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Featured researches published by Tusar K. Desai.


Gut | 2012

The incidence of oesophageal adenocarcinoma in non-dysplastic Barrett's oesophagus: a meta-analysis

Tusar K. Desai; Kumar Krishnan; Niharika R. Samala; Jashanpreet Singh; John D. Cluley; Subaiah Perla; Colin W. Howden

Introduction The risk of oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) in non-dysplastic Barretts oesophagus (BO) may have been overestimated. The objective was to estimate the incidence of OAC in patients with BO without dysplasia. Methods The authors searched MEDLINE and EMBASE from 1966 to 2011 and performed a bibliographic review of previous publications, excluding abstracts, non-peer-reviewed publications and those not published in English, for prospective or retrospective studies of the incidence of OAC in patients with BO. They excluded patients with any degree of dysplasia at baseline and those without documented intestinal metaplasia. Studies were independently reviewed by two individuals. 57 of 3450 studies were included. The authors extracted information on number of patients with BO, length of follow-up, incident cases of OAC, mean age of patients, country of origin, whether prospective or retrospective, mean length of BO segments and mortality from causes other than OAC. Study quality was assessed by the Ottawa Newcastle criteria. Results The 57 included studies comprised 11u2008434 patients and 58u2008547 patient-years of follow-up. The pooled annual incidence of OAC was 0.33% (95% CI 0.28% to 0.38%). Among 16 studies that provided appropriate information on mortality, there were 56 incident cases of OAC but 684 deaths from apparently unrelated causes. Among 16 studies that provided information on patients with short-segment BO, the annual incidence of OAC was only 0.19%. Conclusions The incidence of OAC in non-dysplastic BO is around 1 per 300 patients per year. The incidence of OAC in short-segment BO is under 1 per 500 patients per year.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2008

Phlebotomy Improves Therapeutic Response to Interferon in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C: A Meta-Analysis of Six Prospective Randomized Controlled Trials

Tusar K. Desai; Laith H. Jamil; Mamtha Balasubramaniam; Raymond Koff; Herbert L. Bonkovsky

Prospective randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing phlebotomy and interferon (IFN) treatment to IFN alone in patients with chronic hepatitis C (CHC) have suggested a benefit for the phlebotomy group. However, statistical significance was achieved in only one of these trials. We performed a meta-analysis of RCTs comparing phlebotomy and IFN to IFN alone for the treatment of CHC. The MEDLINE database and Cochrane registry of controlled trials were searched using the key words “phlebotomy” and “treatment of hepatitis C.” Reference lists of review articles discussing the interaction between iron and CHC, and prospective RCTs comparing phlebotomy plus IFN therapy to IFN alone were searched to identify additional RCTs that compared phlebotomy plus IFN to IFN alone. Peto odds ratios with their 95% confidence intervals and Forrest plots were generated for each variable to assess the relationships among the studies that had provided that information. Statistical analysis was performed using Comprehensive META-Analysis version 2.0. Six prospective RCTs were identified: all used sustained viral response (SVR) as an endpoint. The three largest RCTs excluded patients with cirrhosis. Two RCTs specifically included only patients with either high ferritin or high hepatic iron content. IFN treatment regimes varied. Length of treatment varied between 6 and 12xa0months. The phlebotomy plus IFN group and the IFN group did not differ with respect to the percentage of patients with cirrhosis or genotype 1. SVR was attained in 50/182 (27%) patients in the phlebotomy plus IFN group, compared to 22/185 (12%) patients in the IFN group. Peto odds ratio for SVR in phlebotomy plus IFN group was 2.7; 95% CI 1.6–4.5, Pxa0<xa00.0001. All five RCTs published in manuscript form showed a trend towards a benefit from the phlebotomy plus IFN in attaining SVR, and the results of the meta-analysis were not dependent on any single RCT, since excluding any single RCT did not change the results. Phlebotomy improves the SVR in response to IFN treatment in patients with CHC. Confirmation of this will require RCT with detailed pre-treatment iron studies and appropriately powered to demonstrate a statistically significant benefit.


Gastroenterology Clinics of North America | 2008

Syndromic Colon Cancer: Lynch Syndrome and Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

Tusar K. Desai; Donald Barkel

Colon cancer, the third leading cause of mortality from cancer in the United States, afflicts about 150,000 patients annually. More than 10% of these patients exhibit familial clustering. The most common and well characterized of these familial colon cancer syndromes is hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer syndrome (Lynch syndrome), which accounts for about 2% to 3% of all cases of colon cancer in the United States. We review the current knowledge of familial cancer syndromes, with an emphasis on Lynch syndrome and familial adenomatous polyposis.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2016

Case Report of Patient Presenting in Shock from Band Penetration into Stomach After LAGB Surgery: Diagnosis by Emergency EGD After Misdiagnosis by Abdominal CT.

Mitchell S. Cappell; Estela Mogrovejo; Tusar K. Desai

About 250,000 bariatric surgeries, including about 50,000 laparoscopic adjustable gastric band (LAGB) surgeries, are performed annually in the USA, to reduce weight and consequently reduce morbidity and mortality from morbid obesity [1]. Band penetration/perforation into the stomach is a rare complication of LAGB surgery [2]. Comprehensive literature review of cases in which this diagnosis was documented by endoscopic photographs reveals scant data on endoscopic features of this complication [3–9]. Patients often present with moderate symptoms and signs after band penetration perhaps because the penetrating band forms a tight barrier that prevents peritoneal leakage. A case is reported that extends the clinical spectrum of band penetration/perforation, by 1—reporting a patient presenting in shock from overwhelming sepsis and profound GI bleeding from band penetration/perforation; 2—illustrating that an attending radiologist may miss the sometimes subtle CT findings of band penetration; and 3—further characterizing the endoscopic findings.


