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Dive into the research topics where Michel Gowhari is active.

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Featured researches published by Michel Gowhari.


British Journal of Haematology | 2014

Haemoglobinuria is associated with chronic kidney disease and its progression in patients with sickle cell anaemia.

Santosh L. Saraf; Xu Zhang; Tamir Kanias; James P. Lash; Robert E. Molokie; Bharvi Oza; Catherine Lai; Julie H. Rowe; Michel Gowhari; Johara Hassan; Joseph DeSimone; Roberto F. Machado; Mark T. Gladwin; Jane A. Little; Victor R. Gordeuk

To evaluate the association between haemoglobinuria and chronic kidney disease (CKD) in sickle cell anaemia (SCA), we analysed 356 adult haemoglobin SS or Sβo thalassaemia patients from the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) and 439 from the multi‐centre Walk‐Treatment of Pulmonary Hypertension and Sickle Cell Disease with Sildenafil Therapy (Walk‐PHaSST) cohort. CKD was classified according to National Kidney Foundation Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiatives guidelines. Haemoglobinuria, defined as positive haem on urine dipstick with absent red blood cells on microscopy, was confirmed by enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay in a subset of patients. The prevalence of CKD was 58% in the UIC cohort and 54% in the Walk‐PHaSST cohort, and haemoglobinuria was observed in 36% and 20% of the patients, respectively. Pathway analysis in both cohorts indicated an independent association of lactate dehydrogenase with haemoglobinuria and, in turn, independent associations of haemoglobinuria and age with CKD (P < 0·0001). After a median of 32 months of follow‐up in the UIC cohort, haemoglobinuria was associated with progression of CKD [halving of estimated glomerular filtration rate or requirement for dialysis; Hazard ratio (HR) 13·9, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1·7–113·2, P = 0·0012] and increasing albuminuria (HR 3·1, 95% CI: 1·3–7·7; logrank P = 0·0035). In conclusion haemoglobinuria is common in SCA and is associated with CKD, consistent with a role for intravascular haemolysis in the pathogenesis of renal dysfunction in SCA.


British Journal of Haematology | 2008

Clinical effectiveness of decitabine in severe sickle cell disease

Yogen Saunthararajah; Robert E. Molokie; Santosh L. Saraf; Seema Sidhwani; Michel Gowhari; Steven Vara; Donald Lavelle; Joseph DeSimone

precursors to the subsequent DLBCLs these patients develop. Several clonal B-cell populations may develop during the course of the disease, and these may be transient, with many disappearing subsequently. Hence, when a proportion of AITL patients subsequently develop a full-blown DLBCL or EBVcHL, one may or may not be able to establish clonal ancestry to ‘precursor’ cells seen in an earlier biopsy.


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2016

Nonmyeloablative Stem Cell Transplantation with Alemtuzumab/Low-Dose Irradiation to Cure and Improve the Quality of Life of Adults with Sickle Cell Disease

Santosh L. Saraf; Annie L. Oh; Pritesh Patel; Yash Jalundhwala; Karen Sweiss; Matthew Koshy; Sally Campbell-Lee; Michel Gowhari; Johara Hassan; David Peace; John G. Quigley; Irum Khan; Robert E. Molokie; Lewis L. Hsu; Nadim Mahmud; Dennis J. Levinson; A. Simon Pickard; Joe G. N. Garcia; Victor R. Gordeuk; Damiano Rondelli

Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is rarely performed in adult patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). We utilized the chemotherapy-free, alemtuzumab/total body irradiation 300 cGy regimen with sirolimus as post-transplantation immunosuppression in 13 high-risk SCD adult patients between November 2011 and June 2014. Patients received matched related donor (MRD) granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood stem cells, including 2 cases that were ABO incompatible. Quality-of-life (QoL) measurements were performed at different time points after HSCT. All 13 patients initially engrafted. A stable mixed donor/recipient chimerism was maintained in 12 patients (92%), whereas 1 patient not compliant with sirolimus experienced secondary graft failure. With a median follow-up of 22 months (range, 12 to 44 months) there was no mortality, no acute or chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), and no grades 3 or 4 extramedullary toxicities. At 1 year after transplantation, patients with stable donor chimerism have normalized hemoglobin concentrations and improved cardiopulmonary and QoL parameters including bodily pain, general health, and vitality. In 4 patients, sirolimus was stopped without rejection or SCD-related complications. These results underscore the successful use of a chemotherapy-free regimen in MRD HSCT for high-risk adult SCD patients and demonstrates a high cure rate, absence of GVHD or mortality, and improvement in QoL including the applicability of this regimen in ABO mismatched cases (NCT number 01499888).


