Michael Gill

Michael Gill

Trinity College

H-index: 148

North America-United States

About Michael Gill

Michael Gill, With an exceptional h-index of 148 and a recent h-index of 88 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Trinity College,

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Care interruptions and mortality among adults in Europe and North America: a collaborative analysis of cohort studies

The forecasted prevalence of comorbidities and multimorbidity in people with HIV in the United States through the year 2030: A modeling study

Carepath for overcoming psychosis early (COPE): first 5 years of clinical operation and prospective research in the Cavan–Monaghan early intervention service

Neurologic infections in people with HIV: shifting epidemiological and clinical patterns

Strong bipartisan support for controlled psilocybin use as treatment or enhancement in a representative sample of US Americans: need for caution in public policy persists

Longitudinal trends in causes of death among adults with HIV on antiretroviral therapy in Europe and North America from 1996 to 2020: a collaboration of cohort studies

Immunomodulatory therapy in children with paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS, MIS-C; RECOVERY): a randomised …

The changing landscape of both causes and locations of death in a regional HIV population 2010–2021

Michael Gill Information

University

Trinity College

Position

___

Citations(all)

127475

Citations(since 2020)

54569

Cited By

87164

hIndex(all)

148

hIndex(since 2020)

88

i10Index(all)

770

i10Index(since 2020)

470

Email

University Profile Page

Trinity College

Top articles of Michael Gill

Care interruptions and mortality among adults in Europe and North America: a collaborative analysis of cohort studies

Authors

Adam JW Trickey,Lei Zhang,Christopher T Rentsch,Nikos Pantazis,Rebeca Izquierdo,Andrea Antinori,Gisela Leierer,Greer A Burkholder,Matthias Cavassini,Jorge Palacio-Vieira,M John Gill,Ramon Teira,Christoph Stephan,Niels Obel,Jorg-Janne Vehreschild,Timothy R Sterling,Marc van der Valk,Fabrice Bonnet,Heidi M Crane,Michael J Silverberg,Suzanne M Ingle,Jonathan AC Sterne

Journal

AIDS

Published Date

2024/4/18

ObjectiveInterruptions in care of people with HIV (PWH) on antiretroviral therapy (ART) are associated with

The forecasted prevalence of comorbidities and multimorbidity in people with HIV in the United States through the year 2030: A modeling study

Authors

Keri N Althoff,Cameron Stewart,Elizabeth Humes,Lucas Gerace,Cynthia Boyd,Kelly Gebo,Amy C Justice,Emily P Hyle,Sally B Coburn,Raynell Lang,Michael J Silverberg,Michael A Horberg,Viviane D Lima,M John Gill,Maile Karris,Peter F Rebeiro,Jennifer Thorne,Ashleigh J Rich,Heidi Crane,Mari Kitahata,Anna Rubtsova,Cherise Wong,Sean Leng,Vincent C Marconi,Gypsyamber D’Souza,Hyang Nina Kim,Sonia Napravnik,Kathleen McGinnis,Gregory D Kirk,Timothy R Sterling,Richard D Moore,Parastu Kasaie

Journal

Plos Medicine

Published Date

2024/1/12

Background Estimating the medical complexity of people aging with HIV can inform clinical programs and policy to meet future healthcare needs. The objective of our study was to forecast the prevalence of comorbidities and multimorbidity among people with HIV (PWH) using antiretroviral therapy (ART) in the United States (US) through 2030. Methods and findings Using the PEARL model—an agent-based simulation of PWH who have initiated ART in the US—the prevalence of anxiety, depression, stage ≥3 chronic kidney disease (CKD), dyslipidemia, diabetes, hypertension, cancer, end-stage liver disease (ESLD), myocardial infarction (MI), and multimorbidity (≥2 mental or physical comorbidities, other than HIV) were forecasted through 2030. Simulations were informed by the US CDC HIV surveillance data of new HIV diagnosis and the longitudinal North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design (NA-ACCORD) data on risk of comorbidities from 2009 to 2017. The simulated population represented 15 subgroups of PWH including Hispanic, non-Hispanic White (White), and non-Hispanic Black/African American (Black/AA) men who have sex with men (MSM), men and women with history of injection drug use and heterosexual men and women. Simulations were replicated for 200 runs and forecasted outcomes are presented as median values (95% uncertainty ranges are presented in the Supporting information). In 2020, PEARL forecasted a median population of 670,000 individuals receiving ART in the US, of whom 9% men and 4% women with history of injection drug use, 60% MSM, 8% heterosexual men, and 19 …

Carepath for overcoming psychosis early (COPE): first 5 years of clinical operation and prospective research in the Cavan–Monaghan early intervention service

Authors

S Fayyaz,N Nkire,B Nwosu,N Amjad,Anthony Kinsella,Melissa Gill,C McDonough,Vincent Russell,JL Waddington

Journal

Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine

Published Date

2024/3

ObjectivesAs Ireland confronts the many challenges of broadening the introduction of early intervention services (EIS) for first episode psychosis (FEP) as national policy, this article describes Carepath for Overcoming Psychosis Early (COPE), the EIS of Cavan–Monaghan Mental Health Service, and presents prospective research findings during its first 5 years of operation.MethodsCOPE was launched as a rural EIS with an embedded research protocol in early 2012, following an education programme for general practitioners (GPs). Here, operational activities are documented and research findings presented through to late 2016.ResultsDuring this period, 115 instances of FEP were incepted into COPE, 70.4% via their GP and 29.6% via the Emergency Department. The annual rate of inception was 24.8/100,000 of population aged > 15 years and was 2.1-fold more common among men than women. Mean duration …

Neurologic infections in people with HIV: shifting epidemiological and clinical patterns

Authors

Miranda Mengyuan Wan,M John Gill,Kevin Fonseca,Hartmut Krentz,Christopher Power,Raynell Lang

Journal

AIDS

Published Date

2024/1/1

Objectives:The aim of this study was to define the frequency, risk factors, and clinical outcomes of both AIDS-defining and non-AIDS-defining neurologic infections among people with HIV (PWH).Design:We conducted a retrospective observational cohort study by linking the clinical database at the Southern Alberta HIV Clinic (SAC) with the regional hospital and microbiology databases to identify cases and the associated morbidity and mortality for these neurologic infections from 1995 to 2018.Methods:Neurologic infections were categorized into AIDS-defining and non-AIDS defining. Annual incidence rates per 1000 person-years were calculated. Cox proportional hazards models estimated adjusted hazard ratios (aHR) and 95% confidence intervals of risk factors for neurologic infections in PWH and mortality outcomes.Results:Among 2910 PWH contributing 24 237 years of follow-up, 133 (4.6%) neurologic …

Strong bipartisan support for controlled psilocybin use as treatment or enhancement in a representative sample of US Americans: need for caution in public policy persists

Authors

Julian D Sandbrink,Kyle Johnson,Maureen Gill,D Yaden,Julian Savulescu,I Hannikainen,Brian D Earp

Journal

AJOB Neuroscience

Published Date

2024/12/31

The psychedelic psilocybin has shown promise both as treatment for psychiatric conditions and as a means of improving well-being in healthy individuals. In some jurisdictions (e.g., Oregon, USA), psilocybin use for both purposes is or will soon be allowed and yet, public attitudes toward this shift are understudied. We asked a nationally representative sample of 795 US Americans to evaluate the moral status of psilocybin use in an appropriately licensed setting for either treatment of a psychiatric condition or well-being enhancement. Showing strong bipartisan support, participants rated the individual’s decision as morally positive in both contexts. These results can inform effective policy-making decisions around supervised psilocybin use, given robust public attitudes as elicited in the context of an innovative regulatory model. We did not explore attitudes to psilocybin use in unsupervised or non-licensed …

Longitudinal trends in causes of death among adults with HIV on antiretroviral therapy in Europe and North America from 1996 to 2020: a collaboration of cohort studies

Authors

Adam Trickey,Kathleen McGinnis,M John Gill,Sophie Abgrall,Juan Berenguer,Christoph Wyen,Mojgan Hessamfar,Peter Reiss,Katharina Kusejko,Michael J Silverberg,Arkaitz Imaz,Ramon Teira,Antonella d'Arminio Monforte,Robert Zangerle,Jodie L Guest,Vasileios Papastamopoulos,Heidi Crane,Timothy R Sterling,Sophie Grabar,Suzanne M Ingle,Jonathan AC Sterne

Journal

The Lancet HIV

Published Date

2024/1/24

BackgroundMortality rates among people with HIV have fallen since 1996 following the widespread availability of effective antiretroviral therapy (ART). Patterns of cause-specific mortality are evolving as the population with HIV ages. We aimed to investigate longitudinal trends in cause-specific mortality among people with HIV starting ART in Europe and North America.MethodsIn this collaborative observational cohort study, we used data from 17 European and North American HIV cohorts contributing data to the Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration. We included data for people with HIV who started ART between 1996 and 2020 at the age of 16 years or older. Causes of death were classified into a single cause by both a clinician and an algorithm if International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision or Tenth Revision data were available, or independently by two clinicians. Disagreements were resolved …

Immunomodulatory therapy in children with paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS, MIS-C; RECOVERY): a randomised …

Authors

Saul N Faust,Richard Haynes,Christine E Jones,Natalie Staplin,Elizabeth Whittaker,Thomas Jaki,Ed Juszczak,Enti Spata,Mandy Wan,Alasdair Bamford,Paul Dimitri,Adam Finn,John Furness,Athimalaipet V Ramanan,Christopher Gale,Katrina Cathie,Simon Drysdale,Jolanta Bernatoniene,Clare Murray,Charles C Roehr,Paul Fleming,Andrew Riordan,Srini Bandi,Deepthi Jyothish,Jennifer Evans,Marieke Emonts,Dominic Kelly,Nazima Pathan,Patrick Davies,Rosie Hague,Louisa Pollock,Malcolm G Semple,Leon Peto,J Kenneth Baillie,Maya Buch,Katie Jeffery,Marian Knight,Wei Shen Lim,Alan Montgomery,Aparna Mukherjee,Andrew Mumford,Kathryn Rowan,Guy Thwaites,Marion Mafham,Jonathan Emberson,Martin J Landray,Peter W Horby,Lucy Chappell,Jeremy Day,DV Dung,NN Quang,E Burhan,B Alisjahbana,J Koirala,S Basnet,E Kestelyn,B Basnyat,P Gyanwali,RL Hamers,P Sandercock,J Darbyshire,D DeMets,R Fowler,D Lalloo,M Munavvar,I Roberts,A Warris,J Wittes,A Craddock-Bamford,J Barton,A Basoglu,R Brown,W Brudlo,E Denis,L Fletcher,S Howard,S Musini,K Taylor,G Cui,B Goodenough,A King,M Lay,D Murray,W Stevens,K Wallendszus,R Welsh,C Crichton,J Davies,R Goldacre,C Harper,F Knight,M Nunn,H Salih,J Welch,M Campbell,G Pessoa-Amorim,M Zayed,J Wiles,G Bagley,S Cameron,S Chamberlain,B Farrell,H Freeman,A Kennedy,A Whitehouse,S Wilkinson,C Wood,C Reith,K Davies,H Halls,L Holland,R Truell,K Wilson,Emma Lingwood,L Howie,M Lunn,Penelope Rodgers,J Amuasi,K Baird,T Bao,M Bittaye,J Bonney,U D'Alessandro,M Dhimal,T Huyen,A Jagne,A Karkey,O Maiga,E Matey,B Nadjm,J Nel,S Pant,K Puspatriani,M Rahardjani,S Raijal,H Rees,A Rimainar,C Roberts,A Rocca,S Shrestha,E Usuf,C Vidaillic,F Wulandari,A Alexander,M Amezaga,C Armah,A Asghar,P Aubrey,K Barker-Williams,A Barnard

Journal

The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health

Published Date

2024/3/1

BackgroundPaediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS), also known as multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) emerged in April, 2020. The paediatric comparisons within the RECOVERY trial aimed to assess the effect of intravenous immunoglobulin or corticosteroids compared with usual care on duration of hospital stay for children with PIMS-TS and to compare tocilizumab (anti-IL-6 receptor monoclonal antibody) or anakinra (anti-IL-1 receptor antagonist) with usual care for those with inflammation refractory to initial treatment.MethodsWe did this randomised, controlled, open-label, platform trial in 51 hospitals in the UK. Eligible patients were younger than 18 years and had been admitted to hospital for PIMS-TS. In the first randomisation, patients were randomly assigned (1: 1: 1) to usual care (no additional treatments), usual care plus …

The changing landscape of both causes and locations of death in a regional HIV population 2010–2021

Authors

Hartmut B Krentz,Raynell Lang,Jacqueline McMillan,Meagan Ody,M John Gill

Journal

HIV medicine

Published Date

2024/1/19

Background Although HIV‐related deaths among people with HIV have dramatically decreased, deaths from other medical conditions and non‐medical events have increased. The location of death among people with HIV remains underreported. Objectives We reviewed the deaths, causes of death, and reported location of death (i.e. within or outside of medical settings) of all people with HIV with the Southern Alberta Cohort, Calgary, Canada, between 1 January 2010 and 1 January 2022. Methods This was a retrospective longitudinal cohort study reviewing all deaths within a comprehensive geographically defined HIV cohort over 11 years. Results Deaths from HIV‐related causes decreased from 52% of all deaths in 2010 to 14% in 2021. In 2021, non‐HIV medical deaths increased from 38% to 44%, and non‐medical deaths (e.g. violence, suicide, drug overdose) increased from 0.5% to 39%. Of non …

Impact of hepatitis C cure on risk of mortality and morbidity in people with HIV after antiretroviral therapy initiation

Authors

Mathieu Chalouni,Adam Trickey,Suzanne M Ingle,Maria Antonia Sepuvelda,Juan Gonzalez,Andri Rauch,Heidi M Crane,M John Gill,Peter F Rebeiro,Jürgen K Rockstroh,Ricardo A Franco,Giota Touloumi,Didier Neau,Montserrat Laguno,Michaela Rappold,Colette Smit,Jonathan AC Sterne,Linda Wittkop

Journal

AIDS

Published Date

2023/8/1

Objective:Hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in people with HIV (PWH). Sustained virological response (SVR) decreases the risk of HCV-associated morbidity. We compared mortality, risk of AIDS-defining events, and non-AIDS nonliver (NANL) cancers between HCV-co-infected PWH who reached SVR and mono-infected PWH.Design:Adult PWH from 21 cohorts in Europe and North America that collected HCV treatment data were eligible if they were HCV-free at the time of ART initiation.Methods:Up to 10 mono-infected PWH were matched (on age, sex, date of ART start, HIV acquisition route, and being followed at the time of SVR) to each HCV-co-infected PWH who reached SVR. Cox models were used to estimate relative hazards (hazard ratio) of all-cause mortality, AIDS-defining events, and NANL cancers after adjustment.Results:Among 62 495 PWH, 2756 …

COVID-19 vaccine uptake among people with HIV: identifying characteristics associated with vaccine hesitancy

Authors

Karol Boschung,M John Gill,Hartmut B Krentz,Jessica Dalere,Brenda Beckthold,Kevin Fonseca,Jeffrey A Bakal,Jacqueline M McMillan,Jamil Kanji,Raynell Lang

Journal

Scientific Reports

Published Date

2023/11/23

People with HIV (PWH) are at increased risk of COVID-19 infection. Both Canadian (NACI) and US (CDC) guidelines recommend that all PWH receive at least 2 doses of COVID-19 vaccine, and a booster. We examined vaccination uptake among PWH in Southern Alberta, Canada. Among adult PWH, we evaluated COVID-19 vaccination uptake between December 2020 and August 2022. Poisson regression models with robust variance (approximating log binomial models) estimated crude and adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for receiving (1) any vs. no vaccine, and (2) primary series with booster (≥ 3 vaccines) versus primary series without booster. Among 1885 PWH, 10% received no COVID-19 vaccinations, 37% < 3 vaccines and 54% received ≥ 3 vaccines. Females (vs. males) were less likely to receive a vaccine booster. Receiving no COVID-19 vaccines was …

HIV-1 drug resistance in people on dolutegravir-based antiretroviral therapy: a collaborative cohort analysis

Authors

Tom Loosli,Stefanie Hossmann,Suzanne M Ingle,Hajra Okhai,Katharina Kusejko,Johannes Mouton,Pantxika Bellecave,Ard Van Sighem,Melanie Stecher,Antonella d'Arminio Monforte,M John Gill,Caroline A Sabin,Gary Maartens,Huldrych F Günthard,Jonathan AC Sterne,Richard Lessells,Matthias Egger,Roger D Kouyos

Journal

The Lancet HIV

Published Date

2023/11/1

BackgroundThe widespread use of the integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI) dolutegravir in first-line and second-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) might facilitate emerging resistance. The DTG RESIST study combined data from HIV cohorts to examine patterns of drug resistance mutations (DRMs) and identify risk factors for dolutegravir resistance.MethodsWe included cohorts with INSTI resistance data from two collaborations (ART Cohort Collaboration, International epidemiology Databases to Evaluate AIDS in Southern Africa), and the UK Collaborative HIV Cohort. Eight cohorts from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, South Africa, and the UK contributed data on individuals who were viraemic on dolutegravir-based ART and underwent genotypic resistance testing. Individuals with unknown dolutegravir initiation date were excluded. Resistance levels were categorised using the …

Contribution of alcohol use in HIV/hepatitis C virus co‐infection to all‐cause and cause‐specific mortality: A collaboration of cohort studies

