62 results on '"Susan D Rouster"'
Search Results
2. 1248. Relationship Between ALT and New HBV Biomarkers in HBV/HIV Coinfected Persons Started on Antiviral Therapy
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Susan D Rouster, Jason T Blackard, Paul S Horn, Michael E Stec, Kenneth E Sherman, Mark C Anderson, Marion G Peters, and Gavin Cloherty
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Infectious Diseases ,Oncology - Abstract
Background While HBV DNA has served as a primary biomarker of HBV infection, newer biomarkers including pre-genomic HBV RNA (pgRNA) and quantitative HBV surface antigen (qHBsAg) may prognosticate treatment responses better. We analyzed the changes in these biomarkers over time following initiation of antiviral therapy in persons living with HIV (PLWH) to determine the relationship to ALT, a key marker of liver injury. FigureBiomarker changes Methods NIH AIDS Clinical Trials Group Study 5127 enrolled HBV/HIV PLWH into a Phase 2 treatment trial that randomized them to receive 48 weeks of either tenofovir (TDF) or adefovir (ADV). ALT and HBV DNA were evaluated as measures of treatment response. Stored samples were tested for HBV pgRNA and qHBsAg at baseline, 4, 12, 24, 36, and 48 weeks. HBV pgRNA was isolated using RNA-selective extraction chemistry followed by a multiplex RT-qPCR that targets the HBV X and core targets on the m2000 system (Abbott Molecular, Des Plaines, Illinois). A sensitive second-generation assay with a lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) of 10 copies/mL was utilized. Quantitative HBsAg was determined by Abbott ARCHITECT (List# 6C36) with a LLOQ of 0.05 IU/mL. Data were analyzed using SAS® version 9.4. Results Overall, 47 study participants had sufficient samples for biomarker testing. Participants were predominantly male (93.6%) and identified as white, non-Hispanic (55.3%) or black (34%). Groups were evenly randomized to receive either TDF (n=23) or ADV (n=24). Baseline ALT mean was 64.9 U/L, and HBV DNA was 9.1 (+1.6) copies/mL. Pre-treatment pgRNA serum concentration was 7.0 (+1.3) log U/mL, and qHBsAg was 195,574 (+272,190) IU/mL. Over the course of treatment, pgRNA was significantly correlated with the change in serum ALT levels (r=0.48; p=0.0035) but not HBV DNA (r=0.21; p=0.226). ALT was negatively correlated with qHBsAg (r=-0.52; p=0.02). pgRNA was also highly negatively correlated with qHBsAg (r=-0.49l; p=0.03) but not HBV DNA (r=0.13; p=0.59). (Figure). Conclusion HBV pgRNA is a better predictor of ALT change – a key measure of hepatocyte injury – than HBV DNA in PLWH who are initiated on nucleotide/nucleoside therapy. Quantitative HBsAg is inversely associated with ALT levels, supporting the hypothesis that HBsAg inhibits immune mediated injury to hepatocytes. Disclosures Michael E. Stec, MSc, Abbott Laboratories: Employee of Abbott|Abbott Laboratories: Stocks/Bonds mark C. Anderson, PhD, Abbott Laboratories: Employment|Abbott Laboratories: Stocks/Bonds Marion G. Peters, MD, Aligos: Advisor/Consultant|antios: Advisor/Consultant|Excision Biotherapeutics: DSMB Gavin Cloherty, PhD, Abbott: Employee|Abbott: Stocks/Bonds|Abbott Labs: Employee.
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- 2022
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3. Immune Activation: A Link Between Food Insecurity and Chronic Disease in People Living With Human Immunodeficiency Virus
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Angelique Johnson, Sabrina Sales Martinez, Marianna Baum, Tan Li, Heidi L Meeds, Haley R Martin, Kenneth E. Sherman, Yongjun Huang, Colby Teeman, Susan D. Rouster, Javier Tamargo, Jacqueline Hernandez-Boyer, and Adriana Campa
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Social Determinants of Health ,Lipopolysaccharide Receptors ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Food Supply ,Major Articles and Brief Reports ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Vulnerable population ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Food security ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Plasma levels ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,Food insecurity ,Food Insecurity ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Chronic disease ,Chronic Disease ,Cohort ,Florida ,Female ,business ,Biomarkers ,Immune activation - Abstract
Persistent immune activation is a hallmark of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and thought to play a role on chronic diseases in people with HIV (PWH). Food insecurity is disproportionately prevalent in PWH and is associated with adverse health outcomes. We determined whether food insecurity was associated with increased plasma levels of soluble CD14, CD27, and CD163 in 323 antiretroviral-treated PWH from the Miami Adult Studies on HIV cohort. Nearly half (42.7%) of participants were food insecure, and 85.5% were virally suppressed (
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- 2021
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4. Cocaine use associated gut permeability and microbial translocation in people living with HIV in the Miami Adult Study on HIV (MASH) cohort
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Jacqueline Hernandez, Javier A. Tamargo, Sabrina Sales Martinez, Haley R. Martin, Adriana Campa, Rafick-Pierre Sékaly, Rebeka Bordi, Kenneth E. Sherman, Susan D. Rouster, Heidi L. Meeds, Jag H. Khalsa, Raul N. Mandler, Shenghan Lai, and Marianna K. Baum
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Adult ,Lipopolysaccharides ,Multidisciplinary ,Interleukin-6 ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Lipopolysaccharide Receptors ,HIV Infections ,Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins ,Permeability ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,C-Reactive Protein ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Cocaine ,Humans ,RNA ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Objective Determine if cocaine use impacts gut permeability, promotes microbial translocation and immune activation in people living with HIV (PLWH) using effective antiretroviral therapy (ART). Methods Cross-sectional analysis of 100 PLWH (ART ≥6 months, HIV-RNA Results A total of 37 cocaine users and 63 cocaine non-users were evaluated. Cocaine users had higher levels of I-FABP (7.92±0.35 vs. 7.69±0.56 pg/mL, P = 0.029) and LPS (0.76±0.24 vs. 0.54±0.27 EU/mL, P Conclusions Cocaine use was associated with markers of gut permeability, microbial translocation, and immune activation in virally suppressed PLWH. Mitigation of cocaine use may prevent further gastrointestinal damage and immune activation in PLWH.
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- 2022
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5. Hepatitis E Infection in a Longitudinal Cohort of HCV and HCV/HIV Coinfected Persons
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Susan D. Rouster, M. Tarek Shata, Shyam Kottilil, Kenneth E. Sherman, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Heidi L Meeds, Norah A. Terrault, and Ceejay L. Boyce
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0301 basic medicine ,HIV Coinfection ,business.industry ,viruses ,Hepatitis C virus ,Immunology ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,virus diseases ,medicine.disease_cause ,Hepatitis E ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,digestive system diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Hepatitis E virus ,Concomitant ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Longitudinal cohort ,Seroconversion ,business - Abstract
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is thought to be common in the United States with increased prevalence in those with concomitant hepatitis C virus (HCV) or HCV/HIV coinfection. Little is known regarding tr...
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- 2021
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6. Su1335: HBV PGRNA DECLINE FOLLOWING INITIATION OF NUCLEOTIDE THERAPY IN HBV/HIV COINFECTED PERSONS
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Kenneth E. Sherman, Susan D. Rouster, Jason T. Blackard, Paul S. Horn, Marion G. Peters, Mark C. Anderson, Michael Stec, and Gavin A. Cloherty
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
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7. Mo1359: CELL MEDIATED RESPONSES TO HEPATITIS E VIRUS ANTIGENS IN LIVER TRANSPLANT RECIPIENTS
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Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Susan D. Rouster, Heidi L. Meeds, Jennifer Price, Norah Terrault, Mohamed Tarek M. Shata, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
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8. Su1359: CHARACTERIZATION OF HBV PRE-GENOMIC RNA IN AN HBV/HIV COINFECTED COHORT
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Kenneth E. Sherman, Susan D. Rouster, Heidi L. Meeds, Timothy N. Archampong, Awewura Kwara, and Jason T. Blackard
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2022
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9. PNPLA3 Gene Polymorphisms in HCV/HIV-Coinfected Individuals
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Kenneth E. Sherman, Adeel A. Butt, Richard Sterling, Triin Umbleja, Susan D. Rouster, and Minhee Kang
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,HIV Infections ,Context (language use) ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,0302 clinical medicine ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,Genotype ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Allele ,Prospective cohort study ,Sanger sequencing ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Membrane Proteins ,Lipase ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,symbols ,Homeostatic model assessment ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Gene polymorphism ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The patatin-like phospholipase domain containing 3 (PNPLA3) gene has been associated with development of alcoholic and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Using a newly developed and validated assay for PNPLA3, we explored the prevalence of gene polymorphisms in a cohort of HCV/HIV coinfected individuals to determine if there was an association with insulin resistance or hepatic fibrosis. METHODS: A high-resolution melting point (HRM) assay was developed and validated. The assay was used to evaluate samples obtained in the context of a clinical trial performed at ACTG sites across the U.S. in HIV-infected patients. Clinical features and treatment outcomes were assessed in relation to the PNPLA3 genotype. RESULTS: The HRM methodology demonstrated 100% concordance with results obtained by Sanger sequencing. Among 241 participants tested, 66.0% had the wildtype allele (CC) and the remainder had the aberrant PNPLA3 gene polymorphism in the homozygotic (GG) or heterozygotic (CG) form. Race and ethnicity were associated with PNPLA3 genotype but fibrosis stage, HOMA (Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance), and HCV treatment outcome was not. CONCLUSION: The HRM method is an effective, rapid technique for characterizing PNPLA3 genotype. In those with HCV/HIV infection, nearly 40% carry gene polymorphisms associated with development of NASH or ASH. Prospective studies should focus on this group to determine if they represent a subset of HIV-infected persons at increased risk of fibrotic progression.
