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Dive into the research topics where William F. Owen is active.

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Featured researches published by William F. Owen.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

Chronic Kidney Disease, Mortality, and Treatment Strategies among Patients with Clinically Significant Coronary Artery Disease

Donal N. Reddan; Lynda A. Szczech; Robert H. Tuttle; Linda K. Shaw; Roger Jones; Steve J. Schwab; Mark Stafford Smith; Robert M. Califf; Daniel B. Mark; William F. Owen

Cardiovascular disease is an important cause of mortality among patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study describes associations between CKD, cardiac revascularization strategies, and mortality among patients with CKD and cardiovascular disease. All patients undergoing cardiac catheterization at Duke University Medical Center (1995 to 2000) with documented stenosis > or =75% of at least one coronary artery and available creatinine data were included. CKD was staged using creatinine clearance (CrCl) derived from the Cockcroft-Gault formula (normal, > or = 90 ml/min; mild, 60 to 89 ml/min; moderate, 30 to 59 ml/min; severe, 15 to 29 ml/min). Cox proportional-hazard regression estimated the relationship between clinical variables, including CrCl and percutaneous coronary artery intervention (PCI), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), medical management, and patient survival. There were 4584 patients included, and 24% had CrCl <60 ml/min. Each 10-ml/min decrement in CrCl was associated with an increase in mortality (hazard ratio, 1.14; P < 0.0001). CABG was associated with a survival benefit among patients with both normal renal function and patients with CKD compared with medical management. In patients with normal renal function, CABG was not associated with survival benefit over PCI. However, in patients with CKD, CABG was associated with improved survival. PCI was associated with a survival benefit compared with medical management among patients with normal, mildly, and moderately impaired renal function. Among patients with severe CKD, PCI was not associated with improved survival. CABG is associated with greater mortality reduction than PCI in severe CKD.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

A Propensity Analysis of Late Versus Early Nephrologist Referral and Mortality on Dialysis

Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer; William F. Owen; Raisa Levin; Jerry Avorn

Previous studies have analyzed the association between late versus early nephrologist referral (LR, ER) and poor clinical outcomes in patients with end-stage renal disease. We sought to determine whether these poor outcomes were causally related to LR, or whether LR was a proxy for poorer access to health care in general. An inception cohort of incident dialysis patients enrolled in the New Jersey Medicare or Medicaid programs was identified. Using a large number of demographic, clinical, and health care utilization covariates, propensity scores (PS) were then calculated to predict whether a given patient had been seen by a nephrologist at 90 d before first dialysis. Cox proportional hazards models were then built to test the association between timing of nephrologist referral and mortality during the first year of dialysis, using PS adjustment and matching to determine whether this association was confounded by other measures of reduced healthcare utilization. Neither adjustment for PS (HR = 1.31; 95% CI, 1.17 to 1.47) nor matching (HR = 1.40; 95% CI, 1.23 to 1.59) materially changed the initial 36% excess mortality in LR compared with ER patients (HR = 1.36; 95% CI, 1.22 to 1.51). Excess mortality among LR was limited to the first 3 mo of dialysis (HR = 1.75; 95% CI, 1.48 to 2.08) but not present thereafter (HR = 1.03; 95% CI, 0.84 to 1.25). Late nephrologist referral is an independent risk factor for early death on dialysis, even after controlling for other indicators of healthcare utilization. Further research is needed to identify patients at particular risk so that interventions to prevent early deaths on dialysis in LR patients can be developed and tested.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2002

Delayed nephrologist referral and inadequate vascular access in patients with advanced chronic kidney failure

Jerry Avorn; Wolfgang C. Winkelmayer; Rhonda L. Bohn; Raisa Levin; Robert J. Glynn; Elliot Levy; William F. Owen

We sought to determine whether late referral to a nephrologist in patients with chronic renal failure influences the adequacy of vascular access for hemodialysis. We analyzed data describing all health care encounters for all Medicare and Medicaid patients with end-stage renal failure in New Jersey between January 1991 and June 1996. Patients were required to have been diagnosed with renal disease at least 1 year prior to onset of hemodialysis. In the resulting cohort of 2,398 incident hemodialysis patients, 35% had their first nephrologist consultation < or =90 days prior to initiation of dialysis. After controlling for demographic characteristics, socio-economic status and underlying renal disease, we found that patients who were referred to a nephrologist >90 days prior to onset of hemodialysis were 38% more likely to have undergone predialysis vascular access surgery than those who were referred to a nephrologist < or =90 days before dialysis [OR: 1.38; 95% CI (1.15; 1.64)]. Similarly, patients referred late were 42% more likely to require central venous access for hemodialysis compared to those seen by a nephrologist early [OR: 1.42; 95% CI (1.17; 1.71)]. Inadequate development of vascular access for renal replacement therapy in patients with late nephrologist referral unnecessarily contributes to the burden of disease experienced by this vulnerable patient population.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005

