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Featured researches published by Susan Gabriel.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice | 2015

Children and Adults With Frequent Hospitalizations for Asthma Exacerbation, 2012-2013: A Multicenter Observational Study.

Kohei Hasegawa; Jane C. Bittner; Stephanie Nonas; Samantha J. Stoll; Taketo Watase; Susan Gabriel; Vivian Herrera; Carlos A. Camargo; Taruna Aurora; Barry E. Brenner; Mark A. Brown; William J. Calhoun; John E. Gough; Ravi C. Gutta; Jonathan Heidt; Mehdi Khosravi; Wendy C. Moore; Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman; Richard Nowak; Jason Ahn; Veronica Pei; Valerie G. Press; Beatrice D. Probst; Sima K. Ramratnam; Heather N. Hartman; Carly Snipes; Suzanne S. Teuber; Stacy A. Trent; Roberto Villarreal; Scott Youngquist

BACKGROUND Earlier studies reported that many patients were frequently hospitalized for asthma exacerbation. However, there have been no recent multicenter studies to characterize this patient population with high morbidity and health care utilization. OBJECTIVE To examine the proportion and characteristics of children and adults with frequent hospitalizations for asthma exacerbation. METHODS A multicenter chart review study of patients aged 2 to 54 years who were hospitalized for asthma exacerbation at 1 of 25 hospitals across 18 US states during the period 2012 to 2013 was carried out. The primary outcome was frequency of hospitalizations for asthma exacerbation in the past year (including the index hospitalization). RESULTS The cohort included 369 children (aged 2-17 years) and 555 adults (aged 18-54 years) hospitalized for asthma exacerbation. Over the 12-month period, 36% of the children and 42% of the adults had 2 or more (frequent) hospitalizations for asthma exacerbation. Among patients with frequent hospitalizations, guideline-recommended outpatient management was suboptimal. For example, among adults, 32% were not on inhaled corticosteroids at the time of index hospitalization and 75% had no evidence of a previous evaluation by an asthma specialist. At hospital discharge, among adults with frequent hospitalizations who had used no controller medications previously, 37% were not prescribed inhaled corticosteroids. Likewise, during a 3-month postdischarge period, 64% of the adults with frequent hospitalizations were not referred to an asthma specialist. Although the proportion of patients who did not receive these guideline-recommended outpatient care appeared higher in adults, these preventive measures were still underutilized in children; for example, 38% of the children with frequent hospitalizations were not referred to asthma specialist after the index hospitalization. CONCLUSIONS This multicenter study of US patients hospitalized with asthma exacerbation demonstrated a disturbingly high proportion of patients with frequent hospitalizations and ongoing evidence of suboptimal longitudinal asthma care.


Annals of Allergy Asthma & Immunology | 2015

Underuse of guideline-recommended long-term asthma management in children hospitalized to the intensive care unit: a multicenter observational study

Kohei Hasegawa; Jason Ahn; Mark A. Brown; Valerie G. Press; Susan Gabriel; Vivian Herrera; Jane C. Bittner; Carlos A. Camargo; Taruna Aurora; Barry E. Brenner; William J. Calhoun; John E. Gough; Ravi C. Gutta; Jonathan Heidt; Mehdi Khosravi; Wendy C. Moore; Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman; Stephanie Nonas; Richard Nowak; Veronica Pei; Beatrice D. Probst; Sima K. Ramratnam; Matthew Tallar; Carly Snipes; Suzanne S. Teuber; Stacy A. Trent; Roberto Villarreal; Taketo Watase; Scott Youngquist

BACKGROUND Despite the significant burden of childhood asthma, little is known about prevention-oriented management before and after hospitalizations for asthma exacerbation. OBJECTIVE To investigate the proportion and characteristics of children admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) for asthma exacerbation and the frequency of guideline-recommended outpatient management before and after the hospitalization. METHODS A 14-center medical record review study of children aged 2 to 17 years hospitalized for asthma exacerbation during 2012-2013. Primary outcome was admission to the ICU; secondary outcomes were 2 preventive factors: inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) use and evaluation by asthma specialists in the pre- and posthospitalization periods. RESULTS Among 385 children hospitalized for asthma, 130 (34%) were admitted to the ICU. Risk factors for ICU admission were female sex, having public insurance, a marker of chronic asthma severity (ICS use), and no prior evaluation by an asthma specialist. Among children with ICU admission, guideline-recommended outpatient management was suboptimal (eg, 65% were taking ICSs at the time of index hospitalization, and 19% had evidence of a prior evaluation by specialist). At hospital discharge, among children with ICU admission who had not previously used controller medications, 85% were prescribed ICSs. Furthermore, 62% of all children with ICU admission were referred to an asthma specialist during the 3-month posthospitalization period. CONCLUSION In this multicenter study of US children hospitalized with asthma exacerbation, one-third of children were admitted to the ICU. In this high-risk group, we observed suboptimal pre- and posthospitalization asthma care. These findings underscore the importance of continued efforts to improve prevention-oriented asthma care at all clinical encounters.