Haematologica | 2017

APOL1,α-thalassemia, and BCL11A variants as a genetic risk profile for progression of chronic kidney disease in sickle cell anemia

Santosh L. Saraf; Binal N. Shah; Xu Zhang; Jin Han; Bamidele O. Tayo; Taimur Abbasi; Adam Ostrower; Elizabeth Guzman; Robert E. Molokie; Michel Gowhari; Johara Hassan; Shivi Jain; Richard S. Cooper; Roberto F. Machado; James P. Lash; Victor R. Gordeuk

Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is caused by a mutation in the β-globin gene that results in hemoglobin polymerization and affects approximately 1 in 500 African Americans and 25 million people worldwide. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is observed in up to 58% of adults, and is associated with a 3-fold increased risk for early mortality in SCA. Multiple genetic modifiers of clinical complications in SCA have been reported, and combining these genetic factors into a risk profile may strengthen the predictive value as compared to the individual factors alone. Homozygosity or compound heterozygosity for APOL1 G1/G2 (G1=S342G/I384M substitutions, G2=N388/Y389 deletions) is observed in 10-15% of African Americans, and is the strongest genetic association for CKD in African Americans in general. APOL1 G1/G2 is also associated with proteinuria and albumin-


PLOS Medicine | 2017

Oral tetrahydrouridine and decitabine for non-cytotoxic epigenetic gene regulation in sickle cell disease: A randomized phase 1 study

Robert E. Molokie; Donald Lavelle; Michel Gowhari; Michael Pacini; Lani Krauz; Johara Hassan; Vinzon Ibanez; Maria Armila Ruiz; Kwok Peng Ng; Philip G. Woost; Tomas Radivoyevitch; Daisy Pacelli; Sherry Fada; Matthew Rump; Matthew M. Hsieh; John F. Tisdale; James W. Jacobberger; Mitch A. Phelps; James Douglas Engel; Santhosh Saraf; Lewis L. Hsu; Victor R. Gordeuk; Joseph DeSimone; Yogen Saunthararajah

Background Sickle cell disease (SCD), a congenital hemolytic anemia that exacts terrible global morbidity and mortality, is driven by polymerization of mutated sickle hemoglobin (HbS) in red blood cells (RBCs). Fetal hemoglobin (HbF) interferes with this polymerization, but HbF is epigenetically silenced from infancy onward by DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1). Methods and findings To pharmacologically re-induce HbF by DNMT1 inhibition, this first-in-human clinical trial (NCT01685515) combined 2 small molecules—decitabine to deplete DNMT1 and tetrahydrouridine (THU) to inhibit cytidine deaminase (CDA), the enzyme that otherwise rapidly deaminates/inactivates decitabine, severely limiting its half-life, tissue distribution, and oral bioavailability. Oral decitabine doses, administered after oral THU 10 mg/kg, were escalated from a very low starting level (0.01, 0.02, 0.04, 0.08, or 0.16 mg/kg) to identify minimal doses active in depleting DNMT1 without cytotoxicity. Patients were SCD adults at risk of early death despite standard-of-care, randomized 3:2 to THU–decitabine versus placebo in 5 cohorts of 5 patients treated 2X/week for 8 weeks, with 4 weeks of follow-up. The primary endpoint was ≥ grade 3 non-hematologic toxicity. This endpoint was not triggered, and adverse events (AEs) were not significantly different in THU-decitabine—versus placebo-treated patients. At the decitabine 0.16 mg/kg dose, plasma concentrations peaked at approximately 50 nM (Cmax) and remained elevated for several hours. This dose decreased DNMT1 protein in peripheral blood mononuclear cells by >75% and repetitive element CpG methylation by approximately 10%, and increased HbF by 4%–9% (P < 0.001), doubling fetal hemoglobin-enriched red blood cells (F-cells) up to approximately 80% of total RBCs. Total hemoglobin increased by 1.2–1.9 g/dL (P = 0.01) as reticulocytes simultaneously decreased; that is, better quality and efficiency of HbF-enriched erythropoiesis elevated hemoglobin using fewer reticulocytes. Also indicating better RBC quality, biomarkers of hemolysis, thrombophilia, and inflammation (LDH, bilirubin, D-dimer, C-reactive protein [CRP]) improved. As expected with non-cytotoxic DNMT1-depletion, platelets increased and neutrophils concurrently decreased, but not to an extent requiring treatment holds. As an early phase study, limitations include small patient numbers at each dose level and narrow capacity to evaluate clinical benefits. Conclusion Administration of oral THU-decitabine to patients with SCD was safe in this study and, by targeting DNMT1, upregulated HbF in RBCs. Further studies should investigate clinical benefits and potential harms not identified to date. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01685515


American Journal of Hematology | 2016

Patterns of opioid use in sickle cell disease

Jin Han; Santosh L. Saraf; Xu Zhang; Michel Gowhari; Robert E. Molokie; Joharah Hassan; Chaher Alhandalous; Shivi Jain; Jewel Younge; Taimur Abbasi; Roberto F. Machado; Victor R. Gordeuk