Intradialytic Blood Volume Monitoring in Ambulatory Hemodialysis Patients: A Randomized Trial

Donal N. Reddan; Lynda A. Szczech; Vic Hasselblad; Edmund G. Lowrie; Robert M. Lindsay; Jonathan Himmelfarb; Robert D. Toto; John Stivelman; James F. Winchester; Linda A. Zillman; Robert M. Califf; William F. Owen

Complications related to inadequate volume management are common during hemodialysis. This trial tested the hypothesis that availability of an intradialytic blood volume monitoring (IBVM) device improves fluid removal, reducing morbidity. A six-center, randomized trial with 6 mo of intervention comparing IBVM using Crit-Line versus conventional clinical monitoring was conducted. The average rate of non-access-related hospitalizations was compared across treatment groups using Poisson regression. Mortality analysis used the Kaplan Meier method. A total of 227 patients were randomized to Crit-Line, and 216 were randomized to conventional monitoring. Both groups had similar baseline characteristics. During the study, no differences in weight, BP, or number of dialysis-related complications were observed. There were 120 and 81 non-access-related hospitalizations in the Crit-Line and conventional monitoring groups. The adjusted risk ratio for non-access-related and access-related hospitalization was 1.61 (95% confidence interval 1.15 to 2.25; P = 0.01) and 1.52 (95% confidence interval 1.02 to 2.28; P = 0.04) for the Crit-Line monitoring group. Mortality was 8.7% in the Crit-Line monitoring group and 3.3% in the conventional group (P = 0.021). Standardized mortality ratios comparing the Crit-Line and conventional monitoring groups to the prevalent hemodialysis population were 0.77 (NS) and 0.26 (P < 0.001). Hospitalization rates were 1.51 and 1.03 events/yr in the Crit-Line and standard monitoring groups, compared with 2.01 for the prevalent hemodialysis population. IBVM was associated with higher nonvascular and vascular access-related hospitalizations and mortality compared with conventional monitoring. The atypically low hospitalization and mortality rates for the conventional monitoring group suggest that these findings should be generalized to the US hemodialysis population with caution.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2002

National Profile of Practice Patterns for Hemodialysis Vascular Access in the United States

Donal N. Reddan; Preston S. Klassen; Diane L. Frankenfield; Lynda A. Szczech; Steve J. Schwab; Joseph A. Coladonato; Michael V. Rocco; Edmund G. Lowrie; William F. Owen

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), national End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Clinical Performance Measures (CPM) Project is a data collection initiative to identify opportunities for improvement of care to adult, Medicare maintenance dialysis beneficiaries. This analysis of 1999 CPM data characterizes the profile of hemodialysis vascular access in the United States and identifies determinants of vascular access type 2 yr after the translation of vascular access clinical practice guideline statements into national CPMs. CPM data were collected during October to December 1999 and stratified by the 18 regional ESRD networks. Univariate and multivariable analyses were conducted to examine associations of access type with demographic, laboratory, and geographic variables. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to identify independent variables associated with access type. A total of 8154 hemodialysis patients were sampled; 17% (n = 1399) were incident. Twenty-eight percent were dialyzed through an autologous arteriovenous fistula (AVF), 49% through a prosthetic graft (AVG), and 23% through a percutaneous catheter. Independent predictors of having a catheter for hemodialysis were female gender, white race, incident to hemodialysis status, and lower hemoglobin and serum albumin. For patients with a fistula or AVG, female gender (odds ration [OR], 2.46 [2.18 to 2.78]) and black race (OR, 1.70 [1.50 to 1.93]) were the strongest predictors of dialysis through an AVG. Other predictors of dialysis through an AVG were older age, increased body mass index (BMI), diabetes mellitus as the cause of ESRD, and lower serum albumin. Even in adjusted analyses, there was significant geographic variability with respect to hemodialysis access type. Despite translation of practice guidelines for hemodialysis vascular access into national CPMs, there is substantial geographic variability and gender and racial disparity in angioaccess allocation in the United States. Quality improvement strategies to improve the prevalence of fistulae should focus on selected regions and include physician education about their practice patterns and potential biases.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2004

