Children’s Mercy Kansas City
Transformational Pediatrics
Transformational Pediatrics features interviews with physicians and researchers at Children’s Mercy Kansas City who are transforming pediatric care through genomic medicine, personalized therapeutics, health services and outcomes research, and innovations in health care delivery.
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Children’s Mercy Kansas City
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Podcast website
Latest episode
Mar 13, 2026
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Episodes
Achieving Transplant Excellence Through Personalized Medicine 16.02.2021
Children’s Mercy Kansas City is recognized as one of the top 10 nephrology programs in the nation by U.S. News & World Report, and the kidney transplant program has incorporated a number of innovative practices into their management plan that are designed to enhance patient outcomes. Join us as Dr. Bradley Warady discusses how the program’s personalized approach to meeting each patient’s unique ne...
Pediatric Hemodialysis and Advances in Infection Prevention and Vascular Preservation 16.02.2021
To reduce the risk of complications related to hemodialysis, the Children’s Mercy Kansas City Division of Nephrology has implemented several strategies. Listen as Dr. Bradley Warady shares how the institution of standardized infection prevention practices has resulted in more than 1,200 consecutive days without an outpatient central line-associated blood stream infection (CLABSI) in a hemodialysis...
Impact of Race & Ethnicity on Responses to Folic Acid Dosing 05.01.2021
Devika Maulik MD shares her translational research as it relates to folic acid and different responses to dosing among women of various races and ethnicities. She is using the information gathered to create recommended guidelines for folic acid dosing. She discusses current literature on this topic, as well as her studies in this area.
Pediatric Recurrent Intentional Foreign Body Ingestion: Case Series and Review of the Literature 05.11.2020
Dr. Christina Low Kapalu discusses cases and literature surrounding pediatric recurrent intentional foreign body ingestion.
Variations in Morning Serum Cortisol Levels Based on Sex and Pubertal Status 11.09.2020
Dr. Sarah Tsai discusses his recent findings from his study surround serum morning cortisol levels.
Twin to Twin Transfusion Syndrome: Algorithm for Diagnosing and Treating 31.07.2020
Dr. Emanuel "Mike" Vlastos discusses the algorithm for diagnosing and trading twin to twin transfusion syndrome.
Improved Outcomes for Liver Transplantation with Biliary Atresia 18.06.2020
Dr. James Daniel discusses improved outcomes for liver transplantation with Biliary Atresia.
Clinical Characteristics of Fractures in Pediatric Patients Exposed to PPIs 15.05.2020
Dr. Nathan Fleishman discusses the clinical characteristics of fractures in pediatric patients exposed to PPIs.
Pediatric Provider Well-Being and the COVID-19 Pandemic 30.04.2020
The COVID-19 pandemic has created an unprecedented work environment for pediatricians and pediatric subspecialists. How we practice medicine has been dramatically changed. When discussing physical precautions such as PPE and social distancing, provider mental well-being also should be a part of the conversation. In this podcast, Jennifer Bickel, MD, pediatric neurologist and Medical Director of th...
Preventing Type 2 Diabetes 22.04.2020
Dr. Kelsee Halpin discusses Endocrinology and Diabetes.
Bariatric Surgery 16.07.2019
Childhood Obesity continues to be on the rise and causes serious health consequences. In this podcast, Dr. Jason Fraser discusses the Bariatric Surgery program at Children's Mercy. We learn who is a candidate for bariatric surgery, the requirements for surgery, why Children's Mercy decided to offer bariatric surgery, the type of bariatric surgery offered at Children's Mercy and results.
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: Current Concepts for A Complex Condition 28.05.2019
Dr. Tania Burgert discusses Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) and the current ideas surrounding a complex condition.
How the Cardiac High Acuity Monitoring Program (CHAMP) is Helping Change Lives 14.01.2019
CHAMP (Cardiac High Acuity Monitoring Program) is a multi-disciplinary based team that has been designed to meet the needs of the most complex cardiac population with single ventricle heart disease. The program closely monitors patients with single ventricle heart disease between the critical first and second stages (before stage II Glenn surgery). The team at the Ward Family Heart Center at Child...
CKiD Expansion 02.01.2019
The CKiD study was recently approved for an additional five years and $4.7 million of funding, making 20 consecutive years of funding. Historically, when participants developed end-stage disease, they left the study. The next phase of study will focus on the entire spectrum of the disease, starting with early CKiD in infants and following those who progress to kidney failure, requiring dialysis an...
