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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Mueller is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca Mueller.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

β-Cell Secretory Capacity and Demand in Recipients of Islet, Pancreas, and Kidney Transplants

Michael R. Rickels; Rebecca Mueller; Karen L. Teff; Ali Naji

CONTEXT beta-Cell secretory capacity, a measure of functional beta-cell mass, is often impaired in islet transplant recipients, likely because of a low engrafted beta-cell mass, although calcineurin inhibitor toxicity is often cited as the explanation. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine whether use of the calcineurin inhibitor tacrolimus was associated with reduced beta-cell secretory capacity or with increased beta-cell secretory demand independent of engrafted islet mass. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS We compared metabolic measures in five intraportal islet recipients vs. 10 normal controls and in seven portally-drained pancreas-kidney and eight nondiabetic kidney recipients vs. nine kidney donor controls. All transplant groups received comparable exposure to tacrolimus, and each transplant group was matched for kidney function to its respective control group. INTERVENTION AND MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES All participants underwent glucose-potentiated arginine testing where acute insulin responses to arginine (5 g) were determined under fasting (AIR(arg)), 230 mg/dl (AIR(pot)), and 340 mg/dl (AIR(max)) clamp conditions, and AIR(max) gives the beta-cell secretory capacity. Insulin sensitivity (M/I) and proinsulin secretory ratios (PISRs) were assessed to determine whether tacrolimus increased beta-cell secretory demand. RESULTS Insulin responses were significantly lower than normal in the islet group for AIR(arg) (P < 0.05), AIR(pot) (P < 0.01), and AIR(max) (P < 0.01), whereas responses in the pancreas-kidney and kidney transplant groups were not different than in the kidney donor group. M/I and PISRs were not different in any of the transplant vs. control groups. CONCLUSIONS Impaired beta-cell secretory capacity in islet transplantation is best explained by a low engrafted beta-cell mass and not by a deleterious effect of tacrolimus.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Effect of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 on β- and α-Cell Function in Isolated Islet and Whole Pancreas Transplant Recipients

Michael R. Rickels; Rebecca Mueller; James F. Markmann; Ali Naji

CONTEXT Glucose-dependent insulin secretion is often impaired after islet transplantation where reduced beta-cell secretory capacity indicates a low functional beta-cell mass. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine whether glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) enhanced glucose-dependent insulin secretion and glucagon suppression in islet recipients, and whether GLP-1 effects were dependent on functional beta-cell mass by simultaneously studying recipients of whole pancreas transplants. SETTING The study was performed in a clinical and translational research center. PARTICIPANTS Five intraportal islet and six portally drained pancreas transplant recipients participated in the study. INTERVENTION Subjects underwent glucose-potentiated arginine testing with GLP-1 (1.5 pmol . kg(-1) . min(-1)) or placebo infused on alternate randomized occasions, with 5 g arginine injected under basal and hyperglycemic clamp conditions. RESULTS Basal glucose was lower with increases in insulin and decreases in glucagon during GLP-1 vs. placebo in both groups. During the hyperglycemic clamp, a significantly greater glucose infusion rate was required with GLP-1 vs. placebo in both groups (P < 0.05), an effect more pronounced in the pancreas vs. islet group (P < 0.01). The increased glucose infusion rate was associated with significant increases in second-phase insulin secretion in both groups (P < 0.05) that also tended to be greater in the pancreas vs. islet group (P = 0.08), whereas glucagon was equivalently suppressed by the hyperglycemic clamp during GLP-1 and placebo infusions in both groups. The GLP-1-induced increase in second-phase insulin correlated with the beta-cell secretory capacity (P < 0.001). The proinsulin secretory ratio (PISR) during glucose-potentiated arginine was significantly greater with GLP-1 vs. placebo infusion in both groups (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS GLP-1 induced enhancement of glucose-dependent insulin secretion, but not glucagon suppression, in islet and pancreas transplant recipients, an effect dependent on the functional beta-cell mass that may be associated with depletion of mature beta-cell secretory granules.


Journal of Genetic Counseling | 2014

A Qualitative Study of Healthcare Providers’ Perspectives on the Implications of Genome-Wide Testing in Pediatric Clinical Practice

Marian Reiff; Rebecca Mueller; Surabhi Mulchandani; Nancy B. Spinner; Reed E. Pyeritz; Barbara A. Bernhardt

The utilization of genome-wide chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) in pediatric clinical practice provides an opportunity to consider how genetic diagnostics is evolving, and to prepare for the clinical integration of genome-wide sequencing technologies. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 15 healthcare providers (7 genetic counselors, 4 medical geneticists, and 4 non-genetics providers) to investigate the impact of CMA on clinical practice, and implications for providers, patients and families. Interviews were analyzed qualitatively using content analysis. Most providers reported that genomic testing enhanced their professional experience and was beneficial to patients, primarily due to the improved diagnostic rate compared with earlier chromosomal studies. Other effects on practice included moving towards genotype-first diagnosis and broadening indications for chromosomal testing. Opinions varied concerning informed consent and disclosure of results. The duty to disclose incidental findings (IFs) was noted; however concerns were raised about potential psychosocial harms of disclosing pre-symptomatic findings. Tensions were revealed between the need for comprehensive informed consent for all families and the challenges of communicating time-consuming and potentially anxiety-provoking information regarding uncertain and incidental findings that may be relevant only in rare cases. Genetic counselors can play an important role in liaising with families, health professionals and testing laboratories, providing education and guidance to non-genetics providers, and enabling families to receive adequate pre-and post-test information and follow-up care.


