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Dive into the research topics where Philip J. O'Connell is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip J. O'Connell.


Transplantation | 2004

Calcineurin inhibitor nephrotoxicity: longitudinal assessment by protocol histology.

Brian J. Nankivell; Richard J. Borrows; Caroline L.-S. Fung; Philip J. O'Connell; Chapman; Richard D. M. Allen

Background. The role and burden of cyclosporine (CsA) nephrotoxicity in long-term progressive kidney graft dysfunction is poorly documented. Methods. The authors evaluated 888 prospective protocol kidney biopsy specimens from 99 patients taken regularly until 10 years after transplantation for evidence of CsA nephrotoxicity. Results. The most sensitive histologic marker of CsA nephrotoxicity was arteriolar hyalinosis, predicted by CsA dose and functional CsA nephrotoxicity. Striped fibrosis was associated with early initiation of CsA and the need for posttransplant dialysis (both P<0.05). The 10-year cumulative Kaplan-Meier prevalence of arteriolar hyalinosis, striped fibrosis, and tubular microcalcification was 100%, 88.0%, and 79.2% of kidneys, respectively. Beyond 1 year, 53.9% had two or more lesions of CsA nephrotoxicity. Structural CsA nephrotoxicity occurred in two phases, with different clinical and histologic characteristics. The acute phase occurred with a median onset 6 months after transplantation, was usually reversible, and was associated with functional CsA nephrotoxicity (P<0.05), high CsA levels (P<0.05), and mild arteriolar hyalinosis (P<0.001). The chronic phase of CsA nephrotoxicity persisted over several biopsies, occurred at a median onset of 3 years, and was associated with lower CsA doses and trough levels (both P<0.05). It was largely irreversible and accompanied by severe arteriolar hyalinosis and progressive glomerulosclerosis (both P<0.001). A threshold CsA dose of 5 mg/kg/day predicted worsening of arteriolar hyalinosis on sequential histology. Conclusions. Pathologic changes of CsA nephrotoxicity were virtually universal by 10 years and exacerbated chronic allograft nephropathy. CsA is unsuitable as a universal, long-term immunosuppressive agent for kidney transplantation. Strategies to ameliorate or avoid nephrotoxicity are thus urgently needed.


Diabetes Care | 2012

Improvement in Outcomes of Clinical Islet Transplantation: 1999–2010

Franca B. Barton; Michael R. Rickels; Rodolfo Alejandro; Bernhard J. Hering; Stephen Wease; Bashoo Naziruddin; José Oberholzer; Jon S. Odorico; Marc R. Garfinkel; Marlon F. Levy; François Pattou; Thierry Berney; Antonio Secchi; Shari Messinger; Peter A. Senior; Paola Maffi; Andrew M. Posselt; Peter G. Stock; Dixon B. Kaufman; Xunrong Luo; Fouad Kandeel; Enrico Cagliero; Nicole A. Turgeon; Piotr Witkowski; Ali Naji; Philip J. O'Connell; Carla J. Greenbaum; Yogish C. Kudva; Kenneth L. Brayman; Meredith J. Aull

OBJECTIVE To describe trends of primary efficacy and safety outcomes of islet transplantation in type 1 diabetes recipients with severe hypoglycemia from the Collaborative Islet Transplant Registry (CITR) from 1999 to 2010. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS A total of 677 islet transplant-alone or islet-after-kidney recipients with type 1 diabetes in the CITR were analyzed for five primary efficacy outcomes and overall safety to identify any differences by early (1999–2002), mid (2003–2006), or recent (2007–2010) transplant era based on annual follow-up to 5 years. RESULTS Insulin independence at 3 years after transplant improved from 27% in the early era (1999–2002, n = 214) to 37% in the mid (2003–2006, n = 255) and to 44% in the most recent era (2007–2010, n = 208; P = 0.006 for years-by-era; P = 0.01 for era alone). C-peptide ≥0.3 ng/mL, indicative of islet graft function, was retained longer in the most recent era (P < 0.001). Reduction of HbA1c and resolution of severe hypoglycemia exhibited enduring long-term effects. Fasting blood glucose stabilization also showed improvements in the most recent era. There were also modest reductions in the occurrence of adverse events. The islet reinfusion rate was lower: 48% by 1 year in 2007–2010 vs. 60–65% in 1999–2006 (P < 0.01). Recipients that ever achieved insulin-independence experienced longer duration of islet graft function (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS The CITR shows improvement in primary efficacy and safety outcomes of islet transplantation in recipients who received transplants in 2007–2010 compared with those in 1999–2006, with fewer islet infusions and adverse events per recipient.


