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Featured researches published by David Chien.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2005

Prospective Evaluation of Community-Acquired Acute-Phase Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Andrea L. Cox; Dale Netski; Timothy Mosbruger; Susan G. Sherman; Steffanie A. Strathdee; Danielle C. Ompad; David Vlahov; David Chien; Venkatakrishna Shyamala; Stuart C. Ray; David L. Thomas

BACKGROUNDnMore than two-thirds of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections in Western countries are caused by injection drug use, but prospective clinical data regarding the most common mode of HCV acquisition are rare, in part because acute-phase HCV infection is usually asymptomatic.nnnMETHODSnTo characterize acute-phase HCV infection, 179 HCV antibody-negative injection drug users were prospectively evaluated; 62 (34%) of these patients had seroconverted. Twenty of the participants who seroconverted had long-term follow-up with consistent monthly sampling before and after seroconversion, allowing detailed study.nnnRESULTSnThe first indication of HCV infection was the presence of HCV RNA in serum, which preceded elevation of alanine transaminase levels and total bilirubin levels to > or =2 times baseline in 45% and 77% of patients, respectively. No subjects had jaundice. The median time from initial viremia to seroconversion was 36 days (range, 32-46 days). In one instance, viremia was detected 434 days before seroconversion. However, in no other case was HCV RNA detected >63 days before seroconversion. In subjects with viral persistence, a stable level of HCV RNA in the blood was noted in some subjects within 60 days after the initial detection of viremia, but in others, it was not apparent until >1 year later. In subjects with long-term viral clearance, HCV became persistently undetectable as early as 94 and as late as 620 days after initial viremia.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese data underscore the importance of nucleic acid screening of blood donations to prevent HCV transmission and of long-term follow-up to ascertain whether there is viral persistence, at least among injection drug users.


Vaccine | 2010

Safety and Immunogenicity of HCV E1E2 Vaccine Adjuvanted with MF59 Administered to Healthy Adults

Sharon E. Frey; Michael Houghton; Stephen Coates; Sergio Abrignani; David Chien; Domenico Rosa; Piero Pileri; Ranjit Ray; Adrian M. Di Bisceglie; Paola Rinella; Heather Hill; Mark Wolff; Viola Schultze; Jang H. Han; Bruce Scharschmidt; Robert B. Belshe

BACKGROUNDnHepatitis C virus (HCV) causes chronic liver disease that often leads to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. In animal studies, chimpanzees were protected against chronic infection following experimental challenge with either homologous or heterologous HCV genotype 1a strains which predominate in the USA and Canada. We describe the first in humans clinical trial of this prophylactic HCV vaccine.nnnMETHODSnHCV E1E2 adjuvanted with MF59C.1 (an oil-in-water emulsion) was given at 3 different dosages on day 0 and weeks 4, 24 and 48 in a phase 1, placebo-controlled, dose escalation trial to healthy HCV-negative adults.nnnRESULTSnThere was no significant difference in the proportion of subjects reporting adverse events across the groups. Following vaccination subjects developed antibodies detectable by ELISA, CD81 neutralization and VSV/HCV pseudotype neutralization. There were no significant differences between vaccine groups in the number of responders and geometric mean titers for each of the three assays. All subjects developed lymphocyte proliferation responses to E1E2 and an inverse response to increasing amounts of antigen was noted.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe vaccine was safe and generally well-tolerated at each of the 3 dosage levels and induced antibody and lymphoproliferative responses. A larger study to further evaluate safety and immunogenicity is warranted.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

A quantitative test to estimate neutralizing antibodies to the hepatitis C virus: cytofluorimetric assessment of envelope glycoprotein 2 binding to target cells

D. Rosa; S. Campagnoli; C. Moretto; E. Guenzi; L. Cousens; M. Chin; C. Dong; Amy J. Weiner; Joseph Lau; Qui-Lim Choo; David Chien; Piero Pileri; Michael Houghton; Sergio Abrignani


Archive | 2004

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus

Rino Rappuoli; Vega Masignani; Konrad Stadler; Jens-Peter Gregersen; David Chien; Jang Han; John Polo; Amy J. Weiner; Michael Houghton; Hyun Chul Song; Mi Young Seo; John Donnelly; Hans Dieter Klenk; Nicholas M. Valiante


Vaccine | 2007

Hepatitis C virus envelope glycoprotein immunization of rodents elicits cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies

Zania Stamataki; Stephen Coates; Matthew J. Evans; Mark Wininger; Kevin Crawford; Christine Dong; Yiu-Lian Fong; David Chien; Sergio Abrignani; Peter Balfe; Charles M. Rice; Jane A. McKeating; Michael Houghton


Archive | 2003

Device and method for in-line blood testing using biochips

David Chien; Bruce H. Phelps


Archive | 2005

HCV multiple epitope fusion antigens with modified proteolytic cleavage sites and uses thereof

David Chien; Doris Coit; Carlos George-Nascimento; Sansan Lin; Angelica Medina-Selby; Laura Tandeske


Archive | 2005

Hcv non-structural protein mutants and uses thereof

David Chien; Doris Coit; Celine Yuan-Hwei Hu; Sansan Lin; Angelica Medina-Selby


Archive | 2005

Rabbit monoclonal antibodies to hepatitis B surface antigens and methods of using the same

David Chien; Yiu-Lian Fong; Azita Tabrizi; Heather Todd; Mark David Van Cleve


Archive | 2004

Immunogenic reagents from west nile virus

William Andrews; David Chien; Qui-Lim Choo; Stephen Coates; Doris Guenzi Coit; Charles A. Harrington; Susan Hilt; Michael Houghton; Angelica M. Medina-selby; Sergio Pichuantes

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