keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35704096/controlled-human-infection-challenge-studies-with-rsv
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pete Dayananda, Christopher Chiu, Peter Openshaw
Despite considerable momentum in the development of RSV vaccines and therapeutics, there remain substantial barriers to the development and licensing of effective agents, particularly in high-risk populations. The unique immunobiology of RSV and lack of clear protective immunological correlates has held back RSV vaccine development, which, therefore, depends on large and costly clinical trials to demonstrate efficacy. Studies involving the deliberate infection of human volunteers offer an intermediate step between pre-clinical and large-scale studies of natural infection...
June 16, 2022: Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35704095/a-brief-history-of-human-challenge-studies-1900-2021-emphasising-the-virology-regulatory-and-ethical-requirements-raison-d-etre-ethnography-selection-of-volunteers-and-unit-design
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J S Oxford, A Catchpole, A Mann, A Bell, N Noulin, D Gill, J R Oxford, A Gilbert, Shobana Balasingam
Venetian quarantine 400 years ago was an important public health measure. Since 1900 this has been refined to include "challenge" or deliberate infection with pathogens be they viruses, bacteria, or parasites. Our focus is virology and ranges from the early experiments in Cuba with Yellow Fever Virus to the most widespread pathogen of our current times, COVID-19. The latter has so far caused over four million deaths worldwide and 190 million cases of the disease. Quarantine and challenge were also used to investigate the Spanish Influenza of 1918 which caused over 100 million deaths...
June 16, 2022: Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35704094/controlled-human-malaria-infection-studies-in-africa-past-present-and-future
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth Kibwana, Melissa Kapulu, Philip Bejon
Controlled human infection studies have contributed significantly to the understanding of pathogeneses and treatment of infectious diseases. In malaria, deliberately infecting humans with malaria parasites was used as a treatment for neurosyphilis in the early 1920s. More recently, controlled human malaria infection (CHMI) has become a valuable, cost-effective tool to fast-track the development and evaluation of new anti-malarial drugs and/or vaccines. CHMI studies have also been used to define host/parasite interactions and immunological correlates of protection...
June 16, 2022: Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35570883/undertaking-community-engagement-for-a-controlled-human-malaria-infection-study-in-kenya-approaches-and-lessons-learnt
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Noni Mumba, Patricia Njuguna, Primus Chi, Vicki Marsh, Esther Awuor, Mainga Hamaluba, Cynthia Mauncho, Salim Mwalukore, Johnson Masha, Mary Mwangoma, Betty Kalama, Hassan Alphan, Juliana Wambua, Philip Bejon, Dorcas Kamuya, Melissa C Kapulu
Human infection studies (HIS) involve deliberately infecting healthy volunteers with disease-causing pathogens under controlled conditions. These studies are "controlled" by way of using specific types of pathogens, including dose, and the availability of emergency medical facilities to research volunteers. Most HIS involve diseases whose treatment is known and are done to accelerate the development of novel therapeutics such as vaccines, to address emerging and existing infectious diseases. Traditionally, HIS have been conducted primarily in high-income countries (HICs) but are now increasingly being conducted in low-and-middle income countries (LMICs)...
2022: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35523015/challenging-molecular-dogmas-in-human-sepsis-using-mathematical-reasoning
#45
REVIEW
Peter Ghazal, Patricia R S Rodrigues, Mallinath Chakraborty, Siva Oruganti, Thomas E Woolley
Sepsis is defined as a dysregulated host-response to infection, across all ages and pathogens. What defines a dysregulated state remains intensively researched but incompletely understood. Here, we dissect the meaning of this definition and its importance for the diagnosis and management of sepsis. We deliberate on pathophysiological features and dogmas that range from cytokine storms and immune paralysis to dormancy and altered homeostasis setpoints. Mathematical reasoning, used to test for plausibility, reveals three interlinked cardinal rules governing host-response trajectories in sepsis...
June 2022: EBioMedicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35498396/one-health-perspective-of-salmonella-serovars-in-south-africa-using-pooled-prevalence-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#46
REVIEW
Tsepo Ramatla, Mpho Tawana, ThankGod E Onyiche, Kgaugelo E Lekota, Oriel Thekisoe
Salmonella is a bacterium that is commonly associated with food-borne infections and is regarded as one of the most important pathogens in public health. Salmonella serovars, particularly Typhimurium and Enteritidis, which are widely distributed globally, mainly result in outbreaks commonly linked to the consumption of animal products. This study is a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies reporting the prevalence of Salmonella serovars from one health perspective that included human, environmental, and animal samples in South Africa...
2022: International Journal of Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35439242/longitudinal-deep-sequencing-informs-vector-selection-and-future-deployment-strategies-for-transmissible-vaccines
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Megan E Griffiths, Alice Broos, Laura M Bergner, Diana K Meza, Nicolas M Suarez, Ana da Silva Filipe, Carlos Tello, Daniel J Becker, Daniel G Streicker
Vaccination is a powerful tool in combating infectious diseases of humans and companion animals. In most wildlife, including reservoirs of emerging human diseases, achieving sufficient vaccine coverage to mitigate disease burdens remains logistically unattainable. Virally vectored "transmissible" vaccines that deliberately spread among hosts are a potentially transformative, but still theoretical, solution to the challenge of immunising inaccessible wildlife. Progress towards real-world application is frustrated by the absence of frameworks to guide vector selection and vaccine deployment prior to major in vitro and in vivo investments in vaccine engineering and testing...
