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Dive into the research topics where Nahel Elias is active.

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Featured researches published by Nahel Elias.


Journal of Virology | 2008

High Level of PD-1 Expression on Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)-Specific CD8+ and CD4+ T Cells during Acute HCV Infection, Irrespective of Clinical Outcome

Victoria Kasprowicz; Julian Schulze zur Wiesch; Thomas Kuntzen; Brian E. Nolan; Steven Longworth; Andrew Berical; Jenna Blum; Cory McMahon; Laura L. Reyor; Nahel Elias; William W. Kwok; Barbara G. McGovern; Gordon J. Freeman; Raymond T. Chung; Paul Klenerman; Lia Laura Lewis-Ximenez; Bruce D. Walker; Todd M. Allen; Arthur Y. Kim; Georg M. Lauer

ABSTRACT We monitored expression of PD-1 (a mediator of T-cell exhaustion and viral persistence) on hepatitis C virus (HCV)-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells from blood and liver during acute and chronic infections and after the resolved infection stage. PD-1 expression on HCV-specific T cells was high early in acute infection irrespective of clinical outcome, and most cells continued to express PD-1 in resolved and chronic stages of infection; intrahepatic expression levels were especially high. Our results suggest that an analysis of PD-1 expression alone is not sufficient to predict infection outcome or to determine T-cell functionality in HCV infection.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

Outcome of Kidney Transplantation Using Expanded Criteria Donors and Donation After Cardiac Death Kidneys: Realities and Costs

R. Saidi; Nahel Elias; Tatsuo Kawai; Martin Hertl; Farrell Ml; Nelson Goes; Waichi Wong; C. Hartono; Jay A. Fishman; Camille N. Kotton; Nina Tolkoff-Rubin; Francis L. Delmonico; Cosimi Ab; Dicken S.C. Ko

Expanded criteria donors (ECDs) and donation after cardiac death (DCD) provide more kidneys in the donor pool. However, the financial impact and the long‐term benefits of these kidneys have been questioned. From 1998 to 2005, we performed 271 deceased donor kidney transplants into adult recipients. There were 163 (60.1%) SCDs, 44 (16.2%) ECDs, 53 (19.6%) DCDs and 11 (4.1%) ECD/DCDs. The mean follow‐up was 50 months. ECD and DCD kidneys had a significantly higher incidence of delayed graft function, longer time to reach serum creatinine below 3 (mg/dL), longer length of stay and more readmissions compared to SCDs. The hospital charge was also higher for ECD, ECD/DCD and DCD kidneys compared to SCDs, primarily due to the longer length of stay and increased requirement for dialysis (


Gastroenterology | 2014

Liver environment and HCV replication affect human T-cell phenotype and expression of inhibitory receptors

Daniela C. Kroy; Donatella Ciuffreda; Jennifer H. Cooperrider; Michelle Tomlinson; Garrett D. Hauck; Jasneet Aneja; Christoph T. Berger; David Wolski; Mary Carrington; E. John Wherry; Raymond T. Chung; Kenneth K. Tanabe; Nahel Elias; Gordon J. Freeman; Rosemarie H. de Kruyff; Joseph Misdraji; Arthur Y. Kim; Georg M. Lauer

70 030,


American Journal of Transplantation | 2010

Changing pattern of organ donation at a single center: are potential brain dead donors being lost to donation after cardiac death?

R. Saidi; James Bradley; D. Greer; Richard S. Luskin; K. O’Connor; Francis L. Delmonico; Peter T. Kennealey; F. Pathan; Christian Schuetz; Nahel Elias; Dicken S.C. Ko; Tatsuo Kawai; Martin Hertl; Cosimi Ab; James F. Markmann

72 438,


PLOS ONE | 2016

Efficacy and Safety of Direct Acting Antivirals in Kidney Transplant Recipients with Chronic Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Ming V. Lin; Meghan E. Sise; Martha Pavlakis; Beth Amundsen; Donald F. Chute; Anna E. Rutherford; Raymond T. Chung; Michael P. Curry; Jasmine M. Hanifi; Steve Gabardi; Anil Chandraker; Eliot Heher; Nahel Elias; Leonardo V. Riella

72 789 and


Annals of Surgery | 1997

Recurrence-free long-term survival after liver transplantation for hepatitis B using interferon-alpha pretransplant and hepatitis B immune globulin posttransplant.

Jean Tchervenkov; A.J. Tector; Jeffrey Barkun; A Sherker; C D Forbes; Nahel Elias; M. Cantarovich; P Cleland; Peter Metrakos; J L Meakins

47 462, respectively, p < 0.001). Early graft survival rates were comparable among all groups. However, after a mean follow‐up of 50 months, graft survival was significantly less in the ECD group compared to other groups. Although our observations support the utilization of ECD and DCD kidneys, these transplants are associated with increased costs and resource utilization. Revised reimbursement guidelines will be required for centers that utilize these organs.