Transplantation | 2001

Effect of histological damage on long-term kidney transplant outcome

Brian J. Nankivell; Carol A. Fenton-Lee; Dirk Kuypers; Elaine Cheung; Richard D. M. Allen; Philip J. O'Connell; Jeremy R. Chapman

Background. Chronic renal allograft failure remains a major challenge to overcome. Factors such as donor quality, delayed graft function (DGF), acute rejection, and immunosuppression are known to affect long-term outcome, but their relationship to histological damage to graft outcome is unclear. Methods. Protocol kidney biopsies (n=112) obtained at 3 months after transplantation yielded 102 with adequate tissue. Histology was scored by the Banff schema, and compared with implantation biopsies (n=91), repeat 12-month histology (n=39), decline in serum creatinine and serial isotopic glomerular filtration rate, onset of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN), and actuarial graft survival censored for death with a functioning graft. Results. At a median follow-up of 9.3 years, 20 patients had graft failure and 26 died with a functioning graft. Banff chronic nephropathy was present in 24% of 3-month biopsies, and was predicted by microvascular disease in the donor, cold ischemia, DGF, and acute vascular rejection (P <0.001). Acute glomerulitis at 3 months correlated with segmental glomerulosclerosis at 12 months, subsequent recurrent glomerulonephritis, and graft failure (P <0.01). Subclinical rejection at 3 months occurred in 29% of biopsies, correlated with prior acute rejection and HLA mismatch, and led to chronic histological damage by 12 months (r =0.25–0.67, P <0.05–0.001). Subclinical rejection, arteriolar hyalinosis, and tubulitis present at 3 months had resolved by 12 months. The 10-year survival rates for Banff chronic nephropathy were 90.4% for grade 0, 81.0% grade 1, and 57.9% for grades 2 or greater (P <0.01). Early tubulointerstitial damage at 3 months profoundly influenced graft survival beyond 10 years. CAN was predicted by kidney ischemia, 3-month chronic intimal vascular thickening, tubular injury, proteinuria, and late rejection. Chronic fibrointimal thickening of the small arteries and chronic interstitial fibrosis at 3 months independently predicted graft loss and decline in renal function (P <0.05-0.001). Conclusions. Early transplant damage occurs in the tubulointerstitial compartment from preexisting donor kidney injury and discrete events such as vascular rejection and DGF. Subsequent chronic damage and graft failure reflect accumulated previous injury and chronic interstitial fibrosis, vascular impairment, subclinical rejection, and injury from late rejection. CAN may be conceptualized as the sequelae of incremental and cumulative damage to the transplanted kidney. The duration of graft survival is dependent and predicted by the quality of the transplanted donor kidney combined with the intensity, frequency, and irreversibility of these damaging insults.


Transplantation | 2004

Natural History, Risk Factors, And Impact Of Subclinical Rejection In Kidney Transplantation.

Brian J. Nankivell; Richard J. Borrows; Caroline L.-S. Fung; Philip J. O'Connell; Richard D. M. Allen; Chapman

Background. Subclinical rejection (SCR) is defined as histologically proven acute rejection in the absence of immediate functional deterioration. Methods. We evaluated the impact of SCR in 961 prospective protocol kidney biopsies from diabetic recipients of a kidney-pancreas transplant (n=119) and one kidney transplant alone taken regularly up to 10 years after transplantation. Results. SCR was present in 60.8%, 45.7%, 25.8%, and 17.7% of biopsies at 1, 3, 12, and greater than 12 months after transplantation. Banff scores for acute interstitial inflammation and tubulitis declined exponentially with time. SCR was predicted by prior acute cellular rejection and type of immunosuppressive therapy (P<0.05–0.001). Tacrolimus reduced interstitial infiltration (P<0.001), whereas mycophenolate reduced tubulitis (P<0.05), and the combination effectively eliminated SCR (P<0.001). Persistent SCR of less than 2 years duration on sequential biopsies occurred in 29.2% of patients and was associated with prior acute interstitial rejection (P<0.001) and requirement for antilymphocyte therapy (P<0.05). It resolved by 0.49±0.33 years and resulted in higher grades of chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN, P<0.05). True chronic rejection, defined as persistent SCR of 2 years or more duration and implying continuous immunologic activation was found in only 5.8% of patients. The presence of SCR increased chronic interstitial fibrosis, tubular atrophy, and CAN scores on subsequent biopsies (P<0.05–0.001). SCR preceded and was correlated with CAN (P<0.001) on sequential analysis. Conclusions. Histologic evidence of acute rejection in the absence of clinical suspicion resulted in significant tubulointerstitial damage to transplanted kidneys and contributed to CAN.


