Chris E. Holmes

Associate Professor
Prof Chris E. Holmes, has received her Ph.D & M.D from Unive
University of Vermont
United States of America

Professor Haematology
Biography

Prof Chris E. Holmes, has received her Ph.D & M.D from University of Virginia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Currently, she is working as Professor in department of Hematology and Oncology. She has successfully completed her Administrative responsibilities as Professor.

Research Intrest

Dr. Holmes’ research focuses on developing evidence-based clinical interventions to reduce venous and arterial thrombosis in patients with cancer through the optimum utilization of anticoagulation and anti-platelet therapy. The most recent clinical initiative is a novel quality-health services research study that is designed to capture thrombosis and bleeding outcomes in cancer outpatients initiating therapy. The program, Venous ThromboEmbolism Prevention in the Ambulatory Cancer Clinic (termed VTEPACC), is currently assessing a novel multidisciplinary approach to venous thromboembolism (VTE) prevention which includes patient center, personalized decision making. Additional collaborative and ongoing studies include a clinical trial using apixaban for VTE prophylaxis in patients with malignant glioma and an assessment of thrombosis risk associated with immunotherapy in metastatic cancer. In the area of translational science, Dr. Holmes’ group was the first to report that tumor genetics (KRAS status) is associated with VTE risk in metastatic colon cancer - an observation that offers a potentially novel future approach to VTE risk stratification. In addition, the lab has demonstrated distinct changes in platelet phenotype due to cancer and its treatment that result in the need for lower doses of anti-platelets drugs to successfully inhibit platelet function- an observation that has clinical significance for safe dosing of anti-platelet therapy in cancer patients.

List of Publications
Pappas AC, Koide M, Wellman GC. (2016)Purinergic signaling triggers endfoot high-amplitude Ca2+ signals and causes inversion of neurovascular coupling after subarachnoid hemorrhage.36(11):1901-1912
Balbi M, Koide M, Wellman GC, Plesnila N. (2017)Inversion of neurovascular coupling after subarachnoid hemorrhage in vivo.
Wang F, Koide M, Wellman GC. (2017)Nifedipine Inhibition of High-Voltage Activated Calcium Channel Currents in Cerebral Artery Myocytes Is Influenced by Extracellular Divalent Cations. 8:210.