Authors

Adam Trickey,Suzanne M Ingle,Anders Boyd,M John Gill,Sophie Grabar,Inma Jarrin,Niels Obel,Giota Touloumi,Robert Zangerle,Andri Rauch,Christopher T Rentsch,Derek D Satre,Michael J Silverberg,Fabrice Bonnet,Jodie Guest,Greer Burkholder,Heidi Crane,Ramon Teira,Juan Berenguer,Christoph Wyen,Sophie Abgrall,Mojgan Hessamfar,Peter Reiss,Antonella d’Arminio Monforte,Kathleen A McGinnis,Jonathan AC Sterne,Linda Wittkop,Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration

Journal

Journal of viral hepatitis

Published Date

2023/9

Among persons with HIV (PWH), higher alcohol use and having hepatitis C virus (HCV) are separately associated with increased morbidity and mortality. We investigated whether the association between alcohol use and mortality among PWH is modified by HCV. Data were combined from European and North American cohorts of adult PWH who started antiretroviral therapy (ART). Self‐reported alcohol use data, collected in diverse ways between cohorts, were converted to grams/day. Eligible PWH started ART during 2001–2017 and were followed from ART initiation for mortality. Interactions between the associations of baseline alcohol use (0, 0.1–20.0, >20.0 g/day) and HCV status were assessed using multivariable Cox models. Of 58,769 PWH, 29,711 (51%), 23,974 (41%) and 5084 (9%) self‐reported alcohol use of 0 g/day, 0.1–20.0 g/day, and > 20.0 g/day, respectively, and 4799 (8%) had HCV at …

Impact of hepatitis C virus cure on depressive symptoms in the human immunodeficiency virus-hepatitis C virus coinfected population in Canada

Authors

Gayatri Marathe,Erica EM Moodie,Marie-Josée Brouillette,Charlotte Lanièce Delaunay,Joseph Cox,Valérie Martel-Laferrière,John Gill,Curtis Cooper,Neora Pick,Marie-Louise Vachon,Sharon Walmsley,Marina B Klein

Journal

Clinical Infectious Diseases

Published Date

2023/2/1

Background Depression is common in people with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV), with biological and psychosocial mechanisms at play. Direct acting antivirals (DAA) result in high rates of sustained virologic response (SVR), with minimal side-effects. We assessed the impact of SVR on presence of depressive symptoms in the HIV-HCV coinfected population in Canada during the second-generation DAA era (2013–2020). Methods We used data from the Canadian CoInfection Cohort (CCC), a multicenter prospective cohort of people with a HIV and HCV coinfection, and its associated sub-study on food security. Because depression screening was performed only in the sub-study, we predicted Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale-10 classes in the CCC using a random forest classifier and corrected for misclassification. We …

All-cause hospitalisation among people living with HIV according to gender, mode of HIV acquisition, ethnicity, and geographical origin in Europe and North America: findings …

Authors

Sophia M Rein,Fiona C Lampe,Suzanne M Ingle,Jonathan AC Sterne,Adam Trickey,M John Gill,Vasileios Papastamopoulos,Linda Wittkop,Marc van der Valk,Maria Kitchen,Jodie L Guest,Derek D Satre,Gilles Wandeler,Pepa Galindo,Jessica Castilho,Heidi M Crane,Colette J Smith

Journal

The Lancet Public Health

Published Date

2023/10/1

BackgroundUnderstanding demographic disparities in hospitalisation is crucial for the identification of vulnerable populations, interventions, and resource planning.MethodsData were from the Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration (ART-CC) on people living with HIV in Europe and North America, followed up between January, 2007 and December, 2020. We investigated differences in all-cause hospitalisation according to gender and mode of HIV acquisition, ethnicity, and combined geographical origin and ethnicity, in people living with HIV on modern combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). Analyses were performed separately for European and North American cohorts. Hospitalisation rates were assessed using negative binomial multilevel regression, adjusted for age, time since cART intitiaion, and calendar year.FindingsAmong 23 594 people living with HIV in Europe and 9612 in North America …

Polygenic risk prediction: why and when out-of-sample prediction R2 can exceed SNP-based heritability

