Publications

Export 190 results:
Sort by: Author [ Title  (Desc)] Type Year
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 
W
Umar, Muhammed, Aamir G. Khan, Zaigham Abbas, Sanjeev Arora, Naqvi Asifabbas, Andre Elewaut, Gamal Esmat, Graham Foster, Michael Fried, Khean-L Goh et al. "World Gastroenterology Organisation global guidelines: diagnosis, management and prevention of hepatitis C April 2013." Journal of clinical gastroenterology 48, no. 3 (2014): 204-17. Abstract
n/a
Hamid, Saeed, Mario R. Alvares da Silva, Kelly W. Burak, Tao Chen, Joost PH Drenth, Gamal Esmat, Rui Gaspar, Douglas LaBrecque, Alice Lee, Guilherme Macedo et al. "WGO Guidance for the Care of Patients With COVID-19 and Liver Disease." Journal of clinical gastroenterology 55, no. 1 (2021): 1-11. Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the least deadly but most infectious coronavirus strain transmitted from wild animals. It may affect many organ systems. Aim of the current guideline is to delineate the effects of SARS-CoV-2 on the liver. Asymptomatic aminotransferase elevations are common in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) disease. Its pathogenesis may be multifactorial. It may involve primary liver injury and indirect effects such as "bystander hepatitis," myositis, toxic liver injury, hypoxia, and preexisting liver disease. Higher aminotransferase elevations, lower albumin, and platelets have been reported in severe compared with mild COVID-19. Despite the dominance of respiratory disease, acute on chronic liver disease/acute hepatic decompensation have been reported in patients with COVID-19 and preexisting liver disease, in particular cirrhosis. Metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) has a higher risk of respiratory disease progression than those without MAFLD. Alcohol-associated liver disease may be severely affected by COVID-19-such patients frequently have comorbidities including metabolic syndrome and smoking-induced chronic lung disease. World Gastroenterology Organization (WGO) recommends that interventional procedures such as endoscopy and endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography should be performed in emergency cases or when they are considered strictly necessary such as high risk varices or cholangitis. Hepatocellular cancer surveillance may be postponed by 2 to 3 months. A short delay in treatment initiation and non-surgical approaches should be considered. Liver transplantation should be restricted to patients with high MELD scores, acute liver failure and hepatocellular cancer within Milan criteria. Donors and recipients should be tested for SARS-CoV-2 and if found positive donors should be excluded and liver transplantation postponed until recovery from infection.

V
Ismail, Sohair, Hanan Abdel Hafez, Samar K. Darweesh, Kamal Hassan Kamal, and Gamal Esmat. "Virologic response and breakthrough in chronic hepatitis B Egyptian patients receiving lamivudine therapy." Annals of gastroenterology : quarterly publication of the Hellenic Society of Gastroenterology 27, no. 4 (2014): 380-386. Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lamivudine monotherapy is effective in suppressing hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication to undetectable levels by PCR, in ameliorating liver disease and to some extent in achieving HBsAg seroconversion. This study aimed at assessing the virological and biochemical responses as well as breakthrough in HBeAg-negative chronic HBV (CHB) Egyptian patients receiving lamivudine therapy.

METHODS: This retrospective study included 140 CHB patients with positive serum HBV-DNA by quantitative PCR assays and negative HBeAg who had never received prior anti-viral therapy for HBV. According to duration of lamivudine therapy (100 mg/day) patients were grouped into: group I (n=59) who received lamivudine for 1 year, group II (n=50) who received lamivudine for 2 years, and group III (n=31) who received lamivudine for 3 years.

RESULTS: In group I, 76.3% patients had virologic response but this was reduced in group II and group III to 72% and 67.7% respectively. None of the patients in group I developed virologic breakthrough, whereas 12% and 25.8% in groups II and III respectively developed breakthrough. In group I, 25% of patients having high pre-treatment viremia showed virologic response compared to 84.6% and 83.3% having mild and moderate viremia respectively (P<0.01). However, in groups II and III, there was no significant relationship between pre-treatment viremia and virologic response. No significant relationship was found between pre-treatment viral load and incidence of breakthrough within each group.

CONCLUSION: Lamivudine remains one of the antiviral therapies for HBeAg negative CHB patients. The rates of maintained virologic and biochemical responses to lamivudine decrease in time due to selection of drug-resistant mutants and, hence, breakthrough.

T
WAHAB, MFA, and G. Esmat. "THE VALUE OF ULTRASONOGRAPHY IN ASSESSMENT OF PORTAL-HYPERTENSION IN HEPATOSPLENIC SCHISTOSOMIASIS." MEMORIAS DO INSTITUTO OSWALDO CRUZ 87 (1992): 143-147. Abstract
n/a
V
Alboraie, Mohamed, Marwa Khairy, Marwa Elsharkawy, Noha Asem, Aisha Elsharkawy, and Gamal Esmat. "Value of Egy-Score in diagnosis of significant, advanced hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis compared to aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index, FIB-4 and Forns' index in chronic hepatitis C virus." Hepatology research : the official journal of the Japan Society of Hepatology (2014). Abstract

AIM: Serum markers and developed scores are of rising importance in non-invasive diagnosis of hepatic fibrosis. Aspartate aminotransferase-to-platelet ratio index (APRI), FIB-4 and Forns' index are validated scores used for diagnosis of liver fibrosis. The Egy-Score is a newly developed score for detection of hepatic fibrosis with promising results. We aimed to assess the accuracy of the Egy-Score in the diagnosis of significant fibrosis, advanced fibrosis and cirrhosis compared to APRI, FIB-4 and Forns' in chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients.

METHODS: A retrospective study including 100 chronic hepatitis C naïve Egyptian patients was performed. Patients were classified according to stages of fibrosis into three groups: significant fibrosis (≥ F2), advanced fibrosis (≥ F3) and cirrhosis (F4). Egy-Score, APRI, FIB-4 and Forns' index were calculated. Regression analysis and receiver-operator curves were plotted to assess the sensitivity, specificity and predictive values for the significant scores with the best cut-off for diagnosis.

RESULTS: An Egy-Score of 3.28 or more was superior to APRI, FIB-4 and Forns' index for detecting advanced fibrosis with a sensitivity of 91% and specificity of 78%. An Egy-Score of 3.67 or more was superior to APRI, FIB-4 and Forns' index for detecting cirrhosis with a sensitivity of 82% and specificity of 87%. Forns' index was superior to Egy-Score, FIB-4 and APRI for detecting significant fibrosis.

CONCLUSION: The Egy-Score is a promising, accurate, easily calculated, cost-effective score in the prediction of hepatic fibrosis in chronic HCV patients with superiority over APRI, FIB-4 and Forns' index in advanced hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis.

U
ABDELWAHAB, MF, I. Ramzy, G. Esmat, H. ELKAFASS, and GT Strickland. "ULTRASOUND FOR DETECTING SCHISTOSOMA-HAEMATOBIUM URINARY-TRACT COMPLICATIONS - COMPARISON WITH RADIOGRAPHIC PROCEDURES." JOURNAL OF UROLOGY 148 (1992): 346-350. Abstract
n/a
ABDELWAHAB, MF, G. Esmat, A. FARRAG, Y. ELBORAEY, and GT Strickland. "ULTRASONOGRAPHIC PREDICTION OF ESOPHAGEAL-VARICES IN SCHISTOSOMIASIS-MANSONI." AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY 88 (1993): 560-563. Abstract
n/a
T
Esmat, G., A. M. Abouzied, F. Abdel-Aziz, M. K. Mohamed, M. Abdel-Hamid, MS El Raziky, S. A. Ismail, KR Zalata, NN Mikhail, A. Fix et al. "Treatment with Peg-Interferon alfa-2b (PEG-IFN) plus ribavirin compared to interferon alfa-2b (INF alfa-2b)plus ribavirin on subjects with chronic hepatitis C infected with HCV genotype 4." HEPATOLOGY 36 (2002): 364A. Abstract
n/a
Wiersma, S. T., B. McMahon, J. M. Pawlotsky, C. L. Thio, M. Thursz, S. G. Lim, P. Ocama, G. Esmat, M. Mendy, D. Bell et al. "Treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus infection in resource-constrained settings: expert panel consensus (vol 31, pg 755, 2011)." LIVER INTERNATIONAL 32 (2012): 174. Abstract
n/a
Yosry, Ayman, Rabab F. Omar, Mohamed Ezz Al Arab, Hanan Abdel-Hafez, Mohamed Gohar, and Gamal Esmat. "Transient Elastography Can Predict the Risk of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C." HEPATOLOGY 56 (2012): 844A. Abstract
n/a
Hamdi, N., W. El-Akel, M. El-Serafy, G. Esmat, C. Sarrazin, and A. I. Abdelaziz. "Transcriptional Response of MxA, PKR and SOCS3 to Interferon-Based Therapy in HCV Genotype 4-Infected Patients and Contribution of p53 to Host Antiviral Response." INTERVIROLOGY 55 (2012): 210-218. Abstract
n/a
Breban, R., W. Doss, G. Esmat, M. Elsayed, M. Hellard, P. Ayscue, M. Albert, A. Fontanet, and M. K. Mohamed. "Towards realistic estimates of HCV incidence in Egypt." JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS 20 (2013): 294-296. Abstract
n/a
Zayed, Naglaa, Gamal Esmat, Wafaa A. ElAkel, Tahany Awad, and Mahasen Mabrouk. "Therapeutic Outcome in 6198 Interferon-Naive Egyptian Patients with Chronic Hepatitis C genotype-4: A Real Experience." HEPATOLOGY 56 (2012): 1016A. Abstract
n/a
Fawzy, Injie O., Mohamed Negm, Rasha Ahmed, Gamal Esmat, Nabila Hamdi, and Ahmed I. Abdelaziz. "Tamoxifen downregulates MxA expression by suppressing TLR7 expression in PBMCs of males infected with HCV." Journal of medical virology 86, no. 7 (2014): 1113-9. Abstract

Gender discrepancies in immune response to HCV infections and during HCV therapy exist and previous findings including those from this research team indicate the female sex hormone, 17β-estradiol (E2), to be one probable cause of such inconsistencies. Also, it was recently demonstrated that estrogen receptor modulator Tamoxifen (TAM) exerts an upmodulating/enhancing effect on the TLR7 and JAK-STAT pathways in PBMCs of premenopausal females infected with HCV. Pursuing this work, a discrepancy was noticed in the results from male patients, therefore this study aimed to determine whether the effects of TAM previously observed in the PBMCs of women would hold true in PBMCs from males infected with HCV. Isolated PBMCs were pooled and relative expression of the TLR7 was quantified using RTqPCR. Sets of PBMCs were treated with exogenous interferon alpha (IFNα) or the TLR7 ligand, Imiquimod; these stimulations were performed with and without E2 and TAM pretreatment and the relative gene expressions of TLR7 and MxA were measured. Pretreatment with E2 and IFNα downregulated TLR7 (**P = 0.0080) and TAM further decreased this expression significantly (*P = 0.0284). TAM pretreatment also caused a significant downregulation in MxA expression in Imiquimod-stimulated PBMCs (*P = 0.0218). In conclusion, TAM displays several paradoxical effects in PBMCs of males infected with HCV compared to those of females. Contrary to the previous study involving premenopausal females, in PBMCs of infected males TAM may decrease IFNα release as indicated by reduced MxA expression possibly via the suppression of TLR7 expression.

