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Dive into the research topics where Shivam Saxena is active.

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Featured researches published by Shivam Saxena.


Experimental Diabetes Research | 2016

Conserved Metabolic Changes in Nondiabetic and Type 2 Diabetic Bariatric Surgery Patients: Global Metabolomic Pilot Study

Konrad Sarosiek; Kirk L. Pappan; Ankit V. Gandhi; Shivam Saxena; Christopher Y. Kang; Heather McMahon; Galina Chipitsyna; David S. Tichansky; Hwyda A. Arafat

The goal of this study was to provide insight into the mechanism by which bariatric surgical procedures led to weight loss and improvement or resolution of diabetes. Global biochemical profiling was used to evaluate changes occurring in nondiabetic and type 2 diabetic (T2D) patients experiencing either less extreme sleeve gastrectomy or a full gastric bypass. We were able to identify changes in metabolism that were affected by standard preoperation liquid weight loss diet as well as by bariatric surgery itself. Preoperation weight-loss diet was associated with a strong lipid metabolism signature largely related to the consumption of adipose reserves for energy production. Glucose usage shift away from glycolytic pyruvate production toward pentose phosphate pathway, via glucose-6-phosphate, appeared to be shared across all patients regardless of T2D status or bariatric surgery procedure. Our results suggested that bariatric surgery might promote antioxidant defense and insulin sensitivity through both increased heme synthesis and HO activity or expression. Changes in histidine and its metabolites following surgery might be an indication of altered gut microbiome ecology or liver function. This initial study provided broad understanding of how metabolism changed globally in morbidly obese nondiabetic and T2D patients following weight-loss surgery.


Pancreatic disorders & therapy | 2013

RAN GTPase and Osteopontin in Pancreatic Cancer

Shivam Saxena; Ankit V. Gandhi; Pei-Wen Lim; Daniel Relles; Konrad Sarosiek; Christopher Y. Kang; Galina Chipitsyna; Jocelyn Sendecki; Charles J. Yeo; Hwyda A. Arafat

INTRODUCTION Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) has the worst prognosis among cancers, mainly due to the high incidence of early metastases. RAN small GTPase (RAN) is a protein that plays physiological roles in the regulation of nuclear transport and microtubule spindle assembly. RAN was recently shown to mediate the invasive functions of the prometastatic protein osteopontin (OPN) in breast cancer cells. We and others have shown previously that high levels of OPN are present in PDA. In this study, we analyzed the expression and correlation of RAN with OPN in human pancreatic lesions, and explored their regulation in PDA cell lines. METHODS Real time PCR was used to analyze RAN and OPN mRNA levels in PDA, adjacent non-malignant, and benign pancreatic tissues. Expression levels were correlated with survival and different clinicopathological parameters using different statistical methods. Transient transfection studies using OPN and RAN plasmids, and knockdown experiments using siRNA were used to examine their mutual regulation. RESULTS OPN and RAN levels highly correlated with each other (p<0.0001). OPN or RAN levels did not correlate with venous lymphatic invasion, diabetes, obesity, T stage, BMI, or survival. However, we found a significant association between RAN levels and perineural invasion (HR=0.79, 95% CI 0.59, 1.07; p=0.0378.). OPN and RAN colocalized in PDA tissues and cell lines. Increasing RAN expression in PDA cells induced OPN transcription and RAN silencing reduced total OPN levels. OPN did not have any significant effect on RAN transcription. CONCLUSIONS The high levels of RAN in PDA and its correlation with OPN and with perineural invasion suggest that RAN may contribute to PDA metastasis and progression through the induction of OPN. RANs role in the regulation of OPN in PDA is unique and could provide potential novel therapeutic strategies to combat PDA aggressiveness.


Laryngoscope | 2015

Tubeless tracheotomy for survival airway surgery in the leporine model.