Authors

Xiaotong Wang,Alicia Walker,Joana A Revez,Guiyan Ni,Mark J Adams,Andrew M McIntosh,Naomi R Wray,Stephan Ripke,Manuel Mattheisen,Maciej Trzaskowski,Enda M Byrne,Abdel Abdellaoui,Esben Agerbo,Tracy M Air,Till FM Andlauer,Silviu-Alin Bacanu,Marie Bækvad-Hansen,Aartjan TF Beekman,Tim B Bigdeli,Elisabeth B Binder,Julien Bryois,Henriette N Buttenschøn,Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm,Na Cai,Enrique Castelao,Jane Hvarregaard Christensen,Toni-Kim Clarke,Jonathan RI Coleman,Lucía Colodro-Conde,Baptiste Couvy-Duchesne,Nick Craddock,Gregory E Crawford,Gail Davies,Franziska Degenhardt,Eske M Derks,Nese Direk,Conor V Dolan,Erin C Dunn,Thalia C Eley,Valentina Escott-Price,Farnush Farhadi Hassan Kiadeh,Hilary K Finucane,Jerome C Foo,Andreas J Forstner,Josef Frank,Héléna A Gaspar,Michael Gill,Fernando S Goes,Scott D Gordon,Jakob Grove,Lynsey S Hall,Christine Søholm Hansen,Thomas F Hansen,Stefan Herms,Ian B Hickie,Per Hoffmann,Georg Homuth,Carsten Horn,Jouke-Jan Hottenga,David M Hougaard,David M Howard,Marcus Ising,Rick Jansen,Ian Jones,Lisa A Jones,Eric Jorgenson,James A Knowles,Isaac S Kohane,Julia Kraft,Warren W Kretzschmar,Zoltán Kutalik,Yihan Li,Penelope A Lind,Donald J MacIntyre,Dean F MacKinnon,Robert M Maier,Wolfgang Maier,Jonathan Marchini,Hamdi Mbarek,Patrick McGrath,Peter McGuffin,Sarah E Medland,Divya Mehta,Christel M Middeldorp,Evelin Mihailov,Yuri Milaneschi,Lili Milani,Francis M Mondimore,Grant W Montgomery,Sara Mostafavi,Niamh Mullins,Matthias Nauck,Bernard Ng,Michel G Nivard,Dale R Nyholt,Paul F O'Reilly,Hogni Oskarsson,Michael J Owen,Jodie N Painter,Carsten Bøcker Pedersen,Marianne Giørtz Pedersen,Roseann E Peterson,Wouter J Peyrot,Giorgio Pistis,Danielle Posthuma,Jorge A Quiroz,Per Qvist,John P Rice,Brien P Riley,Margarita Rivera,Saira Saeed Mirza,Robert Schoevers,Eva C Schulte,Ling Shen,Jianxin Shi,Stanley I Shyn,Engilbert Sigurdsson,Grant CB Sinnamon,Johannes H Smit,Daniel J Smith,Hreinn Stefansson,Stacy Steinberg,Fabian Streit,Jana Strohmaier,Katherine E Tansey,Henning Teismann,Alexander Teumer,Wesley Thompson,Pippa A Thomson,Thorgeir E Thorgeirsson,Matthew Traylor,Jens Treutlein,Vassily Trubetskoy,André G Uitterlinden,Daniel Umbricht,Sandra Van der Auwera,Albert M van Hemert,Alexander Viktorin,Peter M Visscher,Yunpeng Wang,Bradley T Webb,Shantel Marie Weinsheimer,Jürgen Wellmann,Gonneke Willemsen,Stephanie H Witt,Yang Wu,Hualin S Xi,Jian Yang,Futao Zhang,Volker Arolt

Journal

The American Journal of Human Genetics

Published Date

2023/7/6

In polygenic score (PGS) analysis, the coefficient of determination (R2) is a key statistic to evaluate efficacy. R2 is the proportion of phenotypic variance explained by the PGS, calculated in a cohort that is independent of the genome-wide association study (GWAS) that provided estimates of allelic effect sizes. The SNP-based heritability (, the proportion of total phenotypic variances attributable to all common SNPs) is the theoretical upper limit of the out-of-sample prediction R2. However, in real data analyses R2 has been reported to exceed , which occurs in parallel with the observation that estimates tend to decline as the number of cohorts being meta-analyzed increases. Here, we quantify why and when these observations are expected. Using theory and simulation, we show that if heterogeneities in cohort-specific exist, or if genetic correlations between cohorts are less than one,  …

sHIV-1 drug resistance in people on dolutegravir-based ART: Collaborative analysis of cohort studies

Authors

Tom Loosli,Stefanie Hossmann,Suzanne M Ingle,Hajra Okhai,Katharina Kusejko,Johannes Mouton,Pantxika Bellecave,Ard van Sighem,Melanie Stecher,Antonella d’Arminio Monforte,M John Gill,Caroline A Sabin,Gary Maartens,Huldrych F Guenthard,Jonathan AC Sterne,Richard Lessells,Matthias Egger,Roger Kouyos