April 2022: PLoS Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35042432/higher-risk-of-covid-19-infection-among-internally-displaced-persons-idps-in-myanmar-under-the-military-coup
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tual Sawn Khai
Access to healthcare has been difficult for over a thousand internally displaced people (IPDs) living in camps even before the COVID-19 pandemic surge in Myanmar. Amidst the pandemic crisis, the coup d'etat state power on February 1, 2021, and arbitrary detained all elected officials. Subsequently, over a hundred thousand civilians were displaced from their homes due to the intensified conflict between the military, ethnic armed groups, and people's defence force (PDF). The military attacks on IDP camps, deliberately blockings all humanitarian aid to IDPs, including medical packages and food pack supplies more vulnerable to contracting an infection...
January 18, 2022: Global Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34903944/reverse-zoonosis-of-coronavirus-disease-19-present-status-and-the-control-by-one-health-approach
#49
REVIEW
R Kumar Pramod, Asha V Nair, Padmakar Kamalakar Tambare, Kanchana Chauhan, T Vinay Kumar, R Anju Rajan, Blessy M Mani, Muhasin Asaf, Amit Kumar Pandey
The recent coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak is one of its kind in the history of public health that has created a major global threat. The causative agent, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has a zoonotic source and hence, reverse zoonosis (disease transmission from humans to animals) increases the risk and rate of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Serological and molecular analyses and experimental infection studies have identified SARS-CoV-2 infection in several animal species in various countries...
October 2021: Veterinary World
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34897954/an-ongoing-science-society-ethics-experiment-the-human-challenge-trial-debate-in-covid-19-pandemic-the-human-challenge-trial-debate-in-covid-19-pandemic
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sonia M R Vasconcelos, Angela Esher, Carmen Penido, Cleide Lima, Karina A Rocha, Maria Júlia M Antunes, Mariana D Ribeiro, Marlise Pedrotti
Human challenge trials to deliberately infect volunteers with SARS-CoV-2 should inspire wider debates about research ethics and participants' motivations to take part in such studies.
January 5, 2022: EMBO Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34804062/hsa-mir-31-governs-t-cell-homeostasis-in-hiv-protection-via-ifn-%C3%AE-stat1-t-bet-axis
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lingyan Zhu, Chao Qiu, Lili Dai, Linxia Zhang, Meiqi Feng, Yu Yang, Chenli Qiu, Anli Zhang, Jun Huang, Ying Wang, Ying Wan, Chen Zhao, Hao Wu, Jianxin Lyu, Xiaoyan Zhang, Jianqing Xu
It remains poorly defined whether any human miRNAs play protective roles during HIV infection. Here, focusing on a unique cohort of HIV-infected former blood donors, we identified miR-31 (hsa-miR-31) by comparative miRNA profiling as the only miRNA inversely correlating with disease progression. We further validated this association in two prospective cohort studies. Despite conservation during evolution, hsa-miR-31, unlike its mouse counterpart (mmu-miR-31), was downregulated in human T cell upon activation...
2021: Frontiers in Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34664543/vaccines-against-leishmaniasis-using-controlled-human-infection-models-to-accelerate-development
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vivak Parkash, Paul M Kaye, Alison M Layton, Charles J Lacey
INTRODUCTION: Leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease that is defined by the World Health Organization as vaccine preventable. Although several new candidate vaccines are in development, no vaccine has successfully reached the market for human use. Several species of Leishmania cause human disease and have co-evolved with their respective sand fly vectors. These unique relationships have implications for initiation of infection and vaccine development. An approach to vaccine development for many infectious diseases is the use of controlled human infection models (CHIMs)...
November 2021: Expert Review of Vaccines
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34634963/evaluating-risk-stratified-hpv-catch-up-vaccination-strategies-should-we-go-beyond-age-26
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fan Wang, Kristen N Jozkowski, Shengfan Zhang
BACKGROUND: Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection in the United States. HPV can cause genital warts and multiple types of cancers in females. HPV vaccination is recommended to youth age 11 or 12 years before sexual initiation to prevent onset of HPV-related diseases. For females who have not been vaccinated previously, catch-up vaccines are recommended through age 26. The extent to which catch-up vaccines are beneficial in terms of disease prevention and cost-effectiveness is questionable given that some women may have been exposed to HPV before receiving the catch-up vaccination...
October 11, 2021: Medical Decision Making: An International Journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34344438/simplified-binomial-estimation-of-human-malaria-transmission-exposure-distributions-based-on-hard-classification-of-where-and-when-mosquitoes-are-caught-statistical-applications-with-off-the-shelf-tools
#54
REVIEW
Gerry F Killeen, April Monroe, Nicodem J Govella
The impacts and limitations of personal protection measures against exposure to vectors of malaria and other mosquito-borne pathogens depend on behavioural interactions between humans and mosquitoes. Therefore, understanding where and when they overlap in time and space is critical. Commonly used approaches for calculating behaviour-adjusted estimates of human exposure distribution deliberately use soft classification of where and when people spend their time, to yield nuanced and representative distributions of mean exposure to mosquito bites across entire human populations or population groups...