Maurits Boon; James J. Daniero; Shivam Saxena; Mark Balceniuk

The ideal animal experimental tracheostomy technique is one that is 1) safe and easy to perform, 2) requires no tracheostomy tube, and 3) requires minimal cleaning or suctioning to maintain patency. The leporine model for airway injury has been well established and offers an inexpensive and practical animal model for experimental evaluation. However, previous research has demonstrated a high mortality rate with survival airway surgery in rabbits. This study demonstrates the feasibility of airway management in the leporine model using a simple maturing suture tracheostomy that avoids a tracheostomy tube.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2014

Overexpressing TNF-Alpha in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma Cells and Fibroblasts Modifies Cell Survival and Reduces Fatty Acid Synthesis via Downregulation of Sterol Regulatory Element Binding Protein-1 and Activation of Acetyl CoA Carboxylase

Mazhar Al-Zoubi; Galina Chipitsyna; Shivam Saxena; Konrad Sarosiek; Ankit V. Gandhi; Christopher Y. Kang; Daniel Relles; Jocelyn Andrel-Sendecki; Terry Hyslop; Charles J. Yeo; Hwyda A. Arafat

The effect of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) gene delivery has been suggested as a potentially useful therapeutic approach to improve the chemotherapeutic treatment of patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA), but the exact mechanism of its action is not clearly understood. In this study, we analyzed the expression profile of TNF-α in PDA tissue and explored its potential role in fatty acid synthase (FAS) regulation in PDA cells and in fibroblasts. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to examine the expression of TNF-α in PDA, matching adjacent tissues, and benign lesions. Logistic regression models with robust variance were used to analyze the gene expression levels, and Kaplan–Meier survival curves were generated. In vitro, we overexpressed the TNF-α gene in PDA cells and fibroblasts and analyzed its effect on cell survival, migration, and on members of the FAS signaling pathway. We also evaluated TNF-α effects on a panel of inflammation-, angiogenesis-, and metastasis-related markers. In the tumor tissue of PDA patients, compared with their matched adjacent tissue, expression levels of TNF-α were not statistically different and did not correlate with survival or any other examined clinicopathological features. Overexpression of TNF-α significantly (p < 0.05) reduced PDA and fibroblast cell migration. In PDA cells that highly overexpress TNF-α, this was associated with a significant reduction of FAS mRNA and protein expression levels and significant (p < 0.05) reduction of SREBP-1 and ACC mRNA. Reduction of FAS by TNF-α was inhibited when either SREBP-1 or ACC was knocked down by siRNA. PDA cells and fibroblasts that overexpress TNF-α displayed differential regulation of several inflammation-related markers and reduced levels of metastasis-related genes. Our data demonstrate a previously unknown multi-targeted involvement of TNF-α in PDA lipogenesis and inflammation and metastasis and suggest that intratumoral introduction of TNF-α may have the potential as a novel therapeutic approach in human PDA.


Journal of Thyroid Research | 2016

Hypothyroidism in Pancreatic Cancer: Role of Exogenous Thyroid Hormone in Tumor Invasion—Preliminary Observations

Konrad Sarosiek; Ankit V. Gandhi; Shivam Saxena; Christopher Y. Kang; Galina Chipitsyna; Charles J. Yeo; Hwyda A. Arafat

According to the epidemiological studies, about 4.4% of American general elderly population has a pronounced hypothyroidism and relies on thyroid hormone supplements daily. The prevalence of hypothyroidism in our patients with pancreatic cancer was much higher, 14.1%. A retrospective analysis was performed on patients who underwent pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple procedure) or distal pancreatectomy and splenectomy (DPS) at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, from 2005 to 2012. The diagnosis of hypothyroidism was correlated with clinicopathologic parameters including tumor stage, grade, and survival. To further understand how thyroid hormone affects pancreatic cancer behavior, functional studies including wound-induced cell migration, proliferation, and invasion were performed on pancreatic cancer cell lines, MiaPaCa-2 and AsPC-1. We found that hypothyroid patients taking exogenous thyroid hormone were more than three times likely to have perineural invasion, and about twice as likely to have higher T stage, nodal spread, and overall poorer prognostic stage (P < 0.05). Pancreatic cancer cell line studies demonstrated that exogenous thyroid hormone treatment increased cell proliferation, migration, and invasion (P < 0.05). We conclude that exogenous thyroid hormone may contribute to the progression of pancreatic cancer.