Archives of Surgery | 2009

Living donor kidney transplantation with multiple arteries: recent increase in modern era of laparoscopic donor nephrectomy.

Reza F. Saidi; Tatsuo Kawai; Peter T. Kennealey; Georgios Tsouflas; Nahel Elias; Martin Hertl; Cosimi Ab; Dicken S.C. Ko

BACKGROUND & AIMS There is an unclear relationship between inhibitory receptor expression on T cells and their ability to control viral infections. Studies of human immune cells have been mostly limited to T cells from blood, which is often not the site of infection. We investigated the relationship between T-cell location, expression of inhibitory receptors, maturation, and viral control using blood and liver T cells from patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) and other viral infections. METHODS We analyzed 36 liver samples from HCV antibody-positive patients (30 from patients with chronic HCV infection, 5 from patients with sustained virological responses to treatment, and 1 from a patient with spontaneous clearance) with 19 paired blood samples and 51 liver samples from HCV-negative patients with 17 paired blood samples. Intrahepatic and circulating lymphocytes were extracted; T-cell markers and inhibitory receptors were quantified for total and virus-specific T cells by flow cytometry. RESULTS Levels of the markers PD-1 and 2B4 (but not CD160, TIM-3, or LAG-3) were increased on intrahepatic T cells from healthy and diseased liver tissues compared with T cells from blood. HCV-specific intrahepatic CD8(+) T cells from patients with chronic HCV infection were distinct in that they expressed TIM-3 along with PD-1 and 2B4. In comparison, HCV-specific CD8(+) T cells from patients with sustained virological responses and T cells that recognized cytomegalovirus lacked TIM-3 but expressed higher levels of LAG-3; these cells also had different memory phenotypes and proliferative capacity. CONCLUSIONS T cells from liver express different inhibitory receptors than T cells from blood, independent of liver disease. HCV-specific and cytomegalovirus-specific CD8(+) T cells can be differentiated based on their expression of inhibitory receptors; these correlate with their memory phenotype and levels of proliferation and viral control.


Xenotransplantation | 2012

Up to 9-day survival and control of thrombocytopenia following alpha1,3-galactosyl transferase knockout swine liver xenotransplantation in baboons.

Karen Kim; Christian Schuetz; Nahel Elias; Gregory Veillette; Isaac Wamala; Varma Mc; R. Neal Smith; Simon C. Robson; A. Benedict Cosimi; David H. Sachs; Martin Hertl

Donation after cardiac death (DCD) has proven effective at increasing the availability of organs for transplantation. We performed a retrospective examination of Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) records of all 201 donors from 1/1/98 to the 11/2008, including 54 DCD, 115 DBD and 32 DCD candidates that did not progress to donation (DCD‐dnp). Comparing three time periods, era 1 (01/98–12/02), era 2 (01/03–12/05) and era 3 (01/06–11/08), DCDs comprised 14.8, 48.4% and 60% of donors, respectively (p = 0.002). A significant increase in the incidence of cardiovascular/cerebrovascular as cause of death was evident in era 3 versus eras 1 and 2; 74% versus 57.1% (p < 0.001), as was a corresponding decrease in the incidence of traumatic death. Interestingly, we noted an increase in utilization of aggressive neurological management over time, especially in the DCD group.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2011

A prospective, randomized comparison of bovine carotid artery and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene for permanent hemodialysis vascular access.

Peter T. Kennealey; Nahel Elias; Martin Hertl; Dicken S.C. Ko; Reza F. Saidi; James F. Markmann; Elizabeth Smoot; David A. Schoenfeld; Tatsuo Kawai

The prevalence of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) infection is significantly higher in patients with end-stage renal disease compared to the general population and poses important clinical challenges in patients who undergo kidney transplantation. Historically, interferon-based treatment options have been limited by low rates of efficacy and significant side effects, including risk of precipitating rejection. Limited data exist on the use of all-oral, interferon-free direct-acting antiviral (DAA) therapies in kidney transplant recipients. In this study, we performed a retrospective chart review with prospective clinical follow-up of post-kidney transplant patients treated with DAA therapies at three major hospitals in Boston, MA. A total of 24 kidney recipients with HCV infection received all-oral DAA therapy post-transplant. Patients were predominantly male (79%) with a median age of 60 years (range 34–70 years), median creatinine of 1.2 mg/dL (0.66–1.76), and 42% had advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis. The majority had HCV genotype 1a infection (58%). All patients received full-dose sofosbuvir; it was paired with simeprevir (9 patients without and 3 patients with ribavirin), ledipasvir (7 patients without and 1 patient with ribavirin) or ribavirin alone (4 patients). The overall sustained virologic response (SVR12) was 91% (21 out of 23 patients). One patient achieved SVR4 but demised prior to SVR12 check point due to treatment unrelated cause. Two treatment failures were successfully retreated with alternative DAA regimens and achieved SVR. Both initials failures occurred in patients with advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis, with genotype 1a infection, and prior HCV treatment failure. Adverse events were reported in 11 patients (46%) and were managed clinically without discontinuation of therapy. Calcineurin inhibitor trough levels did not significantly change during therapy. In this multi-center series of patients, all-oral DAA therapy appears to be safe and effective in post-kidney transplant patients with chronic HCV infection.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2014

