Annemarie E. Brouwer
St George's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Annemarie E. Brouwer.
The Lancet | 2004
Annemarie E. Brouwer; Adul Rajanuwong; Wirongrong Chierakul; George E. Griffin; Robert A. Larsen; Nicholas J. White; Thomas S. Harrison
BACKGROUND It frequently takes more than 2 weeks for drug treatments for cryptococcal meningitis to sterilise cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). In-vitro and animal studies lend support to the use of combinations of amphotericin B, flucytosine, and fluconazole for treatment of cryptococcosis. We compared the fungicidal activity of combinations of these drugs for initial treatment of patients with cryptococcal meningitis. METHODS 64 patients with a first episode of HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis were randomised to initial treatment with: amphotericin B (0.7 mg/kg daily); amphotericin B plus flucytosine (100 mg/kg daily); amphotericin B plus fluconazole (400 mg daily); or triple therapy with amphotericin B, flucytosine, and fluconazole. Our primary endpoint was fungicidal activity, measured by the rate of reduction in CSF cryptococcal colony-forming units (CFU) from serial quantitative CSF cultures on days 3, 7, and 14 of treatment. FINDINGS Baseline CSF CFU counts were an important prognostic factor. Clearance of cryptococci from the CSF was exponential and was significantly faster with amphotericin B plus flucytosine than with amphotericin B alone (p=0.0006), amphotericin B plus fluconazole ( p=0.02), or triple therapy (p=0.02). INTERPRETATION At these doses, amphotericin B plus flucytosine is the most rapidly fungicidal regimen. Quantification of CSF cultures provides a powerful new means to accurately assess the fungicidal activity of new treatment regimens for cryptococcal meningitis.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2014
Joseph N. Jarvis; Tihana Bicanic; Angela Loyse; Daniel Namarika; Arthur Jackson; Jesse C. Nussbaum; Nicky Longley; Conrad Muzoora; Jacob Phulusa; Kabanda Taseera; Creto Kanyembe; Douglas Wilson; Mina C. Hosseinipour; Annemarie E. Brouwer; Direk Limmathurotsakul; Nicholas J. White; Charles van der Horst; Robin Wood; Graeme Meintjes; John S. Bradley; Shabbar Jaffar; Thomas S. Harrison
Cerebrospinal fluid fungal burden, altered mental status, and rate of clearance of infection predict acute mortality in HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis. The identification of factors associated with mortality informs strategies to improve outcomes.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2009
Tihana Bicanic; Conrad Muzoora; Annemarie E. Brouwer; Graeme Meintjes; Nicky Longley; Kabanda Taseera; Kevin Rebe; Angela Loyse; Joseph N. Jarvis; Linda-Gail Bekker; Robin Wood; Direk Limmathurotsakul; Wirongrong Chierakul; Kasia Stepniewska; Nicholas J. White; Shabbar Jaffar; Thomas S. Harrison
BACKGROUND Progress in therapy for cryptococcal meningitis has been slow because of the lack of a suitable marker of treatment response. Previously, we demonstrated the statistical power of a novel endpoint, the rate of clearance of infection, based on serial quantitative cultures of cerebrospinal fluid, to differentiate the fungicidal activity of alternative antifungal drug regimens. We hypothesized that the rate of clearance of infection should also be a clinically meaningful endpoint. METHODS We combined data from cohorts of patients with human immunodeficiency virus-associated cryptococcal meningitis from Thailand, South Africa, and Uganda, for whom the rate of clearance of infection was determined, and clinical and laboratory data prospectively collected, and explored the association between the rate of clearance of infection and mortality by Cox survival analyses. RESULTS The combined cohort comprised 262 subjects. Altered mental status at presentation, a high baseline organism load, and a slow rate of clearance of infection were independently associated with increased mortality at 2 and 10 weeks. Rate of clearance of infection was associated with antifungal drug regimen and baseline cerebrospinal fluid interferon-gamma levels. CONCLUSIONS The results support the use of the rate of clearance of infection or early fungicidal activity as a means to explore antifungal drug dosages and combinations in phase II studies. An increased understanding of how the factors determining outcome interrelate may help clarify opportunities for intervention.