Targeted Therapy to Reduce Relapse of Pediatric Leukemia 10.12.2018
Patients that have residual leukemia stem cells after chemotherapy and other treatments have substantially higher risk for relapse. Survival rates for relapsed leukemia are very poor. Even when patients survive long-term, the very toxic anti-cancer treatments are escalated in treating relapsed leukemia. This particularly risks long-term health and substantially increases the risk of early death du...
Identifying Novel Drug Treatment Options for Pediatric Osteosarcoma 19.11.2018
Osteosarcoma is highly metastatic and drug-resistant cancer. The survival rate for metastatic osteosarcoma remains less than 20 percent for the last 40 years. Tomoo Iwakuma, MD, PhD, is leading research focused on the elucidation of mechanisms underlying osteosarcoma progression and the discovery of novel drugs against this osteosarcoma. His laboratory has identified a lead compound that specifica...
Management and Treatment for Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome 01.11.2018
Peutz-jeghers syndrome (PJS) is an inherited syndrome, characterized by the development of gastrointestinal polyps and characteristic mucocutaneous freckling. Individuals that present with PJS tend to have polyps often in their small intestine as well as their stomach and large intestine. Recently the European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology Hepatology and Nutrition (ESPGHAN) group publishe...
Getting in Front of Type 2 Diabetes 23.04.2018
Type 2 diabetes was commonly associated with the adult population. This diagnosis was even referenced as adult-onset diabetes but in recent years type 2 diabetes in children is on the rise. Although researchers aren’t clear as to why some children develop type 2 diabetes there are some causes that can increase the risk. When children present with these risks the Children Mercy Diabetes Center can...
Is There a Role for Fecal Transplant in IBD? 25.02.2018
Can an effective treatment for medically refractive Crohn’s disease be found in the gastrointestinal tract itself? Dr. Alka Goyal with Children’s Mercy Kansas City is exploring the role of fecal transplant as a rescue therapy for patients whose inflammatory bowel disease has not responded to traditional treatment. Early research showed that a single transplant is relatively safe and can result in...
Tourette Syndrome: Using an Evidence-based Algorithm to Guide Treatment 19.02.2018
As an expert in the treatment of Tourette Syndrome (TS), recently, Dr. Coffman was asked to author an article on the pharmacological treatment of Tourette Syndrome. In collaboration with Dr. Quezada, the paper was published in CNS Drugs Journal, focusing on current approaches and new developments regarding treatment of Tourette Syndrome. The team developed a visual algorithm to help guide the trea...
Precision Therapeutics in the NICU 15.02.2018
Neonatal pharmacotherapy is a field ripe with opportunity. Efficacy and toxicity is unpredictable and varies greatly for many drug classes commonly used. Weight-based dosing continues to be the standard of care as individualized drug markers are lacking. To better understand variability in drug response, the focus must shift from drug dosing to drug exposure. Tamorah Lewis, MD, neonatologist and c...
Cancer Genomics: Finding Answers Through Data and DNA 04.02.2018
Approximately 10 to 15 percent of childhood cancer cases are due to a genetic predisposition. Children’s Mercy Kansas City is searching within the genetic code to not only identify genes that may lead to cancer, but to find answers in how to better treat or cure pediatric cancer. Erin Guest, MD, Director of Cancer Genomics at Children’s Mercy, discusses the growing role of cancer genomics and how...
Mitigating Hyperfiltration-Mediated Kidney Injury 27.01.2018
Thanks to the research being done in CKid, we know that children diagnosed with chronic kidney disease progress over time to dialysis and transplantation. That makes it very important to address therapies which can mitigate the progression of chronic kidney disease. Joining the show today is Tarak Srivastava, MD, he has been awarded R01 funding from the National Institutes of Health to work on tar...
The Decision to Withhold Life-Sustaining Medical Treatment for Children 21.01.2018
In pediatrics care most often supports life-sustaining treatment to promote the best interests of the child. But in some circumstances (after weighing the balance of benefits and burdens of a range of treatment choices) continuing life-sustaining treatment is decided to no longer be in the child’s best interests. Collaboration and clear communication are essential in these difficult discussions. J...
Chronic Abdominal Pain Triggers: Is Personalized Assessment Feasible? 10.01.2018
It’s well-accepted that there are a variety of complex pathways that contribute to abdominal pain in children; but what are these pathways, and how can they be measured? By combining the data from mobile body sensors and self-reporting from participants, researchers at Children’s Mercy Kansas City were able apply “big data” to identify pain triggers for each individual patient. The results were ve...
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