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Dive into the research topics where Violet Esquenazi is active.

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Featured researches published by Violet Esquenazi.


American Journal of Transplantation | 2005

Islet Transplantation in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus Using Cultured Islets and Steroid-Free Immunosuppression: Miami Experience

Tatiana Froud; Camillo Ricordi; David A. Baidal; Muhammad M. Hafiz; Gaston Ponte; Pablo Cure; Antonello Pileggi; Raffaella Poggioli; Hirohito Ichii; Aisha Khan; Jacqueline V. Ferreira; Alberto Pugliese; Violet Esquenazi; Norma S. Kenyon; Rodolfo Alejandro

Following the success obtained with transplantation of fresh human islets under steroid‐free immunosuppression, this trial evaluated the transplantation of islets that had undergone a period of in vitro culture and the potential of tumor necrosis factor (TNF‐α) blockade to improve islet engraftment. Subjects included 16 patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM); half were randomly assigned to receive Infliximab immediately preceding initial infusion. Immunosuppression consisted of daclizumab induction and sirolimus/tacrolimus maintenance. Out of 16 subjects 14 achieved insulin independence with one or two islet infusions; adverse events precluded completion in two. Without supplemental infusions, 11/14 (79%) subjects were insulin independent at 1 year, 6/14 (43%) at 18 months; these same subjects remain insulin independent at 33 ± 6 months. While on immunosuppression, all patients maintained graft function. Out of 14 patients, 8 suffered chronic partial graft loss, likely immunological in nature, 5 of these received supplemental infusions. Currently, 11 subjects remain on immunosuppression, 8 (73%) are insulin independent, two with supplemental infusions. Insulin independent subjects demonstrated normalization of HbA1c, fructosamine and Mean Amplitude of Glycemic Excursions (MAGE) values. No clinical benefit of infliximab was identified. These results demonstrate that transplantation of cultured human islet allografts results in reproducible insulin independence in all subjects under this immunosuppressive regimen, comparable to that of freshly transplanted islets (Edmonton protocol).


Transplant Immunology | 1997

Unexpected augmentation of mycophenolic acid pharmacokinetics in renal transplant patients receiving tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil in combination therapy, and analogous in vitro findings

K. Zucker; Anne Rosen; Alexandra K. Tsaroucha; Ludmilla de Faria; David Roth; Gaetano Ciancio; Violet Esquenazi; George W. Burke; Andreas G. Tzakis; Joshua Miller

Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) a potent immunosuppressive agent, has recently been approved for clinical use (CellCept) in renal transplant patients in combination with cyclosporine (CsA). With the expanded use of tacrolimus (Prograf) as well in renal transplant patients, there is a lack of pharmacokinetic studies clarifying drug interactions between the three agents. A pharmacokinetic study was performed on 18 stable renal transplant patients receiving MMF and tacrolimus together, and four control groups, one receiving tacrolimus alone, two receiving CsA, in combination with MMF (1.0 or 1.5 g bid), and one receiving CsA microemulsion (Neoral). Area-under-the-curve values were calculated for each drug to assess if there was a reciprocal effect on the respective bioavailability of each. In vitro, the immunosuppressive effect of trough level plasma from each patient group was studied using mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC), as well as MLC reactions spiked with various combinations of each drug. There was a minimal effect of MMF on tacrolimus pharmacokinetics. However, patients receiving tacrolimus and MMF displayed significantly higher levels (Cmin and area under the curve) of mycophenolic acid (MPA) than those receiving CsA (Sandimmune or Neoral) and the same dose of MMF (50.2 +/- 16.5 vs 32.1 +/- 16.7 micrograms h/ml AUC, p < 0.02). Equivalent MPA levels could be attained in patients receiving CsA if the MMF dose was increased by 50% (1.5 g bid). There were also significantly lower levels of the glucuronide metabolite of MPA (MPAG) (755 +/- 280 vs 1230 +/- 250 micrograms h/ml AUC, p = 0.02), suggesting a specific inhibition (either direct or indirect) of the conversion of MPA to MPAG in tacrolimus patients, as opposed to those receiving CsA. For each drug combination, there was a positive correlation between the plasma immunosuppressive effect seen in MLC assays and the MMF dose. In addition, trough plasma from patients receiving tacrolimus and MMF was significantly more MLC inhibitory than from those receiving CsA or CsA microemulsion and equivalent-dose MMF. Culture media containing MPA and tacrolimus equal to clinical therapeutic trough concentrations (10 ng/ml) were significantly more MLC inhibitory than CsA at equivalent clinical therapeutic trough concentrations (200 ng/ml) with equivalent MPA levels. These studies in renal transplant patients suggest that tacrolimus in combination with MMF may result in a greater degree of immunosuppression than may be anticipated.