Clinical Transplantation | 2005

Guidelines for the treatment and management of new-onset diabetes after transplantation.

Alan H. Wilkinson; Jaime Davidson; Francesco Dotta; Pd Home; P Keown; Bryce A. Kiberd; Alan G. Jardine; N Levitt; Piero Marchetti; Mariana S. Markell; Saraladevi Naicker; Philip J. O'Connell; Mark A. Schnitzler; E Standl; Jv Torregosa; Uchida K; Hannah A. Valantine; Flavio Vincenti; M. Wissing

Abstract:  Although graft and patient survival after solid organ transplantation have improved markedly in recent years, transplant recipients continue to experience an increased prevalence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared with the general population. A number of factors are known to impact on the increased risk of CVD in this population, including hypertension, dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus. Of these factors, new‐onset diabetes after transplantation has been identified as one of the most important, being associated with reduced graft function and patient survival, and increased risk of graft loss. In 2003, International Consensus Guidelines on New‐onset Diabetes after Transplantation were published, which aimed to establish a precise definition and diagnosis of the condition and recommend management strategies to reduce its occurrence and impact. These updated 2004 guidelines, developed in consultation with the International Diabetes Federation (IDF), extend the recommendations of the previous guidelines and encompass new‐onset diabetes after kidney, liver and heart transplantation. It is hoped that adoption of these management approaches pre‐ and post‐transplant will reduce individuals’ risk of developing new‐onset diabetes after transplantation as well as ameliorating the long‐term impact of this serious complication.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2007

Transplant Glomerulopathy: Ultrastructural Abnormalities Occur Early in Longitudinal Analysis of Protocol Biopsies

Moses Wavamunno; Philip J. O'Connell; Matthew J. Vitalone; Caroline L.-S. Fung; Richard D. M. Allen; Jeremy R. Chapman; Brian J. Nankivell

Transplant glomerulopathy (TXG) presents a distinctive pattern of glomerular abnormalities. The aim of this study was to describe its sequential ultrastructural pathology. A paired cohort study of 228 protocol biopsies, from our longitudinal database (n = 1345), compared TXG (7 patients, 95 biopsies) and controls (8 patients, 133 biopsies). Ultrastructural morphometry and C4d immunoperoxidase were evaluated from implantation to 5 years after transplantation against sequential histology and functional changes.


Transplantation | 1999

Predictors of renal transplant histology at three months.

Dirk Kuypers; Jeremy R. Chapman; Philip J. O'Connell; Richard D. M. Allen; Brian J. Nankivell

BACKGROUND The quality of a damaged kidney, the complexity of the surgery, and the events in the first weeks after transplantation, such as delayed graft function (DGF) and acute rejection, may influence its histological appearance and long-term survival. The aim of this study was to evaluate the importance of these factors in predicting renal allograft histology at 3 months. METHODS Prospective, protocol kidney biopsy specimens (n=112), obtained 3 months after transplantation, were scored for chronic damage by the Banff schema and evaluated by multivariate analysis against donor factors, implantation histology, prior recipient sensitization, ischemia, perioperative factors, and subsequent clinical events, such as DGF and acute rejection. RESULTS Adequate samples were obtained in 102 of 112 biopsies and classified as chronic Banff grade 0 (n=22), grade I (n=56), grade II (n=23), or grade III (n=1). Acute Banff scores were minimal. DGF occurred in 49% and was the strongest predictor of tubulointerstitial damage at 3 months. DGF correlated with acute tubular necrosis on the implantation biopsy specimen and with the number of acute rejection episodes; DGF also correlated with the Banff grades of chronic glomerulitis, chronic interstitial fibrosis, and tubular atrophy scores (P<0.05-0.001) in the 3-month biopsy specimen. By multivariate analysis, chronic tubular atrophy was independently predicted by the presence of vascular disease in the donor biopsy specimen, DGF, and vascular rejection occurring within the first 3 months (P<0.05-0.001). Chronic interstitial fibrosis was unrelated to fibrosis in the donor biopsy specimen but was independently predicted by DGF, donor age, and vascular rejection (P<0.05-0.001). Vascular disease in the donor biopsy specimen correlated with chronic intimal thickening (r=0.36, P<0.01) and arteriolar hyalinosis score (r=0.54, P<0.001) on the 3-month biopsy specimen. Banff chronic intimal vascular thickening was independently predicted by donor biopsy specimen vascular grade, prior vascular rejection episodes, and renal cold ischemia time (P<0.05-0.01). There were no correlates with the mean cyclosporine (CsA) dose, blood levels, diagnosis of CsA toxicity, or cellular rejection within the first 3 months. CONCLUSIONS This study has demonstrated that the quality of the donor organ at implantation was strongly predictive of subsequent renal histology in grafts functioning at 3 months. Vascular rejection and DGF had a significant long-term effect on graft damage, but cellular rejection and simple measures of CsA exposure did not.


