Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar
Indiana University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar.
Oncotarget | 2016
Milan Radovich; Patrick J. Kiel; Stacy Marie Nance; Erin Niland; Megan E. Parsley; Meagan Ferguson; Guanglong Jiang; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Lawrence H. Einhorn; Liang Cheng; Mehdi Nassiri; Darrell D. Davidson; Daniel A. Rushing; Patrick J. Loehrer; Roberto Pili; Nasser H. Hanna; J. Thomas Callaghan; Todd C. Skaar; Paul R. Helft; Safi Shahda; Bert H. O’Neil; Bryan P. Schneider
Patients and Methods Patients with metastatic solid tumors who had progressed on at least one line of standard of care therapy were referred to the Indiana University Health Precision Genomics Program. Tumor samples were submitted for DNA & RNA next-generation sequencing, fluorescence in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry for actionable targets. A multi-disciplinary tumor board reviewed all results. For each patient, the ratio of progression-free survival (PFS) of the genomically guided line of therapy divided by the PFS of their prior line was calculated. Patients whose PFS ratio was ≥ 1.3 were deemed to have a meaningful improvement in PFS. Results From April 2014–October 2015, 168 patients were evaluated and 101 patients achieved adequate clinical follow-up for analysis. 19 of 44 (43.2%) patients treated with genomically guided therapy attained a PFS ratio ≥ 1.3 vs. 3 of 57 (5.3%) treated with non-genomically guided therapy (p < 0.0001). Similarly, overall PFS ratios (irrespective of cutoff) were higher for patients with genomically guided therapy vs non-genomically guided therapy (p = 0.05). Further, patients treated with genomically guided therapy had a superior median PFS compared to those treated with non-genomically guided therapy (86 days vs. 49 days, p = 0.005, H.R. = 0.55, 95% C.I.:0.37-0.84). Conclusion Patients with refractory metastatic cancer who receive genomically guided therapy have improved PFS ratios and longer median PFS compared to patients who do not receive genomically guided therapy.
Journal of Gynecologic Oncology | 2014
Maria deLeon; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Daniela Matei
Endometrial cancer is a common gynecologic malignancy typically diagnosed at early stage and cured with surgery alone. Adjuvant therapy is tailored according to the risk of recurrence, estimated based on the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage and other histological factors. The objective of this manuscript is to review the evidence guiding adjuvant therapy for early stage and locally advanced uterine cancer. For patients with early stage disease, minimizing toxicity, while preserving outstanding cure rates remains the major goal. For patients with locally advanced endometrial cancer optimal combined regimens are being defined. Risk stratification based on molecular traits is under development and may aid refine the current risk prediction model and permit personalized approaches for women with endometrial cancer.
Annals of Oncology | 2018
Nabil Adra; Lawrence H. Einhorn; Sandra Althouse; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; D Musapatika; Costantine Albany; David J. Vaughn; Nasser H. Hanna
Background Despite remarkable results with salvage standard-dose or high-dose chemotherapy ∼15% of patients with relapsed germ-cell tumors (GCT) are incurable. Immune checkpoint inhibitors have produced significant remission in multiple tumor types. We report the first study of immunotherapy in patients with GCT. Patients and methods Single arm phase II trial investigating pembrolizumab 200 mg i.v. Q3weeks until disease progression in patients with relapsed GCT and no curable options. Patients age ≥18 with GCT who progressed after first-line cisplatin-based chemotherapy and after at least one salvage regimen (high-dose or standard-dose chemotherapy) were eligible. Centrally assessed programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) on tumor and infiltrating immune cells was scored. Primary end point was overall response rate using immune-related response criteria. Simon two-stage design with type I error 20% and power 80% was utilized. Results Twelve male patients were enrolled. Median age was 38 years. All patients had nonseminoma. Primary site was testis (11) or mediastinum (1). Median AFP 615 (range 1-32, 760) and hCG 4 (range 0.6-37, 096). Six patients had late relapse (>2 years). Median number of previous chemotherapy regimens was 3. Six patients received prior high-dose chemotherapy. Two patients had positive PD-L1 staining (H-score 90 and 170). Median number of pembrolizumab doses was 2 (range 1-8). There were six grade 3 adverse events. No immune-related adverse events were reported. No partial or complete responses were observed. Two patients achieved radiographic stable disease for 28 and 19 weeks, respectively; both had continued rising AFP level despite radiographic stability and had negative PD-L1 staining. Conclusion This is the first reported trial evaluating immune checkpoint inhibitors in GCT. Pembrolizumab is well tolerated but does not appear to have clinically meaningful single-agent activity in refractory GCT. Clinical trial information NCT02499952.
