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Dive into the research topics where Samir J. Patel is active.

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Featured researches published by Samir J. Patel.


Kidney International | 2012

Donor-specific HLA-DQ antibodies may contribute to poor graft outcome after renal transplantation

J. DeVos; A. Osama Gaber; Richard J. Knight; Geoffrey A. Land; Wadi N. Suki; Lillian W. Gaber; Samir J. Patel

Increasing evidence suggests a detrimental effect of donor-specific antibodies directed against the human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A, -B, and -DR loci on renal allograft outcomes. Limited data exist on the impact of de novo HLA-DQ antibodies. Over a 3-year period, we prospectively monitored 347 renal transplant recipients without pre-transplant donor-specific antibodies for their development de novo. After 26 months of follow-up, 62 patients developed donor-specific antibodies, of which 48 had a HLA-DQ antibody either alone (33 patients) or in combination with an HLA-A, -B, or -DR antibody (15 patients). Only 14 patients developed a donor-specific HLA-A, -B, or -DR antibody without a HLA-DQ antibody present. Acute rejection occurred in 21% of the HLA-DQ-only patients, insignificant when compared with 11% of patients without donor-specific antibodies. At the last follow-up, the mean serum creatinine and the fraction of patients with proteinuria were significantly higher in those that developed only HLA-DQ than those without antibodies. The 3-year graft survival was significantly worse when HLA-DQ antibodies were combined with non-DQ antibodies (52%) compared with HLA-DQ alone, non-DQ antibodies alone, or no antibodies (92-94%). Thus, our prospective monitoring study found that donor-specific HLA-DQ antibodies were the most common type detected and these antibodies may contribute to inferior graft outcomes. Ongoing surveillance is necessary to determine the long-term outcome of patients developing HLA-DQ donor-specific antibodies.


Transplantation | 2014

Intermediate-Term Graft Loss After Renal Transplantation is Associated With Both Donor-Specific Antibody and Acute Rejection

J. DeVos; A. O. Gaber; Larry D. Teeter; Edward A. Graviss; Samir J. Patel; Geoffrey A. Land; Linda W. Moore; Richard J. Knight

Background Renal transplant recipients with de novo DSA (dDSA) experience higher rates of rejection and worse graft survival than dDSA-free recipients. This study presents a single-center review of dDSA monitoring in a large, multi-ethnic cohort of renal transplant recipients. Methods The authors performed a nested case-control study of adult kidney and kidney-pancreas recipients from July 2007 through July 2011. Cases were defined as dDSA-positive whereas controls were all DSA-negative transplant recipients. DSA were determined at 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months posttransplant, and every 6 months thereafter. Results Of 503 recipients in the analysis, 24% developed a dDSA, of whom 73% had dDSA against DQ antigen. Median time to dDSA was 6.1 months (range 0.2–44.6 months). After multivariate analysis, African American race, kidney-pancreas recipient, and increasing numbers of human leukocyte antigen mismatches were independent risk factors for dDSA. Recipients with dDSA were more likely to suffer an acute rejection (AR) (35% vs. 10%, P<0.001), an antibody-mediated AR (16% vs. 0.3%, P<0.001), an AR ascribed to noncompliance (8% vs. 2%, P=0.001), and a recurrent AR (6% vs. 1%, P=0.002) than dDSA-negative recipients. At a median follow-up of 31 months, the death-censored actuarial graft survival of dDSA recipients was worse than the DSA-free cohort (P=0.002). Yet, for AR-free recipients, there was no difference in graft survival between cohorts (P=0.66). Conclusions Development of dDSA was associated with an increased incidence of graft loss, yet the detrimental effect of dDSA was limited in the intermediate term to recipients with AR.


Transplantation | 2008

Risk factors and consequences of delayed graft function in deceased donor renal transplant patients receiving antithymocyte globulin induction

Samir J. Patel; Benjamin T. Duhart; Amy G. Krauss; Linda W. Moore; Maria F. Egidi; Hosein Shokouh Amiri; Lillian W. Gaber; A. Osama Gaber

Background. Induction rabbit antithymocyte globulin (rATG) is largely used in renal allograft recipients at risk for delayed graft function (DGF) and immunologic rejection. The purpose of our study was to characterize risk factors and outcomes associated with DGF when it occurs in recipients undergoing routine rATG induction. Methods. We retrospectively reviewed our experience in a predominantly high-risk population receiving modern immunosuppressive regimens. Results. Of 231 deceased-donor transplants, high-risk characteristics included African American race (68%), retransplants (12%), peak panel reactive antibody of atleast 20% (19%), expanded criteria donor kidney (15%), and cold ischemia time exceeding 24 hr (27%). DGF occurred in 29% of patients. rATG was continued to a dose of 7.3 mg/kg in DGF patients and 5 mg/kg in non-DGF patients (P<0.0001). Risk factors for DGF were recipient body mass index greater than 30 kg/m2 (odds ratio [OR]=1.5, P=0.02), female donor/male recipient pairings (OR=1.5, P=0.033), sirolimus use (OR=1.7, P=0.003), and donor creatinine more than 1.5 mg/dL (OR=1.6, P=0.016). One-year patient survival (99% non-DGF, 91% DGF; P=0.001) and acute rejection incidence through 36 months (11% non-DGF, 22.4% DGF; P=0.025) differed between groups. DGF patients experienced a higher rejection rate during the second and third years posttransplant. Death-censored graft survival was similar throughout 36 months. Conclusion. In kidney transplantation with routine rATG induction, DGF was related to size and gender, donor creatinine, and immunosuppressive protocol. Despite low first-year rejection rates, DGF was associated with inferior patient survival. Importantly, patients with DGF continued to be at risk for rejection beyond the first year. Donor and recipient selection impacts short-term outcomes, and induction alone may not confer a long-term advantage without further modification of baseline therapy.


Pharmacogenomics | 2010

Using genetic and clinical factors to predict tacrolimus dose in renal transplant recipients

Ping Wang; Yong Mao; Juan Razo; Xiaobo Zhou; Stephen T. C. Wong; Samir J. Patel; Erin N. Elliott; Erin Shea; Alan H.B. Wu; A. Osama Gaber

AIMS Tacrolimus has a narrow therapeutic window and shows significant interindividual difference in dose requirement. In this study we aim to first identify genetic factors that impact tacrolimus dose using a candidate gene association approach, and then generate a personalized algorithm combining identified genetic and clinical factors to predict individualized tacrolimus dose. MATERIALS & METHODS We screened 768 SNPs in 15 candidate genes in metabolism, transport and calcineurin inhibition pathways of tacrolimus, for association with tacrolimus dose in a discovery cohort of 96 patients. RESULTS Four polymorphisms in CYP3A5 and one polymorphism in CYP3A4 were identified to be significantly associated with tacrolimus stable dose (p < 8.46 × 10(-5)). The same SNPs were identified when dose-normalized trough tacrolimus concentration was analyzed. The CYP3A5*1 allele was associated with significantly higher stable dose, bigger dose increase, higher risk of being underdosed and lower incidence of post-transplant hyperlipidemia. ABCB1 polymorphisms were not associated with stable dose. No significant difference was found between CYP3A5 expressers and nonexpressers in incidence of acute rejection and time to first rejection. Age, ethnicity and CYP3A inhibitor use could predict 30% of tacrolimus dosing variability. Adding the identified genetic polymorphisms to the algorithm increased the predictability to 58%. In two validation cohorts of 77 and 64 patients, the algorithm containing both genetic and clinical factors produced correlation coefficients of 0.63 and 0.42, respectively. This algorithm gave a prediction of the stable doses closer to the actual doses when compared with another algorithm based only on the CYP3A5 genotype. CONCLUSION CYP3A5 genotype is the most significant genetic factor that impacts tacrolimus dose among the genes studied. This study generated the first pharmacogenomics model that predicts tacrolimus stable dose based on age, ethnicity, genotype and comedication use. Our results highlight the importance of incorporating both genetic and clinical, demographic factors into dose prediction.


Journal of Transplantation | 2010

Bortezomib in Kidney Transplantation

Rajeev Raghavan; Abdallah Jeroudi; Katafan Achkar; A. Osama Gaber; Samir J. Patel; Abdul Abdellatif

Although current therapies for pretransplant desensitization and treatment of antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) have had some success, they do not specifically deplete plasma cells that produce antihuman leukocyte antigen (HLA) antibodies. Bortezomib, a proteasome inhibitor approved for the treatment of multiple myeloma (a plasma cell neoplasm), induces plasma cell apoptosis. In this paper we review the current body of literature regarding the use of this biological agent in the field of transplantation. Although limited experience with bortezomib may seem to show promise in the realm of transplant recipients desensitization and treatment of AMR, there is also experience that may suggest otherwise. Bortezomibs role in desensitization protocols and treatment of AMR will be defined better as more clinical data and trials become available.


Transplantation Proceedings | 2010

A Review of the Evidence for Use of Thymoglobulin Induction in Renal Transplantation

A. Osama Gaber; Richard J. Knight; Samir J. Patel; Lillian W. Gaber

Depleting antilymphocyte, or antithymocyte antibodies, have long been an integral part of induction regimens and continue today to be used in the management of patients at risk of early rejection or those in whom the introduction of calcineurins or other immune suppressants must be delayed. Registry data demonstrate that the most commonly used depleting antibody, rabbit anti-human thymocyte globulin (rATG), is associated with improved outcomes following renal transplantation in high-risk patients, particularly in conjunction with steroid-avoidance regimens. Two prospective randomized trials in high-risk renal allograft patients have also demonstrated an advantage of r-ATG induction compared to the nondepleting interleukin receptor (IL2RA) antibodies. In low-immunologic-risk patients, however, r-ATG induction and IL2RA induction appear to be equivalent in terms of rejection prophylaxis and long-term function. Other studies have shown that sequential rATG-containing regimens were superior to no induction and allowed for successful late introduction of calcineurin inhibitors. The side effect profile of the depleting antibody included increased incidence of fever, hematologic abnormalities, cytomegalovirus infections when prophylaxis was not employed, and in some studies, increased incidence of posttransplant lymphoproliferative disease. This review describes the evidence supporting the use of depleting ATGs in kidney transplantation.


Transplantation | 2013

Screening for BK viremia reduces but does not eliminate the risk of BK nephropathy: A single-center retrospective analysis

Richard J. Knight; Lillian W. Gaber; Samir J. Patel; J. DeVos; Linda W. Moore; A. Osama Gaber

Background This study reviewed the outcomes of a screening protocol for BK viremia to determine if early diagnosis, followed by immunosuppression minimization, would prevent progression to nephropathy and graft loss. Methods This review included 369 renal transplant recipients tested for BK virus at serial time points after transplantation. Management included immunosuppression minimization plus cidofovir treatment for BK nephropathy. Results Recipients received tacrolimus-based immunosuppression, with 8% prednisone-free and 6% who received desensitization. With a mean follow-up of 22±10 months, 16% (n=57) of recipients became BK viremia positive. The median (range) time to diagnosis was 3 (1–17) months. Because renal biopsy was performed selectively, 59% of recipients underwent biopsy, with 47% showing BK nephropathy. Seventy-four percent of recipients cleared the virus at a median (range) time of 9 (3–33) months, with four grafts lost to BK nephropathy. Cidofovir-treated recipients displayed a higher viral load at diagnosis but showed equivalent renal function at last evaluation. In multivariate analysis, recipient age, Asian ethnicity, deceased donor, and prednisone use were factors independently associated with BK viremia. Actuarial survival of BK-positive grafts was worse than that of BK-negative grafts (P<0.01, log-rank test). At 9 and 12 months, the mean estimated glomerular filtration rate of the BK-positive group was lower than that of the BK-negative cohort (P=0.02). Conclusions Despite using a screening protocol combined with immunosuppression minimization, BK-positive recipients had a greater risk of graft loss and impaired function than recipients free of infection. Future investigations should focus on practices to prevent BK viremia.


Clinical Transplantation | 2011

Rabbit antithymocyte induction and dosing in deceased donor renal transplant recipients over 60 yr of age

Samir J. Patel; Richard J. Knight; Wadi N. Suki; Abdul Abdellatif; Benjamin T. Duhart; Amy G. Krauss; Saurabh Mannan; Nosratollah Nezakatgoo; A. Osama Gaber

Patel SJ, Knight RJ, Suki WN, Abdellatif A, Duhart BT, Krauss AG, Mannan S, Nezakatgoo N, Gaber AO. Rabbit antithymocyte induction and dosing in deceased donor renal transplant recipients over 60 yr of age.
Clin Transplant 2011: 25: E250–E256.


Transplant Infectious Disease | 2014

Observations on the use of cidofovir for BK virus infection in renal transplantation

Samantha A. Kuten; Samir J. Patel; Richard J. Knight; Lillian W. Gaber; J. DeVos; A.O. Gaber

In renal transplantation, BK virus infection can result in significant graft nephropathy and loss. While reduction in immunosuppression (IS) is considered standard therapy, adjunct agents may be warranted. Data are suggestive of a possible role of cidofovir for the management of BK. This study aims to describe the course of BK viremia (BKV) in a large cohort of renal transplant patients receiving adjunct cidofovir.


Expert Opinion on Drug Safety | 2009

Considerations in sirolimus use in the early and late post-transplant periods

Samir J. Patel; Erin N. Elliott; Richard J. Knight; Lillian W. Gaber; A. Osama Gaber

Sirolimus is an antiproliferative immunosuppressive agent that inhibits the mammalian target of rapamycin. It is highly effective in preventing acute renal allograft rejection and can be used with either calcineurin inhibitors, antimetabolites or corticosteroids. Early studies in renal transplantation have provided insight into optimal dosing strategies of sirolimus and of concomitant immunosuppressive agents. Familiarity with the adverse effect profile of sirolimus and pharmacokinetic and dynamic interactions with other immunosuppressive agents allows for earlier recognition and better management of sirolimus-related complications. The role of sirolimus in preserving long-term renal function, post-transplant malignancies and in prevention of atherosclerosis is currently being considered.

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A. Osama Gaber

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Edward A. Graviss

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Lillian W. Gaber

Houston Methodist Hospital

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J. DeVos

Houston Methodist Hospital

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A. O. Gaber

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Linda W. Moore

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Samantha A. Kuten

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Larry D. Teeter

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Geoffrey A. Land

Houston Methodist Hospital

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