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- 2018
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10. Zika Virus Exposure in an HIV-Infected Cohort in Ghana
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Jason T. Blackard, Susan D. Rouster, Timothy N. Archampong, Ling Kong, Awewura Kwara, Tarek M. Shata, Kenneth E. Sherman, and Matthew T. Aliota
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,030231 tropical medicine ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,HIV Infections ,Antibodies, Viral ,Ghana ,Article ,West africa ,Zika virus ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hiv infected ,parasitic diseases ,Humans ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,business.industry ,Zika Virus ,Dengue Virus ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Virology ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Cohort ,Female ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence and epidemiologic associations of Zika Virus (ZIKV) in HIV-infected patients in Ghana, West Africa. METHODS: We examined the seroprevalence of ZIKV in HIV/HBV co-infected persons in Ghana from sera samples collected from 2012 to 2014 using ELISA assays and plaque reduction neutralization tests (PRNT). RESULTS: Overall, ZIKV antibody was detected in 12.9% of 236 tested samples, though the true estimate of exposure is probably less due cross-reactions with other related viruses. PRNTs were performed on a subset to provide an estimate of the frequency of false positive reaction. Dengue virus testing was also performed and antibody prevalence was 87.2%. The median CD4 count was 436 (range 2–1781 cell/mm(3)) and did not affect antibody results. Regional geographic ethnicity was associated with ZIKV exposure. DISCUSSION: Overall, these data suggest that ZIKV infection is a relatively prevalent infection in HIV-positive persons in Ghana though not as common as dengue. Further evaluation of the effect of ZIKV and HIV co-infection is warranted given the large geographical overlap of populations exposed to both viruses.
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- 2018
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11. Ultra-Deep Genomic Sequencing of HCV NS5A Resistance-Associated Substitutions in HCV/HIV Coinfected Patients
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Ceejay L. Boyce, Mario Medvedovic, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Susan D. Rouster, Jacek Biesiada, Kenneth E. Sherman, and Xiang Zhang
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Drug ,Physiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Viral resistance ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,03 medical and health sciences ,Quinoxalines ,Drug Resistance, Viral ,medicine ,Humans ,Clinical significance ,Dosing ,NS5A ,Benzofurans ,media_common ,Coinfection ,business.industry ,Genomic sequencing ,Imidazoles ,Gastroenterology ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis C ,030112 virology ,Response to treatment ,Virology ,digestive system diseases ,Drug Combinations ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,business - Abstract
The prevalence of naturally occurring HCV-NS5A resistance-associated substitutions (RAS) to DAA drugs might affect the response to treatment in HCV/HIV coinfected subjects. There are limited data on the frequency of HCV-NS5A naturally occurring drug-RAS at baseline in HCV/HIV coinfected patients when ultra-deep sequencing methodologies are applied. HCV-NS5A-RAS were evaluated among 25 subjects in each group. Patients were matched by age, gender, and hepatic fibrosis stage category to control for selection bias. Within subtype 1a, RAS were observed in 28% of HCV monoinfected and 48% of HCV/HIV coinfected subjects. More patients in the HCV/HIV coinfected group had clinically relevant mutations to DAA directed at NS5A. While the clinical significance of this observation may be limited in highly drug adherent populations, some HCV/HIV coinfected persons may be at greater risk of viral resistance if suboptimal dosing occurs.
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- 2018
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12. Validation and Refinement of Noninvasive Methods to Assess Hepatic Fibrosis: Magnetic Resonance Elastography Versus Enhanced Liver Fibrosis Index
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Marianna Baum, Yongjun Huang, Qingyun Liu, Adriana Campa, Gustavo G. Zarini, Javier Tamargo, Kenneth E. Sherman, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Colby Teeman, Richard L. Ehman, Jacqueline Hernandez, Raul N. Mandler, Sabrina Sales Martinez, and Susan D. Rouster
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Adult ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,Physiology ,HIV Infections ,Gastroenterology ,Severity of Illness Index ,Cohort Studies ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,Young Adult ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Blood test ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Area under the curve ,Reproducibility of Results ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic resonance elastography ,Chemokine CXCL10 ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Elasticity Imaging Techniques ,Female ,Hepatic fibrosis ,business ,Blood sampling - Abstract
Noninvasive fibrosis markers are routinely used in patients with liver disease. Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) is recognized as a highly accurate methodology, but a reliable blood test for fibrosis would be useful. We examined performance characteristics of the Enhanced Liver Fibrosis (ELF) Index compared to MRE in a cohort including those with HCV, HIV, and HCV/HIV. Subjects enrolled in the Miami Adult Studies on HIV (MASH) cohort underwent MRE and blood sampling. The ELF Index was scored and receiver–operator curves constructed to determine optimal cutoff levels relative to performance characteristics. Cytokine testing was performed to identify new markers to enhance noninvasive marker development. The ELF Index was determined in 459 subjects; more than half were male, non-white, and HIV-infected. MRE was obtained on a subset of 283 subjects and the group that had both studies served as the basis of the receiver–operator curve analysis. At an ELF Index of > 10.633, the area under the curve for cirrhosis (Metavir F4, MRE > 4.62 kPa) was 0.986 (95% CI 0.994–0.996; p
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- 2019
13. Association between IL28B rs12979860 single nucleotide polymorphism and the frequency of colonic Treg in chronically HCV-infected patients
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Mohamed A El-Feky, Sayed F. Abdelwahab, Enas A. Daef, Kenneth E. Sherman, Ahmed Medhat, Wegdan A. Mohamed, Susan D. Rouster, Nasr K. Khalil, Mohamed A. Mekky, MdMonir Hossain, Helal F Hetta, Mohamed A El-Mokhtar, Shabaan H. Ahmed, Minesh J. Mehta, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, and Mohamed T. Shata
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Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Colon ,Regulatory T cell ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Biology ,Antiviral Agents ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory ,Article ,Pathogenesis ,Plasma ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Virology ,Ribavirin ,Genotype ,medicine ,Humans ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Histocytochemistry ,Interleukins ,Interferon-alpha ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,Hepatitis C ,Odds ratio ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,chemistry ,Immunology ,Egypt ,Female ,Interferons ,Viral load - Abstract
The IL28B gene is associated with spontaneous or treatment-induced HCV viral clearance. However, the mechanism by which the IL28B single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) affects the extra-hepatic HCV immune responses and its relationship to HCV pathogenesis have not been thoroughly investigated. To examine the mechanism by which IL28B affects HCV clearance. Forty Egyptian patients with chronic HCV infection receiving an Interferon/ribavirin treatment regimen were enrolled into this study. There were two groups: non-responders (NR; n = 20) and sustained virologic responders (SVR; n = 20). The initial plasma HCV viral loads prior to treatment and IL28B genotypes were determined by quantitative RT-PCR and sequencing, respectively. Liver biopsies were examined to determine the inflammatory score and the stage of fibrosis. Colonic regulatory T cell (Treg) frequency was estimated by immunohistochemistry. No significant association between IL28B genotypes and response to therapy was identified, despite an odds ratio of 3.4 to have the TT genotype in NR compared to SVR (95 % confidence interval 0.3-35.3, p = 0.3). Patients with the TT-IL28Brs12979860 genotype (unfavorable genotype) have significantly higher frequencies of colonic Treg compared to the CT (p = 0.04) and CC (p = 0.03) genotypes. The frequency of colonic Treg cells in HCV-infected patients had a strong association with the IL-28B genotype and may have a significant impact on HCV clearance.
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- 2016
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14. Evaluating the Role of Cellular Immune Responses in the Emergence of HCV NS3 Resistance Mutations During Protease Inhibitor Therapy
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Susan D. Rouster, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Nadeem Anwar, Ashley Ulm, Hong Ji, Kenneth E. Sherman, Mohamed T. Shata, and Helal F Hetta
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,T-Lymphocytes ,Drug Resistance ,Pilot Projects ,Hepacivirus ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,medicine.disease_cause ,Epitope ,Hepatitis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Recurrence ,HLA Antigens ,Original Research Articles ,80 and over ,Viral ,Prospective Studies ,Chronic ,Aged, 80 and over ,Immunity, Cellular ,Liver Disease ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis C ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Combination ,RNA, Viral ,HIV/AIDS ,Molecular Medicine ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Female ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Infection ,Adult ,Proline ,Adolescent ,Hepatitis C virus ,T cell ,Chronic Liver Disease and Cirrhosis ,030106 microbiology ,Immunology ,Human leukocyte antigen ,Antiviral Agents ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Drug Therapy ,Hepatitis - C ,Virology ,Boceprevir ,Drug Resistance, Viral ,medicine ,Humans ,Protease Inhibitors ,Protease inhibitor (pharmacology) ,Aged ,business.industry ,Immunity ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,chemistry ,Viral replication ,Mutation ,RNA ,Cellular ,Antimicrobial Resistance ,Digestive Diseases ,business - Abstract
The efficacy of protease inhibitor drugs in hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment is limited by the selection and expansion of drug-resistant mutations. HCV replication is error-prone and genetic variability within the dominant epitopes ensures its persistence. The aims of this study are to evaluate the role of cellular immune response in the emergence of HCV protease resistance mutations and its effects on treatment outcome. Ten chronically HCV-infected subjects were treated with boceprevir (BOC)-based triple therapy. HCV-RNA was tested for BOC resistance-associated viral variants. HCV protease resistance mutations were investigated pretreatment and 24 weeks post-treatment. Synthetic peptides representing the wild-type and the potential nonstructural (NS)3 variants were used to evaluate T cell responses and human leukocyte antigen binding. Sustained viral response was achieved in 70% of patients, two patients were treatment nonresponders (NRs) and one was classified as a relapse. Pretreatment, the proportion of drug-resistant variants within individuals was higher in sustained viral responders (SVRs) than in NR patients. However, resistance-associated variants increased in NRs after BOC combined triple therapy. In contrast to NR patients, significant stronger cell-mediated immune responses were observed at the baseline among those who achieved sustained viral response for all T cell epitopes tested. Despite the increase in cell-mediated immune responses at week 24 in NRs, they failed to control the virus replication, leading to development of overt drug-resistant variants. Our data suggest that strong NS3-specific T cell immune responses at the baseline may predict a positive outcome of directly acting antiviral-based therapy, and the presence of pre-existent resistance mutations does not play a significant role in the outcome of anti-HCV combined therapy.
