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Featured researches published by Wojciech Mazur.


Circulation | 1994

Direct in vivo gene transfer into porcine myocardium using replication-deficient adenoviral vectors

Brent A. French; Wojciech Mazur; Robert S. Geske; Roberto Bolli

BACKGROUND Efficient methods of introducing genes into myocardial cells must be developed before local somatic cell gene therapy can be implemented against myocardial disease. Although adenoviral (Ad5) vectors have been used to target rodent hearts and plasmid DNA has been directly injected into the myocardium of rats and dogs, the amounts of recombinant protein produced by these procedures have not been reported, and adenoviral vectors have not been used in large mammalian hearts. METHODS AND RESULTS Replication-deficient recombinant adenoviral vectors carrying either the luciferase or lacZ reporter genes were injected directly into the ventricular myocardium of adult domestic swine for evaluation of reporter gene expression. This procedure did not affect regional myocardial function as assessed by systolic wall thickening using ultrasonic crystals. Luciferase activity was detected 3 days after injection, increased markedly at 7 days, and then declined progressively at 14 and 21 days. Luciferase production was comparable in the right and left ventricular walls and increased with increasing amounts of virus, reaching 61 +/- 21 ng at the highest dose examined (3.6 x 10(9) plaque-forming units). The injection of 200 micrograms of plasmid DNA (pRSVL) produced levels of luciferase comparable to 1.8 x 10(8) plaque-forming units of recombinant Ad5; however, when normalized to the number of genes injected, the adenovirus was 140,000 times more efficient than plasmid DNA. Histochemical analysis of beta-galactosidase activity produced by a second Ad5 vector demonstrated that nearly all (> 95%) of the stained cells were cardiomyocytes and that the percentage of cardiomyocytes infected by the virus could be quite high in microscopic regions adjacent to the needle track (up to 75% in fields of 60 to 70 cells); however, Ad5-infected cells were rarely observed farther than 5 mm from the injection site. Furthermore, the Ad5 vector induced pronounced leukocytic infiltration that was far in excess of that seen after injection of vehicle alone. CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates for the first time that direct intramyocardial injection of replication-deficient adenovirus can program recombinant gene expression in the cardiomyocytes of a large animal species with relevance to human physiology. The efficiency of adenovirus-mediated gene transfer is far superior to that of plasmid DNA injection, and this method appears to be capable of producing more recombinant protein. However, the cell-mediated immune response to the Ad5 vector and the limited distribution of reporter gene expression suggest that less immunogenic recombinant vectors and more homogeneous administration methods will be required before Ad5 vectors can be successfully used for phenotypic modulation.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2010

Comparison of magnetic resonance feature tracking for strain calculation with harmonic phase imaging analysis.

Kan N. Hor; William Gottliebson; Christopher Carson; Erin Wash; James Cnota; Robert J. Fleck; Janaka Wansapura; Piotr Klimeczek; Hussein R. Al-Khalidi; Eugene S. Chung; D. Woodrow Benson; Wojciech Mazur

OBJECTIVES To compare a steady-state free precession cine sequence-based technique (feature tracking [FT]) to tagged harmonic phase (HARP) analysis for peak average circumferential myocardial strain (epsilon(cc)) analysis in a large and heterogeneous population of boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). BACKGROUND Current epsilon(cc) assessment techniques require cardiac magnetic resonance-tagged imaging sequences, and their analysis is complex. The FT method can readily be performed on standard cine (steady-state free precession) sequences. METHODS We compared mid-left ventricular whole-slice epsilon(cc) by the 2 techniques in 191 DMD patients grouped according to age and severity of cardiac dysfunction: group B: DMD patients 10 years and younger with normal ejection fraction (EF); group C: DMD patients older than 10 years with normal EF; group D: DMD patients older than 10 years with reduced EF but negative myocardial delayed enhancement (MDE); group E: DMD patients older than 10 years with reduced EF and positive MDE; and group A: 42 control subjects. Retrospective, offline analysis was performed on matched tagged and steady-state free precession slices. RESULTS For the entire study population (N = 233), mean FT epsilon(cc) values (-13.3 +/- 3.8%) were highly correlated with HARP epsilon(cc) values (-13.6 +/- 3.4%), with a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.899. The mean epsilon(cc) of DMD patients determined by HARP (-12.52 +/- 2.69%) and FT (-12.16 +/- 3.12%) was not significantly different (p = NS). Similarly, the mean epsilon(cc) of the control subjects by determined HARP (-18.85 +/- 1.86) and FT (-18.81 +/- 1.83) was not significantly different (p = NS). Excellent correlation between the 2 methods was found among subgroups A through E, except there was no significant difference in strain between groups B and C with FT analysis. CONCLUSIONS FT-based assessment of epsilon(cc) correlates highly with epsilon(cc) derived from tagged images in a large DMD patient population with a wide range of cardiac dysfunction and can be performed without additional imaging.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1996

