agodoa; Matthew Gitlin; Shravanthi R. Gandra; Tracy J. Mayne
The health‐related quality of life (HRQOL) claims in the current Epoetin alfa label are based on the reanalyses of the exercise and physical function data from the Canadian Erythropoietin Study Group trial. The reanalysis was done to comply with the Food and Drug Administrations requirement of using statistical methods that are currently standard in evaluating clinical trial data. Presented here are HRQOL results associated with anemia. The Canadian Erythropoietin Study Group trial was a multicenter, double blind, randomized, placebo‐controlled trial evaluating the effects of Epoetin alfa on HRQOL in anemic hemodialysis patients. A total of 118 patients who were 18–75 years old, on hemodialysis for >3 months, who had a hemoglobin <9.0 g/dL, and did not have coronary artery disease or diabetes mellitus, were randomized to either receive placebo (n=40), or receive intravenous Epoetin alfa to achieve a target hemoglobin of 9.5–11.0 g/dL (n=40) or a target of 11.5–13.0 g/dL (n=38). Patients were followed for 6 months. The two Epoetin alfa‐treatment groups were combined for all analyses performed. This post hoc analysis was conducted using an intent‐to‐treat repeated measures mixed model analysis of variance using Bonferronis multiplicity correction. The Epoetin alfa‐treated group showed a statistically significant improvement in the Kidney Disease Questionnaire symptom of fatigue in comparison with placebo. Additionally, the change in hemoglobin at 2 months was correlated with change in fatigue, energy, shortness of breath, and weakness, but had minimal effect on depression. These analyses confirm previously reported results, which indicate that treating hemodialysis patients with an erythropoiesis‐stimulating agent improves HRQOL.
Journal of Medical Economics | 2011
Lia Gutierrez; Neil Roskell; Jordi Castellsague; Stephen Beard; Catherine Rycroft; Shaun Abeysinghe; Paul Shannon; Sean Robbins; Matthew Gitlin
Abstract Objective: To determine the incremental cost of healthcare and clinical outcomes in the 12 months following incident hip fractures among postmenopausal women in the UK. Methods: Retrospective cohort study of women aged 50 years or older hospitalized for an incident hip fracture within 1 week of the fracture date who were age- and comorbidity-matched to women without fracture. Cohorts were identified in the Health Improvement Network database, and followed up for 1 year. Results: Among 2,427 women who had a hip fracture and a recorded hospitalization, the mean [SD] age was 81 [9.3] years. About 18% of women without fractures were hospitalized during follow-up and 18% of women with hip fractures and 4% of women without fractures had at least one emergency admission (RR, 4.7; 95% CI, 3.8–5.8). There were no major differences in use of general practitioner visit, referral visits, or in prescription of medications. Mortality was 18% in the hip fracture cohort and 7% in the non-fracture cohort (RR, 2.5; 95% CI, 2.1–3.0). The overall 1-year mean incremental cost of hip fractures was £4,222 (95% CI, £4,105–4,339); most of this cost (97%) was for hospitalizations, with an increment of £4,095. About 98% of the incremental cost occurred in the first 6 months following hip fracture. Conclusions: The results of this study indicate that the cost and clinical burden associated with hip fractures in postmenopausal women in the UK are considerable. The incremental cost is mostly related to the cost of hospitalization and treatment of the hip fracture. Key limitations were the inclusion of only those women with a recorded hospitalization, and that costs associated with rehabilitation services, social services, and long-term care were not recorded in this study, although these are important contributors to the total cost of fractures.
Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013
Cynthia B. Whitman; Sanatan Shreay; Matthew Gitlin; Martijn G. van Oijen; Brennan M. Spiegel
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Red blood cell transfusion was previously the principle therapy for anemia in CKD but became less prevalent after the introduction of erythropoiesis-stimulating agents. This study used adaptive choice-based conjoint analysis to identify preferences and predictors of transfusion decision-making in CKD. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS A computerized adaptive choice-based conjoint survey was administered between June and August of 2012 to nephrologists, internists, and hospitalists listed in the American Medical Association Masterfile. The survey quantified the relative importance of 10 patient attributes, including hemoglobin levels, age, occult blood in stool, severity of illness, eligibility for transplant, iron indices, erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, cardiovascular disease, and functional status. Triggers of transfusions in common dialysis scenarios were studied, and based on adaptive choice-based conjoint-derived preferences, relative importance by performing multivariable regression to identify predictors of transfusion preferences was assessed. RESULTS A total of 350 providers completed the survey (n=305 nephrologists; mean age=46 years; 21% women). Of 10 attributes assessed, absolute hemoglobin level was the most important driver of transfusions, accounting for 29% of decision-making, followed by functional status (16%) and cardiovascular comorbidities (12%); 92% of providers transfused when hemoglobin was 7.5 g/dl, independent of other factors. In multivariable regression, Veterans Administration providers were more likely to transfuse at 8.0 g/dl (odds ratio, 5.9; 95% confidence interval, 1.9 to 18.4). Although transplant eligibility explained only 5% of decision-making, nephrologists were five times more likely to value it as important compared with non-nephrologists (odds ratio, 5.2; 95% confidence interval, 2.4 to 11.1). CONCLUSIONS Adaptive choice-based conjoint analysis was useful in predicting influences on transfusion decisions. Hemoglobin level, functional status, and cardiovascular comorbidities most strongly influenced transfusion decision-making, but preference variations were observed among subgroups.