Pain, the hallmark complication of sickle cell disease (SCD), is largely managed with opioid analgesics in the United States, but comprehensive data regarding the long‐term use of opioids in this patient population is lacking. The pain medication prescription records from a cohort of 203 SCD patients were analyzed. Twenty‐five percent were not prescribed opioid medications while 47% took only short‐acting opioids, 1% took only long‐acting opioids, and 27% took a combination of short‐acting and long‐acting opioids. The median (interquartile range) daily opioid dose was 6.1 mg (1.7–26.3 mg) of oral morphine equivalents, which is lower than the published opioid use among patients with other pain syndromes. The dose of opioids correlated with the number of admissions due to vaso‐occlusive crisis (VOC) (r = 0.53, P < 0.001). When the patients were grouped into quartiles based on daily dose opioid use, a logistic regression model showed that history of avascular necrosis (AVN) (OR: 2.87, 95% CI: 1.37–6.02, P = 0.005), 25‐OHD levels (OR: 0.59, 95% CI: 0.38–0.93, P = 0.024) and total bilirubin concentration (OR: 0.64, 95% CI: 0.42–0.99, P = 0.043) were independently associated with opioid use quartiles. In conclusion, doses and types of opioid medications used by adult SCD patients vary widely. Our findings implicate AVN and lower vitamin D levels as factors associated with higher opioid use. They also suggest an association of higher bilirubin levels, possibly suggesting higher hemolytic rate, with lower opioid use. Am. J. Hematol. 91:1102–1106, 2016.


British Journal of Haematology | 2011

Standard clinical practice underestimates the role and significance of erythropoietin deficiency in sickle cell disease

Santosh L. Saraf; Mohammed Farooqui; Giovanni Infusino; Bharvi Oza; Seema Sidhwani; Michel Gowhari; Stephen Vara; Weihua Gao; Lani Krauz; Donald Lavelle; Joseph DeSimone; Robert E. Molokie; Yogen Saunthararajah

In sickle cell disease (SCD), vigorous reticulocytosis is required to partially compensate for chronic hemolytic anaemia. Consequently, early renal damage, insufficient to cause azotemia but sufficient to cause erythropoietin deficiency and chronic relative reticulocytopenia (chRR), could have severe clinical consequences. chRR was defined as reticulocytes <250 × 109/l despite haemoglobin <9 g/dl on ≥ two occasions ≥4 weeks apart. The influence of multiple variables including chRR on time from first clinic visit to death was evaluated in 306 SCD patients. In univariate analyses, fetal haemoglobin, indices of renal damage (serum creatinine, proteinuria), chRR and age, were associated with rate of death. In multivariate analysis, only age and chRR (Hazard ratio 3·6, 95% CI 2·049–6·327, P < 0·0001) were significant, underlining that chRR could be an early and important clinical consequence of renal damage. Even in chRR patients with normal serum creatinine levels, low haemoglobin and low reticulocyte counts were associated with low erythropoietin levels. In the general population, evaluation of erythropoietin levels is prompted by the combination of anaemia and abnormal serum creatinine. In SCD patients, this standard approach can miss a substantial risk factor for early death. chRR could be a practical and important criterion for diagnosis of erythropoietin deficiency in SCD.


Blood Advances | 2017

Randomized phase 2 trial of regadenoson for treatment of acute vaso-occlusive crises in sickle cell disease

Joshua J. Field; Elaine M. Majerus; Victor R. Gordeuk; Michel Gowhari; Carolyn Hoppe; Matthew M. Heeney; Maureen M. Achebe; Alex George; Hillary Chu; Brian Sheehan; Maneka Puligandla; Donna Neuberg; Gene Lin; Joel Linden; David G. Nathan

Adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) agonists have been shown to decrease tissue inflammation induced by hypoxia/reoxygenation in mice with sickle cell disease (SCD). The key mediator of the A2AR agonists anti-inflammatory effects is a minor lymphocyte subset, invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells. We tested the hypothesis that administration of an A2AR agonist in patients with SCD would decrease iNKT cell activation and dampen the severity of vaso-occlusive (VO) crises. In a phase 2, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, we administered a 48-hour infusion of the A2AR agonist regadenoson (1.44 μg/kg per hour) to patients with SCD during VO crises to produce a plasma concentration of ∼5 nM, a concentration known from prior studies to suppress iNKT cell activation in SCD. The primary outcome measure was a >30% reduction in the percentage of activated iNKT cells. Ninety-two patients with SCD were randomized to receive a 48-hour infusion of regadenoson or placebo, in addition to standard-of-care treatment, during hospital admission for a VO crisis and had analyzable iNKT cell samples. The proportion of subjects who demonstrated a reduction of >30% in activated iNKT cells was not significantly different between the regadenoson and placebo arms (43% vs 23%; P = .07). There were also no differences between regadenoson and placebo groups in length of hospital stay, mean total opioid use, or pain scores. These data demonstrate that a low-dose infusion of regadenoson intended to reduce the activity of iNKT cells is not sufficient to produce a statistically significant reduction in such activation or in measures of clinical efficacy. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01788631.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2018