High dose rate intracoronary radiation for inhibition of neointimal formation in the stented and balloon-injured porcine models of restenosis : Angiographic, morphometric, and histopathologic analyses

Wojciech Mazur; M. Nadir Ali; Musa M. Khan; Salim F. Dabaghi; Clement A. DeFelice; Pierre Paradis; E. Brian Butler; Ann E. Wright; Luis F. Fajardo; Brent A. French; Albert E. Raizner

PURPOSE We examined the effects of intracoronary irradiation delivered at a high dose rate on neointimal hyperplasia after injury induced by two methods: balloon overstretch injury, and stent implantation in a porcine model of coronary restenosis. METHODS AND MATERIALS In 34 Hanford miniature swine, a segment of each coronary artery was targeted for injury and treatment. The artery segments were treated with 192Ir at doses of 10 Gy over 4 min (eight animals), 15 Gy over 6 min (nine animals), 25 Gy over 10 min (nine animals) or control (simulation wire only; eight animals). The treated segments were subjected to stent implantation (left anterior descending and right coronary artery) or balloon overstretch (circumflex) injury. Twenty-eight days later, repeat coronary angiography and sacrifice were done. Quantitative coronary angiography, morphometry, and extensive histopathologic analyses were carried out in a blinded fashion. RESULTS The change in minimal lumen diameter from postinjury to presacrifice in the stent-injured left anterior descending was -0.79 +/- 0.34 (mean: +/- SD) mm in the control group, compared to -0.43 +/- 0.35 mm in the 15 Gy (p = 0.04) and -0.21 +/- 0.50 mm in the 25 Gy (p = 0.01) groups; and in the balloon-injured circumflex was -0.31 +/- 0.22 mm in the control group compared to -0.03 +/- 0.18 mm in the 10 Gy (p = 0.05) and 0.00 +/- 0.33 in the 15 Gy (p = 0.01) groups. Percent area stenosis in the left anterior descending was 36 +/- 9% in the control group compared to 18 +/- 12% in the 15 Gy (p = 0.003) and 11 +/- 11% in the 25 Gy (p < 0.001) groups; and in the circumflex was 16 +/- 10% in the control groups, compared to 5 +/- 5% in the 15 Gy (p = 0.02) and 2 +/- 2% in the 25 Gy (p = 0.009) groups. Histopathology showed a striking reduction in the amount of neointima in the irradiated arteries compared with control vessels. Other radiation effects were stromal fibrin exudate, thinning of the media, and adventitial fibrosis and leukocyte infiltration in the radiated arterial segments. CONCLUSIONS High dose rate intracoronary irradiation with 192Ir effectively inhibits intimal proliferation after stent-induced as well as balloon-overstretch injury. This shorter treatment time (4 to 10 min) may provide a clinically practical approach to the prevention of restenosis after angioplasty.


Circulation | 1994

Percutaneous transluminal in vivo gene transfer by recombinant adenovirus in normal porcine coronary arteries, atherosclerotic arteries, and two models of coronary restenosis.

Brent A. French; Wojciech Mazur; Nadir M. Ali; Robert S. Geske; J P Finnigan; George P. Rodgers; Robert Roberts; Albert E. Raizner

