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Dive into the research topics where Donald R. Hoover is active.

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Featured researches published by Donald R. Hoover.


Neurology | 1993

Dementia in AIDS patients Incidence and risk factors

Justin C. McArthur; Donald R. Hoover; H. Bacellar; Eric N. Miller; Bruce A. Cohen; James T. Becker; Neil M. H. Graham; Julie H. McArthur; Ola A. Selnes; Lisa P. Jacobson; Barbara R. Visscher; M. Concha; Alfred J. Saah

We determined incidence and future projections of dementia after AIDS onset in 492 homosexual men with AIDS in the Baltimore/Los Angeles sites of the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study, 64 of whom developed dementia. We studied various risk factors for dementia, including demographic and clinical features, medical history, markers of immune status before AIDS, and zidovudine use. During the first 2 years after AIDS, HIV dementia developed at an annual rate of 7%. Overall, 15% of the cohort followed through death developed dementia. The median survival after dementia was 6.0 months. Using a proportional hazards model, risk factors for more rapid development of dementia were lower hemoglobin (relative hazard, 0.59 per additional 2 g/dl;p = 0.0005) and body mass index (relative hazard, 0.64 per additional 5 kg/m2; p = 0.05) 1 to 6 months before AIDS, more constitutional symptoms 7 to 12 months before AIDS (relative hazard, 1.68 per additional symptom, p = 0.005), and older age at AIDS onset (relative hazard, 1.60 per decade older; p = 0.009). In a multivariate model, pre-AIDS hemoglobin remained the most significant predictor of dementia. There were no significant risks defined from demographic characteristics, specific AIDS-defining illnesses, zidovudine use before AIDS, or CD4+ lymphocyte count before AIDS. We project that 12 months after the first AIDS diagnosis, 7.1% of survivors will have dementia. The observed association between anemia, low weight, constitutional symptoms, and dementia suggests a role for cytokines inducing both systemic and neurologic disease.


AIDS | 1998

Bacterial vaginosis and disturbances of vaginal flora : association with increased acquisition of HIV

Taha E. Taha; Donald R. Hoover; Gina A. Dallabetta; Newton Kumwenda; Laban Mtimavalye; Li Ping Yang; George N. Liomba; Robin L. Broadhead; John D. Chiphangwi; Paolo G. Miotti

Background:Cross-sectional studies suggest an association between bacterial vaginosis (BV) and HIV-1 infection. However, an assessment of a temporal effect was not possible. Objectives:To determine the association of BV and other disturbances of vaginal flora with HIV seroconversion among pregnant and postnatal women in Malawi, Africa. Design:Longitudinal follow-up of pregnant and postpartum women. Methods:Women attending their first antenatal care visit were screened for HIV after counselling and obtaining informed consent. HIV-seronegative women were enrolled and followed during pregnancy and after delivery. These women were again tested for HIV at delivery and at 6-monthly visits postnatally. Clinical examinations and collection of laboratory specimens (for BV and sexually transmitted diseases) were conducted at screening and at the postnatal 6-monthly visits. The diagnosis of BV was based on clinical criteria. Associations of BV and other risk factors with HIV seroconversion, were examined using contingency tables and multiple logistic regression analyses on antenatal data, and Kaplan–Meier proportional hazards analyses on postnatal data. Results:Among 1196 HIV-seronegative women who were followed antenatally for a median of 3.4 months, 27 women seroconverted by time of delivery. Postnatally, 97 seroconversions occurred among 1169 seronegative women who were followed for a median of 2.5 years. Bacterial vaginosis was significantly associated with antenatal HIV seroconversion (adjusted odds ratio = 3.7) and postnatal HIV seroconversion (adjusted rate ratio = 2.3). There was a significant trend of increased risk of HIV seroconversion with increasing severity of vaginal disturbance among both antenatal and postnatal women. The approximate attributable risk of BV alone was 23% for antenatal HIV seroconversions and 14% for postnatal seroconversions. Conclusions:This prospective study suggests that progressively greater disturbances of vaginal flora, increase HIV acquisition during pregnancy and postnatally. The screening and treating of women with BV could restore normal flora and reduce their susceptibility to HIV.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1996