Transplantation | 2011

Conversion of Long-Term Kidney Transplant Recipients From Calcineurin Inhibitor Therapy to Everolimus: A Randomized, Multicenter, 24-Month Study

Hallvard Holdaas; Lionel Rostaing; Daniel Serón; Edward Cole; Jeremy R. Chapman; Bengt Fellström; Erik H. Strøm; Alan G. Jardine; Karsten Midtvedt; Uwe Machein; Bettina Ulbricht; Alexander Karpov; Philip J. O'Connell; Ascertain Investigators; Eric Goffin

Background. Benefits of conversion from calcineurin inhibitor (CNI) to mammalian target of rapamycin inhibitor-based immunosuppression in long-term kidney transplant patients remain uncertain. Methods. ASCERTAIN was a 24-month, open-label, multicenter study. Kidney transplant patients more than 6 months posttransplant receiving CNI (baseline glomerular filtration rate [GFR] 30–70 mL/min/1.73 m2) were randomized to everolimus with CNI elimination (n=127) or CNI minimization (n=144), or continued CNI unchanged (controls, n=123) to assess the effect on measured GFR at month 24 after randomization. Results. Renal function was stable in all groups to month 24. Mean measured GFR at month 24, the primary endpoint, was 48.0±22.0 mL/min/1.73 m2, 46.6±21.1 mL/min/1.73 m2, and 46.0±20.4 mL/min/1.73 m2 in the CNI elimination, CNI minimization, and control groups, respectively. Differences between CNI elimination (1.12 mL/min/1.73 m2, 95% confidence interval [CI] −3.51 to 5.76, P=0.63) and CNI minimization (0.59 mL/min/1.73 m2, 95% CI −3.88 to 5.07, P=0.79) versus controls at month 24 were nonsignificant that is, the primary endpoint was not met. No efficacy endpoint differed significantly between groups. Post hoc analyses showed that patients with baseline creatinine clearance (CrCl) more than 50 mL/min had a significantly greater increase in measured GFR after CNI elimination versus controls (difference 11.4 mL/min/1.73 m2, 95% CI 2.1 to 20.8 mL/min/1.73 m2, P=0.017). Adverse events resulted in discontinuation in 36 (28.3%) CNI elimination patients, 24 (16.7%) CNI minimization patients, and 5 (4.1%) controls (P<0.001 vs. CNI elimination; P=0.020 vs. CNI minimization). Conclusion. Conversion to everolimus with CNI elimination or minimization a mean of 5.6 years after kidney transplantation had no overall renal benefit and was associated with more frequent adverse events and discontinuations. Patients with CrCl more than 50 mL/min may benefit from a change in therapy more than 6 months after renal transplantation.


Transplantation | 1997

Diabetic neuropathy after pancreas transplantation: determinants of recovery.