Fawzy, I. O., M. Negm, R. Ahmed, G. Esmat, N. Hamdi, and A. I. Abdelaziz. "Tamoxifen alleviates hepatitis C virus-induced inhibition of both toll-like receptor 7 and JAK-STAT signalling pathways in PBMCs of infected Egyptian females." JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS 19 (2012): 854-861. Abstract
n/a
Abdelaziz, AO, AY Hamad, G. Esmat, M. A-Serafy, W. Doss, A. Hosny, A. Ansary, and K. Tanaka. "Tacrolimus (FK 506) toxicity in the early postoperative period following living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) among Egyptian adults: Limited experiance." LIVER TRANSPLANTATION 11 (2005): C44. Abstract
n/a
Ibrahim, Sherif A., Sayed F. Abdelwahab, Mona M. Mohamed, Ahmed M. Osman, Eman Fathy, Kamal S. Al-Badry, Nabil Al-Kady, Gamal Esmat, and Maged M. Al-Sherbiny. "T cells are depleted in HCV-induced hepatocellular carcinoma patients: possible role of apoptosis and p53." RETROVIROLOGY 3 (2006). Abstract
n/a
S
Sievert, William, Ibrahim Altraif, Homie A. Razavi, Ayman Abdo, Ezzat Ali Ahmed, Ahmed AlOmair, Deepak Amarapurkar, Chien-Hung Chen, Xiaoguang Dou, Hisham El Khayat et al. "A systematic review of hepatitis C virus epidemiology in Asia, Australia and Egypt." LIVER INTERNATIONAL 31 (2011): 61-80. Abstract
n/a
Eldin, Noha Sharaf, Soheir Ismail, Hala Mansour, Claire Rekacewicz, Moustafa El-Houssinie, Sherif El-Kafrawy, Saeed El Aidi, Mohamed Abdel-Hamid, Gamal Esmat, Stanislas Pol et al. "Symptomatic Acute Hepatitis C in Egypt: Diagnosis, Spontaneous Viral Clearance, and Delayed Treatment with 12 Weeks of Pegylated Interferon Alfa-2a." PLOS ONE 3 (2008). Abstract
n/a
Raziky, M. E., W. El-Akel, M. A. Soliman, S. El Kafrawy, M. Abdel-Hamid, M. K. Mostafa, M. Sjogren, T. Strickland, and G. Esmat. "Sustained virological responders to interferon therapy for chronic hepatitis C Genotype 4: is there a possibility of relapse?" LIVER INTERNATIONAL 26 (2006): 4. Abstract
n/a
Hashem, Mohamed, Hanaa El-Karaksy, Mohamed T. Shata, Maha Sobhy, Heba Helmy, Suzan El-Naghi, Gehan Galal, Zainab Z. Ali, Gamal Esmat, Sayed F. Abdelwahab et al. "Strong Hepatitis C Virus (HCV)-specific Cell-mediated Immune Responses in the Absence of Viremia or Antibodies Among Uninfected Siblings of HCV Chronically Infected Children." JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES 203 (2011): 854-861. Abstract
n/a
Wedemeyer, H., A. S. Duberg, M. Buti, W. M. Rosenberg, S. Frankova, G. Esmat, N. Örmeci, H. Van Vlierberghe, M. Gschwantler, U. Akarca et al. "Strategies to manage hepatitis C virus (HCV) disease burden." Journal of viral hepatitis 21 Suppl 1 (2014): 60-89. Abstract

The number of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections is projected to decline while those with advanced liver disease will increase. A modeling approach was used to forecast two treatment scenarios: (i) the impact of increased treatment efficacy while keeping the number of treated patients constant and (ii) increasing efficacy and treatment rate. This analysis suggests that successful diagnosis and treatment of a small proportion of patients can contribute significantly to the reduction of disease burden in the countries studied. The largest reduction in HCV-related morbidity and mortality occurs when increased treatment is combined with higher efficacy therapies, generally in combination with increased diagnosis. With a treatment rate of approximately 10%, this analysis suggests it is possible to achieve elimination of HCV (defined as a >90% decline in total infections by 2030). However, for most countries presented, this will require a 3-5 fold increase in diagnosis and/or treatment. Thus, building the public health and clinical provider capacity for improved diagnosis and treatment will be critical.

Hatzakis, P. Van Damme, K. Alcorn, C. Gore, M. Benazzouz, S. Berkane, M. Buti, M. Carballo, Cortes H. Martins, S. Deuffic-Burban et al. "The State of Hepatitis B and C in the Mediterranean and Balkan Countries: Report from a Summit Conference (vol 20, pg 1, 2013)." JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS 20 (2013): 744. Abstract
n/a
Hatzakis, A., P. Van Damme, K. Alcorn, C. Gore, M. Benazzouz, S. Berkane, M. Buti, M. Carballo, H. Cortes Martins, S. Deuffic-Burban et al. "The State of Hepatitis B and C in the Mediterranean and Balkan Countries: Report from a Summit Conference." JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS 20 (2013): 1-20. Abstract
n/a
Hatzakis, A., S. Wait, J. Bruix, M. Buti, M. Carballo, M. Cavaleri, M. Colombo, E. Delarocque-Astagneau, G. Dusheiko, G. Esmat et al. "The state of hepatitis B and C in Europe: report from the hepatitis B and C summit conference." JOURNAL OF VIRAL HEPATITIS 18 (2011): 1-16. Abstract
n/a