Seroconversion to Antibodies against Kaposi's Sarcoma–Associated Herpesvirus–Related Latent Nuclear Antigens before the Development of Kaposi's Sarcoma

Shou-Jiang Gao; Lawrence A. Kingsley; Donald R. Hoover; Thomas J. Spira; Charles R. Rinaldo; Alfred J. Saah; John P. Phair; Roger Detels; Preston Parry; Yuan Chang; Patrick S. Moore

BACKGROUND If Kaposis sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) is the cause of Kaposis sarcoma, serologic evidence of infection should be present in patients before the disease develops. METHODS Using an immunoblot assay for two latent nuclear antigens of KSHV, we tested serum samples from homosexual male patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) with and without Kaposis sarcoma (HIV-infected men with hemophilia), HIV-seronegative blood donors, and HIV-seronegative patients with high titers of antibodies against Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Serial serum samples obtained from patients with Kaposis sarcoma before the diagnosis of the disease were tested for evidence of seroconversion. RESULTS Of 40 patients with Kaposis sarcoma, 32 (80 percent) were positive for antibodies against KSHV antigens by the immunoblot assay, as compared with only 7 of 40 homosexual men (18 percent) without Kaposis sarcoma immediately before the onset of AIDS. Of 122 blood donors, 22 EBV-infected patients, and 20 HIV-infected men with hemophilia, none were seropositive. When studied by the immunoblot assay over a period of 13 to 103 months, 21 of the 40 patients with Kaposis sarcoma (52 percent) seroconverted 6 to 75 months before the clinical appearance of Kaposis sarcoma. The median duration of antibody seropositivity for KSHV-related latent nuclear antigens before the diagnosis of Kaposis sarcoma was 33 months. CONCLUSIONS In most patients with kaposis sarcoma and AIDS, seroconversion to positivity for antibodies against KSHV-related nuclear antigens occurs before the clinical appearance of Kaposis sarcoma. This supports the hypothesis that Kaposis sarcoma results from infection with KSHV.


The Lancet | 2002

Protection against persistence of hepatitis C

Shruti H. Mehta; Andrea L. Cox; Donald R. Hoover; Xiao Hong Wang; Qing Mao; Stuart C. Ray; Steffanie A. Strathdee; David Vlahov; David L. Thomas

BACKGROUND Neither previous hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection nor vaccination with HCV-derived antigens protects against reinfection. However, HCV infection and vaccination in chimpanzees has been shown to reduce the magnitude and duration of viraemia with re-challenge. We aimed to establish whether similar immunity could be achieved in man. METHODS From a study of injecting drug users, we identified 164 people who had no evidence of previous HCV infection and 98 individuals who had been previously, but were not currently, infected with HCV. We compared the incidence and persistence of HCV viraemia in these two groups over four consecutive 6-month periods. FINDINGS Of participants without previous infection, the incidence of HCV infection was 21% (35/164). By contrast, people previously infected were half as likely to develop new viraemia (12% [12/98]), even after accounting for risk behaviour (hazard ratio, 0.45; 95% CI 0.23-0.88). Furthermore, in HIV-1-negative people, those previously infected were 12 times less likely than people infected for the first time to develop persistent infection (odds ratio 0.05, 95% CI 0.01-0.30), and median peak HCV RNA concentration was two logs lower. HCV persisted in six of six HIV-1-positive people, even in one man who had previously cleared HCV infection when he was HIV-1 negative. INTERPRETATION There is an alarming frequency of HCV infection and persistence among injecting drug users. Our data suggest that immunity against viral persistence can be acquired, and that vaccines should be tested to reduce the burden of HCV-related liver disease.


