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Dive into the research topics where Pamala A. Pawloski is active.

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Featured researches published by Pamala A. Pawloski.


JAMA | 2011

ADHD Medications and Risk of Serious Cardiovascular Events In Young and Middle-Aged Adults

Laurel A. Habel; William O. Cooper; Colin M. Sox; K. Arnold Chan; Bruce Fireman; Patrick G. Arbogast; T. Craig Cheetham; Virginia P. Quinn; Sascha Dublin; Denise M. Boudreau; Susan E. Andrade; Pamala A. Pawloski; Marsha A. Raebel; David H. Smith; Ninah Achacoso; Connie S. Uratsu; Alan S. Go; Steve Sidney; Mai N Nguyen-Huynh; Wayne A. Ray; Joe V. Selby

CONTEXT More than 1.5 million US adults use stimulants and other medications labeled for treatment of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). These agents can increase heart rate and blood pressure, raising concerns about their cardiovascular safety. OBJECTIVE To examine whether current use of medications prescribed primarily to treat ADHD is associated with increased risk of serious cardiovascular events in young and middle-aged adults. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Retrospective, population-based cohort study using electronic health care records from 4 study sites (OptumInsight Epidemiology, Tennessee Medicaid, Kaiser Permanente California, and the HMO Research Network), starting in 1986 at 1 site and ending in 2005 at all sites, with additional covariate assessment using 2007 survey data. Participants were adults aged 25 through 64 years with dispensed prescriptions for methylphenidate, amphetamine, or atomoxetine at baseline. Each medication user (n = 150,359) was matched to 2 nonusers on study site, birth year, sex, and calendar year (443,198 total users and nonusers). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Serious cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction (MI), sudden cardiac death (SCD), or stroke, with comparison between current or new users and remote users to account for potential healthy-user bias. RESULTS During 806,182 person-years of follow-up (median, 1.3 years per person), 1357 cases of MI, 296 cases of SCD, and 575 cases of stroke occurred. There were 107,322 person-years of current use (median, 0.33 years), with a crude incidence per 1000 person-years of 1.34 (95% CI, 1.14-1.57) for MI, 0.30 (95% CI, 0.20-0.42) for SCD, and 0.56 (95% CI, 0.43-0.72) for stroke. The multivariable-adjusted rate ratio (RR) of serious cardiovascular events for current use vs nonuse of ADHD medications was 0.83 (95% CI, 0.72-0.96). Among new users of ADHD medications, the adjusted RR was 0.77 (95% CI, 0.63-0.94). The adjusted RR for current use vs remote use was 1.03 (95% CI, 0.86-1.24); for new use vs remote use, the adjusted RR was 1.02 (95% CI, 0.82-1.28); the upper limit of 1.28 corresponds to an additional 0.19 events per 1000 person-years at ages 25-44 years and 0.77 events per 1000 person-years at ages 45-64 years. CONCLUSIONS Among young and middle-aged adults, current or new use of ADHD medications, compared with nonuse or remote use, was not associated with an increased risk of serious cardiovascular events. Apparent protective associations likely represent healthy-user bias.


Clinical Medicine & Research | 2013

Patient Characteristics Associated with Medication Adherence

Sharon J. Rolnick; Pamala A. Pawloski; Brita Hedblom; Stephen E. Asche; Richard Bruzek

Objective Despite evidence indicating therapeutic benefit for adhering to a prescribed regimen, many patients do not take their medications as prescribed. Non-adherence often leads to morbidity and to higher health care costs. The objective of the study was to assess patient characteristics associated with medication adherence across eight diseases. Design Retrospective data from a repository within an integrated health system was used to identify patients ≥18 years of age with ICD-9-CM codes for primary or secondary diagnoses for any of eight conditions (depression, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, multiple sclerosis, cancer, or osteoporosis). Electronic pharmacy data was then obtained for 128 medications used for treatment. Methods Medication possession ratios (MPR) were calculated for those with one condition and one drug (n=15,334) and then for the total population having any of the eight diseases (n=31,636). The proportion of patients adherent (MPR ≥80%) was summarized by patient and living-area (census) characteristics. Bivariate associations between drug adherence and patient characteristics (age, sex, race, education, and comorbidity) were tested using contingency tables and chi-square tests. Logistic regression analysis examined predictors of adherence from patient and living area characteristics. Results Medication adherence for those with one condition was higher in males, Caucasians, older patients, and those living in areas with higher education rates and higher income. In the total population, adherence increased with lower comorbidity and increased number of medications. Substantial variation in adherence was found by condition with the lowest adherence for diabetes (51%) and asthma (33%). Conclusions The expectation of high adherence due to a covered pharmacy benefit, and to enhanced medication access did not hold. Differences in medication adherence were found across condition and by patient characteristics. Great room for improvement remains, specifically for diabetes and asthma.