BACKGROUND Gene therapy has been proposed as a possible solution to the problem of restenosis after coronary angioplasty. The current study was undertaken to assess conventional methods of gene transfer and to develop percutaneous techniques for introducing genes directly into the coronary arteries of large mammals. Since the anticipated targets of gene therapy against restenosis include atherosclerotic and previously instrumented arteries, we also evaluated gene transfer in atherosclerotic coronary arteries and in two porcine models of restenosis: one using intracoronary stents and a second using balloon overstretch angioplasty. METHODS AND RESULTS The conventional method of using perforated balloon catheters to deliver Lipofectin-DNA complexes directly into the coronary arteries of intact animals was applied to 18 porcine coronary arteries including normal arteries, hypercholesterolemic arteries, and those simulating restenosis. The results of this study were consistent with previously published results indicating that only low levels of luciferase gene expression could be obtained by Lipofectin-mediated gene transfer. We therefore undertook a second, parallel study to evaluate percutaneous transluminal in vivo gene transfer using a replication-deficient adenoviral vector. A comparison of the two studies revealed that the mean level of reporter gene expression in the cohort undergoing adenoviral infection was 100-fold higher than in the cohort undergoing Lipofection. Analysis of luciferase activity over time in normal arteries revealed that recombinant gene expression was half-maximal after 1 day, peaked within 1 week, was still half-maximal at 2 weeks, and declined to low levels by 4 weeks. Histochemical analysis of coronary arteries treated with a second adenovirus expressing a nuclear-localized beta-galactosidase gene demonstrated gene transfer to a limited number of cells in the media and adventitia. Immunohistochemical analysis of Ad5-infused arteries using a monoclonal antibody directed against CD44 identified a periadventitial infiltrate composed of leukocytes. CONCLUSIONS The recombinant adenoviral vectors proved to be far more effective than Lipofectin at delivering foreign genes directly into the coronary arteries of living mammals. Furthermore, the influences of hypercholesterolemia and arterial injury appeared to have little effect on the levels of gene expression obtained using either method. The results demonstrate that low-level recombinant gene expression, the major obstacle impeding gene therapy for the prevention of restenosis, can potentially be overcome by using adenoviral vectors to mediate coronary gene transfer in vivo. The duration of gene expression provided by these vectors and their effective deployment in atherosclerotic, balloon-overstretched, and stented coronary arteries suggest that recombinant adenovirus may have potential for evaluating gene therapy in the clinically informative porcine models of coronary restenosis.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2009

Circumferential strain analysis identifies strata of cardiomyopathy in Duchenne muscular dystrophy: a cardiac magnetic resonance tagging study.

Kan N. Hor; Janaka Wansapura; Larry W. Markham; Wojciech Mazur; Linda H. Cripe; Robert J. Fleck; D. Woodrow Benson; William Gottliebson

OBJECTIVES This study sought to evaluate the natural history of occult cardiac dysfunction in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). BACKGROUND Duchenne muscular dystrophy is characterized by progressive cardiac dysfunction and myocardial fibrosis late in the disease process. We hypothesized that left ventricular myocardial peak circumferential strain (epsilon(cc)) would decrease in DMD before global systolic functional abnormalities regardless of age or ventricular ejection fraction (EF). METHODS We evaluated cardiac magnetic resonance image (MRI) data from 70 DMD patients and 16 aged-matched control subjects. Standard imaging data included steady-state free precession short-axis cine stack images, cine myocardial tagged images, and myocardial delayed enhancement (MDE) (an indicator of myocardial fibrosis) sequences. Analysis was performed with QMASS (Medis Medical Imaging Systems, Leiden, the Netherlands) and HARP (Diagnosoft, Palo Alto, California) software. The DMD patient data were subdivided by age (<10 or >10 years), EF (>55% or <55%), and the presence or absence of MDE. RESULTS The DMD patients with normal EF had reduced epsilon(cc) at an early age (<10 years) compared with control subjects (p < 0.01). The DMD patients age >10 years with normal EF had further decline in epsilon(cc) compared with younger DMD patients (p < 0.01). There was further decline in epsilon(cc) with age in patients with reduced EF (p < 0.01) without MDE. The oldest patients, with both reduced EF and positive MDE, exhibited the lowest epsilon(cc). None of the patients had ventricular hypertrophy. CONCLUSIONS Myocardial strain abnormalities are prevalent in young DMD patients despite normal EF, and these strain values continue to decline with advancing age. Strain analysis in combination with standard MRI and MDE imaging provides a means to stratify DMD cardiomyopathy.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2011

Magnetic Resonance Derived Myocardial Strain Assessment Using Feature Tracking

Kan N. Hor; Rolf Baumann; Gianni Pedrizzetti; Gianni Tonti; William Gottliebson; Michael D. Taylor; D. Woodrow Benson; Wojciech Mazur

Purpose: An accurate and practical method to measure parameters like strain in myocardial tissue is of great clinical value, since it has been shown, that strain is a more sensitive and earlier marker for contractile dysfunction than the frequently used parameter EF. Current technologies for CMR are time consuming and difficult to implement in clinical practice. Feature tracking is a technology that can lead to more automization and robustness of quantitative analysis of medical images with less time consumption than comparable methods. Methods: An automatic or manual input in a single phase serves as an initialization from which the system starts to track the displacement of individual patterns representing anatomical structures over time. The specialty of this method is that the images do not need to be manipulated in any way beforehand like e.g. tagging of CMR images. Results: The method is very well suited for tracking muscular tissue and with this allowing quantitative elaboration of myocardium and also blood flow. Conclusions: This new method offers a robust and time saving procedure to quantify myocardial tissue and blood with displacement, velocity and deformation parameters on regular sequences of CMR imaging. It therefore can be implemented in clinical practice.


