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Dive into the research topics where Anne Marie Irani is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Marie Irani.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 1990

Human conjunctival mast cells: Distribution of MCT and MCTC in vernal conjunctivitis and giant papillary conjunctivitis

Anne Marie Irani; Salim I. Butrus; Khalid F. Tabbara; Lawrence B. Schwartz

The distribution and concentration of human tryptase-positive, chymase-negative mast cells (MCTS) and tryptase-positive, chymase-positive mast cells (MCTCS) were examined in conjunctival biopsy specimens from subjects with active vernal conjunctivitis (VC; n = 7), giant papillary conjunctivitis (GPC; n = 6), and allergic conjunctivitis (AC; n = 5), and from asymptomatic soft-contact lens wearers (SCL; n = 6) and normal control individuals (n = 19). Carnoys fixed tissue sections were stained by a double immunohistochemical method using a biotinylated mouse monoclonal antichymase antibody with immunoperoxidase, followed by an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated mouse monoclonal antitryptase antibody. Epithelial mast cells (MCs) were found in all VC specimens (96% MCTCs) and in three GPC specimens (100% MCTCS) but in none of the other groups. In the substantia propria, MCTCS were the predominant type of MC observed in all specimens, accounting for 95% of the total MCs in the normal control group and 100% of the total MCs in the subjects with GPC, AC, and SCL. No significant differences were found in the total MC concentration of the substantia propria among the normal control subjects (11,054 +/- 6327 MCs per cubic millimeter), subjects in the SCL group (13,168 +/- 4685 MCs per cubic millimeter), subjects with GPC (17,313 +/- 8500 MCs per cubic millimeter), and subjects with AC (15,380 +/- 5660 MCs per cubic millimeter). In subjects with VC, the percentage of MCTs (18% +/- 13%) and the total MC concentration (24,689 +/- 18,978 MCs per cubic millimeter) in the substantia propria were significantly increased as compared to the normal control group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2016

Inflammatory and Comorbid Features of Patients with Severe Asthma and Frequent Exacerbations

Loren C. Denlinger; Brenda R. Phillips; Sima K. Ramratnam; Kristie R. Ross; Nirav R. Bhakta; Juan Carlos Cardet; Mario Castro; Stephen P. Peters; Wanda Phipatanakul; Shean J. Aujla; Leonard B. Bacharier; Eugene R. Bleecker; Suzy Comhair; Andrea M. Coverstone; Mark D. DeBoer; Serpil C. Erzurum; Sean B. Fain; Merritt L. Fajt; Anne M. Fitzpatrick; Jonathan M. Gaffin; Benjamin Gaston; Annette T. Hastie; Gregory A. Hawkins; Fernando Holguin; Anne Marie Irani; Elliot Israel; Bruce D. Levy; Ngoc P. Ly; Deborah A. Meyers; Wendy C. Moore

Rationale: Reducing asthma exacerbation frequency is an important criterion for approval of asthma therapies, but the clinical features of exacerbation‐prone asthma (EPA) remain incompletely defined. Objectives: To describe the clinical, physiologic, inflammatory, and comorbidity factors associated with EPA. Methods: Baseline data from the NHLBI Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP)‐3 were analyzed. An exacerbation was defined as a burst of systemic corticosteroids lasting 3 days or more. Patients were classified by their number of exacerbations in the past year: none, few (one to two), or exacerbation prone (≥3). Replication of a multivariable model was performed with data from the SARP‐1 + 2 cohort. Measurements and Main Results: Of 709 subjects in the SARP‐3 cohort, 294 (41%) had no exacerbations and 173 (24%) were exacerbation prone in the prior year. Several factors normally associated with severity (asthma duration, age, sex, race, and socioeconomic status) did not associate with exacerbation frequency in SARP‐3; bronchodilator responsiveness also discriminated exacerbation proneness from asthma severity. In the SARP‐3 multivariable model, blood eosinophils, body mass index, and bronchodilator responsiveness were positively associated with exacerbation frequency (rate ratios [95% confidence interval], 1.6 [1.2‐2.1] for every log unit of eosinophils, 1.3 [1.1‐1.4] for every 10 body mass index units, and 1.2 [1.1‐1.4] for every 10% increase in bronchodilatory responsiveness). Chronic sinusitis and gastroesophageal reflux were also associated with exacerbation frequency (1.7 [1.4‐2.1] and 1.6 [1.3‐2.0]), even after adjustment for multiple factors. These effects were replicated in the SARP‐1 + 2 multivariable model. Conclusions: EPA may be a distinct susceptibility phenotype with implications for the targeting of exacerbation prevention strategies. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 01760915).


