David Favro
Henry Ford Health System
4 Papers
6 Citations
David Favro is an academic researcher from Henry Ford Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & B-cell activating factor. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Quantifying the proportion of severe asthma exacerbations attributable to inhaled corticosteroid nonadherence
L. Keoki Williams,Edward L. Peterson,Karen Wells,Brian K. Ahmedani,Rajesh Kumar,Esteban G. Burchard,Vimal K. Chowdhry,David Favro,David E. Lanfear,Manel Pladevall,Manel Pladevall +10 more
TL;DR: ICS adherence varies in the time period leading up to and after an asthma exacerbation, and nonadherence likely contributes to a large number of these exacerbations.
Genetic variation in B cell-activating factor of the TNF family (BAFF) and asthma exacerbations among African American subjects.
Rajesh Kumar,L. Keoki Williams,Atsushi Kato,Edward L. Peterson,Silvio Favoreto,Katie Hulse,Deli Wang,Kenneth B. Beckman,Shannon Thyne,Michael A. LeNoir,Kelley Meade,David E. Lanfear,Albert M. Levin,David Favro,James J. Yang,Kevin B. Weiss,Homer A. Boushey,Leslie C. Grammer,Pedro C. Avila,Esteban G. Burchard,Robert P. Schleimer +20 more
TL;DR: BAFF expression in vivo increases in natural rhinovirus infection and may play a role in airway antiviral immunity and impact asthma exacerbation rates.
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Extending Admixture Mapping to Nuclear Pedigrees: Application to Sarcoidosis
Paul M. McKeigue,Marco Colombo,Felix Agakov,Indrani Datta,Albert M. Levin,David Favro,Courtney Gray-Montgomery,Michael C. Iannuzzi,Benjamin A. Rybicki +8 more
TL;DR: Although the pedigree extension of ADMIXMAP can use ancestry‐informative markers only at relatively low density, it can use imputed ancestry states from programs such as WINPOP or HAPMIX that use dense SNP marker genotypes for admixture mapping, extending both the efficiency and the range of application of this powerful gene mapping method.
Differences in allergic sensitization by self-reported race and genetic ancestry.
James J. Yang,Esteban G. Burchard,Shweta Choudhry,Christine Cole Johnson,Dennis R. Ownby,David Favro,Justin Chen,Matthew Akana,Connie Ha,Pui-Yan Kwok,Richard Krajenta,Suzanne Havstad,Christine L.M. Joseph,Max A. Seibold,Mark D. Shriver,L. Keoki Williams +15 more
TL;DR: Self-reported race and location of residence appeared to be more important predictors of allergic sensitization when compared with genetic ancestry, suggesting that the disparity in allergic sensitized by race might be primarily a result of environmental factors rather than genetic differences.