Publications by authors named "D Ostrander"

Article Synopsis
  • Kidney transplantation from HIV-positive donors to HIV-positive recipients is a growing practice, initiated under a 2016 U.S. law, and is currently being evaluated for broader clinical implementation.
  • An observational study involving 408 candidates at 26 U.S. centers assessed the safety and health outcomes of kidney transplants from both HIV-positive and HIV-negative donors to HIV-positive recipients, finding no significant difference in major health risks between the two donor groups.
  • Results indicated similar long-term survival rates, graft success, and complication rates across both groups, although recipients of kidneys from HIV-positive donors showed a higher incidence of HIV breakthrough infections.
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A successful multidisciplinary research center depends on the quality of the science being conducted and the quality of the center's design, culture, infrastructure, and institutional support. In this perspective, we describe our experience building and maintaining a multidisciplinary transplant research center with a large focus on transplant infectious diseases. We identify principles that we believe contributed to our success including: taking inventory, defining culture, creating a multidisciplinary shared leadership model, establishing expertise in a multiple method approach, investing in operations and management, building and sharing resources, and securing institutional support.

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Background: The prevalence and outcomes of COVID-19-associated invasive fungal infections (CAIFIs) in solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs) remain poorly understood.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study of SOTRs with COVID-19 admitted to 5 hospitals within Johns Hopkins Medicine was performed between March 2020 and March 2022. Cox regression multilevel mixed-effects ordinal logistic regression was used.

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Histoplasmosis, the most common endemic mycosis in North America, presents in a myriad of ways, spanning the spectrum from self-limiting pneumonia to progressive disseminated histoplasmosis (PDH). Toward better describing contemporary histoplasmosis syndromes, risks, and outcomes, this single-center retrospective cohort study was performed (2009-2019). The population who developed PDH was similar to that with other forms of histoplasmosis (OFH) except for higher rates of preexisting immunocompromising conditions (91.

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The latent viral reservoir (LVR) remains a major barrier to HIV-1 curative strategies. It is unknown whether receiving a liver transplant from a donor with HIV might lead to an increase in the LVR because the liver is a large lymphoid organ. We found no differences in intact provirus, defective provirus, or the ratio of intact to defective provirus between recipients with ART-suppressed HIV who received a liver from a donor with (n = 19) or without HIV (n = 10).

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