JAMA | 2013

Chronic use of opioid medications before and after bariatric surgery.

Marsha A. Raebel; Sophia R. Newcomer; Liza M. Reifler; Denise M. Boudreau; Thomas E. Elliott; Lynn DeBar; Ameena T. Ahmed; Pamala A. Pawloski; David Fisher; W. Troy Donahoo; Elizabeth A. Bayliss

IMPORTANCE Obesity is associated with chronic noncancer pain. It is not known if opioid use for chronic pain in obese individuals undergoing bariatric surgery is reduced. OBJECTIVES To determine opioid use following bariatric surgery in patients using opioids chronically for pain control prior to their surgery and to determine the effect of preoperative depression, chronic pain, or postoperative changes in body mass index (BMI) on changes in postoperative chronic opioid use. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Retrospective cohort study in a distributed health network (10 demographically and geographically varied US health care systems) of 11,719 individuals aged 21 years and older, who had undergone bariatric surgery between 2005 and 2009, and were assessed 1 year before and after surgery, with latest follow-up by December 31, 2010. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Opioid use, measured as morphine equivalents 1 year before and 1 year after surgery, excluding the first 30 postoperative days. Chronic opioid use is defined as 10 or more opioid dispensings over 90 or more days or as dispensings of at least a 120-day supply of opioids during the year prior to surgery. RESULTS Before surgery, 8% (95% CI, 7%-8%; n = 933) of bariatric patients were chronic opioid users. Of these individuals, 77% (95% CI, 75%-80%; n = 723) continued chronic opioid use in the year following surgery. Mean daily morphine equivalents for the 933 bariatric patients who were chronic opioid users before surgery were 45.0 mg (95% CI, 40.0-50.1) preoperatively and 51.9 mg (95% CI, 46.0-57.8) postoperatively (P < .001). For this group with chronic opiate use prior to surgery, change in morphine equivalents before vs after surgery did not differ between individuals with loss of more than 50% excess BMI vs those with 50% or less (>50% BMI loss: adjusted incidence rate ratio [adjusted IRR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.07-1.28] vs ≤50% BMI loss [adjusted IRR, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.93-1.14] model interaction, P = .06). In other subgroup analyses of preoperative chronic opioid users, changes in morphine equivalents before vs after surgery did not differ between those with or without preoperative diagnosis of depression or chronic pain (depression only [n = 75; IRR, 1.08; 95% CI, 0.90-1.30]; chronic pain only [n = 440; IRR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.08-1.27]; both depression and chronic pain [n = 226; IRR, 1.11; 95% CI, 0.96-1.28]; neither depression nor chronic pain [n = 192; IRR, 1.22; 95% CI, 0.98-1.51); and P values for model interactions when compared with neither were P = .42 for depression, P = .76 for pain, and P = .48 for both. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this cohort of patients who underwent bariatric surgery, 77% of patients who were chronic opioid users before surgery continued chronic opioid use in the year following surgery, and the amount of chronic opioid use was greater postoperatively than preoperatively. These findings suggest the need for better pain management in these patients following surgery.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2013

Validity of health plan and birth certificate data for pregnancy research

Susan E. Andrade; Pamela E. Scott; Robert L. Davis; De Kun Li; Darios Getahun; T. Craig Cheetham; Marsha A. Raebel; Sengwee Toh; Sascha Dublin; Pamala A. Pawloski; Tarek A. Hammad; Sarah J. Beaton; David H. Smith; Inna Dashevsky; Katherine Haffenreffer; William O. Cooper

To evaluate the validity of health plan and birth certificate data for pregnancy research.


Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | 2012

Trends in the use of antiepileptic drugs among pregnant women in the US, 2001-2007: a medication exposure in pregnancy risk evaluation program study

William V. Bobo; Robert L. Davis; Sengwee Toh; De-Kun Li; Susan E. Andrade; T. Craig Cheetham; Pamala A. Pawloski; Sascha Dublin; Simone P. Pinheiro; Tarek A. Hammad; Pamela E. Scott; Richard A. Epstein; Patrick G. Arbogast; James A. Morrow; Judith A. Dudley; Jean M. Lawrence; Lyndsay A. Avalos; William O. Cooper

BACKGROUND Little is known about the extent of antiepileptic drug (AED) use in pregnancy, particularly for newer agents. Our objective was to assess whether AED use has increased among pregnant women in the US, 2001-2007. METHODS   We analysed data from the Medication Exposure in Pregnancy Risk Evaluation Program (MEPREP) database, 1 January 2001 to 31 December 2007. We identified liveborn deliveries among women, aged 15-45 years on delivery date, who were members of MEPREP health plans (n=585615 deliveries). Pregnancy exposure to AEDs, determined through outpatient pharmacy dispensing files. Older AEDs were available for clinical use before 1993; other agents were considered newer AEDs. Information on sociodemographic and medical/reproductive factors was obtained from linked birth certificate files. Maternal diagnoses were identified based on ICD-9 codes. RESULTS   Prevalence of AED use during pregnancy increased between 2001 (15.7 per 1000 deliveries) and 2007 (21.9 per 1000 deliveries), driven primarily by a fivefold increase in the use of newer AEDs. Thirteen per cent of AED-exposed deliveries involved a combination of two or more AEDs. Psychiatric disorders were the most prevalent diagnoses, followed by epileptic and pain disorders, among AED users regardless of AED type, year of conception or gestational period. CONCLUSIONS   AED use during pregnancy increased between 2001 and 2007, driven by a fivefold increase in the use of newer AEDs. Nearly one in eight AED-exposed deliveries involved the concomitant use of more than one AED. Additional investigations of the reproductive safety of newer AEDs may be needed.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2012

Medication Exposure in Pregnancy Risk Evaluation Program

Susan E. Andrade; Robert L. Davis; T. Craig Cheetham; William O. Cooper; De Kun Li; Thushi Amini; Sarah J. Beaton; Sascha Dublin; Tarek A. Hammad; Pamala A. Pawloski; Marsha A. Raebel; David H. Smith; Judy A. Staffa; Sengwee Toh; Inna Dashevsky; Katherine Haffenreffer; Kimberly Lane; Richard Platt; Pamela E. Scott

To describe a program to study medication safety in pregnancy, the Medication Exposure in Pregnancy Risk Evaluation Program (MEPREP). MEPREP is a multi-site collaborative research program developed to enable the conduct of studies of medication use and outcomes in pregnancy. Collaborators include the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and researchers at the HMO Research Network, Kaiser Permanente Northern and Southern California, and Vanderbilt University. Datasets have been created at each site linking healthcare data for women delivering an infant between January 1, 2001 and December 31, 2008 and infants born to these women. Standardized data files include maternal and infant characteristics, medication use, and medical care at 11 health plans within 9 states; birth certificate data were obtained from the state departments of public health. MEPREP currently involves more than 20 medication safety researchers and includes data for 1,221,156 children delivered to 933,917 mothers. Current studies include evaluations of the prevalence and patterns of use of specific medications and a validation study of data elements in the administrative and birth certificate data files. MEPREP can support multiple studies by providing information on a large, ethnically and geographically diverse population. This partnership combines clinical and research expertise and data resources to enable the evaluation of outcomes associated with medication use during pregnancy.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2013

Validity of diagnostic codes to identify cases of severe acute liver injury in the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Mini-Sentinel Distributed Database

Vincent Lo Re; Kevin Haynes; David J. Goldberg; Kimberly A. Forde; Dena M. Carbonari; Kimberly B.F. Leidl; Sean Hennessy; K. Rajender Reddy; Pamala A. Pawloski; Gregory W. Daniel; T. Craig Cheetham; Aarthi Iyer; Kara O. Coughlin; Sengwee Toh; Denise M. Boudreau; Nandini Selvam; William O. Cooper; Mano S. Selvan; Jeffrey J. VanWormer; Mark Avigan; Monika Houstoun; Gwen Zornberg; Judith A. Racoosin; Azadeh Shoaibi

The validity of International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD‐9‐CM) codes to identify diagnoses of severe acute liver injury (SALI) is not well known. We examined the positive predictive values (PPVs) of hospital ICD‐9‐CM diagnoses in identifying SALI among health plan members in the Mini‐Sentinel Distributed Database (MSDD) for patients without liver/biliary disease and for those with chronic liver disease (CLD).