Richard D. M. Allen; Ibrahim S. Al-harbi; John G. Morris; Paul D. Clouston; Philip J. O'Connell; Jeremy R. Chapman; Brian J. Nankivell

Although simultaneous pancreas and kidney transplantation (SPK) achieves normoglycemia and correction of uremia in type I diabetic patients with renal failure, little data are available on long-term outcome and clinical determinants of recovery of peripheral neuropathy. In this prospective study, 219 electrophysiological studies using a standardized protocol were performed before and up to 8 years after SPK in 44 patients. Nine control diabetic recipients with functioning kidney but nonfunctioning pancreas transplants were studied on 35 occasions. Patients were 38.5+/-7.9 years old (mean+/-SD) with pretransplant diabetes present for 25.2+/-7.6 years. Significant polyneuropathy (total nerve conduction scores [NCS] <-1.0) was present in 89% before transplantation, which correlated with body weight (r=0.628, P<0.001). Two distinct patterns of neurological recovery were observed after SPK. Conduction velocity (CV) improved in a biphasic pattern, with a rapid initial recovery followed by subsequent stabilization. In contrast, the recovery of nerve amplitude was monophasic, and continued to improve for up to 8 years. Initial improvement in NCS was primarily due to an increase in CV (P=0.002 vs. baseline), and was best in shorter and younger patients. Recovery of total NCS at 6 months after SPK, assessed by multivariate analysis, was least in obese recipients and when performed in patients who had started dialysis before SPK, and was associated with lower transplant kidney isotopic glomerular filtration rate and HLA mismatch (P<0.05 to 0.001). Subsequent improvement was associated with less severe initial neuropathy, smaller body weight, and longer duration of diabetes (P<0.01 to 0.001). Fasting hyperinsulinemia was associated with impairment of initial recovery and subsequent NCS after SPK, but was worse in the control group. Recovery of nerve action potential amplitudes was predicted by better initial amplitudes and HLA mismatch, lower body weight, and the use of nifedipine (P<0.05 to 0.001). Nifedipine was used for hypertension in 33% of SPK and was associated with better CV and amplitudes, particularly in the upper limbs, where there was less neuropathy. The use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors also appeared beneficial, but this was confined to the lower limbs. SPK resulted in a gradual, sustained, and late improvement in nerve action potential amplitudes, consistent with axonal regeneration and partial reversal of diabetic neuropathy. These data suggest that early transplantation of uremic diabetic patients before onset of severe neuropathy, minimizing obesity and optimizing renal transplant function, maximizes neurological recovery after SPK. Furthermore, the preliminary data support randomized clinical trials for evaluation of nifedipine and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors in diabetic neuropathy.


Transplantation | 2006

Treatment of subclinical rejection diagnosed by protocol biopsy of kidney transplants.

Kee Ty; Chapman; Philip J. O'Connell; Caroline L.-S. Fung; Richard D. M. Allen; Kathy Kable; Matthew J. Vitalone; Brian J. Nankivell

Background. Subclinical rejection (SCR) causes chronic allograft damage, which may be prevented by antirejection therapy. Methods. A pilot study of the effect of routine treatment of SCR was performed in 88 recipients of either a kidney (n=59) or combined kidney-pancreas transplant (n=29) undergoing protocol biopsy (PBX) surveillance at 1 and 3 months, using calcineurin inhibitors, mycophenolate mofetil, and corticosteroid therapy. Results. SCR was seen in 46.6% (41/88 patients), as 30 borderline and 11 acute SCR. From 279 transplant biopsies, the prevalence of SCR was 25% (22/88) at 1 month, 10.2% (9/88) at 3 months, and 8.3% (2/24) at 12 months PBX. Treatment included bolus intravenous or oral corticosteroids (n=20) and augmented immunosuppression, either by conversion to tacrolimus (n=6) or increased doses of maintenance therapy (n=14), whereas OKT3 was used in one case of subclinical vascular rejection. Borderline episodes were not treated in 12 patients. In biopsies taken to assess therapeutic response, persistent SCR was present in 46.1% (6/13). Treatment of SCR at 1 month was followed by lower acute Banff sum scores at 3 months PBX (P<0.01–0.0001). Early chronic damage was already present in the 1 month PBX, associated with SCR (P<0.0005 versus without SCR), although by 3 months these differences were lost. Rates of opportunistic infections and BK nephropathy were not increased by SCR treatment. Conclusion. Early chronic allograft damage was associated with SCR and therapy appeared to ameliorate further immune-mediated injury, although the efficacy of corticosteroids alone may be inadequate. A controlled trial of therapy for SCR is warranted.

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Peter J. Cowan

St. Vincent's Health System

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Stacey N. Walters

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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