Transplantation | 2005

A randomized trial of three renal transplant induction antibodies: early comparison of tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, and steroid dosing, and newer immune-monitoring.

Gaetano Ciancio; George W. Burke; Jeffrey J. Gaynor; Manuel Carreno; Robert Cirocco; James M. Mathew; Adela Mattiazzi; Tatiana Cordovilla; David Roth; Warren Kupin; Anne Rosen; Violet Esquenazi; Andreas G. Tzakis; Joshua Miller

Background. New trends in immunosuppression in clinical transplantation include the use of antibody induction agents in protocols that emphasize reduction or avoidance of steroids and calcineurin inhibitors. Methods. In a randomized trial using three different antibody induction agents in 90 first renal transplant recipients from cadaver donors, group A received Thymoglobulin, group B received Alemtuzumab, and group C received Daclizumab. Maintenance immunosuppression included tacrolimus and mycophenolate in all three arms, and methylprednisolone in groups A and C only (standard clinical institutional practice). The targeted trough level of tacrolimus was between 8 and 10 ng/mL for groups A and C, respectively, with a targeted mycophenolate dose of 1 g twice daily. However, in group B, the target tacrolimus trough level was 4 to 7 ng/mL to reduce long-term nephrotoxicity, with 500 mg twice-daily doses of mycophenolate, without steroid maintenance. Results. In this 15-month median postoperative interval report, there were no notable differences in demographics and patient and graft survivals. Acute rejection rates at 1 year were equivalent, that is, 5 of 30 in all three groups (16.6%). In group B, there was slightly lower renal function at 1 month, but no difference at 1 year. There was also significantly more leukopenia, but a greater percentage of T-regulatory cells and number of Fox-P3 mRNA copies by flow cytometry and semiquantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis, respectively, in group B. Conclusions. This preliminary analysis indicates that 80% of the patients in group B remained steroid-free 1 year postoperatively, with lower tacrolimus trough levels and no difference in other adverse events.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 1999

Evidence that tacrolimus augments the bioavailability of mycophenolate mofetil through the inhibition of mycophenolic acid glucuronidation.

K. Zucker; Alexandra K. Tsaroucha; Les Olson; Violet Esquenazi; Andreas G. Tzakis; Joshua Miller

We previously reported an unexpected augmentation of mycophenolic acid (MPA) levels (trough and AUC0-12) in patients receiving mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) in combination with tacrolimus versus patients receiving the same dose of MMF in combination with cyclosporin A (CsA). This finding was accompanied by a corresponding reduction of the inactive glucuronide metabolite of MPA (MPAG) in patients, suggesting that tacrolimus may effect the conversion of MPA to MPAG by the enzyme UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UDPGT). To investigate this possibility directly, UDPGT was extracted from human liver and kidney tissue and its activity was characterized using MPA as a substrate in vitro, assessing the conversion of MPA to MPAG using analysis by high-performance liquid chromatography. With crude microsomal preparations, amounts of UDPGT at least 100 times higher in specific activity (i.e., units to milligrams of protein) could be extracted per gram of tissue from kidney as opposed to liver. This result did not appear to be related to the coextraction of a liver-specific UDPGT inhibitor because initial enzyme kinetic values (Vmax and km) were identical for kidney and liver extracts, and further purification of the liver enzyme did not enhance activity (as is seen when inhibitors are removed during purification). With further UDPGT purification (approximately 200-fold) from kidney extracts using a combination of ammonium sulfate precipitation, followed by anion exchange, hydroxyapatite, and size exclusion chromatography, the enzyme was more than 80% pure when assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Initial enzyme kinetic analysis of this purified product showed a km value for MPA of 35.4+/-5.7 microg/mL and a Vmax of 2.87+/-0.31 MPAG produced per hour (n = 7). The addition of clinically relevant concentrations of CsA (200-1,000 ng/mL) or tacrolimus (10-25 ng/mL) resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of the UDPGT enzyme by both agents with tacrolimus, which was approximately 60-fold more efficient as an inhibitor. The calculated inhibition constants (KI) of tacrolimus and CsA for the purified UDPGT were 27.3+/-5.6 ng/ml and 2,518+/-1473 ng/ml. respectively. Both agents displayed an inhibition profile characteristic of a competitive inhibitor (substrate) that could be demonstrated in a reciprocal experiment with CsA as a substrate, but not with tacrolimus. This finding suggested that the significantly more efficient inhibition of UDPGT by tacrolimus may occur by a more complicated mechanism that is yet to be determined.