Enhanced Expression of Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products in Chronic Kidney Disease

Fan Fan Hou; Hao Ren; William F. Owen; Zhi Jian Guo; Ping Yan Chen; Ann Marie Schmidt; Toshio Miyata; Xun Zhang

Inappropriate chronic inflammation associated with progressive, chronic kidney disease (CKD) reflects sustained activation of immunocompetent cells, like monocytes/macrophages. Advanced glycation end products (AGE) accumulate in CKD, but it is unclear if they stimulate monocytes by binding with the receptor for AGE (RAGE). Posited was the notion that RAGE plays a contributory role to monocyte-mediated systemic inflammation of progressive CKD. Peripheral blood monocytes were isolated from 102 patients without diabetes with varying severity of CKD. RAGE expression on peripheral blood monocytes increased with worsening CKD (r2 = 0.73) and was strongly correlated with plasma levels of pentosidine, a marker for AGE (r = 0.71). Strongly positive statistical correlations were observed in patients with CKD between monocyte RAGE and plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) (r = 0.61), the monocyte activation marker, neopterin (r = 0.65), and the systemic acute phase reactant, C-reactive protein (r = 0.44). Monocytes obtained from patients with CKD showed a monotonic increase in the number and affinity of specific AGE binding sites and increased production of TNF-alpha under stimulation of AGE. All these upregulatory responses in uremic monocytes could be largely blocked by an anti-RAGE antibody. It was concluded that RAGE expression was upregulated on monocytes from patients with CKD. Enhanced RAGE may amplify AGE-induced monocytes perturbation and contribute to monocyte-mediated systemic inflammation in progressive CKD.


American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 1999

Association of acidosis and nutritional parameters in hemodialysis patients

Jaime Uribarri; Nathan W. Levin; James A. Delmez; Thomas A. Depner; Daniel B. Ornt; William F. Owen; Guofen Yan

There is extensive literature supporting an important role for acidosis in inducing net protein breakdown, both in experimental animals and humans. However, the clinical importance of the moderate intermittent metabolic acidosis frequently observed in hemodialysis patients has not been determined. We performed a cross-sectional analysis of the baseline laboratory data in the first 1,000 patients recruited to the Hemodialysis Study, looking for correlations between predialysis serum total carbon dioxide levels and parameters related to dietary intake and nutritional status. We found the mean predialysis serum total carbon dioxide level was moderately low (21.6 +/- 3.4 mmol/L; mean +/- SD) despite the use of bicarbonate dialysate and an average single-pool Kt/V of 1.54. Predialysis serum total carbon dioxide level correlated negatively with normalized protein catabolic rate (P < 0.001), suggesting patients with lower serum total carbon dioxide levels have a greater protein intake. The degree of acidosis observed in our patients does not seem to have a deleterious effect on the nutritional status of these patients because correlation of serum total carbon dioxide level with nutritional parameters, such as serum creatinine and serum albumin levels, was either negative or not statistically significant. Further investigation of the effect of modifying serum bicarbonate concentration on nutritional markers is needed to test these hypotheses.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

Patterns of Care for Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease in the United States: Dying for Improvement

William F. Owen

The burden of chronic kidney disease can be assessed by multiple criteria that underscore the need for improved detection, treatment, and outcome monitoring. Several process measures for the care of advanced CKD patients are examined herein. Twenty seven and 11% of patients with CKD in National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) III had BP <140/90 and 130/85, respectively. In addition to inadequate prescription of antihypertensive drugs, another confounder is poor diagnostic recognition of CKD. Recent surveys of incident Medicare-eligible ESRD patients observed severe anemia in a preponderance of patients; mean and median hematocrit values were 27.7% +/- 5.9 and 27.8%, respectively. Only 23 to 28% of these patients were prescribed epoetin alfa. Clinical practice guidelines recommend that <10% of maintenance hemodialysis patients should be chronically dialyzed using percutaneous catheters. A recent national survey of vascular access types among incident American hemodialysis patients found that 30%, 41%, and 29% were dialyzing through a catheter, prosthetic graft, and autologous fistula, respectively. Tunneled catheters are associated with a 39% annual increased risk of death. Based on pharmacokinetic assumptions about the minimum amount of solute clearance by hemodialysis needed for patient survival in ESRD, a GFR of 10.5 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) is needed. The mean GFR of incident ESRD patients in the United States was 9.5 ml/min per 1.73 m(2) in 2000. In addition to the wide international variability in modality treatment selection, geographic variability exists within the United States; <7 to >15% of the prevalent patients are treated by peritoneal dialysis across the country. Despite survival and quality-of-life benefits with transplantation, most eligible recipients in the United States have not been placed on a transplant waiting list 6 mo after beginning dialysis. Last, <40% of incident ESRD patients in the United States have received the recommended frequency of mammography, PAP examinations, or prostate-specific antigen (PSA) or HbA1c measurements. These deficiencies in care for patients with advanced CKD likely adversely influence the survival of US ESRD patients. Contemporary outcome information supports this contention. CKD patients referred to a nephrologist for the first time within 90 d of the start of dialysis have an approximately 40% to 60% increased risk of death during their first year of renal replacement therapy (RRT). Thirty-five percent of CKD patients are seen within 90 d of receiving RRT. In addition, if fewer than five nephrology visits occur, death risks are increased by 15%. These findings confirm the urgent need for improvement in healthcare delivery for CKD patient in the United States.