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023/4/5

Background:The widespread use of the integrase strand transfer inhibitor (INSTI) dolutegravir (DTG) in first-and second-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) may facilitate emerging resistance. We combined data from HIV cohorts to examine patterns of drug resistance mutations (DRMs) and identify risk factors for DTG resistance.Methods:Eight cohorts from Canada, Europe, and South Africa contributed data on individuals with genotypic resistance testing on DTG-based ART. Resistance levels were categorised using the Stanford algorithm. We identified risk factors for resistance using mixed-effects ordinal logistic regression models.Results:We included 750 people with genotypic resistance testing on DTG-based ART between 2013 and 2022. Most had HIV subtype B (N= 444, 59· 2%) and were treatment-experienced; 134 (17.9%) were on DTG dual and 19 (2.5%) on DTG monotherapy. INSTI DRMs were detected in …

Verbal memory performance and depressive symptoms in persons with treated HIV

Authors

Lujie Xu,M John Gill,Christopher Power,Esther Fujiwara

Journal

AIDS and Behavior

Published Date

2023/9

The link between memory and comorbid depression in persons with HIV (PWH) is unclear based on evidence from published cohorts. We compared verbal memory in the HVLT-R in a well-characterized HIV cohort (n = 354) with (n = 102) or without (n = 252) comorbid depressive symptoms, and examined memory correlates in both scenarios. Memory fell within unimpaired ranges, but was lower in depressed than non-depressed PWH. Memory was related to quality of life, sociodemographic, and mental health factors, but not to assessed HIV-related or antiretroviral factors. However, longitudinally (n = 52) memory declined with presence and severity of depressive symptoms. In this treated cohort, verbal memory was unrelated to HIV-related variables but to quality of life and depressive symptoms. Greater performance decline over time also related to acute or ongoing depressive symptoms. These findings …

The prevalence of mental health disorders in people with HIV and the effects on the HIV care continuum

Authors

Raynell Lang,Brenna Hogan,Jiafeng Zhu,Kristen McArthur,Jennifer Lee,Peter Zandi,Paul Nestadt,Michael J Silverberg,Angela M Parcesepe,Judith A Cook,M John Gill,David Grelotti,Kalysha Closson,Viviane D Lima,Joseph Goulet,Michael A Horberg,Kelly A Gebo,Reena M Camoens,Peter F Rebeiro,Ank E Nijhawan,Kathleen McGinnis,Joseph Eron,Keri N Althoff

Journal

Aids

Published Date

2023/2/1

Objective:To describe the prevalence of diagnosed depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia in people with HIV (PWH) and the differences in HIV care continuum outcomes in those with and without mental health disorders (MHDs).Design:Observational study of participants in the North American AIDS Cohort Collaboration on Research and Design.Methods:PWH (≥ 18 years) contributed data on prevalent schizophrenia, anxiety, depressive, and bipolar disorders from 2008 to 2018 based on International Classification of Diseases code mapping. Mental health (MH) multimorbidity was defined as having two or more MHD. Log binomial models with generalized estimating equations estimated adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) and 95% confidence intervals for retention in care (≥ 1 visit/year) and viral suppression (HIV RNA≤ 200 copies/ml) by presence vs. absence of each MHD between 2016 and …

Long COVID research: an update from the PHOSP-COVID Scientific Summit

Authors

Christopher E Brightling,Rachael A Evans,Amisha Singapuri,Nikki Smith,Louise V Wain,CE Brightling,RA Evans,LV Wain,JD Chalmers,VC Harris,LP Ho,A Horsley,L Houchen-Wolloff,M Marks,B Raman,A Singapuri,P Barran,M Bingham,ER Chilvers,E Daynes,CM Efstathiou,O Elneima,B Guillen Guio,EM Harrison,RG Jenkins,F Liew,NI Lone,JM Lord,HJC McAuley,GP McCann,J Mitchell,T Plekhanova,RJ Russell,RM Saunders,MG Semple,N Smith,D Trivedi,L Turtle,S Walker,K Abel,H Adamali,D Adeloye,O Adeyemi,R Adrego,LA Aguilar Jimenez,S Ahmad,N Ahmad Haider,R Ahmed,N Ahwireng,M Ainsworth,B Al-Sheklly,A Alamoudi,M Ali,M Aljaroof,L Allan,RJ Allen,L Allerton,L Allsop,AM Allt,P Almeida,D Altmann,M Alvarez Corral,S Amoils,D Anderson,C Antoniades,G Arbane,A Arias,C Armour,L Armstrong,N Armstrong,D Arnold,H Arnold,A Ashish,A Ashworth,M Ashworth,S Aslani,H Assefa-Kebede,P Atkin,C Atkin,R Aul,H Aung,L Austin,C Avram,A Ayoub,M Babores,R Baggott,J Bagshaw,D Baguley,L Bailey,JK Baillie,S Bain,M Bakali,M Bakau,E Baldry,M Baldwin,D Baldwin,C Ballard,A Banerjee,D Bang,RE Barker,L Barman,S Barratt,F Barrett,D Basire,N Basu,M Bates,A Bates,R Batterham,H Baxendale,G Baxter,H Bayes,M Beadsworth,P Beckett,M Beggs,M Begum,P Beirne,M Bell,R Bell,K Bennett,E Beranova,A Bermperi,A Berridge,C Berry,S Betts,E Bevan,K Bhui,K Birchall,L Bishop,K Bisnauthsing,J Blaikely,A Bloss,A Bolger,CE Bolton,J Bonnington,A Botkai,C Bourne,M Bourne,K Bramham,L Brear,G Breen,J Breeze,K Breeze,A Briggs,E Bright,S Brill,K Brindle,L Broad,A Broadley,C Brookes,M Broome