Transplantation | 1989

Posttransplant hyperglycemia. Increased incidence in cyclosporine-treated renal allograft recipients

David Roth; Martin L. Milgrom; Violet Esquenazi; Laphalle Fuller; George W. Burke; Joshua Miller

The incidence of posttransplant diabetes mellitus (PTDM) was compared in two groups of renal allograft recipients. These were all nondiabetic patients who had been transplanted between 1979 and 1987 and received either azathioprine-methylprednisolone (group 1) or cyclosporine-methylprednisolone (group 2) therapy as maintenance immunosuppression. The incidence of PTDM in group 1 was 9.1% vs. 18.6% in group 2 (P less than .05). The mean daily dose of methylprednisolone during the initial 2 months posttransplant was not greater among the PTDM patients of groups 1 or 2. Cyclosporine levels and mean daily CsA doses during the initial 2 posttransplant months were also not different among the CsA-PTDM and euglycemic CsA patients. Posttransplant diabetes mellitus occurred rapidly (less than 2 months) and required insulin therapy in the majority of cases. Increased age (greater than 40 years) was associated with a higher risk for PTDM, however, the greater incidence accompanying increased body weight only approached significance. Patient gender and donor source were not associated with significant risk for PTDM. The development of PTDM was accompanied by a significant decrease in graft survival at 3 years in the entire PTDM population and at 4 years in the CsA-PTDM subgroup. Actuarial patient survival was not adversely affected. The current study suggests that CsA may be diabetogenic when administered with methylprednisolone to renal allograft recipients. The adverse effect on allograft survival requires further investigation. These results may also have important implications for pancreatic and islet cell transplantation.


Transplantation | 1997

High-dose donor bone marrow infusions to enhance allograft survival: The effect of timing

Camillo Ricordi; T. Karatzas; Jose Nery; M. Webb; Gennaro Selvaggi; Luis A. Fernandez; Farrukh A. Khan; Phillip Ruiz; Eugene R. Schiff; L. Olson; Hugo F. Fernandez; Judy A. Bean; Violet Esquenazi; Joshua Miller; Andreas G. Tzakis

BACKGROUND The development of strategies to enhance survival of transplanted organs and to potentially lower or even discontinue immunosuppressive therapy would represent a significant advance in posttransplant patient care. The aim of this clinical trial was to determine the effect of timing and dose of peripheral donor bone marrow cell (DBMC) infusion on graft and patient survival after liver transplantation. METHODS DBMC, obtained from vertebral bodies, were administered in 101 recipients of liver allografts (OLTX). There were 107 patients for whom DBMC could not be obtained; they received OLTX alone (controls). A total of 5 x 10(8)/kg DBMC were infused at day 0 (group 1; n=9); at days 0 and 11 (group 2; n=26); or at days 5 and 11 (group 3; n=26). In group 4 (n=40), patients received up to five infusions of 2 x 10(8)/kg DBMC at days 5, 14, 21, 28, and 90 after OLTX. RESULTS When the results from patients receiving two or more DBMC infusions (groups 2, 3, and 4) are considered, both patient and graft survival were significantly improved compared with the control group (P=0.02 and P=0.01, respectively). In groups 3 and 4, 88.5% and 95% of patients were alive with mean follow-up of 536 and 265 days, respectively, compared with 77.6% of patients in the control group (average follow-up of 452 days) (P=0.02). Graft survival was also significantly improved in groups 3 (88.5%) and 4 (92.5%), compared with the controls (72%) (P=0.007). CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that dose and timing of DBMC infusions may be important variables affecting allograft survival. A randomized prospective trial is now in progress to compare group 3 DBMC infusion protocol with controls receiving OLTX alone.


