Publications by authors named "Elizabeth B Rand"

Article Synopsis
  • Adenovirus has been linked to acute liver failure (ALF), prompting a study on the prevalence of various viruses in children who underwent liver transplants due to liver diseases.
  • The study analyzed 33 liver samples, finding HHV-6 in the majority of cases, while adenovirus was only detected in one ALF case, suggesting it may not significantly contribute to liver failure.
  • The findings highlight HHV-6 as the most common virus in liver transplant cases, providing foundational data for understanding viral links to ALF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Elevated spleen stiffness may be seen in patients with portal hypertension due to cirrhosis. In patients with Fontan physiology, elevated liver stiffness has been shown to correlate poorly with liver fibrosis. It is unknown whether spleen stiffness may instead serve as a surrogate marker of liver fibrosis in these patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Hardikar syndrome (HS, MIM #301068) is a female-specific multiple congenital anomaly syndrome characterized by retinopathy, orofacial clefting, aortic coarctation, biliary dysgenesis, genitourinary malformations, and intestinal malrotation. We previously showed that heterozygous nonsense and frameshift variants in MED12 cause HS. The phenotypic spectrum of disease and the mechanism by which MED12 variants cause disease is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Fontan operation is the current standard of care for single-ventricle congenital heart disease. Individuals with a Fontan circulation (FC) exhibit central venous hypertension and face life-threatening complications of hepatic fibrosis, known as Fontan-associated liver disease (FALD). The fundamental biology and mechanisms of FALD are little understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: Alagille syndrome (ALGS) is characterized by chronic cholestasis with associated pruritus and extrahepatic anomalies. Maralixibat, an ileal bile acid transporter inhibitor, is an approved pharmacologic therapy for cholestatic pruritus in ALGS. Since long-term placebo-controlled studies are not feasible or ethical in children with rare diseases, a novel approach was taken comparing 6-year outcomes from maralixibat trials with an aligned and harmonized natural history cohort from the G lobal AL agille A lliance (GALA) study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Fontan-associated liver disease (FALD) is a liver condition that develops in patients with single ventricle heart defects who have undergone Fontan surgery, often requiring monitoring through liver biopsies for fibrosis.
  • - A case study of a 7-year-old girl with hypoplastic left heart syndrome highlighted the need for vigilance when observing liver symptoms, as she showed signs of liver disease following her Fontan procedure and subsequent elevated liver enzyme levels.
  • - The liver biopsy revealed glycogen storage disease IX, showcasing how investigating unexpected health issues in these patients can lead to significant and beneficial diagnoses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: Live vaccines (measles-mumps-rubella [MMR] and varicella-zoster virus [VZV]) have not been recommended after solid organ transplant due to concern for inciting vaccine strain infection in an immunocompromised host. However, the rates of measles, mumps, and varicella are rising nationally and internationally, leaving susceptible immunocompromised children at risk for life-threating conditions.

Objective: To determine the safety and immunogenicity of live vaccines in pediatric liver and kidney transplant recipients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted to compare long-term outcomes of pediatric liver transplant recipients who stopped taking immunosuppression drugs to matched recipients who continued their medication, using data from the Society of Pediatric Liver Transplant (SPLIT) registry.
  • The retrospective analysis included 33 patients off immunosuppression and 66 matched controls, assessing factors like retransplantation, allograft rejection, and overall health after transplantation.
  • Results showed no significant differences in rejection rates or health outcomes between the two groups, indicating that stopping immunosuppression might be safe, but the small sample size limits the findings' applicability to the general pediatric population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) is an acute decompensation of chronic liver disease leading to multiorgan failure and mortality. The objective of this study was to evaluate characteristics and outcomes of children with ACLF who are at the highest priority for liver transplantation (LT) on the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) database-listed as status 1B. The characteristics and outcomes of 478 children with ACLF listed as status 1B on the UNOS LT waiting list from 2007-2019 were compared with children with similar or higher priority listing for transplant: 929 with acute liver failure (ALF) listed as status 1A and 808 with metabolic diseases and malignancies listed as status 1B (termed "non-ACLF").