AIDS | 2009
Tihana Bicanic; Annemarie E. Brouwer; Graeme Meintjes; Kevin Rebe; Direk Limmathurotsakul; Wirongrong Chierakul; Praprit Teparrakkul; Angela Loyse; Nicholas J. White; Robin Wood; Shabbar Jaffar; Tom Harrison
Objectives:To assess impact of serial lumbar punctures on association between cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) opening pressure and prognosis in HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis; to explore time course and relationship of opening pressure with neurological findings, CSF fungal burden, immune response, and CD4 cell count. Design:Evaluation of 163 HIV-positive ART-naive patients enrolled in three trials of amphotericin B-based therapy for cryptococcal meningitis in Thailand and South Africa. Methods:Study protocols required four lumbar punctures with measurements of opening pressure over the first 2 weeks of treatment and additional lumbar punctures if opening pressure raised. Fungal burden and clearance, CSF immune parameters, CD4 cell count, neurological symptoms and signs, and outcome at 2 and 10 weeks were compared between groups categorized by opening pressure at cryptococcal meningitis diagnosis. Results:Patients with higher baseline fungal burden had higher baseline opening pressure. High fungal burden appeared necessary but not sufficient for development of high pressure. Baseline opening pressure was not associated with CD4 cell count, CSF pro-inflammatory cytokines, or altered mental status. Day 14 opening pressure was associated with day 14 fungal burden. Overall mortality was 12% (20/162) at 2 weeks and 26% (42/160) at 10 weeks, with no significant differences between opening pressure groups. Conclusion:Studies are needed to define factors, in addition to fungal burden, associated with raised opening pressure. Aggressive management of raised opening pressure through repeated CSF drainage appeared to prevent any adverse impact of raised opening pressure on outcome in patients with cryptococcal meningitis. The results support increasing access to manometers in resource-poor settings and routine management of opening pressure in patients with cryptococcal meningitis.
Journal of Immunology | 2005
Asna A. Siddiqui; Annemarie E. Brouwer; V. Wuthiekanun; Shabbar Jaffar; Robin J. Shattock; Diane Irving; Joanna Sheldon; Wirongrong Chierakul; Sharon J. Peacock; Nicholas P. J. Day; Nicholas J. White; Thomas S. Harrison
In animal models, immunity to cryptococcal infection, as in many chronic fungal and bacterial infections, is associated with a granulomatous inflammatory response, intact cell-mediated immunity, and a Th1 pattern of cytokine release. To examine the correlates of human immunity to cryptococcal infection in vivo, we analyzed immune parameters at the site of infection over time and assessed the rate of clearance of infection by serial quantitative cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) fungal cultures in 62 patients in a trial of antifungal therapy for HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis. CSF IL-6, IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-8 were significantly higher in survivors compared with nonsurvivors. There were negative correlations between log TNF-α, IFN-γ, and IL-6 levels and baseline cryptococcal CFU. Log IFN-γ, G-CSF, TNF-α, and IL-6 were correlated positively with the rate of fall in log CFU/ml CSF/day. In a linear regression model including antifungal treatment group, baseline CFU, and these cytokines, only treatment group and log IFN-γ remained independently associated with rate of clearance of infection. The results provide direct in vivo evidence for the importance of quantitative differences in IFN-γ secretion in human immune control of granulomatous infections, and increase the rationale for adjunctive IFN-γ in the treatment of refractory HIV-associated cryptococcosis.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004
Mihai G. Netea; Annemarie E. Brouwer; Elizabeth H. Hoogendoorn; Jos W. M. van der Meer; M.I. Koolen; Paul E. Verweij; Bart Jan Kullberg