Transplantation | 1995

De novo membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis in hepatitis C virus-infected renal allograft recipients.

David Roth; Robert Cirocco; K. Zucker; Phillip Ruiz; Ana L. Viciana; George W. Burke; Manuel Carreno; Violet Esquenazi; Joshua Miller

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the leading cause of non-A, non-B hepatitis among renal allograft recipients. We sought to identify and describe a proteinuric renal disease occurring in our HCV-infected renal transplant patients. Patients with proteinuria exceeding 1 g/day were identified from a cohort of 98 HCV-infected kidney recipients. Qualitative and quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and restriction fragment-length polymorphism of the amplified RT-PCR product was performed to detect circulating HCV RNA, viral titer, and strain type, respectively. An immune complex nephritis (ICN) of the membranoproliferative pattern (MPGN) was found on five of eight biopsies. Two patients infected with the Hutch strain-type developed nephrotic-range proteinuria within three months posttransplant while the remaining three MPGN patients had been transplanted greater than 5 years prior to the onset of proteinuria. Testing for rheumatoid factors, cryoglobulins, hypocomplementemia, and circulating immune complexes failed to show a consistent pattern. Sucrose density gradient (SDG) equilibrium centrifugation was used to determine the buoyant-density of HCV virions from control (HCV-infected nonproteinuric recipients; n = 5) and nephrotic patients (n = 5). Whereas HCV virions from the control patients had a low buoyant density on sucrose gradients, a substantial percentage of the circulating HCV RNA from the MPGN patients was present in the high-density fractions in association with IgM and IgG. Treatment of the pooled high-density layers with NP40 followed by recentrifugation resulted in a shift of the HCV RNA to the medium-density layers. In conclusion, MPGN developed in five HCV-infected kidney recipients despite pharmacologic immunosuppression. Both the physicochemical properties of the HCV virions on SDG and their association with IgG and IgM in the high-density layers provide indirect evidence for the presence of circulating complexes of anti-HCV antibody and HCV antigen(s).


Transplantation | 2001

Six-year clinical effect of donor bone marrow infusions in renal transplant patients.

Gaetano Ciancio; Joshua Miller; Rolando Garcia-Morales; Manuel Carreno; George W. Burke; David Roth; Warren Kupin; Andreas G. Tzakis; Camillo Ricordi; Anne Rosen; Laphalle Fuller; Violet Esquenazi

Background. To date, several single- and multicenter clinical trials have attempted to induce specific immunological unresponsiveness using donor bone marrow cell infusions to augment solid organ transplantation, but the outcomes have not been definitive. Methods. Between September 1994 and May 1998, 63 cadaver (CAD) renal transplant recipients of either one or two postoperative donor bone marrow cell (DBMC) infusions were prospectively compared with 219 non-infused controls given equivalent immunosuppression. There was at least a 1 HLA DR antigen match present between donors and recipients. The immunosuppressive regimen included a 10-day course of OKT3 induction, and tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, and methylprednisolone maintenance. A total 7.01×108±1.9×108 (SD) DBMC/kg was infused into the CAD recipients on either days 4 and 11 (n=42) or one half of that dose on day 4 (n=21) postoperatively. Clinical follow-up has ranged from 2.9 to 6.3 years (mean, 4.7 years). Studies were also performed of humoral immunity and quantitative cellular chimerism. Results. There is clear-cut equivalence in immunosuppressive dosaging and in the other major demographic variables in both groups. However, only 2/63 DBMC recipients had biopsy-proven chronic rejection, whereas 41/219 showed chronic rejection in the controls (P =<0.01). In both groups, mortality was not associated with rejection. The actuarial graft survival at 6.3 years in the CAD DBMC group was 84.3% compared with 72.2% in the control group (not statistically significant). However, if death with a functioning graft was excluded, graft survival was 94.1% in the DBMC group and 79.8% in the controls (P =0.039). Forty patients in the control group continue to have deteriorating renal function (increasing serum creatinine concentrations to 2 mg/dl and higher), compared with 2 patients in the DBMC group (P =0.04). In the DBMC group, chimerism in iliac crest marrow aspirates has increased 3-fold in yearly sequential measurements between 1 and 4 years postoperatively averaging 1.3±0.36% (SE) most recently. This has not occurred in the controls. Conclusions. There now appears to be more solid long-term evidence, in kidney transplant recipients prospectively receiving DBMC infusions, of an improvement in long-term graft survival, and of the degree of chimerism positively correlating with the absence of graft loss.