Bone | 2012
Lia Gutierrez; Neil Roskell; Jordi Castellsague; Steve Beard; Catherine Rycroft; Shaun Abeysinghe; Paul Shannon; Matthew Gitlin; Sean Robbins
This cohort study of postmenopausal women in the United Kingdom aged ≥50years determined the incremental cost of health care and clinical outcomes in the 12months following incident, selected fractures (non-vertebral non-hip [NVNHF], vertebral [VF] and multiple [MF]). Incremental costs and outcomes of the fracture cohorts were compared with those of cohorts comprised of women without fractures who were individually matched on age and comorbidity. Cohorts were identified from The Health Improvement Network database, a primary health care database, from 2001 to 2005. We estimated 1-year incremental costs (hospitalizations; general practice, accident/emergency, and referral visits; and prescription medications) associated with each fracture type. Descriptive analyses examined occurrence of subsequent fractures and death. No long-term health care costs or outcomes were assessed. Overall, 14,030 women had NVNHF, 1471 had VF, and 193 had MF. The risk of death was greater for women with fractures than for women in the non-fracture cohorts. Mean incremental cost for fractures compared with no fractures was £1152 for VF; £690 for NVNHF, and £2581 for MF. Of the total incremental cost, hospitalizations represented 54%-90% and medications represented 7%-29%. In all fracture cohorts, most of the total annual costs were concentrated in the 6months after the date of fracture. Fractures among postmenopausal women represent an important burden to the health system due to the increase in health resource utilization and related costs. In this study, hospitalizations were the main driver of the overall incremental cost during the 12months following the fracture. Mortality in women in the selected fracture cohorts was higher than in women in the non-fracture cohorts.
Hemodialysis International | 2011
Norman Muirhead; Paul Keown; David N. Churchill; Melanie Poulin-Costello; Sandeep Gantotti; Lei Lei; Matthew Gitlin; Tracy J. Mayne
The risks/benefits of anemia treatment in dialysis patients have been redefined in the US Epoetin α label. This analysis was carried out to determine if increasing hemoglobin (Hb) levels improve exercise tolerance and physical function in anemic dialysis patients. This is a new analysis of the Canadian Erythropoietin Study Group trial, a double‐blind, randomized, placebo‐controlled trial in dialysis patients. Subjects were 18 to 75 years old, on hemodialysis for >3 months, and had a baseline Hb <9.0 g/dL. Patients with a history of diabetes mellitus, ischemic heart disease, or severe/uncontrolled hypertension were excluded. Patients were randomized to receive Epoetin α to a target Hb of 9.5 to 11.0 g/dL (n=40) or a target of 11.5 to 13.0 g/dL (n=38), or receive placebo (n=40). Results from patients in the Epoetin‐α–treated arms were combined for this analysis. Hb level, exercise tolerance (Treadmill Stress Test and 6‐Minute Walk Test) and patient‐reported physical function measures (Physical Summary domain from the Kidney Disease Questionnaire, and 4 domains from the Sickness Impact Profile) were reported at baseline and months 2, 4, and 6.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2010
Brennan M. Spiegel; Roger Bolus; Amar A. Desai; Philip G. Zager; Tom F. Parker; John Moran; Sally Bolus; Matthew D. Solomon; Osman Khawar; Matthew Gitlin; Hack Sul; Jennifer Talley; Allen R. Nissenson
BACKGROUND Because there is wide variation in outcomes across dialysis facilities, it is possible that top-performing units use practices not shared by others. The Identifying Best Practices in Dialysis (IBPiD) Study seeks to identify practices that distinguish top- from bottom-performing facilities by key outcomes, including achievement of recommended hemoglobin targets. STUDY DESIGN Observational study with cross-sectional study ascertainment of predictors and outcomes. PREDICTORS Facility dialysis practices ascertained using practice surveys of dialysis staff who indicated their level of agreement that each practice occurs in their facility (1-6 on a Likert scale). SETTING & PARTICIPANTS 423 personnel in 90 dialysis facilities from 1 for-profit and 2 not-for-profit dialysis organizations. OUTCOMES Percentage of patients per month per facility with hemoglobin levels of 11-12 g/dL. We divided facilities by median into top- versus bottom-performing groups and compared mean scores for each practice using t tests. We report practices that were statistically significant and achieved at least a medium effect size (ES) >or=0.4. RESULTS 17 of 155 tested predictors were significant. Achievement of hemoglobin level targets was related most strongly to the use of chairside computers (ES, 0.8 [95% CI, 0.4-1.4]), extent/quality of educational videos (ES, 0.6 [95% CI, 0.2-1.1]), frequency of calling per diem staff if short staffed (ES, 0.6 [95% CI, 0.21-1.1]), policy that nurses pass written competency examinations before hire (ES, 0.6 [95% CI, 0.2-1.0]), and technician cannulation mastery (ES, 0.6 [95% CI, 0.2-1.1]). LIMITATIONS This is a cross-sectional study that can address only associations, not causations. Future research should measure the longitudinal predictive value of these practices. CONCLUSIONS High-performing facilities report more effective education programs, better staff management, higher staff competency, and higher use of chairside computers, a potential marker of information technology proficiency. This suggests that hemoglobin level management is enhanced by processes reflecting a coordinated multidisciplinary environment.