BACKGROUND Although Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungal pathogen that causes human disease predominantly in the immunocompromised host, severe cryptococcal infections are occasionally encountered in apparently immunocompetent individuals. Activation of cellular immunity by proinflammatory cytokines plays a central role in anticryptococcal defense. METHODS We describe 2 patients with severe cryptococcal meningitis who appeared to have idiopathic CD4 lymphopenia. For these patients and for 4 healthy volunteers, ex vivo stimulation of whole blood with microbial stimuli was used to investigate putative defects in cytokine production capacity. RESULTS Assessment of the cytokine released from the 2 patients with CD4 lymphopenia revealed a defective production of the proinflammatory cytokines interferon (IFN)- gamma and tumor necrosis factor (TNF) but not of the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10). One patient with disease progression despite receipt of antifungal treatment was administered immunotherapy with recombinant IFN- gamma . Administration of recombinant IFN- gamma resulted in both restoration of immunological parameters and a sustained clinical recovery. CONCLUSIONS Refractory meningitis may be due to defective TNF and IFN- gamma production, and IFN- gamma treatment may be useful in patients with an impaired cellular immune response and refractory cryptococcal meningitis.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014
Wilber Sabiiti; Emma J. Robertson; Mathew A. Beale; Simon A. Johnston; Annemarie E. Brouwer; Angela Loyse; Joseph N. Jarvis; Andrew S. Gilbert; Matthew C. Fisher; Tom Harrison; Robin C. May; Tihana Bicanic
BACKGROUND Cryptococcal meningitis (CM) is a leading cause of HIV-associated mortality globally. High fungal burden in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) at diagnosis and poor fungal clearance during treatment are recognized adverse prognostic markers; however, the underlying pathogenic factors that drive these clinical manifestations are incompletely understood. We profiled a large set of clinical isolates for established cryptococcal virulence traits to evaluate the contribution of C. neoformans phenotypic diversity to clinical presentation and outcome in human cryptococcosis. METHODS Sixty-five C. neoformans isolates from clinical trial patients with matched clinical data were assayed in vitro to determine murine macrophage uptake, intracellular proliferation rate (IPR), capsule induction, and laccase activity. Analysis of the correlation between prognostic clinical and host immune parameters and fungal phenotypes was performed using Spearmans r, while the fungal-dependent impact on long-term survival was determined by Cox regression analysis. RESULTS High levels of fungal uptake by macrophages in vitro, but not the IPR, were associated with CSF fungal burden (r = 0.38, P = 0.002) and long-term patient survival (hazard ratio [HR] 2.6, 95% CI 1.2-5.5, P = 0.012). High-uptake strains were hypocapsular (r = -0.28, P = 0.05) and exhibited enhanced laccase activity (r = 0.36, P = 0.003). Fungal isolates with greater laccase activity exhibited heightened survival ex vivo in purified CSF (r = 0.49, P < 0.0001) and resistance to clearance following patient antifungal treatment (r = 0.39, P = 0.003). CONCLUSION These findings underscore the contribution of cryptococcal-phagocyte interactions and laccase-dependent melanin pathways to human clinical presentation and outcome. Furthermore, characterization of fungal-specific pathways that drive clinical manifestation provide potential targets for the development of therapeutics and the management of CM. FUNDING This work was made possible by funding from the Wellcome Trust (WT088148MF), the Medical Research Council (MR/J008176/1), the NIHR Surgical Reconstruction and Microbiology Research Centre and the Lister Institute for Preventive Medicine (to R.C. May), and a Wellcome Trust Intermediate fellowship (089966, to T. Bicanic). The C. neoformans isolates were collected within clinical trials funded by the British Infection Society (fellowship to T. Bicanic), the Wellcome Trust (research training fellowships WT069991, to A.E. Brouwer and WT081794, to J.N. Jarvis), and the Medical Research Council, United Kingdom (76201). The funding sources had no role in the design or conduct of this study, nor in preparation of the manuscript.