World Allergy Organization Journal | 2016

Biomarkers of the involvement of mast cells, basophils and eosinophils in asthma and allergic diseases

Dean D. Metcalfe; Ruby Pawankar; Steven J. Ackerman; Cem Akin; Frederic Clayton; Franco H. Falcone; Gerald J. Gleich; Anne Marie Irani; Mats W. Johansson; Amy D. Klion; Kristin M. Leiferman; Francesca Levi-Schaffer; Gunnar Nilsson; Yoshimichi Okayama; Calman Prussin; John T. Schroeder; Lawrence B. Schwartz; Hans-Uwe Simon; Andrew F. Walls; Massimo Triggiani

Biomarkers of disease activity have come into wide use in the study of mechanisms of human disease and in clinical medicine to both diagnose and predict disease course; as well as to monitor response to therapeutic intervention. Here we review biomarkers of the involvement of mast cells, basophils, and eosinophils in human allergic inflammation. Included are surface markers of cell activation as well as specific products of these inflammatory cells that implicate specific cell types in the inflammatory process and are of possible value in clinical research as well as within decisions made in the practice of allergy-immunology.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice | 2017

Baseline Features of the Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP III) Cohort: Differences with Age

W. Gerald Teague; Brenda R. Phillips; John V. Fahy; Sally E. Wenzel; Anne M. Fitzpatrick; Wendy C. Moore; Annette T. Hastie; Eugene R. Bleecker; Deborah A. Meyers; Stephen P. Peters; Mario Castro; Andrea M. Coverstone; Leonard B. Bacharier; Ngoc P. Ly; Michael C. Peters; Loren C. Denlinger; Sima K. Ramratnam; Ronald L. Sorkness; Benjamin Gaston; Serpil C. Erzurum; Suzy Comhair; Ross Myers; Joe Zein; Mark D. DeBoer; Anne Marie Irani; Elliot Israel; Bruce D. Levy; Juan Carlos Cardet; Wanda Phipatanakul; Jonathan M. Gaffin

BACKGROUND The effect of age on asthma severity is poorly understood. OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to compare the baseline features of severe and nonsevere asthma in the Severe Asthma Research Program (SARP) III cohort, and examine in cross section the effects of age on those features. METHODS SARP III is a National Institutes of Health/National Heart Lung Blood Institute multisite 3-year cohort study conducted to investigate mechanisms of severe asthma. The sample included 188 children (111 severe, 77 nonsevere) and 526 adults (313 severe, 213 nonsevere) characterized for demographic features, symptoms, health care utilization, lung function, and inflammatory markers compared by age and severity. RESULTS Compared with children with nonsevere asthma, children with severe asthma had more symptoms and more historical exacerbations, but no difference in body weight, post-bronchodilator lung function, or inflammatory markers. After childhood, and increasing with age, the cohort had a higher proportion of women, less allergen sensitization, and overall fewer blood eosinophils. Enrollment of participants with severe asthma was highest in middle-aged adults, who were older, more obese, with greater airflow limitation and higher blood eosinophils, but less allergen sensitization than adults with nonsevere asthma. CONCLUSIONS The phenotypic features of asthma differ by severity and with advancing age. With advancing age, patients with severe asthma are more obese, have greater airflow limitation, less allergen sensitization, and variable type 2 inflammation. Novel mechanisms besides type 2 inflammatory pathways may inform the severe asthma phenotype with advancing age.


Blood | 1992

Recombinant human stem cell factor stimulates differentiation of mast cells from dispersed human fetal liver cells

Anne Marie Irani; Gunnar Nilsson; Ulla Miettinen; Shirley S. Craig; Leonie K. Ashman; Teruko Ishizaka; K. M. Zsebo; Lawrence B. Schwartz


Journal of Immunology | 1997

Effect of recombinant human IL-4 on tryptase, chymase, and Fc epsilon receptor type I expression in recombinant human stem cell factor-dependent fetal liver-derived human mast cells.

Han-Zhang Xia; Zhongmin Du; S. Craig; G. Klisch; N. Noben-Trauth; J. P. Kochan; T. H. Huff; Anne Marie Irani; Lawrence B. Schwartz


Blood | 1994

Interleukin-4 inhibits the expression of Kit and tryptase during stem cell factor-dependent development of human mast cells from fetal liver cells

Gunnar Nilsson; Ulla Miettinen; Teruko Ishizaka; Leonie K. Ashman; Anne Marie Irani; Lawrence B. Schwartz


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2006

Structural and functional comparison of mast cells in the pregnant versus nonpregnant human uterus

Robert E. Garfield; Anne Marie Irani; Lawrence B. Schwartz; Egle Bytautiene; Roberto Romero


Blood | 1995

Human mast cells derived from fetal liver cells cultured with stem cell factor express a functional CD51/CD61 (alpha v beta 3) integrin

Y. Shimizu; Anne Marie Irani; E. J. Brown; Leonie K. Ashman; Lawrence B. Schwartz


Journal of Immunology | 1997

Recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF), but not recombinant human granulocyte CSF, down-regulates the recombinant human stem cell factor-dependent differentiation of human fetal liver-derived mast cells.

Zhongmin Du; Y Li; Han-Zhang Xia; Anne Marie Irani; Lawrence B. Schwartz

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Lawrence B. Schwartz

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Zhongmin Du

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Gunnar Nilsson

Karolinska University Hospital

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Andrea M. Coverstone

Washington University in St. Louis

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Benjamin Gaston

Case Western Reserve University

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Brenda R. Phillips

Pennsylvania State University

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Bruce D. Levy

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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