The Lancet | 2005

Aseptic peritonitis due to peptidoglycan contamination of pharmacopoeia standard dialysis solution

Leo Martis; Mehul Patel; Joe Giertych; Jim Mongoven; Michel Taminne; Michele A Perrier; Omar Mendoza; Niranjan Goud; Aidan Costigan; Nicole Denjoy; Christian Verger; William F. Owen

BACKGROUND Manufacturers of parenteral solutions adhere to European and US Pharmacopoeia standards to define safety and sterility. In response to excess cases of aseptic peritonitis in peritoneal dialysis patients using icodextrin-containing dialysate that met all pharmacopoeia standards, a global recall was issued in May, 2002. We aimed to establish the cause of aseptic peritonitis. METHODS We analysed 186 reports of aseptic peritonitis between September, 2001, and January, 2003. Extensive physical, chemical, and microbiological investigations of recalled dialysate were done. We calculated dose-response curves for peptidoglycan-induced interleukin 6 elaboration in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from healthy donors and for sterile peritonitis in rats. FINDINGS Although its chemical constituents and concentrations of endotoxin were within pharmacopoeia specifications, the dialysis solution elicited an interlukin 6 response in vivo and in vitro. We identified peptidoglycan from thermophilic acidophilic bacteria (Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius) as the contaminating proinflammatory substance. In the PBMC assay, strong dose-response relations were noted between peptidoglycan concentrations and interleukin 6. In rats injected with peptidoglycan, dose-dependent increases of intraperitoneal neutrophils and pyrogenic cytokines were recorded. We measured a positive relation between peptidoglycan concentrations in recalled dialysate and reports of aseptic peritonitis. After implementation of corrective actions, the rate of peritonitis returned to baseline. INTERPRETATION Excess cases of aseptic peritonitis in peritoneal dialysis patients were due to peptidoglycan contamination of dialysate by Alicyclobacillus. This outbreak serves as an example of how contemporary parenteral products with microbial contaminants can be considered safe under current pharmacopoeia tests, but provoke adverse clinical effects.


Advances in Renal Replacement Therapy | 1997

African-Americans on maintenance dialysis: a review of racial differences in incidence, treatment, and survival.

Deborah A. Price; William F. Owen

African-Americans are the fasting growing racial minority with end stage renal disease (ESRD) in the United States. Currently, African-Americans comprise approximately 31% of the ESRD population. African-Americans are almost a decade younger than their white (referring to non-Hispanic white) counterparts with ESRD with a mean age of 58 years old. Although African-Americans systematically receive less dialysis than whites (Kt/V of 1.05 versus 1.18, respectively), their survival is higher. The 2-year survival probability of African-Americans is 66.2% in comparison with 59.8% for whites. This improved survival with ESRD is accompanied by an improved quality of life for African-Americans. Their enhanced quality of life is reflected by a greatly decreased frequency of withdrawing from dialysis treatments. In this article, we will examine the reasons why African-Americans have an excessive incidence of selective diseases that culminate in ESRD. We will explore the factors that influence the difference in dialysis modality selection between African-Americans and whites. Lastly, we will pose and judge several hypotheses that may account for the improved survival enjoyed by African-Americans with ESRD. We contend that research to clarify the basis for these differences between African-Americans and whites with ESRD will improve outcomes for both populations and is fiscally sound health policy.

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Donal N. Reddan

National University of Ireland

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Diane L. Frankenfield

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

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