Journal

The Lancet Respiratory Medicine

Published Date

2023/11/1

The severity of acute SARS-CoV-2 infection has decreased with the introduction of public health policies, vaccination, improved management of acute disease, and a degree of protective immunity in those who have survived past infection. However, in the wake of the pandemic, post-acute sequelae of COVID-19—referred to as long COVID—have emerged. The UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) describes long COVID as a condition in which signs and symptoms continue or develop after acute COVID-19 (> 4 weeks), including ongoing symptomatic COVID-19 and post-COVID-19 syndrome (≥ 12 weeks). 3 years since the first UK national lockdown, the Post-hospitalisation COVID-19 study (PHOSP-COVID) held a Scientific Summit in Leicester, UK (28–29 March, 2023) to review progress and address key questions related to future research. PHOSP-COVID is a UK consortium of …

Surgical stress: the muscle and cognitive demands of robotic and laparoscopic surgery

Authors

Abdul Shugaba,Daren A Subar,Kate Slade,Mark Willett,Mohammed Abdel-Aty,Iain Campbell,Nick Heywood,Louis Vitone,Adnan Sheikh,Mike Gill,Bachar Zelhof,Helen E Nuttall,Theodoros M Bampouras,Christopher J Gaffney

Journal

Annals of Surgery Open

Published Date

2023/6/1

Methods:Surgeons who performed live laparoscopic (LS) and robotic (RS) surgeries underwent EMG and EEG measurements. Wireless EMG was used to measure muscle activation in 4 muscle groups bilaterally (biceps brachii, deltoid, upper trapezius, and latissimus dorsi), and an 8-channel wireless EEG device was used to measure cognitive demand. EMG and EEG recordings were completed simultaneously during (1) noncritical bowel dissection,(2) critical vessel dissection, and (3) dissection after vessel control. Robust ANOVA was used to compare the% MVC RMS and alpha power between LS and RS.Results:Thirteen male surgeons performed 26 LS and 28 RS. Muscle activation was significantly higher in the right deltoid (P= 0.006), upper trapezius (left, P= 0.041; right, P= 0.032), and latissimus dorsi (left, P= 0.003; right, P= 0.014) muscles in the LS group. There was greater muscle activation in the right …

See List of Professors in Michael Gill University(Trinity College)

Michael Gill FAQs

What is Michael Gill's h-index at Trinity College?

The h-index of Michael Gill has been 88 since 2020 and 148 in total.

What are Michael Gill's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Care interruptions and mortality among adults in Europe and North America: a collaborative analysis of cohort studies

The forecasted prevalence of comorbidities and multimorbidity in people with HIV in the United States through the year 2030: A modeling study

Carepath for overcoming psychosis early (COPE): first 5 years of clinical operation and prospective research in the Cavan–Monaghan early intervention service

Neurologic infections in people with HIV: shifting epidemiological and clinical patterns

Strong bipartisan support for controlled psilocybin use as treatment or enhancement in a representative sample of US Americans: need for caution in public policy persists

Longitudinal trends in causes of death among adults with HIV on antiretroviral therapy in Europe and North America from 1996 to 2020: a collaboration of cohort studies

Immunomodulatory therapy in children with paediatric inflammatory multisystem syndrome temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2 (PIMS-TS, MIS-C; RECOVERY): a randomised …

The changing landscape of both causes and locations of death in a regional HIV population 2010–2021

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are the top articles of Michael Gill at Trinity College.

What is Michael Gill's total number of citations?

Michael Gill has 127,475 citations in total.

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