AIDS | 2012
S.F. van Lelyveld; Luuk Gras; Anouk M. Kesselring; Shuangjie Zhang; F. de Wolf; A.M.J. Wensing; Andy I. M. Hoepelman; Annemarie E. Brouwer; P.P. Koopmans ; M. Keuter; A.J.A.M. van der Ven; H.J.M. ter Hofstede; R. de Groot
Objective:We investigated the risk of AIDS and serious non-AIDS-defining diseases (non-ADDs) according to the degree of immunological recovery after 2 years of virological successful antiretroviral therapy (HAART). Design:Retrospective observational cohort study including HIV-infected patients treated with HAART resulting in viral suppression (<500 copies/ml). Methods:Patients were grouped according to their CD4 cell count after 2 years of HAART: CD4 cell count less than 200 cells/&mgr;l (group A), 200–350 cells/&mgr;l (group B), 351–500 cells/&mgr;l (group C) or more than 500 cells/&mgr;l (group D). Analysis was done to assess predictors for poor immunological recovery and the occurrence of a composite endpoint [death, AIDS, malignancies, liver cirrhosis and cardiovascular events (CVEs)], non-ADDs, CVEs and non-AIDS-defining malignancies (non-ADMs). Results:Three thousand and sixty-eight patients were included. Older age, lower CD4 cell nadir and lower plasma HIV-RNA at the start of HAART were independent predictors for a poor immunological recovery. The composite endpoint, non-ADDs and CVE were observed most frequently in group A (overall log rank, P < 0.0001, P = 0.002 and P = 0.01). In adjusted analyses, age was a strong independent predictor for all endpoints. Compared with group A, patients in group D had a lower risk for the composite endpoint [hazard ratio 0.54 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.33–0.87]; patients in group B had a lower risk for CVEs [hazard ratio 0.34 (95% CI 0.14–0.86)]. Conclusion:Poor immunological recovery despite virological successful HAART is associated with a higher risk for overall morbidity and mortality and CVEs in particular. This study underlines the importance of starting HAART at higher CD4 cell counts, particularly in older patients.
PLOS Pathogens | 2011
Sitali P. Simwami; Kantarawee Khayhan; Daniel A. Henk; David M. Aanensen; Teun Boekhout; Ferry Hagen; Annemarie E. Brouwer; Thomas S. Harrison; Christl A. Donnelly; Matthew C. Fisher
The global burden of HIV-associated cryptococcal meningitis is estimated at nearly one million cases per year, causing up to a third of all AIDS-related deaths. Molecular epidemiology constitutes the main methodology for understanding the factors underpinning the emergence of this understudied, yet increasingly important, group of pathogenic fungi. Cryptococcus species are notable in the degree that virulence differs amongst lineages, and highly-virulent emerging lineages are changing patterns of human disease both temporally and spatially. Cryptococcus neoformans variety grubii (Cng, serotype A) constitutes the most ubiquitous cause of cryptococcal meningitis worldwide, however patterns of molecular diversity are understudied across some regions experiencing significant burdens of disease. We compared 183 clinical and environmental isolates of Cng from one such region, Thailand, Southeast Asia, against a global MLST database of 77 Cng isolates. Population genetic analyses showed that Thailand isolates from 11 provinces were highly homogenous, consisting of the same genetic background (globally known as VNI) and exhibiting only ten nearly identical sequence types (STs), with three (STs 44, 45 and 46) dominating our sample. This population contains significantly less diversity when compared against the global population of Cng, specifically Africa. Genetic diversity in Cng was significantly subdivided at the continental level with nearly half (47%) of the global STs unique to a genetically diverse and recombining population in Botswana. These patterns of diversity, when combined with evidence from haplotypic networks and coalescent analyses of global populations, are highly suggestive of an expansion of the Cng VNI clade out of Africa, leading to a limited number of genotypes founding the Asian populations. Divergence time testing estimates the time to the most common ancestor between the African and Asian populations to be 6,920 years ago (95% HPD 122.96 - 27,177.76). Further high-density sampling of global Cng STs is now necessary to resolve the temporal sequence underlying the global emergence of this human pathogen.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005
Annemarie E. Brouwer; Paprit Teparrukkul; Supraphada Pinpraphaporn; Robert A. Larsen; Wirongrong Chierakul; Sharon J. Peacock; Nicholas P. J. Day; Nicholas J. White; Thomas S. Harrison
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cryptococcal colony-forming unit counts and CSF cryptococcal antigen titers serve as alternative measures of organism load in cryptococcal meningitis. For these measures, we correlated baseline values and rates of decline during the first 2 weeks of therapy in 68 human immunodeficiency virus--seropositive patients with cryptococcal meningitis. At baseline, there was a strong correlation between CSF cryptococcal colony-forming unit counts and CSF cryptococcal antigen titers. During the first 2 weeks of therapy, CSF cryptococcal colony-forming unit counts decreased by >5 logs, and CSF cryptococcal antigen titers decreased by 1.5 dilutions. In individual patients, there was no correlation between the rate of decline in CSF cryptococcal colony-forming unit counts and that in CSF cryptococcal antigen titers.