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- 2016
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15. Sa1509 ASSESSMENT AND VALIDATION OF HBV PRE-GENOMIC RNA ASSAYS
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Susan D. Rouster, Kenneth E. Sherman, Jeffrey Gersch, and Gavin Cloherty
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Genomic rna - Published
- 2020
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16. Zika virus replication and cytopathic effects in liver cells
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Matthew T. Aliota, Susan D. Rouster, Jason T. Blackard, Gary E. Dean, Ling Kong, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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0301 basic medicine ,RNA viruses ,viruses ,Cell Lines ,Apoptosis ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,Virus Replication ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Zika virus ,Cytopathogenic Effect, Viral ,Animal Cells ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Electron Microscopy ,Enzyme-Linked Immunoassays ,Cytopathic effect ,Virus quantification ,Microscopy ,Multidisciplinary ,Cell Death ,Zika Virus Infection ,Hep G2 Cells ,Viral Load ,3. Good health ,Liver ,Medical Microbiology ,Cell Processes ,Viral Pathogens ,Viruses ,Medicine ,Biological Cultures ,Pathogens ,Cellular Types ,Anatomy ,Viral hepatitis ,Research Article ,Science ,030106 microbiology ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Virus ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,Extraction techniques ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunoassays ,Vero Cells ,Microbial Pathogens ,Biology and life sciences ,Flaviviruses ,Virion ,Organisms ,Zika Virus ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Viral Replication ,RNA extraction ,Research and analysis methods ,030104 developmental biology ,Viral replication ,Cell culture ,Vero cell ,Hepatocytes ,Immunologic Techniques - Abstract
Zika virus (ZIKV) has emerged globally as an important pathogen, since it has been recognized as a cause of microcephaly and other neurologic processes and sequalae in newborns. The virus shares homology with Hepaciviruses and therefore may be a cause of hepatitis. We sought to characterize ZIKV replication in hepatocyte-derived cell lines. Huh7.5 and HepG2 cells were infected with ZIKV and replication potential was evaluated by multiple methods including plaque assay, qRT-PCR, negative-strand ZIKV RNA production, and ZIKV NS1 protein production. Growth curves in cells and supernatant were compared to replicative capacity in Vero cells. Overall, viral replication in both hepatocyte lines approximated that observed in the Vero cells. Cell cytopathology was observed after 3 days of infection and apoptosis markers increased. Transmission electron microscopy revealed evidence of viral capsids in cells and negative staining revealed ZIKV particles in the supernatant. Conclusions: Hepatocyte-derived cell lines are permissive for ZIKV replication and produce an overt cytopathic effect consistent with development of an acute viral hepatitis. Further evaluation of replication and injury is warranted.
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- 2018
17. Improvement in Hepatic Fibrosis Biomarkers Associated With Chemokine Receptor Inactivation Through Mutation or Therapeutic Blockade
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Parham Safaie, Susan D. Rouster, Paul S. Horn, Kenneth E. Sherman, Jason T. Blackard, Barbara Kroner, Liliana Preiss, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Mohamed T. Shata, and Shyam Kottilil
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0301 basic medicine ,Liver Cirrhosis ,Male ,CCR2 ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gastroenterology ,Cohort Studies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrosis ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Articles and Commentaries ,Coinfection ,Imidazoles ,virus diseases ,Hepatitis C ,Middle Aged ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Sulfoxides ,CCR5 Receptor Antagonists ,Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Receptors, CCR5 ,Hepatitis C virus ,030106 microbiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Alleles ,Aged ,Hepatitis ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Blockade ,Mutation ,HIV-1 ,Hepatic fibrosis ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background The C-C chemokine receptor Type 5 (CCR5) is a key receptor for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) entry into T-cells and a variant allele, CCR5 delta-32, is associated with decreased viral replication and disease progression. Active HIV-1 replication is highly associated with accelerated rates of hepatic fibrosis. We postulated that CCR5 plays a role in the development of hepatic fibrosis and evaluated the longitudinal effect of natural or drug-induced CCR5 mutation and blockade on biomarkers of liver fibrosis in HIV-1 patients. Methods To accomplish this goal, we examined 2 distinct cohorts. First, we evaluated fibrosis markers in the Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Studies (MHCS), which included subjects with HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) coinfection with the CCR5 delta-32 allele. We also evaluated an HIV-1 infected cohort that was treated with a dual CCR5/CCR2 antagonist, cenicriviroc. The enhanced liver fibrosis (ELF) index was validated against liver histology obtained from HCV/HIV and HCV patients and demonstrated strong correlation with fibrosis stage. Results In both the MHCS patients and patients treated with cenicriviroc, CCR5 mutation or blockade was associated with a significant decrease in the ELF index. Among the patients with the delta-32 allele, the ELF index rate significantly decreased in sequential samples as compared to CCR5 wild-type patients (P = .043). This was not observed in control subjects treated with efavirenz nor with a lower dose of 100 mg cenicriviroc. Conclusion These findings suggest that hepatic fibrosis in HIV-1 infected patients can be modulated by the mutation of CCR5 and/or use of CCR5/CCR2 blockade agents. Clinical Trials Registration NCT01338883.
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- 2018
18. 359. TLR7 Gene Polymorphisms Influence Development of Hepatic Fibrosis in HCV/HIV Coinfection
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Susan D. Rouster, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Heidi L Meeds, Kenneth E. Sherman, and M. Tarek Shata
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business.industry ,Hepatitis C virus ,virus diseases ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,TLR7 ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Abstracts ,Infectious Diseases ,Oncology ,Hemophilias ,Fibrosis ,Poster Abstracts ,Immunology ,Coinfection ,Medicine ,Allele ,business ,Hepatic fibrosis - Abstract
Background Hepatic fibrosis in individuals with HCV/HIV coinfection or HCV mono-infection may be modulated by a variety of host factors. In this study, we investigated the role of gene polymorphisms of putative genes that might influence fibrosis progression including MICA (rs2596542), interferon-stimulated gene OAS2 (rs1293762) and the pathogen recognition receptors TLR7 (rs179009) and TLR9 (rs187084). Effect on a cytokine panel was evaluated. Methods Longitudinal samples were obtained from subjects enrolled in the NCI Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Study. Within the cohort, a subset of subjects were included based upon presence or absence of the CCR5 delta-32 mutation which was previously shown to influence the rate of fibrosis progression. Hepatic fibrosis change was determined using the serum-derived Enhanced Liver Fibrosis (ELF) Index. Four putative genes with polymorphisms that have been previously associated with the development or progression of hepatic fibrosis were evaluated using Taqman SNP genotyping assays. Cytokine assays were performed using Luminex chipsets. Samples were analyzed using Statistix 10.0 using ANOVA and least square regression models. Results 58 unique subjects were evaluated. The mean age was 38 years, and all were male. 74% were HIV infected and 97% were HCV infected (76.8% coinfection). Controlling for the effect of CCR5, only the TLR7 A -> G polymorphism was predictive of change in the ELF Index. There was no statistically significant predictive difference between genotypes in the other three polymorphisms. Subjects with the TLR7 A allele (n = 47) had an average increase in ELF of 0.79 units, while the G allele (n = 11) had an increase in ELF of 2.1 units (P = 0.008). A regression model identified TLR7 as a key factor in ELF change, as well as HCV/HIV coinfection. Interferon alfa-2 levels were highly associated (increased, P = 0.0007) with the TLR7 A -> G polymorphism, while RANTES levels were inversely associated (decreased, P = 0.0443) with it. Conclusion Of the gene polymorphisms investigated, only TLR7 (rs179009) is an independent predictor of development of hepatic fibrosis in HCV/HIV coinfected subjects. The mechanism may involve modulation of inflammatory response pathways. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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- 2019
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19. Hepatitis E infection in HIV-infected liver and kidney transplant candidates
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Kenneth E. Sherman, Burc Barin, Norah A. Terrault, Susan D. Rouster, and Mohamed T. Shata
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Adult ,Male ,viruses ,HIV Infections ,Viremia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Hepevirus ,Liver disease ,Hepatitis E virus ,Virology ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Hepatitis Antibodies ,Kidney ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis E ,medicine.disease ,United States ,digestive system diseases ,Transplantation ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immunoglobulin M ,Immunoglobulin G ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) has been reported to cause acute and chronic hepatitis in those with HIV infection and among solid organ transplant recipients in Europe. Limited data indicate that HEV is endemic in the United States, but the prevalence and significance of HEV infection among those with HIV and awaiting solid organ transplantation is unknown. We evaluated anti-HEV IgM and IgG antibodies and HEV RNA in 166 HIV-infected solid organ transplant candidates enrolled in the NIH HIV-Transplant Cohort. Overall prevalence of anti-HEV IgG approached 20% in both liver and renal transplant candidates. Evidence of recent infection was present in approximately 2% of liver transplant candidates and none of the kidney transplant candidates. HEV RNA was not detected in any patient. We conclude that markers of HEV infection are frequent among candidates for transplantation, but active, ongoing viremia is not seen. Evidence of recent infection (acute on chronic) liver disease was present in liver but not kidney recipients.
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- 2014
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20. Association of TIMP1 Levels and Liver Disease Progression Among HIV/HCV Co-infected, HIV Mono-, HCV Mono-infected, and Healthy Groups from the MASH Cohort (FS09-07-19)
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Marianna Baum, Jacqueline Hernandez, Juphshy Jasmin, Leslie Seminario, Sabrina Sales Martinez, Adriana Campa, Colby Teeman, Javier Tamargo, Joseph Piperato, Hyojung Kim, Kenneth E. Sherman, Tan Li, Qingyun Liu, Gustavo G. Zarini, Susan D. Rouster, and Enass A. Abdel-hameed
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Aging and Chronic Disease ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,virus diseases ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Liver disease ,Cohort ,Medicine ,business ,Food Science ,TIMP1 - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Antiretroviral therapy has increased life expectancy for HIV infected patients; however, this population is developing chronic illnesses associated with aging. Liver disease is a major cause of non-AIDS mortality, characterized by progressive fibrosis. Infection with HIV and with Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) promotes liver fibrogenesis. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP1), inhibits fibrosis regression and is profibrogenic. Association between TIMP1 and liver disease progression in an aging population of HIV/HCV co-infected, HIV mono-infected, HCV mono-infected, and healthy groups from the Miami Adult Studies on HIV (MASH) cohort in Miami, Florida, was investigated. METHODS: Serum TIMP1 levels were determined by ELISA. A non-invasive estimate of liver fibrosis, FIB-4 score was calculated. Liver fibrosis was defined as FIB-4: Low 3.25. ANOVA with Tukey's test assessed the mean differences of FIB-4 score and TIMP1 level between groups, TIMP1 levels between 3 FIB-4 categories, and the effect of age on FIB-4 and TIMP1. Linear regression predicted the association of FIB-4 score and TIMP-1 level. RESULTS: Mean age of the cohort was 54.3 ± 8.1 years with no difference between groups. Mean FIB-4 for HIV/HCV co-infected group was the highest among the 4 groups (P
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- 2019
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21. Tu1541 – Validation of Non-Invasive Biomarkers of Liver Disease in a Cohort of Hiv/Hcv Coinfection
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Susan D. Rouster, Kenneth E. Sherman, and Enass A. Abdel-hameed
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Oncology ,Liver disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Hiv hcv coinfection ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Non invasive biomarkers ,Cohort ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2019
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22. Mutations associated with occult hepatitis B virus infection result in decreased surface antigen expression in vitro
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Mohamed T. Shata, Jeffrey A. Welge, Kenneth E. Sherman, Susan D. Rouster, Christina M. Martin, and Jason T. Blackard
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Hepatitis B virus ,HBsAg ,Mutation ,Hepatology ,Hepatitis B virus DNA polymerase ,virus diseases ,Biology ,Hepatitis B ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Molecular biology ,digestive system diseases ,Hepatitis B virus PRE beta ,Infectious Diseases ,Antigen ,Genotype ,medicine - Abstract
Occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is characterized by the absence of detectable hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) in the serum, despite detectable HBV DNA. Investigations of the mechanisms underlying the development of occult HBV infection are lacking in the current literature, although viral mutations in the surface region, resulting in decreased HBsAg expression or secretion, represent one potential mechanism. Wild-type HBsAg expression vectors were constructed from genotype-matched chronic HBV sequences. Site-directed mutagenesis was then utilized to introduce three genotype A mutations - M103I, K122R and G145A - associated with occult HBV infection in vivo, alone and in combination, into the wild-type HBsAg vectors. Transfection of Huh7 and HepG2 cell lines was performed, and cell culture supernatants and cell lysates were collected over 7 days to assess the effects of these mutations on extracellular and intracellular HBsAg levels. The G145A mutation resulted in significantly decreased extracellular and intracellular HBsAg expression in vitro. The most pronounced reduction in HBsAg expression was observed when all three mutations were present. The mutations evaluated in vitro in the current study resulted in decreased HBsAg expression and potentially increased hepatic retention and/or decreased hepatic secretion of synthesized HBsAg, which could explain the lack of HBsAg detection that is characteristic of occult HBV infection in vivo.
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- 2012
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23. Genomic variability associated with the presence of occult hepatitis B virus in HIV co-infected individuals
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Norah J. Shire, Jason T. Blackard, Kenneth E. Sherman, Christina M. Martin, Jeffrey A. Welge, Mohamed T. Shata, and Susan D. Rouster
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Hepatitis B virus ,HBsAg ,Mutation ,Hepatology ,virus diseases ,Viral quasispecies ,Hepatitis B ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology ,digestive system diseases ,Serology ,Infectious Diseases ,Antigen ,Genotype ,medicine - Abstract
Occult hepatitis B virus (O-HBV) infection is characterized by the presence of HBV DNA without detectable hepatitis B surface antigen (HBV DNA+/HBsAg-) in the serum. Although O-HBV is more prevalent during HBV/HIV co-infection, analysis of HBV mutations in co-infected patients is limited. In this preliminary study, HBV PreSurface (PreS) and surface (S) regions were amplified from 33 HIV-positive patient serum samples - 27 chronic HBV (C-HBV) and six O-HBV infections. HBV genotype was determined by phylogenetic analysis, while quasispecies diversity was quantified for the PreS, S and overlapping polymerase regions. C-HBV infections harboured genotypes A, D and G, compared to A, E, G and one mixed A/G infection for O-HBV. Interestingly, nonsynonymous-synonymous mutation values indicated positive immune selection in three regions for O-HBV vs one for C-HBV. Sequence analysis further identified new O-HBV mutations, in addition to several previously reported mutations within the HBsAg antigenic determinant. Several of these O-HBV mutations likely contribute to the lack of detectable HBsAg in O-HBV infection by interfering with detection in serologic assays, altering antigen secretion and/or decreasing replicative fitness.
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- 2009
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24. HCV kinetics, quasispecies, and clearance in treated HCV-infected and HCV/HIV-1-coinfected patients with hemophilia
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Susan D. Rouster, Norah J. Shire, Paul S. Horn, Kenneth E. Sherman, Sandra Stanford, and M. Elaine Eyster
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Adult ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,Hepatitis C virus ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,Viral quasispecies ,Hemophilia A ,medicine.disease_cause ,Antiviral Agents ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Immunopathology ,Ribavirin ,Humans ,Medicine ,Sida ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Remission Induction ,Interferon-alpha ,virus diseases ,Alanine Transaminase ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis C ,digestive system diseases ,chemistry ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,Coinfection ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Viral disease ,business ,Viral load ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment response rates remain low in HCV/HIV-1-coinfected individuals compared with those with HCV alone. Persons with inherited coagulation disorders have high rates of HCV and HIV-1 infection, but HCV treatment trials in this patient population are scarce. We hypothesized that differences by infection status in HCV viral kinetics would be associated with differences in HCV quasispecies complexity over time and with treatment response disparities. Coinfected and monoinfected patients were enrolled in a treatment trial for pegylated-interferon alpha-2a (peg-IFN) + ribavirin. Patients were treated for 48 weeks and followed for an additional 24. Quantitative HCV RNA was tested at multiple times during and after treatment. Viral kinetic parameters associated with response were estimated with a mathematical model. Quasispecies emergence was determined via heteroduplex complexity assay. Twenty-two patients were HCV RNA-positive at baseline, with no significant demographic or virological differences by infection status. Five of eleven (45%) of monoinfected and 3 of 11 (27%) of coinfected patients achieved sustained viral response (SVR). Peg-IFN efficacy (epsilon) of 90% or greater was associated with probability of end-of-treatment response (ETR) (P = .001) and SVR (P = .06). Patients with SVR had lower baseline quasispecies complexity than those without SVR (P = .07). Those with epsilon of 90% or greater also had lower baseline complexity (P = .07). Coinfection status mediated changes in complexity over time (P = .04). In conclusion, low pretreatment quasispecies complexity may predict peg-IFN response; early peg-IFN response is critical for sustained HCV clearance and is altered in coinfection. Further studies are warranted.
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- 2006
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25. Clinical application of polymerase chain reaction to diagnose Clostridium difficile in hospitalized patients with diarrhea
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Susan D. Rouster, Ralph A. Giannella, Michael S. Morelli, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Adult ,Diarrhea ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cost effectiveness ,Hospitalized patients ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Bacterial Toxins ,Clostridium difficile toxin B ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,law.invention ,Immunoenzyme Techniques ,Feces ,Bacterial Proteins ,Predictive Value of Tests ,law ,Internal medicine ,Positive predicative value ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Intensive care medicine ,Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Clostridioides difficile ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Middle Aged ,Clostridium difficile ,Diagnostic Techniques, Digestive System ,Immunoassay ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background & Aims: Clostridium difficile is a common cause of diarrhea in hospitalized patients and is associated with significant morbidity and cost. The current diagnostic standard, enzyme immunoassay (EIA), has low sensitivity, leading to duplicate testing and empiric treatment. We sought to show the usefulness and potential cost effectiveness of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of toxin B gene for diagnosis of C. difficile —induced diarrhea. Methods: A total of 148 stool samples from academic and community-based hospitals were sent for EIA testing and were evaluated prospectively for the presence of toxin B gene by PCR. Results were compared with EIA regarding sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values. Medical charts were reviewed to determine the following: (1) number of EIAs sent per admission, (2) number sent within a 24-hour time period, and (3) how caregivers practiced based on EIA results. Results: The mean age of 130 patients was 55 years. EIA and PCR were positive in 6.8% and 13.6% of patients, respectively. EIA sensitivity was 40%, specificity was 98%, and positive and negative predictive values were 80% and 91%, respectively. The cost of the PCR was $22/sample. Empiric treatment for C. difficile was given unnecessarily in 42% of EIA-negative results. Thirty percent of patients had 3 or more EIAs sent during their hospital admission. Of patients with multiple samples sent, 57% had more than 1 sample sent in a 24-hour period. Conclusions: Many physicians do not conform to practice guidelines regarding recommended diagnosis and empiric treatment of C. difficile . Toxin B gene PCR represents a more sensitive and potentially cost-effective method to diagnose C. difficile —induced diarrhea than EIA and should be considered for use as an alternative diagnostic standard.
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- 2004
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26. Complexity and Diversity of Hepatitis C Virus RNA in African Americans and Whites: Analysis of the Envelope‐Coding Domain
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Paul S. Horn, Erica D. Keenan, Susan D. Rouster, Norah J. Shire, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Adult ,Male ,Nonsynonymous substitution ,Silent mutation ,Hepatitis C virus ,Hepacivirus ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Black People ,medicine.disease_cause ,White People ,Virus ,Viral Envelope Proteins ,medicine ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Genetics ,Mutation ,biology ,Genetic Variation ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Hypervariable region ,Infectious Diseases ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Synonymous substitution - Abstract
African Americans infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV) are less responsive than whites to interferon-based therapy. HCV quasi species have been implicated. Quasi-species complexity and diversity were evaluated in matched African American and white individuals. Complexity and diversity in the first hypervariable region were similar in the 2 groups. Both the frequency of nonsynonymous amino acid substitutions and the mean ratio of nonsynonymous mutations to synonymous mutations were greater in clones derived from white patients. Racial differences in amino acid usage at otherwise conserved positions were observed. Differences in amino acid representation at key positions are suggestive of immunologic and functional selection along racial lines.
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- 2004
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27. Occult Hepatitis B in HIV-Infected Patients
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Natasa Rajicic, Norah J. Shire, Susan D. Rouster, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Adult ,Male ,Hepatitis B virus ,HBsAg ,HIV Infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Serology ,Cohort Studies ,Hepatitis B, Chronic ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Prospective Studies ,Hepatitis B Antibodies ,Sida ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Alanine Transaminase ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis B ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,United States ,digestive system diseases ,Vaccination ,Infectious Diseases ,DNA, Viral ,Immunology ,HIV-1 ,biology.protein ,Female ,Viral disease ,Antibody ,business - Abstract
Prevalence of hepatitis B virus (HBV) markers, including occult HBV, has not been described in diverse cohorts among HIV-infected patients. The objective of this study was to assess prevalence and significance of active and occult HBV infection in an HIV-positive US cohort. A random sample was taken from 2 prospective multicenter treatment intervention cohorts. The sample population (n = 240) was HIV-1 infected and highly active antiretroviral therapy-naive. Prevalence of HBV serologic markers and quantitative HBV DNA were determined. Serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels were measured to evaluate correlates of hepatocyte injury. A total of 64.6% of subjects demonstrated reactivity for any marker of current or past HBV infection or prior vaccination. Chronic HBV infection characterized by hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) reactivity was present in 7.1% while 15.8% exhibited HB anticore IgG only. Approximately 10% of the latter group was HBV DNA positive by a polymerase chain reaction-based assay. Only patients with a serologic pattern of HBsAg or HB anticore alone reactivity had HBV DNA. Occult HBV was observed in approximately 10% of HIV-infected patients with HB anticore IgG antibody in a geographically representative national cohort. Though viral titers and serum ALT levels were low, screening of this subset of HIV-infected patients may have implications in terms of antiretroviral therapy and risk of immune reconstitution-associated flares.
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- 2004
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28. Comparison of Methodologies for Quantification of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) RNA in Patients Coinfected with HCV and Human Immunodeficiency Virus
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Susan D. Rouster, Paul S. Horn, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Adult ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C virus ,HIV Infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Virus ,Cohort Studies ,Liver disease ,Flaviviridae ,Methods ,medicine ,Humans ,biology ,business.industry ,HIV ,virus diseases ,Viral Load ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis C ,Virology ,Titer ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Viral disease ,business ,Viral load - Abstract
Quantification of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA is important in the assessment of HCV-associated liver disease in patients coinfected with HCV and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). To investigate whether the standard integrity of competing test methodologies might be compromised by higher HCV titers in coinfected patients, 2 technologies (a polymerase chain reaction-based assay [COBAS Amplicor 2.0 assay; Roche Diagnostics] and a branched-chain DNA assay [Versant 3.0; Bayer]) were evaluated by testing paired serum samples from 68 coinfected patients and 137 HCV-monoinfected patients. Although the correlation was highly significant (r=0.81; P
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- 2002
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29. Hepatitis C virus Antigens Enzyme Immunoassay (HCV-AGS EIA) for One-Step Diagnosis of Viremic HCV Co-Infection in HIV Infected Individuals
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Ke-Qin Hu, Kenneth E. Sherman, Wei Cui, and Susan D. Rouster
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Hepatitis C virus ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Enzyme ,Antigen ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunoassay ,Hiv infected ,medicine ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,business ,Co infection - Published
- 2017
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30. Modulation of HCV replication after combination antiretroviral therapy in HCV/HIV co-infected patients
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Zachary Goodman, Mario Castro, Jeremie Guedj, Jason T. Blackard, Kenneth E. Sherman, Bruce J. Aronow, Mohamed T. Shata, Susan D. Rouster, Richard K. Sterling, Alan S. Perelson, and Judith Feinberg
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Adult ,Male ,Cart ,T-Lymphocytes ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C virus ,HIV Infections ,Virus Replication ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Young Adult ,Liver disease ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,medicine ,Humans ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,biology ,Coinfection ,Gene Expression Profiling ,virus diseases ,Alanine Transaminase ,General Medicine ,Hepatitis C ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,digestive system diseases ,Kinetics ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Liver ,Viral replication ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Viral load - Abstract
The hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an important contributor to morbidity and mortality in patients coinfected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Coinfection results in increased HCV replication and more rapid rates of liver disease progression. The effect of HIV combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) on HCV replication has not been studied in depth. To address this issue, we enrolled a small cohort of HCV/HIV coinfected patients into a cART initiation trial, and used dynamic modeling combined with evaluation of immune responses and microarray profiles to determine how effective treatment of HIV affects HCV. Treatment with cART resulted in HCV flare and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) increase (2× or more increase from baseline) in a subset of treated patients. Subjects with evidence of hepatic injury (increased ALT) were more likely to have HCV-specific immune responses directed against HCV epitopes. Over time, HCV viral loads declined. Reproducible and biologically important gene expression changes occurred in patients who underwent successful cART, particularly with respect to downregulation of genes with known antiviral roles. Our findings suggest that the effective suppression of HIV by cART initiates a cascade of early and late events in treated patients with HCV. Early events involving downregulation of interferon-stimulated genes may lead to transiently increased viral replication and hepatic injury. At later time points, HCV viral load declines to levels comparable to those seen in the setting of HCV monoinfection. These findings support early antiretroviral therapy in those with HCV/HIV coinfection.
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- 2014
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31. Hepatitis C virus NS3 mutations in haemophiliacs
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Susan D. Rouster, Ming Valerie Lin, Ashley N. Charlton, Philippe J. Zamor, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Hepacivirus ,Hepatitis C virus ,Haemophilia A ,HIV Infections ,Drug resistance ,Viral Nonstructural Proteins ,medicine.disease_cause ,Hemophilia A ,Antiviral Agents ,Hemophilia B ,Article ,Young Adult ,Drug Resistance, Viral ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Protease Inhibitors ,Prospective Studies ,Genetics (clinical) ,Ohio ,Mutation ,Analysis of Variance ,biology ,business.industry ,Coinfection ,virus diseases ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Hepatitis C ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,business - Abstract
Summary Haemophiliacs have high hepatitis C virus (HCV) exposure risk from blood products that did not undergo heat inactivation or disease-specific screening prior to 1987. Repeated exposure to infected factor concentrates predisposes haemophiliacs to higher likelihood of HCV from multiple sources. HIV coinfection could result in impaired clearance of less fit variants resulting in enrichment of quasispecies carrying resistance mutations. We postulated that haemophiliacs demonstrate increased prevalence of baseline signature mutations in the HCV NS3/4 serine protease coding domain. We examined the prevalence of putative HCV protease inhibitor mutations, mutations, subclassified into dominant mutations if changes conferred resistance, and minor variants not associated with drug resistance, in patients with haemophilia A or B, infected with HCV or HCV/HIV, prior to HCV PI exposure. A total of 151 subjects were evaluated, including 22 haemophiliacs and 129 non-haemophilic controls. Of the 58 mutations detected, 55 (95%) were resistance mutations and three (5%) were minor variants. Dominant mutations were detected in 10 (45.5%) haemophiliacs and in 43 (33.3%) controls (OR 1.67, 95% CI 0.67–4.16). There was no statistical difference in proportion of dominant mutations (P = 0.27) or minor variants (P = 0.47) between groups, despite adjustment for HIV status (P = 0.44). No significant differences in dominant or minor resistance mutations between haemophiliacs and non-haemophiliacs were observed. HIV presence or prior HAART exposure did not affect baseline distribution. We conclude that haemophiliacs are not at higher risk for pre-existing HCV PI mutations, and prospective studies of response to PI-based regimens with HCV activity are indicated.
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- 2014
32. Mechanism of indinavir-induced hyperbilirubinemia
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Xiaofa Qin, Stephen D. Zucker, Kenneth E. Sherman, Judith Feinberg, Pavitra Keshavan, Fei Yu, Richard M. Green, and Susan D. Rouster
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Male ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Glucuronosyltransferase ,Bilirubin ,Rats, Gunn ,Population ,HIV Infections ,Indinavir ,Pharmacology ,digestive system ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Medicine ,HIV Protease Inhibitor ,Rats, Wistar ,education ,Hyperbilirubinemia ,Unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,HIV Protease Inhibitors ,Biological Sciences ,Gunn rat ,Rats ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,business ,Saquinavir ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Indinavir is a viral protease inhibitor used for the treatment of HIV infection. Unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia develops in up to 25% of patients receiving indinavir, prompting drug discontinuation and further clinical evaluation in some instances. We postulated that this side-effect is due to indinavir-mediated impairment of bilirubin UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) activity and would be most pronounced in individuals with reduced hepatic enzyme levels, as occurs in ≈10% of the population manifesting Gilbert's syndrome. This hypothesis was tested in vitro , in the Gunn rat model of UGT deficiency, and in HIV-infected patients with and without the Gilbert's polymorphism. Indinavir was found to competitively inhibit UGT enzymatic activity ( K I = 183 μM) while concomitantly inducing hepatic bilirubin UGT mRNA and protein expression. Although oral indinavir increased plasma bilirubin levels in wild-type and heterozygous Gunn rats, the mean rise was significantly greater in the latter group of animals. Similarly, serum bilirubin increased by a mean of 0.34 mg/dl in indinavir-treated HIV patients lacking the Gilbert's polymorphism versus 1.45 mg/dl in those who were either heterozygous or homozygous for the mutant allele. Whereas saquinavir also competitively inhibits UGT activity, this drug has not been associated with hyperbilirubinemia, most likely because of the higher K I (360 μM) and substantially lower therapeutic levels as compared with indinavir. Taken together, these findings indicate that elevations in serum-unconjugated bilirubin associated with indinavir treatment result from direct inhibition of bilirubin-conjugating activity.
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- 2001
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33. [Untitled]
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Susan D. Rouster, Judith Feinberg, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Torque teno virus ,biology ,Physiology ,Gastroenterology ,virus diseases ,Hepatitis C ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Virus ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Immunology ,Lentivirus ,medicine ,Viral disease ,Sida ,Viral load - Abstract
TT virus is a small, circular DNA virus, that has been associated with transfusion hepatitis. We sought to determine the prevalence of TT virus (TTV) in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and to characterize the virus in terms of genotypic variability and in the relationship to CD4+, HIV viral loads, HCV/HIV coinfection, and ALT abnormalities. A cross-sectional analysis of HIV-infected patients in the United States, including 86 HIV-positive subjects and 118 HIV-negative controls was performed. TTV was detected using a seminested PCR technique. Samples underwent cloning and sequence analysis and/or RFLP to determine genotype. Thirty-eight percent of HIV-positive patients had TTV infection versus 14.4% of patients within the matching cohort (P = 0.0009). The highest rate of TTV infection was in patients with concurrent HCV/HIV infection (54% vs 30%, P = 0.038). HIV-infected subjects with TTV had lower ALT levels than those without TTV (P = 0.036). Intravenous drug use was the leading factor associated with TTV positivity among HIV-positive subjects. Mixed genotypes were more common in those with HIV. Therefore, TTV prevalence, ALT levels, and genomic heterogeneity of TTV all seem to be altered in patients with HIV.
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- 2001
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34. Hepatitis cRNA quasispecies complexity in patients with alcoholic liver disease
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Charles L. Mendenhall, Donna Thee, Susan D. Rouster, and Kenneth E. Sherman
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Male ,Alcoholic liver disease ,Population ,Hepacivirus ,Viral quasispecies ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,RNA, Complementary ,Cohort Studies ,Liver disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Genotype ,medicine ,Humans ,Cloning, Molecular ,education ,Liver Diseases, Alcoholic ,NS5B ,DNA Primers ,Hepatitis ,education.field_of_study ,Base Sequence ,Hepatology ,Nucleic Acid Heteroduplexes ,Genetic Variation ,Hepatitis C ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,chemistry ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,5' Untranslated Regions - Abstract
Alcohol abuse is described as a major cofactor in the development of hepatitis C (HCV) associated liver disease and may play a role in the outcome of interferon-based treatment interventions. The association between HCV viral heterogeneity and alcohol has not been previously described. This study was designed to evaluate the quasispecies nature of the HCV population in patients with compensated and decompensated alcoholic liver disease, to test the hypothesis that alcoholics have greater complexity than matched nonalcoholic controls. A nonisotopic heteroduplex complexity assay (HCA) was first validated by comparison with results of quasispecies complexity determined by subcloning and sequencing of amplicon products from the E2/NS1 hypervariable coding region (HVR). Subsequently, this methodology was applied to comparison of 20 compensated (Child's-Pugh A) and decompensated (Child's-Pugh B/C) alcoholic and 20 nonalcoholic controls. The complexity of the HVR, as well as the 5' Untranslated (5'UT) and the NS5b coding domains were evaluated. The HCA methodology provided a reasonable semiquantitative measure of HCV RNA quasispecies variability compared with subclone sequence homology comparison. Overall, alcoholic patients had greater quasispecies complexity (2.65 bands) than nonalcoholic controls (1.6 bands; P = .01). Subset analysis revealed that compensated alcoholic patients had a mean of 3.1 homo/heteroduplex bands per sample whereas Child's-Pugh B/C alcoholics showed intermediate complexity. A similar quasispecies complexity difference was seen in the 5'UTR, but not in the NS5b coding domain. Quasispecies complexity was not associated with viral titer, complementary DNA concentration, or genotype. The differences in quasispecies complexity may help explain reports of poor interferon responsiveness in alcoholic patients.
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- 1999
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35. Host Response to Mycobacterial Infection in the Alcoholic Rat
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Peter S. Gartside, Charles J. Grossman, Gary A. Roselle, X. Li, P. Hurtubise, Susan D. Rouster, and Charles L. Mendenhall
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Hepatitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Flow cytometry ,Sexual dimorphism ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Endocrinology ,Immune system ,Neurology ,Oral administration ,Internal medicine ,Toxicity ,Immunology ,medicine ,Analysis of variance ,CD8 - Abstract
LI, X., C. J. GROSSMAN, C. L. MENDENHALL, P. HURTUBISE, S. D. ROUSTER, G. A. ROSELLE AND P. GARTSIDE. Host response to mycobacterial infection in the alcoholic rat: Male and female dimorphism . ALCOHOL 16 (3) 207–212, 1998.—Increased susceptibility to tuberculosis occurs in the alcoholic. One explanation for the altered susceptibility is a change in T-lymphocyte modulation. To evaluate this, 24 male and 24 female Sprague–Dawley rats were treated with either a Lieber-type liquid ethanol diet (LED) or an isocaloric control (LCD). After 2 weeks, half the subjects were infected with BCG (10 8 colony-forming units) and sacrificed after 42 days. Splenic helper (CD4) and suppressor/cytoxic (CD8) cells were quantitated by flow cytometry. By three-way analysis of variance, splenic cellularity was significantly increased by infection ( p p = 0.0002). There was a marginal sexual difference ( p = 0.065) with females exhibiting a 35% lower response while on alcohol. Examining lymphocyte subsets, the most significant changes were observed after infection (BCG) and alcohol treatment (LED). CD4 levels were deminished by LED ( p = 0.0002) but markedly increased by infection ( p p p = 0.0078). CD8 was influenced only by infection ( p p = 0.0032). Splenic T-lymphocytes, predominately CD4, are involved in the host response to BCG hepatitis and are adversely influenced by LED, which may contribute to increased susceptibility. Published by Elsevier Science Inc.
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- 1998
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36. Biphasic in vivo immune function after low- versus high-dose alcohol consumption
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Susan D. Rouster, Susan A. Theus, Charles L. Mendenhall, Gary A. Roselle, and Charles J. Grossman
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Immune system ,In vivo ,Immunopathology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Intradermal injection ,Ethanol ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Immunity ,Immunosuppression ,General Medicine ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Cytokine ,Neurology ,chemistry ,Immunology ,Toxicity ,Interleukin-2 - Abstract
A series of experiments was performed to assess the alterations in immune status in vivo that are associated with differences in the amount and duration of ethanol intake. Using a nonspecific delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity-like response to the intradermal injection of phytohemagglutinin, the area of induration (skin test response) was significantly enhanced (p = 0.008) after low-dose ethanol (0.5 g/kg) administered daily by gastric gavage for 5 days. High-dose ethanol (6.0 g/kg) significantly diminished this response (p = 0.03). Using an experimental model of Mycobacterium bovis hepatitis, the host immune response was also altered in a biphasic manner after chronic, 28-day ethanol consumption. With this model 0.43 +/- 0.03 g/kg/day (mean +/- SEM) of ethanol (low dose) was associated with a 40% improvement in the removal of the organisms from liver tissue (p = 0.002). High dose (12.1 +/- 0.5 g/kg/day) impaired removal, resulting in a 55% increase in the number of viable organisms (p = 0.001). The levels of three cytokines, MIF, TNF-alpha, and IL-2, known to be involved in the modulation of the host response to mycobacterial infections, were measured in sera after the infection. The serum levels of these cytokines in response to infection did not correlate with this biphasic response to different alcohol dose levels.
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- 1997
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37. Human Hepatocyte Growth Factor in Alcoholic Liver Disease: A Comparison with Change in α-Fetoprotein
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Susan D. Rouster, Charles J. Grossman, John R. Lake, Thomas E. Moritz, Antonio Chedid, Filip Roos, Gregory L. Bennett, Charles L. Mendenhall, and Gary A. Roselle
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Hepatitis ,Liver injury ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcoholic liver disease ,Cirrhosis ,business.industry ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Alcoholic hepatitis ,Toxicology ,medicine.disease ,Liver regeneration ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Ascites ,medicine ,Hepatocyte growth factor ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To evaluate the hepatic regenerative response in patients with alcoholic liver disease, sera from 263 patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis and/or cirrhosis were analyzed for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). HGF concentration was elevated above healthy controls in 95% of the patients (median level = 2.4 ng/ml), whereas AFP tended to be depressed below controls (median level = 4.1 ng/ml). Correlations with parameters of liver injury (i.e., ascites, encephalopathy, AST bilirubin, and protime) all showed a more significant correlation with HGF concentrations than those of AFP. Patients with HGF levels below the mean (4 ng/ml) exhibited significantly better survival (median survival = 35 months vs. 8.5 months for those with HGF > or = 4 ng/ml; p = 0.007). Serum HGF levels were associated with various specific histologic features of alcoholic hepatitis that included, but were not exclusively related to, necrosis.
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- 1996
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38. Relevance of anti-HCV reactivity in patients with alcoholic hepatitis
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Charles L. Mendenhall, Antonio Chedid, Polito Aj, Susan D. Rouster, Gary A. Roselle, Quan S, and Thomas E. Moritz
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Alcoholic liver disease ,business.industry ,T cell ,Gastroenterology ,Alcoholic hepatitis ,Hepatitis C ,Hepatology ,medicine.disease ,Liver disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Immune system ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,medicine ,business ,CD8 - Abstract
From 8 Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, 296 patients with varying degrees of alcoholic liver disease were tested for hepatitis C (HCV) infection using an EIA and RIBA 2. A high frequency of positive response was observed with 13.9% reactive to both and an additional 4.4% positive only to RIBA 2 (total 18.3%). An evaluation of known risk factors (injection drug use and prior blood transfusions) failed to account for the mode of transmission in 42.6% of the HCV+ patients. The clinical severity of the liver disease and degree of liver pathology were nearly identical in HCV+ vs. HCV- patients. However, the process was accelerated in the HCV+ patients occurring at a 12.8% younger age (p< 0.0001) with a 43% increase in ALT (p=0.05). The most striking differences were observed in immune parameters. In peripheral blood, total lymphocyte counts were increased 20% (p=0.01) accompanied by a 56% increase in B cells (p=0.01) and a 35% elevation of IgG levels (p=0.0001) in HCV+ patients. T cell changes consisted of a 50% increase in CD8 cells (p=0.047). However, lymphocyte infiltration into liver was not significantly different (HCV+ vs. HCV−) for any of the subsets studied (CD4, CD8, B cells, NK cells). The combined presence of HCV and alcohol injury did not significantly increase mortality but did significantly increase the number of hospitalizations from 2.4 to 4.0 per year (p= 0.0005).
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- 1993
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39. Genotypic characterization of symptomatic hepatitis E virus (HEV) infections in Egypt
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Suzanne U. Emerson, Robert H. Purcell, Susan D. Rouster, Enas A. Daef, Gehan Galal, Soad Nady, M. Tarek Shata, Kenneth E. Sherman, Salwa Seif El Din, Naglaa Marzuuk, Jason T. Blackard, and Marwaa M. Rafaat
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Male ,Genotype ,viruses ,Hepatitis C virus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Feces ,Hepatitis E virus ,Virology ,medicine ,Seroprevalence ,Animals ,Humans ,Child ,Phylogeny ,Hepatitis B virus ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis E ,Macaca mulatta ,humanities ,digestive system diseases ,Caliciviridae ,Infectious Diseases ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Egypt ,Female ,Viral disease ,Viral hepatitis - Abstract
Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a common cause of acute viral hepatitis (AVH) in many developing countries. In Egypt, HEV seroprevalence is among the highest in the world; however, only a very limited number of Egyptian HEV sequences are currently available.The objectives were to determine the HEV genotype(s) currently circulating in Egypt.AVH patients without serologic evidence of hepatitis A, B, and C viruses were evaluated for possible HEV infection using serologic assays for anti-HEV IgM and anti-HEV IgG and real-time PCR for HEV RNA. Stool suspensions from suspected cases were inoculated into rhesus macaques to confirm the presence of HEV. Sequence analysis was utilized to determine HEV genotype.Of 287 subjects with AVH enrolled, 58 had serologic evidence of acute HEV infection. Stool samples for two of these patients were repeatedly positive for HEV RNA by real-time PCR. Macaques experimentally inoculated with these human stools also developed viremia. Sequence analysis of open reading frame (ORF) 1 demonstrated that these isolates belonged to HEV genotype 1 and were 3.9-9.5% divergent from other genotype 1 isolates. ORF2 was 5.3-8.7% divergent from previously reported Egyptian isolates.This study strongly suggests that genotype 1 HEV related to other North African isolates is circulating in acute symptomatic patients in Egypt. Further evaluation of genotypic variability is underway in this highly endemic cohort and is considered an important component of our increased understanding of HEV pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2009
40. Antibodies to hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus in alcoholic hepatitis and cirrhosis: Their prevalence and clinical relevance
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Susan D. Rouster, Anna Mae Diehl, Stephen Goldberg, Rowen K. Zetterman, Antonio Chedid, Leonard B. Seeff, Samuel W. French, Gary A. Roselle, Lionel Rabin, Charles L. Mendenhall, Z. Buskell-Bales, Thomas S. Chen, Pedro Garcia-Pont, Carlo H. Tamburro, Saad J. Ghosn, T Kiernan, Peter S. Gartside, Robert E. Weesner, and Charles J. Grossman
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Hepatitis B virus ,Alcoholic liver disease ,HBsAg ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Hepatitis C virus ,Alcoholic hepatitis ,Hepatitis C ,Hepatitis B ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Liver disease ,Immunology ,medicine ,business - Abstract
Patients with overt alcoholic liver disease who had participated in a multicenter therapeutic trial and subgroups of controls (i.e., alcoholic patients without liver disease and patients with neither alcoholism nor liver disease) were tested for hepatitis B virus and hepatitis C virus antibodies to determine the prevalence of these antibodies and any clinical association in the progression and outcome of alcoholic liver disease. Antibodies to hepatitis B (anti–HBs and/or anti-HBc) were found in 29.2% of patients with alcoholic liver disease, in 26.1% of hospitalized alcoholic patients without liver disease and in 24.2% of hospitalized nonalcoholic patients without liver disease; frequencies were not significantly different from one another. HBsAg was not evaluated because HBsAg+ patients had been excluded from the original trial. The presence of these antibody markers correlated with ethnic origin of and immunoglobulin levels in the patients. In contrast, antibody to hepatitis C, as detected by enzyme immunoassay, was positive in 27.1%, 4.8% and 3.0% of the three groups, respectively, the first differing significantly from the other two. Antibody to hepatitis C virus positivity correlated significantly with clinical severity of the disease and with the presence of histological features that imply chronic viral infection (periportal inflammation, cirrhosis), despite the fact that the supplementary assay for antibody to hepatitis C virus, using recombinant immunoblot assay, reduced the positive rate by 79%. Although the presence of hepatitis B antibodies did not correlate with patient survival, some categories of patients with antibody to hepatitis C virus did; the survival of those with antibody to hepatitis C virus and recombinant immunoblot assay reactivity was 67%; for those with antibody to hepatitis C virus positivity but recombinant immunoblot assay negativity the survival was 29% (p < 0.01). The reason for the poor prognosis for those with antibody to hepatitis C virus positivity and recombinant immunoblot assay negativity is not clear, although some theories are offered. (HEPATOLOGY 1991;14:581–589.)
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- 1991
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41. Tu1046 Evaluation of the Role of the Immune Responses in Determining the Emergence of HCV Ns3 Resistance Mutations During Protease Inhibitor (PI) Therapy
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Susan D. Rouster, Hong Ji, Kenneth E. Sherman, Ashley Ulm, Enass A. Abdel-hameed, Helal F Hetta, and Mohamed T. Shata
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Immune system ,Hepatology ,Gastroenterology ,Pi ,Protease inhibitor (pharmacology) ,Biology ,Virology - Published
- 2015
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42. The prevalence and significance of occult hepatitis B virus in a prospective cohort of HIV-infected patients
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Norah J. Shire, Kenneth E. Sherman, Sandra Stanford, Carl J. Fichtenbaum, Jason T. Blackard, Susan D. Rouster, and Christina M. Martin
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Adult ,Male ,HBsAg ,Hepatitis B virus ,HIV Infections ,medicine.disease_cause ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Virus ,law.invention ,Orthohepadnavirus ,law ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Aspartate Aminotransferases ,Hepatitis B Antibodies ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Ohio ,Hepatitis ,Hepatitis B Surface Antigens ,biology ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Alanine Transaminase ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Hepatitis B ,Virology ,Hepatitis B Core Antigens ,digestive system diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Hepadnaviridae ,DNA, Viral ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
Background: Occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) is defined as low-level HBV DNA without hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg). Prevalence estimates vary widely. We determined the prevalence of occult HBV at the University of Cincinnati Infectious Diseases Center (IDC). Methods: Patients in the IDC HIV database (n = 3867) were randomly selected using a 25% sampling fraction. Samples were pooled for HBV nucleic acid extraction. Pools were tested for HBV DNA by a real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to coamplify core/surface protein regions. The PCR assay was run on all individual samples from each DNA + pool. DNA + samples were tested for HBV serologic markers. Results: A total of 909 patients without known HBV were selected. The mean CD4 count was 384 cells/mm 3 . Forty-three patients were HBV DNA + . Twelve of 43 were DNA + /HBsAg - (95% confidence interval for database: 0.58% to 1.90%). Five of 12 were negative for all serologic markers. Alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, and HBV DNA titers were elevated in HBSAg + patients versus occult patients and versus HIV-monoinfected patients. No other significant differences were detected. No occult HBV patient was on treatment with anti-HBV activity. Conclusions: Forty-three percent of those with HBV were not previously identified as HBV + , indicating the need for ongoing screening in high-risk populations. Occult HBV may occur in persons with all negative serologic markers, representing a challenge for identification.
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- 2006
43. Liver injury and changes in hepatitis C Virus (HCV) RNA load associated with protease inhibitor-based antiretroviral therapy for treatment-naive HCV-HIV-coinfected patients: lopinavir-ritonavir versus nelfinavir
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Susan D. Rouster, Norah J. Shire, Paul Cernohous, Kenneth E. Sherman, Scott C. Brun, Janice H. Omachi, and Barbara A. da Silva
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Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Hepatitis C virus ,Lopinavir/ritonavir ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,Pyrimidinones ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gastroenterology ,Lopinavir ,immune system diseases ,Internal medicine ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,medicine ,Humans ,Protease inhibitor (pharmacology) ,Aged ,Hepatitis ,Aged, 80 and over ,Nelfinavir ,Ritonavir ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,Viral Load ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis C ,digestive system diseases ,CD4 Lymphocyte Count ,Infectious Diseases ,Liver ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,business ,Viral load ,medicine.drug - Abstract
2 Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Illinois Background. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) initiation in patients coinfected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) has been associated with transaminase and HCV viral load flares. Previous studies have included highly variable antiretroviral regimens. We compared effects of 2 protease inhibitor-based regimens on alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels and HCV loads in HCV-HIV- coinfected patients initiating HAART. Methods. Seventy HIV-infected patients with positive baseline results of HCV enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay from a treatment trial comparing lopinavir-ritonavir with nelfinavir were evaluated during a 48-week period. HCV and HIV titers were analyzed at baseline, at weeks 24 and 48 of treatment, and during flares in the ALT level of 15 times the upper limit of normal. Results. A total of 57 of 70 patients tested positive for HCV RNA at baseline. HCV titers for patients in lopinavir-ritonavir and nelfinavir groups, respectively, were as follows: baseline, 6.07 and 6.22 log IU/mL; week 24 of treatment, 6.68 and 6.48 log IU/mL; and week 48 of treatment, 6.32 and 6.44 log IU/mL. Of patients with a CD4 + cell count of !100 cells/mm 3 at baseline, 5 of 11 in the nelfinavir group and 0 of 10 in the lopinavir- ritonavir group had an increase in the HCV load of 10.5 log IU/mL from baseline to week 48. The mean ALT level increased by 45 U/L at 24 weeks and 18 U/L at 48 weeks in the nelfinavir group but decreased by 18 U/L at 24 weeks and 7 U/L at 48 weeks in the lopinavir-ritonavir group. Eight patients in the nelfinavir group and 2 patients in the lopinavir-ritonavir group had grade 3 or 4 flares in the ALT level. Conclusions. HAART initiation is associated with increased HCV loads and ALT levels. A low baseline CD4 + cell count is associated with persistent increases in the HCV RNA load in nelfinavir-treated patients. These results warrant careful interpretation of abnormalities in the ALT load after HAART initiation in HCV-HIV-coinfected patients to prevent premature discontinuation of treatment.
- Published
- 2005
44. HCV quasispecies evolution: association with progression to end-stage liver disease in hemophiliacs infected with HCV or HCV/HIV
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James J Goedert, M. Elaine Eyster, Hongxing Qin, Erica D. Keenan, Norah J. Shire, Kenneth E. Sherman, Margaret James Koziel, and Susan D. Rouster
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Hepatitis C virus ,Immunology ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,HIV Infections ,Viral quasispecies ,Hepacivirus ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Hemophilia A ,Biochemistry ,Cohort Studies ,Evolution, Molecular ,Liver disease ,Species Specificity ,medicine ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Longitudinal Studies ,Clotting factor ,virus diseases ,Cancer ,Genetic Variation ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Hepatitis C ,Hepatitis C, Chronic ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Disease Progression ,Liver Failure ,Cohort study - Abstract
Patients with inherited bleeding disorders who received clotting factor concentrates before 1987 have high rates of hepatitis C virus (HCV) or HCV/HIV infection. We evaluated HCV quasispecies evolution in longitudinally collected specimens comparing those from patients with progression to end-stage liver disease (ESLD; cases) to those with compensated chronic hepatitis (controls). Plasma samples were obtained from the National Cancer Institute Multicenter Hemophilia Cohort Study. Controls were matched for age, sex, infection duration, and presence/absence of HIV. Samples from early infection were compared to those obtained after onset of ESLD in the cases. The first hypervariable (HVR1) and core proteincoding regions were amplified, subcloned, and sequenced. Complexity and diversity were determined. More than 700 sub-clones from 10 pairs of patients (8 with HIV) followed over approximately 9.3 years were evaluated. HVR1 complexity narrowed over time in the cases, whereas it increased in controls (P = .01). Similar trends were observed for diversity within HVR1 and the core region (P = .04). HCV-infected patients with inherited bleeding disorders undergo quasispecies evolution over time. Evolution patterns differ for progressors and nonprogressors. Further understanding of these mechanisms may help identify factors related to progression rate and treatment response.
- Published
- 2004
45. Hepatitis C Virus Prevalence in an Unselected Emergency Department Population
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Vidhya A. Kunnathur, Michael S. Lyons, Kenneth E. Sherman, Kimberly W. Hart, Matthew Sperling, and Susan D. Rouster
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Hepatitis C virus ,Emergency medicine ,Population ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Emergency department ,business ,medicine.disease_cause ,education - Published
- 2014
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46. Hepatitis C Virus prevalence among patients infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus: a cross-sectional analysis of the US adult AIDS Clinical Trials Group
- Author
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Raymond T. Chung, Kenneth E. Sherman, Natasa Rajicic, and Susan D. Rouster
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cross-sectional study ,Hepatitis C virus ,HIV Infections ,Hepacivirus ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virus ,Flaviviridae ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Sida ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,biology ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,business.industry ,virus diseases ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hepatitis C ,Infectious Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Cohort ,Immunology ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) has emerged as an important etiologic agent of liver injury and failure in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The prevalence and characteristics of HCV in a representative cohort of HIV-infected patients have not been described. Therefore, a representative sample of 1687 HIV-infected patients was studied; a 213-sample subcohort was selected by use of risk-based sampling from 2 large prospective US Adult AIDS Clinical Trials Group clinical trials. HCV prevalence, HCV RNA level, and genotype were determined. The weighted overall estimate of HCV prevalence in the study cohort was 16.1% (95% weighted confidence interval, 14.3%-17.8%), with significant variability depending on risk factors and HIV RNA levels. Among patients defined as being "at risk", 72.7% were HCV positive, whereas, among low-risk patients, the positivity rate was 3.5%. Genotype 1 was found in 83.3% of infected patients. Median HCV RNA level was 6.08x106 IU/mL. High virus loads and genotype 1 prevalence may be important to interferon-based antiviral response rates among coinfected patients.
- Published
- 2001
47. Cytokine response to BCG infection in alcohol-fed mice
- Author
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Susan D. Rouster, Charles L. Mendenhall, Fred D. Finkelman, Suzanne C. Morris, Gary A. Roselle, Robert T Means, Vinh-Truyen Nguyen, Charles E Grossman, and Kenneth E. Sherman
- Subjects
Male ,Health (social science) ,Ratón ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Colony Count, Microbial ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Andrology ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Interferon-gamma ,Mice ,Immune system ,medicine ,Animals ,Tuberculosis ,Interferon gamma ,RNA, Messenger ,Interleukin 4 ,Ethanol ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Liver Diseases ,Central Nervous System Depressants ,General Medicine ,Mycobacterium bovis ,Interleukin-10 ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Interleukin 10 ,Cytokine ,Neurology ,Toxicity ,Immunology ,Cytokines ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Cattle ,Interleukin-4 ,Spleen ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Alcoholics have increased susceptibility to infections including tuberculosis. Chronic alcohol treatment impairs host response to bovine mycobacterium infection from BCG. This study assesses the role of four cytokines (TNFalpha, IFNgamma, IL-4, and IL-10) in this impaired response. Twenty male C57BL/6 mice were pair-fed on the Lieber DiCarli control (LCD) or ethanol (LED) diets for 28 days. The LED treated subjects ate ad lib and consumed a mean of 13 g/kg/d of ethanol. After 14 days, based on body weight, subjects were randomly divided into four treatment groups of five each. Ten infected with 2x10(6) colony-forming units (CFU) of BCG by tail-vein. On day 28, the mice were sacrificed. Liver was cultured to determine the mycobacteria CFU/g tissue. Spleens were assayed for the levels of TNFalpha, IFNgamma, IL-4, and IL-10 mRNA relative to mRNA levels for a housekeeping gene using a quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR. Without BCG infection, only the mRNA for IFNgamma was increased by LED treatment, 51% (p = 0.0001). BCG infection significantly increased TNFalpha, IFNgamma, and IL-10 mRNA (p0.0001). IL-4 mRNA decreased (p = 0.0006). Chronic LED plus BCG infection further increased TNFalpha (p = 0.002) and IFN-gamma (p = 0.04); IL-10 was unchanged, whereas IL-4 was marginally further decreased (p = 0.06). CFU/liver increased with LED (mean +/- SD, 72+/-33x10(5) vs. 39+/-17x10(5); p = 0.004). A significant direct correlation was observed between CFU and TNFalpha, r = 0.70, p = 0.03. In conclusion, BCG infection increases TNFalpha, IFNgamma,IL-10 and decreases IL-4. CFU numbers correlate with mRNA for TNFalpha, and LED inhibits host containment of BCG infection as measured by liver CFU. This study could not identify cytokine alterations in either Th1- or Th2-type immune responses that might contribute to the impaired host response to the BCG infection.
- Published
- 1999
48. Su1290 Comparison of HCV Ns3 Mutations Between Hemophiliacs and Non-Hemophiliacs Infected With HCV or HCV/HIV
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Ming V. Lin, Susan D. Rouster, Ashley N. Charlton, and Kenneth E. Sherman
- Subjects
Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease_cause ,Virology - Published
- 2013
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49. 315 Modeling HCV viral kinetic response to PEG-IFN/ribavirin in HCV/HIV coinfected patients
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Paul S. Horn, Marion G. Peters, Margaret James Koziel, Raymond T. Chung, Kenneth E. Sherman, and Susan D. Rouster
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Hepatology ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Ribavirin ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,business ,Virology - Published
- 2003
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50. THE IMPACT OF AGE ON ALCOHOL TOXICITY IN THE RAT
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Gary A. Roselle, Charles J. Grossman, Susan D. Rouster, Saad J. Ghosn, Peter S. Gartside, and Charles L. Mendenhall
- Subjects
Liver injury ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ethanol ,business.industry ,Bilirubin ,Physiology ,Alcohol ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Toxicity ,medicine ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Alcohol Toxicity ,Steatosis ,business - Abstract
This study was performed to determine whether the severity of chronic alcohol toxicity is altered by age and duration of drinking. Alcohol as 35% of calorie intake (ED treatment) was administered to Sprague-Dawley rats at predetermined ages beginning at 1, 6, 12, 18, 24 and 27 months for a duration of treatment varying from 1 to 3 months. The degree of injury was compared to controls (CD treatment) of comparable age and duration of treatment. ED was associated with significantly higher serum levels of AST, total bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase (P < 0.0001 for each test) without detectable differences due to age and duration of treatment. Liver triglycerides (as a measure of alcoholic fatty steatosis) were significantly increased by ED (P < 0.0001) and influenced by both age and duration of treatment. The greatest toxicity was observed in young animals. ED treatment beginning at 1 month of age was associated with an AST level 69% above CD and liver triglycerides 463% above CD; beginning at 18 months of age, ED produced an increase of 24% in AST and 175% in liver triglycerides. The hepatic regenerative capacity, as measured by 3H-thymidine uptake into nuclear DNA, was similarly affected by both ED and age. Regeneration was significantly higher in youth. ED produced a 62% increase above CD at 1 month compared to an 11% increase beginning at 18 months of age. These observations suggest that juveniles develop more severe injury from alcohol but that a greater regenerative capacity exists in youth. This may explain the observed clinical relationship between age and prognosis seen in patients with severe alcoholic liver injury.
- Published
- 1993
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