Transplantation | 2004

The Use of Campath-1h as Induction Therapy in Renal Transplantation: Preliminary Results

Gaetano Ciancio; George W. Burke; Jeffrey J. Gaynor; Adela Mattiazzi; Ramin Roohipour; Manuel Carreno; David Roth; Phillip Ruiz; Warren Kupin; Anne Rosen; Violet Esquenazi; Andreas G. Tzakis; Joshua Miller

Background. In an attempt to reduce both initial and long-term (nephrotoxic) calcineurin inhibitor maintenance dosage and totally eliminate maintenance corticosteroids, alemtuzumab (Campath-1H) was used as induction therapy in first cadaver and non-HLA-identical living donor renal transplantation. Methods. Forty-four de novo renal allograft recipients were treated with Campath-1H (0.3 mg/kg) on days 0 and 4 postoperatively, preceded by methylprednisolone boluses. Maintenance target 12-hr tacrolimus trough levels of 5 to 7 ng/mL were operational from the outset as well as (reduced) mycophenolate mofetil dosage of 500 mg twice daily. No corticosteroids were planned to be given after the first week postoperatively. Results. With a median follow-up of 9 (range, 1–19) months, patient and graft survival rates are each at 100%. Biopsy-proven acute rejection was diagnosed in four patients. Infections requiring hospitalization developed in four patients. Thirty-eight recipients remain without the need for long-term corticosteroid therapy. Conclusions. In an early assessment, the combination of Campath-1H, low dosing of tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil, and avoidance of maintenance corticosteroid use seems to be safe and effective for kidney transplant recipients. Long-term outcomes will be reported in the future.


Transplantation | 2004

Preliminary experience with alemtuzumab (Campath-1H) and low-dose tacrolimus immunosuppression in adult liver transplantation.

Andreas G. Tzakis; Panagiotis Tryphonopoulos; Tomoaki Kato; Seigo Nishida; David Levi; Juan Madariaga; Jeffrey J. Gaynor; Werviston De Faria; Arie Regev; Violet Esquenazi; Debbie Weppler; Phillip Ruiz; Joshua Miller

Background. The administration of alemtuzumab (Campath-1H [C1H]; Berlex Laboratories, Montville, NJ) at transplantation prevents a vigorous immune response and is believed to allow a gradual engagement of the host immune system. We report our preliminary experience with C1H and tacrolimus (Tac) immunosuppression in adult liver transplantation. Methods. We administered C1H and low-dose Tac to 40 adult recipients of cadaveric liver allografts between December 2001 and April 2003. A control group who met the same eligibility criteria consisted of 50 liver transplant recipients treated with our standard Tac and steroids protocol. Results. Baseline characteristics and patient and graft survival were similar (P >0.15). The incidence of acute rejection was significantly lower during the first 2 months posttransplantation (P =0.002) and slightly lower overall in the study group versus the control group at 12 months (46% vs. 55%, P =0.12, log-rank test). Median time to rejection among those experiencing rejection was significantly longer in the study group versus control group (2.76 vs. 0.34 months, P =0.0007). The mean Tac dose, 12-hr trough level, and percentage of patients receiving maintenance steroids were significantly lower in the group receiving C1H and Tac (P <0.0001 during the first 3 months, P <0.05 thereafter), as were the mean creatinine levels (P <0.05) and incidence of nephrotoxicity (P =0.004, conversion from Tac to other agents). Finally, in the group receiving C1H/Tac, patients with an average Tac trough level less than 6.5 ng/mL during the first 2 months post-transplantation demonstrated a significantly higher rejection rate beyond that time (P =0.02). Conclusion. C1H and low-dose Tac seems to be at least as effective as our standard Tac and steroids regimen in preventing acute rejection in adult liver allotransplantation with less renal toxicity and less use of maintenance steroids.

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