Nephrology | 2017
Pranav S. Garimella; Poojitha Balakrishnan; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Shanti Patel; Achint Patel; Ioannis Konstantinidis; Narender Annapureddy; Girish N. Nadkarni
Tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) is a life threatening emergency due to destruction and massive release of intracellular metabolites from cancer cells often resulting in acute kidney injury (AKI), sometimes severe enough to require dialysis (AKI‐D). The impact of dialysis requirement in AKI has not been explored. We utilized data from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample and using International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, diagnoses codes for TLS, AKI and dialysis, evaluated the incidence, risk factors and impact of AKI‐D on mortality, adverse discharge and length of stay (LOS). Survey multivariable logistic regression was used to compute adjusted Odds Ratios (aOR and 95% confidence intervals (CI). An estimated 12% (2,919) of all TLS hospitalizations (n = 22 875) develop AK‐D. After adjustment for confounders, AKI‐D was associated with greater odds of mortality (aOR 1.98; (95% CI 1.60–2.45)), adverse discharge (aOR 1.63 (95% CI 1.19–2.24)) and longer LOS (19 vs 14.6 days; P < 0.01) compared with those without AKI‐D. Further studies to evaluate the association of AKI‐D on long‐term outcomes in patients with TLS are needed.
International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance | 2014
Girish N. Nadkarni; Manpreet Singh Sabharwal; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Narender Annapureddy; Rishi Malhan; Bijal Mehta; Vijay Kanakadandi; Shiv Kumar Agarwal; Ethan D. Fried
PURPOSE Patient satisfaction has been recognized as an important variable affecting healthcare behavior. However, there are limited data on the relationship between doctor post-graduate year (PGY) status and patient satisfaction with provider interpersonal skills and humanistic qualities. The authors aims to assess this relationship using an American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) questionnaire. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH Participants were: patients attending a primary care clinic at a large urban academic hospital; and physicians treating them. The survey questionnaire was the ABIM patient satisfaction instrument; ten questions pertaining to humanistic qualities and communication skills with responses from poor to excellent. Mann Whitney U test and multi-variable logistic regression analyses were used to explore score differences by PGY level. FINDINGS The postgraduate year one (PGY1) had higher patient-satisfaction levels compared to PGY2/PGY3 residents. The PGY1 level residents were more likely to score in the 90th percentile and this remained constant even after adjusting for confounders. RESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS The research was a single-center study and may have been subject to confounding factors such as patient personality types and a survey ceiling effect. The surveys cross-sectional nature may also be a potential limitation. Practical implications - Patient satisfaction varies significantly with PGY status. Though clinical skills may improve with increasing experience, findings imply that interpersonal and humanistic qualities may deteriorate. ORIGINALITY/VALUE The study is the first to assess patient satisfaction with PGY status and provides evidence that advanced trainees may need support to keep their communication skills and humanistic qualities from deteriorating as stressors increase to ensure optimal patient satisfaction.
American Journal of Therapeutics | 2014
Narender Annapureddy; Shiv Kumar Agarwal; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Kanakadandi; Manpreet Singh Sabharwal; Hari Priya Sanjani; Priya K. Simoes; Girish N. Nadkarni
A 46-year-old man with a history of asthma and psoriatic arthritis on adalimumab presented with fever, tachycardia, and hypoxia. He was diagnosed with pleural effusion and started on antibiotics, as it was noted to be an exudative effusion. Patient failed to improve on multiple courses of antibiotics, and his blood and pleural fluid cultures were negative. He was then started on prednisone 1 mg/kg and showed remarkable recovery. He was diagnosed with adalimumab-induced serositis.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2015
Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Daniela Matei; Rafat Abonour; Lawrence H. Einhorn
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Shailesh R. Satpute; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Lawrence H. Einhorn
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2012
Narender Annapureddy; Shiv Kumar Agarwal; Vijay Kanakadandi; Manpreet Singh Sabharwal; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Priya K. Simoes; Hari Priya Sanjani; Girish N. Nadkarni
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Nabil Adra; Sandra Althouse; Natraj Reddy Ammakkanavar; Milan Radovich; Costantine Albany; David J. Vaughn; Lawrence H. Einhorn; Nasser H. Hanna