ClinicoEconomics and Outcomes Research | 2014

Group-based trajectory modeling to assess adherence to biologics among patients with psoriasis

Y. Li; Huanxue Zhou; Beilei Cai; Kristijan H. Kahler; Haijun Tian; Susan Gabriel; Stephen Arcona

Background Proportion of days covered (PDC), a commonly used adherence metric, does not provide information about the longitudinal course of adherence to treatment over time. Group-based trajectory model (GBTM) is an alternative method that overcomes this limitation. Methods The statistical principles of GBTM and PDC were applied to assess adherence during a 12-month follow-up in psoriasis patients starting treatment with a biologic. The optimal GBTM model was determined on the basis of the balance between each model’s Bayesian information criterion and the percentage of patients in the smallest group in each model. Variables potentially predictive of adherence were evaluated. Results In all, 3,249 patients were included in the analysis. Four GBTM adherence groups were suggested by the optimal model, and patients were categorized as demonstrating continuously high adherence, high-then-low adherence, moderate-then-low adherence, or consistently moderate adherence during follow-up. For comparison, four PDC groups were constructed: PDC Group 4 (PDC ≥75%), PDC Group 3 (25%≤ PDC <50%), PDC Group 2 (PDC <25%), and PDC Group 1 (50%≤ PDC <75%). Our findings suggest that the majority of patients (97.9%) from PDC Group 2 demonstrated moderate-then-low adherence, whereas 96.4% of patients from PDC Group 4 showed continuously high adherence. The remaining PDC-based categorizations did not capture patients with uniform adherence behavior based on GBTM. In PDC Group 3, 25.3%, 17.2%, and 57.5% of patients exhibited GBTM-defined consistently moderate adherence, moderate-then-low adherence, or high-then-low adherence, respectively. In PDC Group 1, 70.8%, 23.6%, and 5.7% of patients had consistently moderate adherence, high-then-low adherence, and continuously high adherence, respectively. Additional analyses suggested GBTM-based categorization was best predicted by patient age, sex, certain comorbidities, and particular drug use. Conclusion GBTM is a more appropriate way to model dynamic behaviors and offers researchers an alternative to more traditional drug adherence measurements.


Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders | 2013

Health care utilization and costs among patients with AD with and without dysphagia.

Haijun Tian; Safiya Abouzaid; Marwan N. Sabbagh; Wei Chen; Susan Gabriel; Kristijan H. Kahler; Edward Kim

Objective:To assess health care utilization and associated costs among patients with Alzheimer disease (AD), with and without dysphagia. Methods:MarketScan® Commercial and Medicare databases were analyzed. Patients with a diagnosis of AD with and without dysphagia between October 2006 and September 2010 were included. Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor usage, the number of outpatient and emergency room (ER) visits and hospitalizations, and associated health care costs were assessed. All variables were measured 1 year after the initial diagnosis of AD at the patient level. Patients with dysphagia were matched to patients without dysphagia using propensity score-matching (PSM) methods. Regression models were conducted to compare utilization and costs between the 2 groups. Results:A total of 485 patients with dysphagia and 8492 patients without dysphagia were included. Before matching, patients with dysphagia were older (81.1 vs. 79.8 y), and had higher Charlson Comorbidity Index scores (2.4 vs. 1.7). After matching, all baseline covariates were not statistically different between the 2 groups. Multivariate regression results showed that patients with dysphagia had a higher likelihood of all-cause hospitalizations [odds ratio (OR)=2.26, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.70-2.99, P=0.001] and all-cause ER visits (OR=1.45, 95% CI=1.12-1.87, P=0.007) compared with patients without dysphagia; they also had a higher likelihood for AD-related hospitalizations and ER visits. The difference in all-cause total health care, ER, and hospitalization costs between patients with and without dysphagia were


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2016

Association of Guideline‐concordant Acute Asthma Care in the Emergency Department With Shorter Hospital Length of Stay: A Multicenter Observational Study

Kohei Hasegawa; Barry E. Brenner; Richard M. Nowak; Stacy A. Trent; Vivian Herrera; Susan Gabriel; Jane C. Bittner; Carlos A. Camargo; Michael S. Runyon

3620 (95% CI=


Journal of Dermatological Treatment | 2017

Patient-reported impact of chronic urticaria compared with psoriasis in theUnited States

Meryl Mendelson; Jonathan A. Bernstein; Susan Gabriel; Maria-Magdalena Balp; Haijun Tian; Jeffrey Vietri; Mark Lebwohl

2863-


ClinicoEconomics and Outcomes Research | 2014

Costs and health care resource utilization among chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients with newly acquired pneumonia

Junji Lin; Y. Li; Haijun Tian; Michael J. Goodman; Susan Gabriel; Tara Nazareth; Stuart J. Turner; Stephen Arcona; Kristijan H. Kahler

4375),


The Primary Care Companion To The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2012

Resource utilization and costs associated with insomnia treatment in patients with major depressive disorder.

Haijun Tian; Safiya Abouzaid; Susan Gabriel; Kristijan H. Kahler; Edward Kim

258 (95% CI=


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

Increasing patient participation in drug development

Paul Wicks; Maria Lowe; Susan Gabriel; Slaven Sikirica; Rahul Sasane; Stephen Arcona

241-


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2018

Burden of chronic urticaria relative to psoriasis in five European countries

Maria-Magdalena Balp; Sam Khalil; Haijun Tian; Susan Gabriel; J. Vietri; T. Zuberbier

274), and

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Barry E. Brenner

Case Western Reserve University

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Stacy A. Trent

University of Colorado Denver

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