The Lancet | 1994

Maternal vitamin A deficiency and mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1

Richard D. Semba; John D. Chiphangwi; Paolo G. Miotti; G.A Dallabetta; Donald R. Hoover; Joseph K. Canner; Aj Saah

Studies show that around 10-40% HIV-positive women will give birth to children who are also infected. However, the risk factors for transmission from mother to child are not well understood and the effects of maternal nutritional status are unknown. We conducted a study of vitamin A status in pregnant women as a risk factor for mother-to-child transmission of HIV in Malawi. Serum vitamin A, height, weight, CD4 T-cell counts, and duration of breastfeeding were measured in 338 HIV-positive mothers whose infants HIV serostatus was known. Mother-to-child transmission of HIV was 21.9% among mothers whose infants survived to 12 months of age. Mean vitamin A concentration in 74 mothers who transmitted HIV to their infants was lower than that in 264 mothers who did not transmit HIV to their infants (0.86 [0.03] vs 1.07 [0.02], p < 0.0001). We divided HIV positive mothers to 4 groups, those with vitamin A concentrations of less than 0.70, between 0.70 and 1.05, between 1.05 and 1.40, and greater than or equal to 1.40 mumol/L. The mother-to-child transmission rates for each group were 32.4%, 26.2%, 16.0%, and 7.2%, respectively (p < 0.0001). Maternal CD4 cell counts, CD4%, and CD4/CD8 ratio were also associated with increased mother-to-child transmission of HIV. Maternal age, body-mass index, and breastfeeding practices were not significantly associated with higher mother-to-child transmission. Our study suggests that maternal vitamin A deficiency contributes to mother-to-child transmission of HIV.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1993

Clinical Manifestations of AIDS in the Era of Pneumocystis Prophylaxis

Donald R. Hoover; Alfred J. Saah; Helena Bacellar; John P. Phair; Roger Detels; Roger Anderson; Richard A. Kaslow

BACKGROUND Among patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), early and widespread use of prophylactic regimens against Pneumocystis carinii is changing the pattern of illnesses related to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). METHODS We conducted a subcohort analysis of 844 men with AIDS (87 percent of whom have since died) from a prospectively followed cohort of 2592 HIV-1-infected homosexual men. RESULTS A total of 138 men received prophylaxis before the diagnosis of AIDS, but 39 (28 percent) nevertheless had P. carinii pneumonia at some time. Only four illnesses occurred more frequently in men who received P. carinii prophylaxis before the onset of AIDS: Mycobacterium avium complex disease, which developed in 33.4 percent, as compared with 17.3 percent of the 706 men who did not receive early prophylaxis; wasting syndrome (18.4 percent vs. 6.4 percent); cytomegalovirus disease (44.9 percent vs. 24.8 percent); and esophageal candidiasis (21.3 percent vs. 12.8 percent). Collectively, these four diseases accounted for the initial AIDS-related illness in 42.7 percent of those who received prophylaxis before the onset of AIDS, as compared with 10.7 percent of those who did not. During the three six-month periods before the diagnosis of AIDS (0 to 6, > 6 to 12, and > 12 to 18 months), the geometric mean CD4+ cell counts were 48, 87, and 147 per cubic millimeter, respectively, in men who received prophylaxis against P. carinii, as compared with 118, 211, and 279 per cubic millimeter in those who did not. CONCLUSIONS M. avium complex disease, esophageal candidiasis, wasting syndrome, and cytomegalovirus disease are more common in HIV-infected patients who have received prophylaxis against P. carinii than in those who have not. Prophylaxis may delay the first AIDS illness for 6 to 12 months.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Load in Breast Milk, Mastitis, and Mother-to-Child Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1

Richard D. Semba; Newton Kumwenda; Donald R. Hoover; Taha E. Taha; Thomas C. Quinn; Laban Mtimavalye; Robert J. Biggar; Robin L. Broadhead; Paolo G. Miotti; Lori J. Sokoll; Len van der Hoeven; John D. Chiphangwi

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 load in breast milk and mastitis were examined as risk factors for vertical transmission of HIV-1. Six weeks after delivery, HIV-1 load and sodium (an indicator of mastitis) were measured in breast milk from 334 HIV-1-infected women in Malawi. Median breast milk HIV-1 load was 700 copies/mL among women with HIV-1-infected infants versus undetectable (<200 copies/mL) among those with uninfected infants, respectively (P<. 0001). Elevated breast milk sodium levels consistent with mastitis occurred in 16.4% of HIV-1-infected women and were associated with increased vertical transmission of HIV-1 (P<.0001). Median breast milk HIV-1 load was 920 copies/mL among women with versus undetectable among those without elevated breast milk sodium levels, respectively (P<.0001). Mastitis and breast milk HIV-1 load may increase the risk of vertical transmission of HIV-1 through breast-feeding.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1996