Laryngoscope | 2014

Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound-Guided Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy of the Ocular Conjunctiva

Mindy Rabinowitz; Daniel A. Merton; Ji-Bin Liu; Shivam Saxena; John Pluta; John R. Eisenbrey; Adam L. Baker; Michael P. Rabinowitz; Sara Lally; David Cognetti; Barry B. Goldberg; Edmund A. Pribitkin; Joseph Curry

Sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) has been utilized for cutaneous melanoma and other malignancies arising from the eye and ocular adnexa. Currently, SLNB requires blue dyes and/or radiopharmaceuticals; both of which have significant shortcomings. This study sought to evaluate the feasibility of SLNB with the use of real‐time, contrast‐enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) as an alternative technique for tumors arising in the conjunctiva.


Gastroenterology | 2013

Mo1839 Osteopontin (Opn) Isoforms, Diabetes, Obesity, and Cancer; What's One Got to Do With the Other? A New Role for Opn

Konrad Sarosiek; Elizabeth Jones; Galina Chipitsyna; Mazhar Al-Zoubi; Shivam Saxena; Christopher Y. Kang; Ankit V. Gandhi; David S. Tichansky; Charles J. Yeo; Hwyda A. Arafat

Alternative splicing of osteopontin (OPN) produces three isoforms: OPNa, OPNb, and OPNc. The aims of this study were to examine the expression profile of OPN isoforms in sera from patients with pancreatic lesions and to determine their correlation with the presence of comorbid systemic inflammatory conditions, such as diabetes and/or obesity. Sera from 90 patients undergoing pancreatic surgery and 29 healthy volunteers were analyzed. Seventeen patients were diabetics, 17 were obese, and 6 had both diabetes and obesity. In patients with pancreatic lesions, OPNb was expressed in 48 % of the patients’ sera, OPNc in 34 %, and both in 5 %. The presence of diabetes and/or obesity was associated with complete disappearance of OPNb and expression of only OPNc. OPNc presence was significantly associated with diabetes and obesity (OR = 7.06 [95 % CI 1.97–23.3]; p = 0.003). No OPNb or OPNc was detected in the normal sera. Overexpression of OPNb and OPNc isoforms in PDA cells significantly (p < 0.05) increased their activity in soft-agar colony formation and wound healing assays, induced the transcription of interleukin (IL)-6, and reduced tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interferon gamma (IFN-γ), and IL-10. Our data show for the first time the significant association between serum OPNc and diabetes and/or obesity. Unraveling the functional role of OPN isoforms in systemic inflammation is essential to understanding their significance as therapeutic targets in diabetes and obesity, and during metastasis development in PDA.


Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | 2015

Osteopontin (OPN) isoforms, diabetes, obesity, and cancer; what is one got to do with the other? A new role for OPN.

Konrad Sarosiek; Elizabeth Jones; Galina Chipitsyna; Mazhar Al-Zoubi; Christopher Y. Kang; Shivam Saxena; Ankit V. Gandhi; Jocelyn Sendiky; Charles J. Yeo; Hwyda A. Arafat


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2013

Differential Expression of Cytochrome P450 Omega-hydroxylase Isoforms and Their Association with Clinicopathological Features in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

Ankit V. Gandhi; Shivam Saxena; Daniel Relles; Konrad Sarosiek; Christopher Y. Kang; Galina Chipitsyna; Jocelyn Sendecki; Charles J. Yeo; Hwyda A. Arafat


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology | 2013

Tonsillar Kaposi's sarcoma

Shivam Saxena; Joseph Curry; Madalina Tuluc

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Ankit V. Gandhi

Thomas Jefferson University

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Galina Chipitsyna

Thomas Jefferson University

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Hwyda A. Arafat

Thomas Jefferson University

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Charles J. Yeo

Thomas Jefferson University

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Konrad Sarosiek

Thomas Jefferson University

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Daniel Relles

Thomas Jefferson University

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David S. Tichansky

Thomas Jefferson University

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Mazhar Al-Zoubi

Thomas Jefferson University

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Elizabeth Jones

Thomas Jefferson University

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