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Featured researches published by Nayana U. Patel.


Kidney International | 2012

Analysis of baseline parameters in the HALT polycystic kidney disease trials

Vicente E. Torres; Arlene B. Chapman; Ronald D. Perrone; K. Ty Bae; Kaleab Z. Abebe; James E. Bost; Dana C. Miskulin; Theodore I. Steinman; William E. Braun; Franz T. Winklhofer; Marie C. Hogan; Frederic Rahbari Oskoui; Cass Kelleher; Amirali Masoumi; James F. Glockner; Neil Halin; Diego R. Martin; Erick M. Remer; Nayana U. Patel; Ivan Pedrosa; Louis H. Wetzel; Paul A. Thompson; J. Philip Miller; Catherine M. Meyers; Robert W. Schrier

HALT PKD consists of two ongoing randomized trials with the largest cohort of systematically studied patients with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease to date. Study A will compare combined treatment with an angiotensin-converting inhibitor and receptor blocker to inhibitor alone and standard compared with low blood pressure targets in 558 early-stage disease patients with an eGFR over 60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2). Study B will compare inhibitor-blocker treatment to the inhibitor alone in 486 late-stage patients with eGFR 25-60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2). We used correlation and multiple regression cross-sectional analyses to determine associations of baseline parameters with total kidney, liver, or liver cyst volumes measured by MRI in Study A and eGFR in both studies. Lower eGFR and higher natural log-transformed urine albumin excretion were independently associated with a larger natural log-transformed total kidney volume adjusted for height (ln(HtTKV)). Higher body surface area was independently associated with a higher ln(HtTKV) and lower eGFR. Men had larger height-adjusted total kidney volume and smaller liver cyst volumes than women. A weak correlation was found between the ln(HtTKV) and natural log-transformed total liver volume adjusted for height or natural log liver cyst volume in women only. Women had higher urine aldosterone excretion and lower plasma potassium. Thus, our analysis (1) confirms a strong association between renal volume and functional parameters, (2) shows that gender and other factors differentially affect the development of polycystic disease in the kidney and liver, and (3) suggests an association between anthropomorphic measures reflecting prenatal and/or postnatal growth and disease severity.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2014

Renal Relevant Radiology: Use of Ultrasonography in Patients with AKI

Sarah Faubel; Nayana U. Patel; Mark E. Lockhart; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai

As judged by the American College of Radiology Appropriateness Criteria, renal Doppler ultrasonography is the most appropriate imaging test in the evaluation of AKI and has the highest level of recommendation. Unfortunately, nephrologists are rarely specifically trained in ultrasonography technique and interpretation, and important clinical information obtained from renal ultrasonography may not be appreciated. In this review, the strengths and limitations of grayscale ultrasonography in the evaluation of patients with AKI will be discussed with attention to its use for (1) assessment of intrinsic causes of AKI, (2) distinguishing acute from chronic kidney diseases, and (3) detection of obstruction. The use of Doppler imaging and the resistive index in patients with AKI will be reviewed with attention to its use for (1) predicting the development of AKI, (2) predicting the prognosis of AKI, and (3) distinguishing prerenal azotemia from intrinsic AKI. Finally, pediatric considerations in the use of ultrasonography in AKI will be reviewed.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Assessment of Left Ventricular Mass in Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease

Ronald D. Perrone; Kaleab Z. Abebe; Robert W. Schrier; Arlene B. Chapman; Vicente E. Torres; James E. Bost; Diana Kaya; Dana C. Miskulin; Theodore I. Steinman; William E. Braun; Franz T. Winklhofer; Marie C. Hogan; Frederic Rahbari-Oskoui; Cass Kelleher; Amirali Masoumi; James F. Glockner; Neil Halin; Diego R. Martin; Erick M. Remer; Nayana U. Patel; Ivan Pedrosa; Louis H. Wetzel; Paul A. Thompson; J. Philip Miller; Catherine M. Meyers; K. Ty Bae