Lancet Neurology | 2015

Eplerenone for early cardiomyopathy in Duchenne muscular dystrophy: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Subha V. Raman; Kan N. Hor; Wojciech Mazur; Nancy Halnon; John T. Kissel; Xin He; Tam Tran; Suzanne Smart; Beth McCarthy; Michael D. Taylor; John L. Jefferies; Jill A. Rafael-Fortney; Jeovanna Lowe; Sharon Roble; Linda H. Cripe

BACKGROUND Cardiomyopathy is a leading cause of death in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy and myocardial damage precedes decline in left ventricular systolic function. We tested the efficacy of eplerenone on top of background therapy in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy with early myocardial disease. METHODS In this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, boys from three centres in the USA aged 7 years or older with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, myocardial damage by late gadolinium enhancement cardiac MRI and preserved ejection fraction received either eplerenone 25 mg or placebo orally, every other day for the first month and once daily thereafter, in addition to background clinician-directed therapy with either angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEI) or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB). Computer-generated randomisation was done centrally using block sizes of four and six, and only the study statistician and the investigational pharmacy had the preset randomisation assignments. The primary outcome was change in left ventricular circumferential strain (Ecc) at 12 months, a measure of contractile dysfunction. Safety was established through serial serum potassium levels and measurement of cystatin C, a non-creatinine measure of kidney function. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01521546. FINDINGS Between Jan 26, 2012, and July 3, 2013, 188 boys were screened and 42 were enrolled. 20 were randomly assigned to receive eplerenone and 22 to receive placebo, of whom 20 in the eplerenone group and 20 in the placebo group completed baseline, 6-month, and 12-month visits. After 12 months, decline in left ventricular circumferential strain was less in those who received eplerenone than in those who received placebo (median ΔEcc 1·0 [IQR 0·3-2·2] vs 2·2 [1·3-3·1]; p=0·020). Cystatin C concentrations remained normal in both groups, and all non-haemolysed blood samples showed normal potassium concentrations. One 23-year-old patient in the placebo group died of fat embolism, and another patient in the placebo group withdrew from the trial to address long-standing digestive issues. All other adverse events were mild: short-lived headaches coincident with seasonal allergies occurred in one patient given eplerenone, flushing occurred in one patient given placebo, and anxiety occurred in another patient given placebo. INTERPRETATION In boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy and preserved ejection fraction, addition of eplerenone to background ACEI or ARB therapy attenuates the progressive decline in left ventricular systolic function. Early use of available drugs warrants consideration in this population at high risk of cardiac death, but further studies are needed to determine the effect of combination cardioprotective therapy on event-free survival in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. FUNDING BallouSkies, Parent Project for Muscular Dystrophy, US National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, and US National Institutes of Health.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2015

Myocardial strain measurement with feature-tracking cardiovascular magnetic resonance: normal values.

Robin J. Taylor; William E. Moody; Fraz Umar; Nicola C. Edwards; Tiffany J. Taylor; Berthold Stegemann; John N. Townend; Kan N. Hor; Richard P. Steeds; Wojciech Mazur; Francisco Leyva

AIMS Myocardial deformation is a key to clinical decision-making. Feature-tracking cardiovascular magnetic resonance (FT-CMR) provides quantification of motion and strain using standard steady-state in free-precession (SSFP) imaging, which is part of a routine CMR left ventricular (LV) study protocol. An accepted definition of a normal range is essential if this technique is to enter the clinical arena. METHODS AND RESULTS One hundred healthy individuals, with 10 men and women in each of 5 age deciles from 20 to 70 years, without a history of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, renal impairment, or family history of cardiovascular disease, and with a normal stress echocardiogram, underwent FT-CMR assessment of LV myocardial strain and strain rate using SSFP cines.Peak systolic longitudinal strain (Ell) was -21.3 ± 4.8%, peak systolic circumferential strain (Ecc) was -26.1 ± 3.8%, and peak systolic radial strain (Err) was 39.8 ± 8.3%. On Bland-Altman analyses, peak systolic Ecc had the best inter-observer agreement (bias 0.63 ± 1.29% and 95% CI -1.90 to 3.16) and peak systolic Err the least inter-observer agreement (bias 0.13 ± 6.41 and 95% CI -12.44 to 12.71). There was an increase in the magnitude of peak systolic Ecc with advancing age, which was greatest in subjects over the age of 50 years (R(2) = 0.11, P = 0.003). There were significant gender differences (P < 0.001) in peak systolic Ell, with a greater magnitude of deformation in females (-22.7%) than in males (-19.3%). CONCLUSION Normal values for myocardial strain measurements using FT-CMR are provided. All circumferential and longitudinal based variables had excellent intra- and inter-observer variability.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1994