Opioid doses and acute care utilization outcomes for adults with sickle cell disease: Emergency department versus acute care unit

Robert E. Molokie; Chariz Montminy; Corissa Dionisio; Muhammad Ahmen Farooqui; Michel Gowhari; Yingwei Yao; Marie L. Suarez; Miriam O. Ezenwa; Judith M. Schlaeger; Zaijie Jim Wang; Diana J. Wilkie

Background: Acute care units (ACUs) with focused sickle cell disease (SCD) care have been shown to effectively address pain and limit hospitalizations compared to emergency departments (ED), the reason for differences in admission rates is understudied. Our aim was compare effects of usual care for adult SCD pain in ACU and ED on opioid doses and discharge pain ratings, hospital admission rates and lengths of stay. Methods: In a retrospective, comparative cohort, single academic tertiary center study, 148 adults with sickle cell pain received care in the ED, ACU or both. From the medical records we documented opioid doses, unit discharge pain ratings, hospital admission rates, and lengths of stay. Findings: Pain on admission to the ED averaged 8.7 ± 1.5 and to the ACU averaged 8.0 ± 1.6. The average pain on discharge from the ED was 6.4 ± 3.0 and for the ACU was 4.5 ± 2.5. 70% of the 144 ED visits resulted in hospital admissions as compared to 37% of the 73 ACU visits. Admissions from the ED or ACU had similar inpatient lengths of stay. Significant differences between ED and ACU in first opioid dose and hourly opioid dose were noted. Conclusions: Applying guidelines for higher dosing of opioids for acute painful episodes in adults with SCD in ACU was associated with improved pain outcomes and decreased hospitalizations, compared to ED. Adoption of this approach for SCD pain in ED may result in improved outcomes, including a decrease in hospital admissions.


Pharmacotherapy | 2016

Impact of a Clinical Pharmacy Service on the Management of Patients in a Sickle Cell Disease Outpatient Center.

Jin Han; Shubha Bhat; Michel Gowhari; Victor R. Gordeuk; Santosh L. Saraf

Ambulatory care clinical pharmacy services have expanded beyond primary care settings, but literature supporting the benefits of clinical pharmacy involvement with patients who have rare diseases such as sickle cell disease (SCD) is lacking. Hydroxyurea is the only agent approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of SCD; full benefit in controlling pain episodes and other complications is achieved through monitored escalation to a maximum tolerated dose. The primary objective of this analysis was to evaluate the impact of a newly implemented clinical pharmacy service on the management of patients with SCD. We performed a retrospective cross‐sectional analysis of 385 adults with SCD who received care between January 1, 2014, and December 31, 2014, at a single Sickle Cell Outpatient Center that implemented a clinical pharmacy service in August 2013. Data were collected on hydroxyurea dose escalation, immunization completion rates, and health maintenance metrics (screening for nephropathy with microalbuminuria testing, retinopathy with annual retinal examinations, and pulmonary hypertension with echocardiography). The impact of the clinical pharmacy service on quality measurements was evaluated by using univariate and multivariate analyses. The number of pharmacist encounters, defined as a clinic visit when a clinical pharmacist interacted with a patient as documented in the medical records, was associated with an improved hydroxyurea dose escalation rate (odds ratio [OR] 1.48, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.07–2.05, p=0.02). Immunization rates for the 23‐valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine, the 13‐valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, and influenza vaccine were 66%, 47%, and 62%, respectively. The number of pharmacist encounters was associated with improved immunization completion rates (OR 1.38, 95% CI 1.17–1.62, p<0.001). Improved screening for microalbuminuria (OR 2.14, 95% CI 1.60–2.86, p<0.001) and sickle cell retinopathy (OR 1.16, 95% CI 1.00–1.35, p=0.05) were also associated with the number of pharmacist encounters. A new clinical pharmacy service implemented in managing a rare disease, SCD, was associated with an improved hydroxyurea dose escalation rate, immunization completion rates, and health maintenance metrics.

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Robert E. Molokie

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Victor R. Gordeuk

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Santosh L. Saraf

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Johara Hassan

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Jin Han

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Shivi Jain

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Xu Zhang

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Joseph DeSimone

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Lewis L. Hsu

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Roberto F. Machado

University of Illinois at Chicago

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