August 3, 2021: Parasites & Vectors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34311781/understanding-the-benefits-and-burdens-associated-with-a-malaria-human-infection-study-in-kenya-experiences-of-study-volunteers-and-other-stakeholders
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Primus Che Chi, Esther Awuor Owino, Irene Jao, Fredrick Olewe, Bernhards Ogutu, Philip Bejon, Melissa Kapulu, Dorcas Kamuya, Vicki Marsh
BACKGROUND: Human infection studies (HIS) that involve deliberately infecting healthy volunteers with a pathogen raise important ethical issues, including the need to ensure that benefits and burdens are understood and appropriately accounted for. Building on earlier work, we embedded social science research within an ongoing malaria human infection study in coastal Kenya to understand the study benefits and burdens experienced by study stakeholders in this low-resource setting and assess the wider implications for future research planning and policy...
July 26, 2021: Trials
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34304899/dysregulation-of-host-cell-calcium-signaling-during-viral-infections-emerging-paradigm-with-high-clinical-relevance
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Suman Saurav, Jyoti Tanwar, Kriti Ahuja, Rajender K Motiani
Viral infections are one of the leading causes of human illness. Viruses take over host cell signaling cascades for their replication and infection. Calcium (Ca2+ ) is a versatile and ubiquitous second messenger that modulates plethora of cellular functions. In last two decades, a critical role of host cell Ca2+ signaling in modulating viral infections has emerged. Furthermore, recent literature clearly implicates a vital role for the organellar Ca2+ dynamics (influx and efflux across organelles) in regulating virus entry, replication and severity of the infection...
July 22, 2021: Molecular Aspects of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34242320/exploring-willingness-to-participate-in-future-human-infection-studies-in-lusaka-zambia-a-nested-qualitative-exploratory-study
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Evelyn Muleba Kunda-Ngándu, Masuzyo Chirwa-Chobe, Chanda Mwamba, Jenala Chipungu, Esnart Ng'andu, Hope Mwanyungwi Chinganya, Michelo Simuyandi, Roma Chilengi, Anjali Sharma
Human Infection Studies (HIC) involve intentional infection of volunteers with a challenge agent or pathogen with the aim of understanding and developing vaccines as well as understanding the disease pathophysiology in a well-controlled environment. Though Africa carries the highest burden of vaccine-preventable diseases, the region is only now being primed to conduct HIC relevant to its population. Given the imminent introduction of HIC in Zambia, we sought to understand potential participants' willingness to volunteer for such studies...
2021: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34239984/analysis-of-covid-19-outbreak-origin-in-china-in-2019-using-differentiation-method-for-unusual-epidemiological-events
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vladan Radosavljevic
Objectives: Origin of outbreaks could be natural, accidental, deliberate, and caused by a new or re-emerging bioagent. The aim of this study was the retrospective analysis of whether the COVID-19 outbreak was natural, accidental, deliberate one, or caused by a new or re-emerging bioagent. Methods: Analysis was performed according to the Radosavljevic-Belojevic method for outbreak scoring and differentiation. Data for the application of this method were obtained by literature review in the Medline database for the period from 2000 to 2020...
2021: Open Medicine (Warsaw, Poland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34223057/cognitive-bias-how-understanding-its-impact-on-antibiotic-prescribing-decisions-can-help-advance-antimicrobial-stewardship
#59
REVIEW
Bradley J Langford, Nick Daneman, Valerie Leung, Dale J Langford
The way clinicians think about decision-making is evolving. Human decision-making shifts between two modes of thinking, either fast/intuitive (Type 1) or slow/deliberate (Type 2). In the healthcare setting where thousands of decisions are made daily, Type 1 thinking can reduce cognitive load and help ensure decision making is efficient and timely, but it can come at the expense of accuracy, leading to systematic errors, also called cognitive biases. This review provides an introduction to cognitive bias and provides explanation through patient vignettes of how cognitive biases contribute to suboptimal antibiotic prescribing...
December 2020: JAC-antimicrobial resistance
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34208306/reporter-phage-based-detection-and-antibiotic-susceptibility-testing-of-yersinia-pestis-for-a-rapid-plague-outbreak-response
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarit Moses, Moshe Aftalion, Emanuelle Mamroud, Shahar Rotem, Ida Steinberger-Levy
Pneumonic plague is a lethal infectious disease caused by Yersinia pestis , a Tier-1 biothreat agent. Antibiotic treatment can save infected patients; however, therapy should begin within 24 h of symptom onset. As some Y. pestis strains showed an antibiotic resistance phenotype, an antibiotic susceptibility test (AST) must be performed. Performing the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)-recommended standard process, which includes bacterial isolation, enumeration and microdilution testing, lasts several days...
June 11, 2021: Microorganisms
keyword
keyword
95172
3
4
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.