Pretransplant IgG Reactivity to Apoptotic Cells Correlates With Late kidney Allograft Loss

Baoshan Gao; Carolina Moore; Fabrice Porcheray; Chunshu Rong; Cem Abidoglu; Julie DeVito; Rosemary Paine; Timothy C. Girouard; Susan L. Saidman; David A. Schoenfeld; Bruce Levin; Waichi Wong; Nahel Elias; Christian Schuetz; Ivy A. Rosales; Yaowen Fu; Emmanuel Zorn

OBJECTIVE The authors determined whether pretransplant reduction of hepatitis B virus (HBV) load using alpha-interferon-2b (IFN) and passive immunoprophylaxis using hepatitis B immunoglobulin (HBIg) posttransplantation can prevent HBV recurrence in patients undergoing liver transplantation (LT) for HBV cirrhosis. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Liver transplantation in patients with HBV cirrhosis is associated with a high rate of recurrence and reduced survival. In patients with evidence of replicating virus (HBV-DNA or hepatitis B e antigen [HBeAg]-positive serum or both), recurrence is nearly universal. Passive immunoprophylaxis with HBIg alone is not effective in preventing HBV recurrence posttransplant, especially in patients with evidence of active viral replication pretransplant. Higher doses of HBIg posttransplant has reduced recurrence rates to 30% to 50%. Lamivudine, a nucleoside analogue that has shown early promise, also is associated with significant HBV recurrence. The authors report a reliable method of preventing viral recurrence in patients even with evidence for active HBV replication pretransplant. METHODS Pretransplant patients with evidence of replicating HBV were given IFN starting at 1 million IU 3 times per week subcutaneously. This dose was increased to 2 and then 3 million IU 3 times per week when patients side effects permitted and was maintained until the patient underwent a LT. All patients were tested every 4 weeks for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg), HBeAg, and HBV-DNA. When patients became negative for HBeAg and HBV-DNA, they were listed for LT. Patients that were only HBsAg positive were listed immediately and received a LT without prior IFN treatment. Post-LT, all patients began receiving HBIg 2000 IU (10 mL) daily from days 1 to 20 and then weekly for the first 2 years. After 2 years, all patients received 2000 IU (10 mL) monthly. Additional HBIg immunoprophylaxis was given during intense immunosuppression for rejection. Posttransplant serum was tested for HBsAg, HBeAg, and HBV-DNA in all patients 1 week, 1 month, and every 3 months thereafter. Liver biopsies were done at least yearly and when liver enzymes were abnormal and were always tested for HBsAg and HBcAg by immunoperoxidase. RESULTS Thirteen patients with decompensated HBV cirrhosis were transplanted. Pretransplant, eight patients had evidence of active viral replication at the initial assessment (HBeAg or HBV-DNA-positive serum or both). All eight were successfully treated with IFN (median duration, 24 weeks; range, 8-53) and converted to a negative status before transplantation. Side effects from IFN were minimal and well tolerated, except in one patient who required 6 million IU to convert to a nonreplicating status. The five patients that were only HBsAg positive were not treated with IFN pretransplant. After surgery, HBIg given as described achieved consistently serum levels greater than 1000 IU/L. Twelve of the 13 patients are alive with normal liver function and without serologic evidence of HBV recurrence at a median follow-up of 32 months (range, 9-56 months). None have evidence of HBV recurrence as measured by serum HBsAg/HBeAg/HBV-DNA at recent follow-up. The sera of the seven longest survivors has tested negative for HBV-DNA using the polymerase chain reaction method. In addition, a liver biopsy was obtained in six of these patients, the results of which also tested negative for HBV-DNA using polymerase chain reaction. Liver biopsy specimens have been negative for the presence of HBsAg and HBcAg by immunoperoxidase staining in all 12 patients. CONCLUSION A reduction of viral load pretransplant with IFN and posttransplant HBIg prevents recurrence of hepatitis B and permits LT for HBV cirrhosis, even in patients with evidence of replicating virus. The IFN pretransplant was well tolerated, and the small frequent dosing of HBIg posttransplant did not cause side effects while achieving serum levels > 1000 IU/L.

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Martin Hertl

Rush University Medical Center

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