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Dive into the research topics where Zaina P. Qureshi is active.

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Featured researches published by Zaina P. Qureshi.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2011

Market withdrawal of new molecular entities approved in the United States from 1980 to 2009

Zaina P. Qureshi; Enrique Seoane-Vazquez; Rosa Rodriguez-Monguio; Kurt B. Stevenson; Sheryl L. Szeinbach

Economic factors, market dynamics, and safety issues are largely responsible for decisions to withdraw pharmaceutical products from the market. In this study, new molecular entities (NMEs) approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) were examined in the USA from 1980 to 2009.


Ndt Plus | 2012

Gadolinium-induced nephrogenic systemic fibrosis: the rise and fall of an iatrogenic disease

Charles L. Bennett; Zaina P. Qureshi; A. Oliver Sartor; LeAnn B. Norris; Alanna Murday; Sudha Xirasagar; Henrik S. Thomsen

Background. In 2006, nephrologists in Denmark unexpectedly identified chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients with a new syndrome, nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF). Subsequently, 1603 NSF patients were reported to the Food and Drug Administration. Sixty hospitals in the USA account for 93% of these cases, and two hospitals in Denmark account for 4% of these reports. We review Denmark’s identification and subsequent rapid eradication of NSF. Methods. NSF reports from clinicians, the Danish Medicines Agency (DMA) and gadolinium-based contrast agents (GBCAs) manufacturers were reviewed (2002–11). Results. In 1994, the DMA approved a non-ionic linear GBCA, gadodiamide (0.1 mmol/kg), for magnetic resonance imagings (MRIs), with a renal insufficiency contraindication. In 1996, 0.3 mmol/kg dosing received DMA approval. In 1998, the DMA removed renal contraindications. In 1997 and 2002, radiologists at Skejby Hospital and Herlev Hospital, respectively, began performing gadodiamide-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography scans (0.3 mmol/kg) of CKD patients. In 2005, Herlev clinicians requested assistance in evaluating etiological causes of NSF occurring among 10 CKD patients who had developed NSF. This investigation, focusing on infectious agents, was inconclusive. In 2006, Herlev clinicians reported that of 108 CKD patients who had received gadodiamide-enhanced MRI, 20 had developed probable NSF. Herlev radiologists voluntarily discontinued administering gadodiamide to all patients and no new NSF cases at Herlev Hospital developed subsequently. After meeting with Herlev radiologists, Skejby radiologists also discontinued administering gadodiamide to all patients. In 2007, the European Medicines Agency and the DMA contraindicated gadodiamide administration to CKD patients. In 2008, in response to these advisories, radiologists at the other 36 Danish hospitals discontinued administering gadodiamide to all patients, following on practices adopted at Skejby and Herlev Hospitals. In 2009, clinicians at Skejby Hospital reported that a look-back survey identified 33 CKD patients with NSF developing after undergoing GBCA-enhanced MRIs between 1999 and 2007. In 2010, an independent review, commissioned by the Minister of Health, concluded that the DMA had erred in rescinding gadodiamide’s renal insufficiency contraindication in 1998 and that this error was a key factor in the development of NSF in Denmark. In 2011, three NSF cases associated with macrocyclic GBCA-associated NSF and three NSF patients with Stages 3 and 4 CKD disease from Skejby Hospital were reported. Conclusion. A confluence of factors led to the development and eradication of NSF in Denmark.


Lancet Oncology | 2014

Regulatory and clinical considerations for biosimilar oncology drugs

Charles L. Bennett; Brian Chen; Terhi Hermanson; Michael D. Wyatt; Richard M. Schulz; Peter Georgantopoulos; Samuel Kessler; Dennis W. Raisch; Zaina P. Qureshi; Z. Kevin Lu; Bryan L. Love; Virginia Noxon; Laura Rose Bobolts; Melissa Armitage; John Bian; Paul Ray; Richard J. Ablin; William J. M. Hrushesky; Iain C. Macdougall; Oliver Sartor; James O. Armitage

Biological oncology products are integral to cancer treatment, but their high costs pose challenges to patients, families, providers, and insurers. The introduction of biosimilar agents-molecules that are similar in structure, function, activity, immunogenicity, and safety to the original biological drugs-provide opportunities both to improve health-care access and outcomes, and to reduce costs. Several international regulatory pathways have been developed to expedite entry of biosimilars into global marketplaces. The first wave of oncology biosimilar use was in Europe and India in 2007. Oncology biosimilars are now widely marketed in several countries in Europe, and in Australia, Japan, China, Russia, India, and South Korea. Their use is emerging worldwide, with the notable exception of the USA, where several regulatory and cost barriers to biosimilar approval exist. In this Review, we discuss oncology biosimilars and summarise their regulatory frameworks, clinical experiences, and safety concerns.


Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 2012

Ticlopidine-, clopidogrel-, and prasugrel-associated thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura: A 20-year review from the southern network on adverse reactions (SONAR)

Sony Jacob; Brianne L. Dunn; Zaina P. Qureshi; Nicholas Bandarenko; Hau C. Kwaan; Dilip K. Pandey; June M. McKoy; Sara E. Barnato; Jeffrey L. Winters; John F. Cursio; Ivy Weiss; Thomas J. Raife; Patricia M. Carey; Ravindra Sarode; Joseph E. Kiss; Constance Danielson; Thomas L. Ortel; William F. Clark; G. Rock; Masanori Matsumoto; Yoshihiro Fujimura; X. Long Zheng; Hao Chen; Fei Chen; John M. Armstrong; Dennis W. Raisch; Charles L. Bennett

Thienopyridine-derivatives (ticlopidine, clopidogrel, and prasugrel) are the primary antiplatelet agents. Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) is a rare drug-associated syndrome, with the thienopyridines being the most common drugs implicated in this syndrome. We reviewed 20 years of information on clinical, epidemiologic, and laboratory findings for thienopyridine-associated TTP. Four, 11, and 11 cases of thienopyridine-associated TTP were reported in the first year of marketing of ticlopidine (1989), clopidogrel (1998), and prasugrel (2010), respectively. As of 2011, the FDA received reports of 97 ticlopidine-, 197 clopidogrel-, and 14 prasugrel-associated TTP cases. Severe deficiency of ADAMTS-13 (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with a thrombospondin type 1 motif, member 13) was present in 80% and antibodies to 100% of these TTP patients on ticlopidine, 0% of the patients with clopidogrel-associated TTP (p < 0.05), and an unknown percentage of patients with prasugrel-associated TTP. TTP is associated with use of each of the three thienopyridines, although the mechanistic pathways may differ.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Acquired Idiopathic ADAMTS13 Activity Deficient Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura in a Population from Japan

Masanori Matsumoto; Charles L. Bennett; Ayami Isonishi; Zaina P. Qureshi; Yuji Hori; Masaki Hayakawa; Yoko Yoshida; Hideo Yagi; Yoshihiro Fujimura

Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) is a type of thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA). Studies report that the majority of TTP patients present with a deficiency of ADAMTS13 activity. In a database of TMA patients in Japan identified between 1998 and 2008, 186 patients with first onset of acquired idiopathic (ai) ADAMTS13-deficient TTP (ADAMTS13 activity <5%) were diagnosed. The median age of onset of TTP in this group of patients was 54 years, 54.8% were female, 75.8% had renal involvement, 79.0% had neurologic symptoms, and 97.8% had detectable inhibitors to ADAMTS13 activity. Younger patients were less likely to present with renal or neurologic dysfunction (p<0.01), while older patients were more likely to die during the TTP hospitalization (p<0.05). Findings from this cohort in Japan differ from those reported previously from the United States, Europe, and Korea with respect to age at onset (two decades younger in the other cohort) and gender composition (60% to 100% female in the other cohort). We conclude that in one of the largest cohorts of ai-TTP with severe deficiency of ADAMTS13 activity reported to date, demographic characteristics differ in Japanese patients relative to those reported from a large Caucasian registry from Western societies. Additional studies exploring these findings are needed.


Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 2012

A review of safety, efficacy, and utilization of erythropoietin, darbepoetin, and peginesatide for patients with cancer or chronic kidney disease: A report from the southern network on adverse reactions (SONAR)

Charles L. Bennett; David Spiegel; Iain C. Macdougall; LeAnn B. Norris; Zaina P. Qureshi; Oliver Sartor; Stephen Y. Lai; Martin S. Tallman; Dennis W. Raisch; Sheila Weiss Smith; Samuel M. Silver; Alanna Murday; James O. Armitage; David Goldsmith

The erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs) erythropoietin and darbepoetin prevent transfusions among chemotherapy-associated anemia patients. Clinical trials, meta-analyses, and guidelines identify mortality, tumor progression, and venous thromboembolism (VTE) risks with ESA administration in this setting. Product labels advise against administering ESAs with potentially curative chemotherapy (United States) or to conduct risk-benefit assessments (Europe/Canada). Since 2007, fewer chemotherapy-associated anemia patients in the United States and Europe receive ESAs. ESAs and the erythropoietin receptor agonist peginesatide prevent transfusions among chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients; clinical trials, guidelines, and meta-analyses demonstrate myocardial infarction, stroke, VTE, or mortality risks with ESAs targeting high hemoglobin levels. U.S. labels recommend administering ESAs or peginesatide at doses sufficient to prevent transfusions among dialysis CKD patients. For dialysis CKD patients, Canadian and European labels recommend targeting hemoglobin levels of 10 to 12 g/dL and 11 to 12 g/dL, respectively, with ESAs. ESA utilization for dialysis CKD patients has decreased in the United States.