Fate of side branches after intracoronary implantation of the Gianturco-Roubin Flex-Stent for acute or threatened closure after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty

Wojciech Mazur; W.Carter Grinstead; Arif H. Hakim; Salim F. Dabaghi; John M. Abukhalil; Nadir M. Ali; Jane Joseph; Brent A. French; Albert E. Raizner

Side branch occlusion may occur in the course of percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), particularly if complicated by site dissection. Concern that the additional placement of a stent may further jeopardize side branches is logical. Consequently, this study analyzed pre-PTCA, post-PTCA, poststent, and 6-month follow-up angiograms of 100 consecutive patients in whom 103 Gianturco-Roubin stents were implanted for acute or threatened closure after PTCA. Side branches were defined as major (> 50% of the stented vessel diameter) and minor (< 50%). Minor branches, often < 1 mm in diameter, were assessed only for patency. One hundred eight major branches, of which 33 were diseased (> 50% stenosis), and 129 minor branches were analyzed. Seven major branches (6%), all of which were diseased before PTCA, and 23 minor branches (18%) were lost after PTCA. Immediately after stent insertion, only 1 additional major and 1 minor branch were lost, whereas 2 of 7 major (29%) and 9 of 23 minor (39%) branches reappeared. At follow-up angiography, 7 major branches (6%) were more stenosed and 6 (6%) were improved compared with the angiogram before PTCA. Only 2 major (2%) and 5 minor (4%) branches remained occluded. Additionally, 2 major and 1 minor branch, which were patent after PTCA and stenting, were occluded at follow-up as a result of total occlusion of the stented segment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging | 2013

Occult Cardiotoxicity in Childhood Cancer Survivors Exposed to Anthracycline Therapy

Olga Toro-Salazar; Eileen Gillan; Michael T. O’Loughlin; Georgine Burke; Joanna Ferranti; Jeffrey A. Stainsby; Bruce T. Liang; Wojciech Mazur; Subha V. Raman; Kan N. Hor

Background—More than 50% of >270 000 childhood cancer survivors in the United States have been treated with anthracyclines and are therefore at risk of developing cardiotoxicity. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) has demonstrated utility to detect diffuse interstitial fibrosis and changes in regional myocardial function. We hypothesized that CMR would identify occult cardiotoxicity characterized by structural and functional myocardial abnormalities in a cohort of asymptomatic pediatric cancer survivors with normal global systolic function. Methods and Results—Forty-six long-term childhood cancer survivors with a cumulative anthracycline dose ≥200 mg/m2 and normal systolic function were studied 2.5 to 26.9 years after anthracycline exposure. Subjects underwent transthoracic echocardiography, CMR with routine cine acquisition, tissue characterization, and left ventricular strain analysis using a modified 16-segment model. Extracellular volume was measured in 27 subjects, all of whom were late gadolinium enhancement negative. End-systolic fiber stress was elevated in 45 of 46 subjects. Low average circumferential strain magnitude (&egr;cc) −14.9±1.4; P<0.001, longitudinal strain magnitude (&egr;ll) −13.5±1.9; P<0.001, and regional peak circumferential strain were seen in multiple myocardial segments, despite normal global systolic function by transthoracic echocardiography and CMR. The mean T1 values of the myocardium were significantly lower than that of control subjects at 20 minutes (458±69 versus 487±44 milliseconds; P=0.01). Higher mean extracellular volume was observed in female subjects (0.34 versus 0.22; P=0.01). Conclusions—Asymptomatic postchemotherapy pediatric patients have abnormal myocardial characteristics and strain parameters by CMR despite normal global cardiac function by standard transthoracic echocardiography and CMR measures.

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Kan N. Hor

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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D. Woodrow Benson

Children's Hospital of Wisconsin

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John L. Jefferies

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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William Gottliebson

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Linda H. Cripe

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Albert E. Raizner

Baylor College of Medicine

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Janaka Wansapura

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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