Endocrinology | 2012

Accumulation of Intrahepatic Islet Amyloid in a Nonhuman Primate Transplant Model

Chengyang Liu; Brigitte Koeberlein; Michael Feldman; Rebecca Mueller; Zhonglin Wang; Yanjing Li; Kristin Lane; Clifford C. Hoyt; John E. Tomaszewski; Ali Naji; Michael R. Rickels

Islet amyloid is hypothesized to play a role in nonimmunologic transplanted islet graft loss. We performed a quantitative histologic analysis of liver biopsies from intrahepatic islet grafts transplanted in streptozotocin-induced diabetic cynomolgus macaques. Seven animals treated with antithymocyte globulin (ATG) and rapamycin or ATG and rituximab experienced islet graft rejection with lymphocytic infiltrates present on islet graft biopsies. Except for one case involving the oldest and largest donor where amyloid was present on initial biopsy 1 month after transplant, none of the six other cases with rejection contained amyloid, including one case biopsied serially to 25 months. In contrast, four out of six animals treated with ATG and rituximab and rapamycin had no evidence of rejection at the time of biopsy (two animals that discontinued rapamycin had mild periislet lymphocytes), and all four cases followed more than 4 months demonstrated amyloid deposition at subsequent time points. Amyloid severity increased with time after transplant (r = 0.68; P < 0.05) and with decreasing islet β-cell area (r = -0.68; P < 0.05). In two islet recipients with no evidence of rejection and still normoglycemic and insulin independent at the first detection of amyloid, β-cell secretory capacity declined over time coincident with increasing amyloid severity and decreasing β-cell area, with both animals eventually becoming hyperglycemic and insulin dependent. Transplanted islet amyloid also developed in autologous islets placed sc. These results indicate that in cynomolgus macaques, transplanted islets may accumulate amyloid over time associated with subsequent decline in β-cell mass and function and support the development of intrahepatic islet amyloid as a potential mechanism for nonimmunologic islet graft loss.


Perspectives in Biology and Medicine | 2011

Is cystic fibrosis genetic medicine's canary?

Susan Lindee; Rebecca Mueller

In 1989 the gene that causes cystic fibrosis (CF) was identified in a search accompanied by intense anticipation that the gene, once discovered, would lead rapidly to gene therapy. Many hoped that the disease would effectively disappear. Those affected were going to inhale vectors packed with functioning genes, which would go immediately to work in the lungs. It was a bewitching image, repeatedly invoked in both scientific and popular texts. Gene therapy clinical trials were carried out with a range of strategies and occasionally success seemed close, but by 1996 the idea that gene therapy for CF would quickly provide a cure was being abandoned by the communities engaged with treatment and research. While conventional wisdom holds that the death of Jesse Gelsinger in an unrelated gene therapy trial in 1999 produced new skepticism about gene therapy, the CF story suggests a different trajectory, and some different lessons. This article considers the rise and fall of gene therapy for CF and suggests that CF may provide a particularly compelling case study of a failed genomic technology, perhaps even of a medical “canary.” The story of CF might be a kind of warning to us that genetic medicine may create as many problems as it solves, and that moving forward constructively with these techniques and practices requires many kinds of right information, not just about biology, but also about values, priorities, market forces, uncertainty, and consumer choice.


Personalized Medicine | 2017

How do providers discuss the results of pediatric exome sequencing with families

Sarah A. Walser; Allison Werner-Lin; Rebecca Mueller; Victoria A. Miller; Sawona Biswas; Barbara A. Bernhardt

AIM This study provides preliminary data on the process and content of returning results from exome sequencing offered to children through one of the Clinical Sequencing Exploratory Research (CSER) projects. MATERIALS & METHODS We recorded 25 sessions where providers returned diagnostic and secondary sequencing results to families. Data interpretation utilized inductive thematic analysis. RESULTS Typically, providers followed a results report and discussed diagnostic findings using technical genomic and sequencing concepts. We identified four provider processes for returning results: teaching genetic concepts; assessing family response; personalizing findings; and strengthening patient-provider relationships. CONCLUSION Sessions should reflect family interest in medical management and next steps, and minimize detailed genomic concepts. As the scope and complexity of sequencing increase, the traditional information-laden counseling model requires revision.


Journal of Psychosocial Oncology | 2017

Longitudinal cancer risk management trajectories of BRCA1/2 mutation-positive reproductive-age women

Jennifer L. Young; Allison Werner-Lin; Rebecca Mueller; Lindsey M. Hoskins; Norman Epstein; Mark H. Greene

ABSTRACT Young women with BRCA1/2 mutations face difficult health-care decisions regarding family formation, fertility, breastfeeding, and whether/when to undergo cancer risk-reducing surgery. This longitudinal qualitative study investigated these life choices during the reproductive years. We conducted two semistructured interviews over three years with 12 reproductive-age BRCA1/2-positive women. Researchers coded transcripts to examine the evolution of risk perceptions, risk management, and family planning decisions. To cope with the conflict between cancer risk reduction versus plans for pregnancy, breastfeeding, and child rearing, participants deliberately prioritized either risk reducing surgery or family formation goals. Implications for mutation carriers and health-care providers are outlined.


Journal of Genetic Counseling | 2016

An Exploratory Study of Employers’ Attitudes Towards a Clinical Doctorate in Genetic Counseling

Kathleen D. Valverde; Rebecca Mueller; Breah Paciotti; Laura Conway

Creation of an advanced degree in genetic counseling has been considered since the early 1980s. The Genetic Counseling Advanced Degree Task Force (GCADTF) was convened in 2012 to formally explore the potential suitability of a clinical doctorate (ClinD), though employer perspectives of advanced training were not part of the discussion. The conclusion of this group was that the field was not ready to move to an entry-level clinical doctorate at this time but that further education and research among other stakeholders was necessary (Nagy et al. 2014). In this study, we describe employers’ perspectives on developing a clinical doctorate in genetic counseling based upon thirty audio-recorded semi-structured phone interviews that were transcribed verbatim and qualitatively analyzed. Overall, employers expressed concerns regarding the economic viability of ClinD training but envisioned expanded roles for genetic counselors (especially in areas of education and research) and enhanced credibility. While some employers reported that they would provide flexibility and tuition assistance for acquisition of a ClinD, for many employers, support was contingent on perceived value of the degree. Some employers were not clear about the difference between a ClinD and a PhD, suggesting that there is a need for educating employers about advanced degree options for the genetic counseling field. Future research could include investigating employer attitudes about market needs, envisioned roles, and compensation formulas for counselors with a ClinD or other forms of advanced training.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2018

Gratitude, protective buffering, and cognitive dissonance: How families respond to pediatric whole exome sequencing in the absence of actionable results

Allison Werner-Lin; Lori Zaspel; Mae Carlson; Rebecca Mueller; Sarah A. Walser; Ria Desai; Barbara A. Bernhardt

Clinical genome and exome sequencing (CGES) may identify variants leading to targeted management of existing conditions. Yet, CGES often fails to identify pathogenic diagnostic variants and introduces uncertainties by detecting variants of uncertain significance (VUS) and secondary findings. This study investigated how families understand findings and adjust their perspectives on CGES. As part of NIHs Clinical Sequencing Exploratory Research Consortium, children were recruited from clinics at the Childrens Hospital of Pennsylvania (CHOP) and offered exome sequencing. Primary pathogenic and possibly pathogenic, and some secondary findings were returned. Investigators digitally recorded results disclosure sessions and conducted 3‐month follow up interviews with 10 adolescents and a parent. An interdisciplinary team coded all transcripts. Participants were initially disappointed with findings, yet reactions evolved within disclosure sessions and at 3‐month interviews toward acceptance and satisfaction. Families erroneously expected, and prepared extensively, to learn about risk for common conditions. During disclosure sessions, parents and adolescents varied in how they monitored and responded to each others reactions. Several misinterpreted, or overestimated, the utility of findings to attribute meaning and achieve closure for the CGES experience. Participants perceived testing as an opportunity to improve disease management despite results that did not introduce new treatments or diagnoses. Future research may examine whether families experience cognitive dissonance regarding discrepancies between expectations and findings, and how protective buffering minimizes the burden of disappointment on loved ones. As CGES is increasingly integrated into clinical care providers must contend with tempering family expectations and interpretations of findings while managing complex medical care.


Diabetes | 2005

Islet Cell Hormonal Responses to Hypoglycemia After Human Islet Transplantation for Type 1 Diabetes

Michael R. Rickels; Mark Schutta; Rebecca Mueller; James F. Markmann; Clyde F. Barker; Ali Naji; Karen L. Teff

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Ali Naji

University of Pennsylvania

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Karen L. Teff

Monell Chemical Senses Center

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Lindsey M. Hoskins

National Institutes of Health

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Mark H. Greene

National Institutes of Health

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Mark Schutta

University of Pennsylvania

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Michael Feldman

University of Pennsylvania

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