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2011

Age, Comorbidity, and Breast Cancer Severity: Impact on Receipt of Definitive Local Therapy and Rate of Recurrence among Older Women with Early Stage Breast Cancer

Terry S. Field; Jaclyn L. F. Bosco; Marianne N. Prout; Heather Taffet Gold; Sarah L. Cutrona; Pamala A. Pawloski; Marianne Ulcickas Yood; Virginia P. Quinn; Soe Soe Thwin; Rebecca A. Silliman

BACKGROUND The definitive local therapy options for early-stage breast cancer are mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery followed by radiation therapy. Older women and those with comorbidities frequently receive breast-conserving surgery alone. The interaction of age and comorbidity with breast cancer severity and their impact on receipt of definitive therapy have not been well-studied. STUDY DESIGN In a cohort of 1,837 women aged 65 years and older receiving treatment for early-stage breast cancer in 6 integrated health care delivery systems in 1990-1994 and followed for 10 years, we examined predictors of receiving nondefinitive local therapy and assessed the impact on breast cancer recurrence within levels of severity, defined as level of risk for recurrence. RESULTS Age and comorbidity were associated with receipt of nondefinitive therapy. Compared with those at low risk, women at the highest risk were less likely to receive nondefinitive therapy (odds ratio = 0.32; 95% CI, 0.22-0.47), and women at moderate risk were about half as likely (odds ratio = 0.54; 95% CI, 0.35-0.84). Nondefinitive local therapy was associated with higher rates of recurrence among women at moderate (hazard ratio = 5.1; 95% CI, 1.9-13.5) and low risk (hazard ratio = 3.2; 95% CI, 1.1-8.9). The association among women at high risk was weak (hazard ratio = 1.3; 95% CI, 0.75-2.1). CONCLUSIONS Among these older women with early-stage breast cancer, decisions about therapy partially balanced breast cancer severity against age and comorbidity. However, even among women at low risk, omitting definitive local therapy was associated with increased recurrence.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2013

Validation of an Algorithm to Estimate Gestational Age in Electronic Health Plan Databases

Qian Li; Susan E. Andrade; William O. Cooper; Robert L. Davis; Sascha Dublin; Tarek A. Hammad; Pamala A. Pawloski; Simone P. Pinheiro; Marsha A. Raebel; Pamela E. Scott; David H. Smith; Inna Dashevsky; Katherine Haffenreffer; Karin Johnson; Sengwee Toh

To validate an algorithm that uses delivery date and diagnosis codes to define gestational age at birth in electronic health plan databases.


Genetics in Medicine | 2013

Underutilization of Lynch syndrome screening in a multisite study of patients with colorectal cancer

Deanna S. Cross; Alanna Kulchak Rahm; Tia L. Kauffman; Jennifer Webster; Anh Quynh Le; Heather Spencer Feigelson; Gwen Alexander; Paul Meier; Adedayo A. Onitilo; Pamala A. Pawloski; Andrew E. Williams; Stacey Honda; Yee Hwa Daida; Catherine A. McCarty; Katrina A.B. Goddard

Purpose:The aim of this study was to examine Lynch syndrome screening of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer in integrated health-care-delivery organizations.Methods:We determined the availability of Lynch syndrome screening criteria and actual Lynch syndrome screening in the medical records of 1,188 patients diagnosed with metastatic colorectal cancer between 2004 and 2009 at seven institutions in the Cancer Research Network.Results:We found infrequent use of Lynch syndrome screening (41/1,188). Family history was available for 937 of the 1,188 patients (79%). There was sufficient information to assess Lynch syndrome risk using family history–based criteria in 719 of the 937 patients (77%) with family history documentation. In 391 individuals with a family history of a Lynch syndrome–associated cancer, 107 (27%) could not be evaluated due to missing information such as age of cancer onset. Eleven percent of patients who met the Bethesda criteria and 25% of individuals who met the Amsterdam II criteria were screened for Lynch syndrome. Recommended guidelines were adhered to during screening, but no testing method was preferred.Conclusion:The information required for Lynch syndrome screening decisions is routinely collected but seldom used. There is a critical gap between collection of family history and its use to guide Lynch syndrome screening, which may support a case for implementation of universal screening guidelines.Genet Med 15 12, 933–940.Genetics in Medicine (2013); 15 12, 933–940. doi:10.1038/gim.2013.43

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Susan E. Andrade

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Sascha Dublin

Group Health Research Institute

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