
Research topics
- Internal medicine
- Medicine
- Surgery
- Radiology
- Pathology
- Cardiology
Selected publications
Stroke · 2022 · 148 citations
- Medicine
- Surgery
- Internal medicine
BACKGROUND: A small randomized controlled trial suggested that dabigatran may be as effective as warfarin in the treatment of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT). We aimed to compare direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) to warfarin in a real-world CVT cohort. METHODS: This multicenter international retrospective study (United States, Europe, New Zealand) included consecutive patients with CVT treated with oral anticoagulation from January 2015 to December 2020. We abstracted demographics and CVT risk factors, hypercoagulable labs, baseline imaging data, and clinical and radiological outcomes from medical records. We used adjusted inverse probability of treatment weighted Cox-regression models to compare recurrent cerebral or systemic venous thrombosis, death, and major hemorrhage in patients treated with warfarin versus DOACs. We performed adjusted inverse probability of treatment weighted logistic regression to compare recanalization rates on follow-up imaging across the 2 treatments groups. RESULTS: =0.02). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with CVT, treatment with DOACs was associated with similar clinical and radiographic outcomes and favorable safety profile when compared with warfarin treatment. Our findings need confirmation by large prospective or randomized studies.
The Lancet · 2020 · 614 citations
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Surgery
The Lancet · 2020 · 179 citations
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Radiology
Journal of Neuroimaging · 2020 · 39 citations
- Medicine
- Cardiology
- Internal medicine
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: In patients with symptomatic vertebrobasilar intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD), impaired distal flow predicts recurrent stroke, but limited data exist on the association between perfusion status and recurrent stroke in anterior circulation ICAD. METHODS: This is a retrospective study of patients hospitalized for symptomatic ICAD with 50-99% stenosis of the intracranial carotid or middle cerebral artery. The primary outcome is recurrent symptomatic ischemic stroke in the territory of the artery with ≥50% stenosis within 90 days. The primary predictor is distal hypoperfusion on magnetic resonance (MR) or computed tomography (CT) perfusion, defined as a ≥15 mL volume of territory of the symptomatic artery with Tmax >6 seconds. RESULTS: Fifty patients met inclusion criteria, including 15 (30%) with recurrent stroke and 15 (30%) with distal hypoperfusion. Distal hypoperfusion was present in 10 of 15 (66.7%) with recurrent stroke versus 5 of 35 (14.3%) without recurrent stroke (P < .001). The hazard ratio for recurrent stroke in patients with distal hypoperfusion was 6.80 (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.31-20.0). CONCLUSION: Distal hypoperfusion in acutely symptomatic ICAD with 50-99% stenosis is associated with stroke recurrence. Distal hypoperfusion could be used to enrich future trials of secondary stroke prevention in ICAD patients.
Frequent coauthors
- 373 shared
Karen L. Furie
University of Iowa
- 292 shared
Shadi Yaghi
Providence College
- 238 shared
Mahesh Jayaraman
Brown University
- 227 shared
Brian Mac Grory
Duke University
- 225 shared
Tina Burton
Arcadia
- 204 shared
Ryan McTaggart
Brown University
- 150 shared
Michael Reznik
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
- 130 shared
Andrew Chang
Logan Hospital
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