Publications
Department of Medicine faculty members published more than 3,000 peer-reviewed articles in 2022.
2018
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2018
Heavy drinking is prevalent among people living with HIV. Studies use tools like patient-reported outcomes (PROs) to quantify alcohol use in a detailed, timely manner. However, if alcohol misuse influences PRO completion, selection bias may result. Our study included 14,145 adult HIV patients (133,036 visits) from CNICS who were eligible to complete PROs at an HIV primary care visit. We compared PRO completion proportions between patients with and without a clinical diagnosis of at-risk alcohol use in the prior year. We accounted for confounding by baseline and visit-specific covariates. PROs were completed at 20.8% of assessed visits. The adjusted difference in PRO completion proportions was -3.2% (95% CI -5.6 to -0.8%). The small association between receipt of an at-risk alcohol use diagnosis and decreased PRO completion suggests there could be modest selection bias in studies using the PRO alcohol measure.
View on PubMed2018
BACKGROUND
Although individual cardiac biomarkers are associated with heart failure risk and all-cause mortality in HIV-infected individuals, their combined use for prediction has not been well studied.
METHODS AND RESULTS
Unsupervised k-means cluster analysis was performed blinded to the study outcomes in 332 HIV-infected participants on 8 biomarkers: ST2, NT-proBNP (N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide), hsCRP (high-sensitivity C-reactive protein), GDF-15 (growth differentiation factor 15), cystatin C, IL-6 (interleukin-6), D-dimer, and troponin. We evaluated cross-sectional associations of each cluster with diastolic dysfunction, pulmonary hypertension (defined as echocardiographic pulmonary artery systolic pressure ≥35 mm Hg), and longitudinal associations with all-cause mortality. The biomarker-derived clusters partitioned subjects into 3 groups. Cluster 3 (n=103) had higher levels of CRP, IL-6, and D-dimer (inflammatory phenotype). Cluster 2 (n=86) displayed elevated levels of ST2, NT-proBNP, and GDF-15 (cardiac phenotype). Cluster 1 (n=143) had lower levels of both phenotype-associated biomarkers. After multivariable adjustment for traditional and HIV-related risk factors, cluster 3 was associated with a 51% increased risk of diastolic dysfunction (95% confidence interval, 1.12-2.02), and cluster 2 was associated with a 67% increased risk of pulmonary hypertension (95% confidence interval, 1.04-2.68), relative to cluster 1. Over a median 6.9-year follow-up, 48 deaths occurred. Cluster 3 was independently associated with a 3.3-fold higher risk of mortality relative to cluster 1 (95% confidence interval, 1.3-8.1), and cluster 2 had a 3.1-fold increased risk (95% confidence interval, 1.1-8.4), even after controlling for diastolic dysfunction, pulmonary hypertension, left ventricular mass, and ejection fraction.
CONCLUSIONS
Serum biomarkers can be used to classify HIV-infected individuals into separate clusters for differentiating cardiopulmonary structural and functional abnormalities and can predict mortality independent of these structural and functional measures.
View on PubMed2018
BACKGROUND
Integrating home-based HIV counseling and testing (HCT) with tuberculosis (TB) evaluation could improve the uptake of HIV testing among household contacts of patients with active TB. We sought to identify the facilitators of and barriers to HCT during household contact investigation for TB in Kampala, Uganda.
METHODS
We nested semi-structured interviews with 28 household contacts who were offered home-based HCT in a household-randomized trial of home-based strategies for TB contact investigation. Respondents reflected on their experiences of the home visit, the social context of the household, and their decision to accept or decline HIV testing. We used content analysis to identify and evaluate facilitators of and barriers to testing, then categorized the emergent themes using the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation, and Behavior (COM-B) model.
RESULTS
Facilitators included a preexisting desire to confirm HIV status or to show support for the index TB patient; a perception that home-based services are convenient; and positive perceptions of lay health workers. Key barriers included fear of results and feeling psychologically unprepared to receive results. The social influence of other household members operated as both a facilitator and a barrier.
CONCLUSIONS
Preexisting motivation, psychological readiness to test, and the social context of the household are major contributors to the decision to test for HIV at home. Uptake might be improved by providing normalizing information about HCT before the visit, by offering a second HCT opportunity, by offering self-tests with follow-up counseling, or by introducing HCT using "opt-out" language.
View on PubMed2018
Inhibition of the bile salt export pump (BSEP) by a drug has been implicated as a risk factor for a drug's potential to cause drug-induced liver injury (DILI) and is thought to be an important mechanism leading to DILI. For a wide variety of drugs a correlation has been observed between the potency of in vitro BSEP inhibition and its propensity to cause DILI in humans. These findings were interpreted to suggest that BSEP inhibition could be an important mechanism to help explain how some drugs initiate DILI. Because the Biopharmaceutics Drug Disposition Classification System (BDDCS) can be useful in characterizing and predicting some important transporter effects in terms of drug-drug interactions, we evaluated the information provided by BDDCS in order to understand the inhibition propensity of BSEP. Here we analyze the relationship between a compound's ability to inhibit BSEP function and cause liver injury in humans using a compilation of published DILI datasets that have screened for BSEP inhibitors, other hepatic transporters and other mechanism-based toxicity key events. Our results demonstrate that there is little support for in vitro BSEP inhibition being universally DILI predictive. Rather we show that most potent BSEP inhibitors are BDDCS class 2 drugs, which we have demonstrated previously is the BDDCS class most likely to be DILI related. Since BDDCS class is not related to any proposed DILI mechanistic hypotheses, we maintain that if measures of BSEP inhibition alone or together with inhibition of other transporters cannot be differentiated from class 2 assignment, there is no support for in vitro BSEP inhibition being DILI predictive.
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