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Liver transplantation (LT) has been used for many years as a therapeutic option for certain inborn errors of metabolism (IEMs). Here we present one institution's 27 years of experience with LT in IEMs. Our objective is to assess the outcomes of IEM patients who have undergone LT, which we hypothesize to be generally successful for prevention of metabolic decompensation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pediatric liver transplant (LT) recipients are often transplanted at a young age, precluding them from receiving live virus vaccinations (LVV) such as varicella (VZV) vaccine and measles, mumps and rubella. This places them at profound risk for vaccine preventable illness. We sought to detail safety of vaccination.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Liver disease causes around 15,000 hospitalizations in children each year in the U.S., with common causes including biliary atresia, metabolic disorders, and infections.
  • Children facing severe liver issues may experience acute liver failure (ALF) or acute on chronic liver failure (ACLF), both requiring intensive care and potentially leading to needing a liver transplant.
  • Effective treatment involves a multidisciplinary approach in pediatric ICUs, focusing on the complex interactions between the liver and other organ systems while managing diagnosis and care until transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transplant center performance and practice variation for pediatric post-liver transplantation (LT) outcomes other than survival are understudied. This was a retrospective cohort study of pediatric LT recipients who received transplants between January 1, 2006, and May 31, 2017, using United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) data that were merged with the Pediatric Health Information System database. Center effects for the acute rejection rate at 1 year after LT (AR1) using UNOS coding and the biliary complication rate at 1 year after LT (BC1) using inpatient billing claims data were estimated by center-specific rescaled odds ratios that accounted for potential differences in recipient and donor characteristics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To evaluate growth in a population of patients with Fontan circulation.

Study Design: We performed a cross-sectional evaluation of patients followed in our multidisciplinary Fontan clinic from January 2011 through August 2015. We reviewed the historical data, anthropometry, clinical, and laboratory studies and performed bivariate and multivariate analysis of factors associated with height z score.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The increasing global prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 and the resulting COVID-19 disease pandemic pose significant concerns for clinical management of solid organ transplant recipients (SOTR). Wearable devices that can measure physiologic changes in biometrics including heart rate, heart rate variability, body temperature, respiratory, activity (such as steps taken per day) and sleep patterns, and blood oxygen saturation show utility for the early detection of infection before clinical presentation of symptoms. Recent algorithms developed using preliminary wearable datasets show that SARS-CoV-2 is detectable before clinical symptoms in >80% of adults.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is a monogenic type-I interferonopathy that results in neurologic injury. The systemic impact of sustained interferon activation is less well characterized. Liver inflammation is known to be associated with the neonatal form of AGS, but the incidence of AGS-related hepatitis across lifespan is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background The physiologic hallmarks of the Fontan circulation-chronically elevated central venous pressures and low cardiac output-have significant effects not only on cardiovascular status but also impact other organ systems. Exercise capacity is limited in many and declines with age, accelerating in adolescence, but with wide variability. We explore the relationship between exercise performance and end-organ function in outpatient subjects with a Fontan circulation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: Tolerance is transplantation's holy grail, as it denotes allograft health without immunosuppression and its toxicities. Our aim was to determine, among stable long-term pediatric liver transplant recipients, the efficacy and safety of immunosuppression withdrawal to identify operational tolerance.

Approach And Results: We conducted a multicenter, single-arm trial of immunosuppression withdrawal over 36-48 weeks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid (HIDA) scan is frequently used in an attempt to exclude biliary atresia in infants who are cholestatic. We present 6 cases of confirmed biliary atresia in infants who had biliary patency reported on HIDA scan. We demonstrate that misinterpreted HIDA scans led to delayed diagnosis and surgical intervention for biliary atresia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alagille syndrome is an autosomal dominant disease with a known molecular etiology of dysfunctional Notch signaling caused primarily by pathogenic variants in JAGGED1 (JAG1), but also by variants in NOTCH2. The majority of JAG1 variants result in loss of function, however disease has also been attributed to lesser understood missense variants. Conversely, the majority of NOTCH2 variants are missense, though fewer of these variants have been described.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF