6 results on '"Payne, Jessica R."'
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2. Elevated incidence of infant botulism in a 17-county area of the Mid-Atlantic region in the United States, 2000–2019, including association with soil types.
- Author
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Dabritz, Haydee A., Friberg, Ingrid K., Payne, Jessica R., Moreno-Gorrin, Camille, Lunquest, Kristy, Thomas, Deepam, Newman, Alexandra P., Negrón, Elizabeth A., and Drohan, Patrick J.
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INTRAVENOUS immunoglobulins , *BOTULINUM A toxins , *GLACIAL Epoch , *SOIL classification , *CLOSTRIDIUM botulinum - Abstract
We sought to identify counties in the northeastern United States where the incidence of infant botulism (IB) is elevated compared to the nationwide incidence and to assess associations with soil type at the case residence. IB cases were identified through the distribution of the orphan drug Human Botulism Immune Globulin Intravenous for treatment of IB by state and national surveillance systems and were subsequently confirmed by laboratory testing. IB incidence by county was calculated as the number of IB cases divided by the number of live births in the county from 2000 to 2019. Cases were spatially mapped and assigned to soil types using the US Department of Agriculture’s online soils database. Possible association with soil type was evaluated with the Chi-squared test. We identified a rectangular area consisting of 17 contiguous counties in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania, approximately 80 km by 250 km, in which the 20-year incidence of IB was nearly seven times greater than that of the remaining counties in those five states. Within this area, case residences were strongly associated with certain soil types (P ≤ 0.003). From 2000 to 2019, IB occurred with disproportionate incidence in a rectangular area encompassing the lower Delaware and Raritan River Valley and parts of five adjacent states. Further investigation of the soils in counties from this area could assess whether C. botulinum is more prevalent in certain soil types and whether isolation of C. botulinum is more common in counties with higher IB incidence. IMPORTANCE Infant botulism occurs more frequently in 17 counties within and adjacent to the Delaware and Raritan River watersheds. This study should alert physicians and pediatricians in the area to the higher likelihood of encountering cases of this otherwise rare disease that manifests with constipation, poor feeding, loss of head control, weak suck/cry, generalized weakness, and descending bilateral paralysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Efficacy of Human Botulism Immune Globulin for the Treatment of Infant Botulism: The First 12 Years Post Licensure.
- Author
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Payne, Jessica R., Khouri, Jessica M., Jewell, Nicholas P., and Arnon, Stephen S.
- Abstract
Objectives: To report the efficacy of Human Botulism Immune Globulin Intravenous (BIG-IV) in the first 12 years following its licensure in 2003 and to characterize its use nationwide in treating patients with infant botulism.Study Design: Medical records and billing information were collected for US patients treated with BIG-IV from 2003 to 2015. Length of hospital stay (LOS) and hospital charge information for treated patients were compared with the BIG-IV Pivotal Clinical Trial Placebo Group to quantify decreases in LOS and hospital charges.Results: The use of BIG-IV reduced mean LOS from 5.7 to 2.2 weeks. This shortened hospital stay resulted in a mean decrease in hospital charges of $88 900 per patient. For all US patients 2003-2015, total decreases in LOS and hospital charges were 66.9 years and $86.2 million, respectively. The decrease in mean LOS was time dependent: BIG-IV treatment on hospital days 0-3 reduced mean LOS by 3.7 weeks (P <.001 vs the BIG-IV Pivotal Clinical Trial Placebo Group), on hospital days 4-7 by 2.6 weeks (P <.001 vs the BIG-IV Pivotal Clinical Trial Placebo Group) and on hospital days 8-10 by just 1 week (P = NS). Since licensure, 1192 patients in 48 states and Washington, DC, have been treated with BIG-IV.Conclusions: The use of BIG-IV since its licensure in 2003 treated approximately 93% of US patients with laboratory-confirmed infant botulism, and prevented >65 years in hospital stay and >$85 million in hospital charges from occurring. The greatest LOS reduction was achieved when BIG-IV was administered soon after hospital admission. Effective and appropriate use of BIG-IV in the US has continued in the postlicensure period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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4. More Clinical Mimics of Infant Botulism.
- Author
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Khouri, Jessica M., Payne, Jessica R., and Arnon, Stephen S.
- Abstract
Objective: To ascertain the actual diagnoses of 76 patients (2005-2015) whose clinical presentations so closely resembled infant botulism that the patients were treated with Human Botulism Immune Globulin Intravenous (BIG-IV; BabyBIG), but whose illnesses subsequently were not laboratory confirmed as infant botulism ("clinical mimics" of infant botulism).Study Design: The California Department of Public Health produces BIG-IV and distributes it nationwide as a public service (ie, not-for-profit) orphan drug to treat patients hospitalized with suspected infant botulism. During the study period, admission records and discharge summaries for all patients treated with BIG-IV but who lacked a laboratory-confirmed diagnosis of infant botulism were collected and abstracted. The patients' discharge diagnoses were identified, categorized, and compared with previously reported clinical mimics categories for 32 patients (1992-2005).Results: From 2005 to 2015, 76 clinical mimic illnesses were identified. These illnesses were distributed into the 5 categories previously reported of (1) probable infant botulism lacking confirmatory testing (26.3%); (2) spinal muscular atrophy (19.7%); (3) miscellaneous (15.8%); (4) metabolic disorders (11.8%); and (5) other infectious diseases (10.6%). Of the 76 clinical mimic illnesses, 15.8% had no alternate diagnosis established and were therefore categorized as undetermined.Conclusions: Over the 23 years 1992-2015, patients presenting with illnesses so clinically similar to infant botulism that they were treated with BIG-IV had actual diagnoses that were distributed into 5 main categories. These categories and their individual components constitute a working bedside differential diagnosis of infant botulism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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5. Duration of Fecal Excretion of Clostridium Botulinum and Botulinum Neurotoxin in Patients Recovering from Infant Botulism.
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Dabritz, Haydee A., Payne, Jessica R., and Khouri, Jessica M.
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- 2023
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6. Molecular Epidemiology of Infant Botulism in California and Elsewhere, 1976–2010.
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Dabritz, Haydee A., Hill, Karen K., Barash, Jason R., Ticknor, Lawrence O., Helma, Charles H., Dover, Nir, Payne, Jessica R., and Arnon, Stephen S.
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MOLECULAR epidemiology ,BOTULISM ,BOTULISM diagnosis ,SUDDEN infant death syndrome ,INFANT diseases ,CLOSTRIDIUM butyricum ,DIAGNOSIS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background. Infant botulism (IB), first identified in California in 1976, results from Clostridium botulinum spores that germinate, multiply, and produce botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) in the immature intestine. From 1976 to 2010 we created an archive of 1090 BoNT-producing isolates consisting of 1012 IB patient (10 outpatient, 985 hospitalized, 17 sudden death), 25 food, 18 dust/soils, and 35 other strains.Methods. The mouse neutralization assay determined isolate toxin type (56% BoNT/A, 32% BoNT/B). Amplified fragment-length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis of the isolates was combined with epidemiologic information.Results. The AFLP dendrogram, the largest to date, contained 154 clades; 52% of isolates clustered in just 2 clades, 1 BoNT/A (n = 418) and 1 BoNT/B (n = 145). These clades constituted an endemic C. botulinum population that produced the entire clinical spectrum of IB. Isolates from the patient's home environment (dust/soil, honey) usually located to the same AFLP clade as the patient's isolate, thereby identifying the likely source of infective spores. C. botulinum A(B) strains were identified in California for the first time.Conclusions. Combining molecular methods and epidemiological data created an effective tool that yielded novel insights into the genetic diversity of C. botulinum and the clinical spectrum, occurrence, and distribution of IB in California. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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