Current Hepatitis Reports | 2012

The Role of Iron in Hepatitis C Infection

Tusar K. Desai; Jared Bortman; Rasm Al-Sibae; Herbert L. Bonkovsky

Iron overload of varying degrees is common among patients with chronic hepatitis C. The clinical significance of this iron overload is uncertain. Studies that have evaluated the effect of hepatic iron stores on the response to anti-viral treatment or on the natural history of chronic hepatitis C have found variable results depending on the technique used to measure hepatic iron stores and the degree of iron overload present among the study population. We have tried to comprehensively analyze the literature regarding the clinical interaction between iron overload and the natural history of chronic hepatitis C. The one clear relationship that emerges is that pre treatment serum ferritin inversely correlates with the odds of achieving sustained virological(SVR) response after combination interferon ribavirin treatment. We have also reviewed the limited literature that reports the effect of therapeutic phlebotomy to reverse iron overload among patients with chronic hepatitis C. A small meta-analysis of 6 prospective randomized trials and a subsequent seventh trial do suggest that phlebotomy to induce iron depletion enhances the likelihood of achieving (SVR) after anti-viral therapy. However, these studies are primarily in patients receiving interferon monotherapy, which is of course now obsolete. Finally, a few small studies suggest that therapeutic phlebotomy to induce iron depletion reduces liver transaminase levels and may improve histology, and perhaps even reduce the risk of hepato-cellular carcinoma. Prospective randomized controlled trials of phlebotomy among patients with advanced hepatitis C and iron overload are needed.


Case reports in gastrointestinal medicine | 2016

Atypical Aortoesophageal Fistula with Atypical and Delayed Presentation and Negative Imaging Studies

Seifeldin Hakim; Mihajlo Gjeorgjievski; Lohit Garg; Molly Orosey; Tusar K. Desai

A 59-year-old man with past medical history of thoracic aortic aneurysm treated with thoracic endovascular aortic repair presented with melena for 2 weeks. Initial EGD did not reveal the source of bleeding and showed normal esophagus; abdominal arteriogram did not reveal a fistulous communication and initial CTA showed normal position of the aortic graft stent without endoleak. The sixth EGD revealed a submucosal tumor-like projection in the upper esophagus and stigmata of recent bleeding. Another thoracic endovascular aortic repair with stent was placed over the old graft for presumed aortoesophageal fistula. Poststent upper gastrointestinal series with contrast showed extravasation of the contrast from the esophagus and CTA showed fistulous tract between aorta and esophagus. The patient refused definitive surgical repair despite having infected aortic graft; jejunostomy tube was placed and life-long suppressive antibiotic treatment was given and the patient is doing well at 2-year follow-up.


Case Reports in Gastroenterology | 2016

Early, Isolated Duodenal Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue Lymphoma Presenting without Symptoms or Grossly Apparent Endoscopic Lesions and Diagnosed by Random Duodenal Biopsies.

Mihajlo Gjeorgjievski; Issa Makki; Pradeep Khanal; Mitual Amin; Ann Marie Blenc; Tusar K. Desai; Mitchell S. Cappell

Clinical data regarding mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma (MALToma) solely involving the duodenum are sparse because of the relative rarity of the disease. A comprehensive literature review revealed only 17 cases reported until 2004, and only a moderate number of cases have been reported since. MALToma can be asymptomatic in its very early stages but frequently produces localized or nonspecific symptoms, including early satiety, abdominal pain, vomiting, and involuntary weight loss in later stages. While gastric MALToma is strongly associated with gastric Helicobactor pylori infection, duodenal MALToma is often unassociated with H. pylori infection. A 74-year-old female presented with only dysphagia (without symptoms referable to a duodenal lesion), without systemic ‘B’ symptoms, and with no evident duodenal lesions at esophagogastroduodenoscopy; however, she was diagnosed with duodenal MALToma by pathologic examination of random duodenal biopsies performed to exclude celiac disease. An important clinical feature of this case is that duodenal MALToma was diagnosed by pathologic analysis of duodenal biopsies despite (1) no endoscopically apparent duodenal lesions; (2) duodenal involvement without gastric involvement; (3) lack of symptoms attributable to duodenal MALToma, and (4) absence of evident H. pylori infection. This work shows that early duodenal MALToma can be difficult to diagnose because of absent symptoms, absence of gastric involvement, absence of endoscopic abnormalities, and absence of H. pylori infection; it may require random duodenal biopsies for diagnosis.


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2007

Familial dysphagia and eosinophilia

David A. Zink; Mitual Amin; Souheil Gebara; Tusar K. Desai


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2011

The Incidence of Esophageal Adenocarcinoma Among Patients With Nondysplastic Barrett's Esophagus Has Been Overestimated

Tusar K. Desai; Niharika R. Samala


Gastrointestinal Endoscopy | 2017

Esophageal hemangiomatosis with chest CT revealing a fine, curvilinear, calcified thrombus within the esophagus simulating acute esophageal fishbone impaction: first reported endoscopic photograph of GI manifestations in Maffucci syndrome.

Seifeldin Hakim; Tusar K. Desai; Mitchell S. Cappell

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Colin W. Howden

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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