Community oncology | 2010

Polysorbate 80 hypersensitivity reactions: a renewed call to action

LeAnn B. Norris; Zaina P. Qureshi; P. Brandon Bookstaver; Dennis W. Raisch; Oliver Sartor; Hao Chen; Fei Chen; Charles L. Bennett

1 South Carolina Center of Economic Excellence for Medication Safety and Efficacy and the Southern Network on Adverse Reactions (SONAR), South Carolina College of Pharmacy, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC; 2 Pharmacoeconomics, Epidemiology, Public Policy and Outcomes Research (PEPPOR), College of Pharmacy, University of New Mexico, and Veterans Affairs Cooperative Studies Program Clinical Research Pharmacy, Albuquerque, NM; 3 Tulane Cancer Center, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA; 4 eHealthMe, Madison, WI; and 5 Hollings Cancer Center, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC


Biometrics | 2016

A flexible, computationally efficient method for fitting the proportional hazards model to interval-censored data

Lianming Wang; Christopher S. McMahan; Michael G. Hudgens; Zaina P. Qureshi

The proportional hazards model (PH) is currently the most popular regression model for analyzing time-to-event data. Despite its popularity, the analysis of interval-censored data under the PH model can be challenging using many available techniques. This article presents a new method for analyzing interval-censored data under the PH model. The proposed approach uses a monotone spline representation to approximate the unknown nondecreasing cumulative baseline hazard function. Formulating the PH model in this fashion results in a finite number of parameters to estimate while maintaining substantial modeling flexibility. A novel expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm is developed for finding the maximum likelihood estimates of the parameters. The derivation of the EM algorithm relies on a two-stage data augmentation involving latent Poisson random variables. The resulting algorithm is easy to implement, robust to initialization, enjoys quick convergence, and provides closed-form variance estimates. The performance of the proposed regression methodology is evaluated through a simulation study, and is further illustrated using data from a large population-based randomized trial designed and sponsored by the United States National Cancer Institute.


Lancet Oncology | 2016

Generic oncology drugs: are they all safe?

Y. Tony Yang; Sumimasa Nagai; Brian Chen; Zaina P. Qureshi; Akida Lebby; Samuel Kessler; Peter Georgantopoulos; Dennis W. Raisch; Oliver Sartor; Terhi Hermanson; Robert C. Kane; William J. M. Hrushesky; Joshua J. Riente; LeAnn B. Norris; Laura Rose Bobolts; James O. Armitage; Charles L. Bennett

Although the availability of generic oncology drugs allows access to contemporary care and reduces costs, there is international variability in the safety of this class of drugs. In this Series paper, we review clinical, policy, safety, and regulatory considerations for generic oncology drugs focusing on the USA, Canada, the European Union (EU), Japan, China, and India. Safety information about generic formulations is reviewed from one agent in each class, for heavy metal drugs (cisplatin), targeted agents (imatinib), and cytotoxic agents (docetaxel). We also review regulatory reports from Japan and the USA, countries with the largest pharmaceutical expenditures. Empirical studies did not identify safety concerns in the USA, Canada, the EU, and Japan, where regulations and enforcement are strong. Although manufacturing problems for generic pharmaceuticals exist in India, where 40% of all generic pharmaceuticals used in the USA are manufactured, increased inspections and communication by the US Food and Drug Administration are occurring, facilitating oversight and enforcement. No safety outbreaks among generic oncology drugs were reported in developed countries. For developing countries, oversight is less intensive, and concerns around drug safety still exist. Regulatory agencies should collaboratively develop procedures to monitor the production, shipment, storage, and post-marketing safety of generic oncology drugs. Regulatory agencies for each country should also aim towards identical definitions of bioequivalence, the cornerstone of regulatory approval.


Pharmacotherapy | 2013

Safety and Effectiveness of Daptomycin Across a Hospitalized Obese Population: Results of a Multicenter Investigation in the Southeastern United States

P. Brandon Bookstaver; Christopher M. Bland; Zaina P. Qureshi; Carmen M. Faulkner‐Fennell; Margrit A. Sheldon; Celeste R. Caulder; Charles Hartis

Data are limited for antimicrobial outcomes in obese patients. This study investigated the safety and clinical outcomes of daptomycin therapy in a hospitalized obese population in the southeastern United States.

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Charles L. Bennett

University of South Carolina

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LeAnn B. Norris

University of South Carolina

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Sudha Xirasagar

University of South Carolina

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R. Horner

University of South Carolina

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Alanna Murday

University of South Carolina

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Brian Chen

University of South Carolina

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