K
Kathryn Anastos
Researcher at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Publications - 394
Citations - 15007
Kathryn Anastos is an academic researcher from Albert Einstein College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) & Population. The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 351 publications receiving 13391 citations. Previous affiliations of Kathryn Anastos include Lincoln Hospital & Capital Medical University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Use of Nonantiretroviral Medications That May Impact Neurocognition: Patterns and Predictors in a Large, Long-Term HIV Cohort Study.
Kendra K. Radtke,Peter Bacchetti,Kathryn Anastos,Daniel Merenstein,Howard Crystal,Roksana Karim,Kathleen M. Weber,Andrew Edmonds,Anandi N. Sheth,Margaret A. Fischl,David E. Vance,Ruth M. Greenblatt,Leah H. Rubin +12 more
TL;DR: HIV infection was associated with NC-AE medication use, which may influence determinations of HIV-associated neurocognitive impairment, and providers should consider the impact ofNC-AE medications when evaluating patients with HIV and concurrent neuroc cognitive symptoms.
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Cervicovaginal human papillomavirus (HPV)-infection before and after hysterectomy: evidence of different tissue tropism for oncogenic and nononcogenic HPV types in a cohort of HIV-positive and HIV-negative women.
Gypsyamber D'Souza,Robert D. Burk,Ye Zhong,Howard Minkoff,L. Stewart Massad,Xiaonan Xue,D. Heather Watts,Kathryn Anastos,Joel M. Palefsky,Alexandra M. Levine,Christine Colie,Philip E. Castle,Howard D. Strickler,Howard D. Strickler +13 more
TL;DR: Examination of HPV infection in 86 HIV‐positive and 17 HIV‐negative women who underwent hysterectomy during follow‐up in a longitudinal cohort suggested that oncogenic HPV have greater tropism for cervical compared to vaginal epithelium, consistent with the lower incidence of vaginal than cervical cancer.
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Oral Glucose Tolerance Testing identifies HIV+ infected women with Diabetes Mellitus (DM) not captured by standard DM definition.
TL;DR: In HIV+ women, OGTT identified DM cases that were not identified by a standardized clinical definition, and further investigation is needed to determine whether OGTT should be considered as an adjunctive tool for DM diagnosis in the setting of HIV infection.
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Association of subclinical atherosclerosis with lipid levels amongst antiretroviral-treated and untreated HIV-infected women in the Women's Interagency HIV study.
Christina M. Parrinello,Alan L. Landay,Howard N. Hodis,Stephen J. Gange,Philip J. Norris,Philip J. Norris,Mary Young,Kathryn Anastos,Phyllis C. Tien,Phyllis C. Tien,Xiaonan Xue,Jason Lazar,Lorie Benning,Russell P. Tracy,Robert C. Kaplan +14 more
TL;DR: Among HIV-infected women, hyperlipidemia is most strongly associated with subclinical atherosclerosis in treated women, and the association appeared strongest early in the disease course.
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Association of Pre-Treatment Nutritional Status with Change in CD4 Count after Antiretroviral Therapy at 6, 12, and 24 Months in Rwandan Women
Elizabeth M. Kiefer,Elizabeth M. Kiefer,Donald R. Hoover,Qiuhu Shi,Jean Claude Dusingize,Mardge H. Cohen,Eugene Mutimura,Kathryn Anastos,Kathryn Anastos +8 more
TL;DR: In this cohort of African women initiating ART, no measure of malnutrition prior to ART was consistently associated with change in CD4 count at 6, 12, and 24 months of follow up, suggesting that poorer pre-treatment nutritional status does not prevent an excellent response to ART.