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is associated with a substantial cardiovascular disease burden including early onset hypertension, intracranial aneurysms, and left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). A 41% prevalence of LVH has been reported in ADPKD, using echocardiographic assessment of LV mass (LVM). The HALT PKD study was designed to assess the effect of intensive angiotensin blockade on progression of total kidney volume and LVM. Measurements of LVM were performed using cardiac magnetic resonance (MR). DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Five hundred forty-three hypertensive patients with GFR >60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) underwent MR assessment of LVM at baseline. LVM was adjusted for body surface area and expressed as LVM index (LVMI; g/m(2)). RESULTS Baseline BP was 125.1 ± 14.5/79.3 ± 11.6 mmHg. Average duration of hypertension was 5.79 years. Prior use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers was present in 59.5% of patients. The prevalence of LVH assessed using nonindexed LVM (g) was 3.9% (n = 21, eight men and 13 women) and 0.93% (n = 5, one man and four women) using LVMI (g/m(2)). In exploratory analyses, the prevalence of LVH using LVM indexed to H(2.7), and the allometric index ppLVmass(HW), ranged from 0.74% to 2.23% (n = 4 to 12). Multivariate regression showed significant direct associations of LVMI with systolic BP, serum creatinine, and albuminuria; significant inverse associations with LVMI were found with age and female gender. CONCLUSIONS The prevalence of LVH in hypertensive ADPKD patients <50 years of age with short duration of hypertension, and prior use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors/angiotensin receptor blockers is low. Early BP intervention in ADPKD may have decreased LVH and may potentially decrease cardiovascular mortality.


Abdominal Imaging | 2015

Multi-parametric MRI findings of transitional zone prostate cancers: correlation with 3-dimensional transperineal mapping biopsy

Sajal Pokharel; Nayana U. Patel; Kavita Garg; Francisco G. La Rosa; Paul Arangua; Clifford Jones; E. David Crawford

Purpose A preliminary project to correlate MR findings with mapping prostate biopsy to help differentiate malignant transitional zone lesions form benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) nodules. Materials and Methods Institutional IRB approved retrospective study with 14 patients suspected of having prostate cancer who underwent both prostate 3T MRI using endorectal coil and 3D transperineal mapping prostate biopsy. MR exams were independently reviewed by two abdominal radiologists blinded to pathology with disagreement resolved by consensus. An MRI lesion was defined as having hypointense T2 signal subjectively without corresponding T1 high signal intensity and low signal on ADC maps in the central gland. Mapping biopsy consisted of systematic transperineal US guided biopsy with 55–108 cores per patient. Results Twenty-nine lesions were detected on MRI. Of these, 13 correlated with Gleason 6 or higher biopsy samples. 16 were biopsy negative. Among the various MRI characteristics assessed, lack of T2 hypointense rim demonstrated the highest specificity (93%) and positive predictive value (89%). Highest sensitivity (85%) and negative predictive value (78%) were seen with ill-defined nodules. When suspicious MR characteristics were combined, the specificity and PPV rose to 100% while sensitivity decreased to 45% and NPV decreased to 73%. Conclusions Preliminary study indicates MR findings which can help differentiate a BPH nodule from transitional zone prostate cancers which could help direct biopsy in the large and growing number of people suspected of having prostate cancer. Further work will be needed for validation.


Journal of Clinical Ultrasound | 2016

Ultrasound‐based clinical prediction rule model for detecting papillary thyroid cancer in cervical lymph nodes: A pilot study

Nayana U. Patel; Kristin McKinney; Sarah M. Kreidler; Teresa M. Bieker; Paul Russ; Katherine Roberts; Deborah H. Glueck; Maria Albuja-Cruz; Joshua Klopper; Bryan R. Haugen

To identify sonographic features of cervical lymph nodes (LNs) that are associated with papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) and to develop a prediction model for classifying nodes as metastatic or benign.


Abdominal Radiology | 2016

Multiparametric prostate MRI: focus on T2-weighted imaging and role in staging of prostate cancer.

Rajan T. Gupta; Benjamin Spilseth; Nayana U. Patel; Alison F. Brown; Jinxing Yu

Multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) represents a growing modality for the non-invasive evaluation of prostate cancer (PCa) and is increasingly being used for patients with persistently elevated PSA and prior negative biopsies, for monitoring patients in active surveillance protocols, for preoperative characterization of cancer for surgical planning, and in planning for MRI-targeted biopsy. The focus of this work is twofold. First, we review the key role of T2-weighted imaging (T2WI) in mpMRI, specifically outlining how it is used for anatomic evaluation of the prostate, detection of clinically significant PCa, assessment of extraprostatic extension (EPE), and mimics of PCa on this sequence. We will also discuss optimal technical acquisition parameters for this sequence and recent technical advancements in T2WI. Second, we will delineate the role that mpMRI plays in the staging of PCa and describe the implications of the information that mpMRI can provide in determining the most appropriate management plan for the patient with PCa.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2018

Patterns of Kidney Function Decline in Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease: A Post Hoc Analysis From the HALT-PKD Trials

Godela Brosnahan; Kaleab Z. Abebe; Charity G. Moore; Frederic F. Rahbari-Oskoui; Kyongtae T. Bae; Jared J. Grantham; Robert W. Schrier; William E. Braun; Arlene B. Chapman; Michael F. Flessner; Peter C. Harris; Marie C. Hogan; Ronald D. Perrone; Dana C. Miskulin; Theodore I. Steinman; Vicente E. Torres; Theodore Steinman; Jesse Wei; Peter G. Czarnecki; Ivan Pedrosa; Saul Nurko; Erick M. Remer; Diego R. Martin; Frederic Rahbari-Oskoui; Pardeep Mittal; Vicente Torres; Ziad M. El-Zoghby; Peter Harris; James F. Glockner; Bernard F. King

BACKGROUND Previous clinical studies of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) reported that loss of kidney function usually follows a steep and relentless course. A detailed examination of individual patterns of decline in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) has not been performed. STUDY DESIGN Longitudinal post hoc analysis of data collected during the Halt Progression of Polycystic Kidney Disease (HALT-PKD) trials. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS 494 HALT-PKD Study A participants (younger; preserved eGFR) and 435 Study B participants (older; reduced eGFR) who had more than 3 years of follow-up and 7 or more eGFR assessments. MEASUREMENTS Longitudinal eGFR assessments using the CKD-EPI (Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration) creatinine equation. PREDICTORS Demographic, clinical, laboratory, and imaging features of participants. OUTCOMES Probability of linear and nonlinear decline patterns or of stable eGFR calculated for each participant from a Bayesian model of individual eGFR trajectories. RESULTS Most (62.5% in Study A and 81% in Study B) participants had a linear decline in eGFR during up to 8 years of follow-up. A proportion (22% in Study A and 13% in Study B) of progressors had a nonlinear pattern. 15.5% of participants in Study A and 6% in Study B had a prolonged (≥4.5 years) period of stable eGFRs. These individuals (Study A) had significantly smaller total kidney volumes, higher renal blood flows, lower urinary albumin excretion, and lower body mass index at baseline and study end. In Study B, participants with reduced but stable eGFRs were older than the progressors. Two-thirds of nonprogressors in both studies had PKD1 mutations, with enrichment for weak nontruncating mutations. LIMITATIONS Relatively short follow-up of a clinical trial population. CONCLUSIONS Although many individuals with ADPKD have a linear decline in eGFR, prolonged intervals of stable GFRs occur in a substantial fraction. Lower body mass index was associated with more stable kidney function in early ADPKD.


Clinical Imaging | 2016

CT findings of human Fasciola hepatica infection: case reports and review of the literature☆

Nayana U. Patel; Tami J. Bang; Gerald D. Dodd

Due to increasing rates of international travel, hepatic fascioliasis is appearing in nonendemic areas, where diagnosis can be difficult. We present two confirmed cases of hepatic fascioliasis in a nonendemic region. The purposes of this report are to discuss computed tomography (CT) findings of hepatic fascioliasis and to review the literature. While travel history is most important, characteristic findings of hypoattenuating tracts extending from liver capsule into the parenchyma on contrast-enhanced CT scan strongly suggest hepatic fascioliasis.


American Journal of Neuroradiology | 2018

Clinical Validation of a Predictive Model for the Presence of Cervical Lymph Node Metastasis in Papillary Thyroid Cancer

Nayana U. Patel; K.E. Lind; Kristin McKinney; Toshimasa J. Clark; Sajal Pokharel; J.M. Meier; E.R. Stamm; Kavita Garg; Bryan R. Haugen

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Ultrasound is a standard technique to detect lymph node metastasis in papillary thyroid cancer. Cystic changes and microcalcifications are the most specific features of metastasis, but with low sensitivity. This prospective study compared the diagnostic accuracy of a predictive model for sonographic evaluation of lymph nodes relative to the radiologists standard assessment in detecting papillary thyroid cancer metastasis in patients after thyroidectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Cervical lymph node sonographic images were reported by a radiologist (R method) per standard practice. The same images were independently evaluated by another radiologist using a sonographic predictive model (M method). A test was considered positive for metastasis if the R or M method suggested lymph node biopsy. The result of lymph node biopsy or surgical pathology was used as the reference standard. We estimated relative true-positive fraction and relative false-positive fraction using log-linear models for correlated binary data for the M method compared with the R method. RESULTS: A total of 237 lymph nodes in 103 patients were evaluated. Our analysis of relative true-positive fraction and relative false-positive fraction included 54 nodes with pathologic results in which at least 1 method (R or M) was positive. The M method had a higher relative true-positive fraction of 1.46 (95% CI, 1.12–1.91; P = .006) and a lower relative false-positive fraction of 0.58 (95% CI, 0.36–0.92; P = .02) compared with the R method. CONCLUSIONS: The sonographic predictive model outperformed the standard assessment to detect lymph node metastasis in patients with papillary thyroid cancer and may reduce unnecessary biopsies.


Current Urology | 2014

Initial Experience of Targeted Focal Interstitial Laser Ablation of Prostate Cancer with MRI Guidance

Al B. Barqawi; Kevin Krughoff; Hongli Li; Nayana U. Patel

Introduction: To develop and evaluate a technique of 3.0 Tesla magnetic resonance (MR) guided laser ablation based on 3-dimentional mapping biopsy (3DMB) for low risk prostate cancer. Materials and Methods: The study was approved by the institutional review board and was the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act compliant. The prospective study was performed on seven 3DMB proven low risk prostate cancer patients. In the first phase of the procedure the patients prostate was aligned to a position concordant with prior 3DMB using the transperineal grid and fiduciary golden marker coordinates. In the second phase ablation was performed using MR thermometry to determine the ablation endpoint and lesion coverage. Immediately after treatment dynamic contrast-enhanced MR imaging was done. Prostate-specific antigen testing was performed 3 and 12 months after the treatment and compared by ANOVA test. A follow up biopsy was done one year following ablation. Results: The entire procedure took less than 2 hours and all patients tolerated the procedure well. There was a significant difference in prostate-specific antigen value before and 3 months after the treatment (p = 0.005). Four out of 6 patients had positive follow up biopsy for cancer. Conclusion: This study verifies the feasibility and safety of treating low risk prostate cancer with laser therapy guided by 3.0T MR imaging based on 3DMB.

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Sajal Pokharel

University of Colorado Denver

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Ivan Pedrosa

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Kavita Garg

University of Colorado Denver

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