Changes in Sexual Behavior and a Decline in HIV Infection among Young Men in Thailand

Kenrad E. Nelson; David D. Celentano; Sakol Eiumtrakol; Donald R. Hoover; Chris Beyrer; Somboon Suprasert; Surinda Kuntolbutra; Chirasak Khamboonruang

BACKGROUND In Thailand the epidemic of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is of recent origin. Because of the high seroprevalence of HIV among sex workers, the Ministry of Public Health began a program in 1990 and 1991 to promote the use of condoms during commercial sex. We evaluated the effect of this and other programs to prevent HIV infection in Thailand. METHODS Using direct interviews, we studied five cohorts of 21-year-old men from northern Thailand who were conscripted into the army by a lottery in 1991, 1993, and 1995. In all, 4311 men were tested for HIV antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, with confirmation by Western blot assay. RESULTS In the 1991 and 1993 cohorts, the prevalence of HIV infection was 10.4 to 12.5 percent. In 1995, it fell to 6.7 percent (P < 0.001). The seroprevalence was only 0.7 percent among men who did not have sexual relations with a sex worker before 1992. Over the study period, the proportion of men who reported having sexual relations with a sex worker fell from 81.4 percent to 63.8 percent (P < 0.001). From 1991 to 1995, the mens reported use of condoms during the most recent sexual contacts with sex workers increased from 61.0 percent to 92.5 percent (P < 0.001); and in 1995, 15.2 percent of men had a history of a sexually transmitted disease, as compared with 42.2 percent in 1991 (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Public health programs in Thailand have led to substantial changes in sexual behavior among young men, especially an increased use of condoms, and the rate of new HIV infections has declined.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Extended antiretroviral prophylaxis to reduce breast-milk HIV-1 transmission.

Newton Kumwenda; Donald R. Hoover; Lynne M. Mofenson; Michael C. Thigpen; George Kafulafula; Qing Li; Linda Mipando; Kondwani Nkanaunena; Tsedal Mebrahtu; Marc Bulterys; Mary Glenn Fowler; Taha E. Taha

BACKGROUND Effective strategies are urgently needed to reduce mother-to-child transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) through breast-feeding in resource-limited settings. METHODS Women with HIV-1 infection who were breast-feeding infants were enrolled in a randomized, phase 3 trial in Blantyre, Malawi. At birth, the infants were randomly assigned to one of three regimens: single-dose nevirapine plus 1 week of zidovudine (control regimen) or the control regimen plus daily extended prophylaxis either with nevirapine (extended nevirapine) or with nevirapine plus zidovudine (extended dual prophylaxis) until the age of 14 weeks. Using Kaplan-Meier analyses, we assessed the risk of HIV-1 infection among infants who were HIV-1-negative on DNA polymerase-chain-reaction assay at birth. RESULTS Among 3016 infants in the study, the control group had consistently higher rates of HIV-1 infection from the age of 6 weeks through 18 months. At 9 months, the estimated rate of HIV-1 infection (the primary end point) was 10.6% in the control group, as compared with 5.2% in the extended-nevirapine group (P<0.001) and 6.4% in the extended-dual-prophylaxis group (P=0.002). There were no significant differences between the two extended-prophylaxis groups. The frequency of breast-feeding did not differ significantly among the study groups. Infants receiving extended dual prophylaxis had a significant increase in the number of adverse events (primarily neutropenia) that were deemed to be possibly related to a study drug. CONCLUSIONS Extended prophylaxis with nevirapine or with nevirapine and zidovudine for the first 14 weeks of life significantly reduced postnatal HIV-1 infection in 9-month-old infants. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00115648.)


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2009

Insulin, insulin-like growth factor-I, and risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women.

Marc J. Gunter; Donald R. Hoover; Herbert Yu; Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller; Thomas E. Rohan; JoAnn E. Manson; Jixin Li; Gloria Y.F. Ho; Xiaonan Xue; Garnet L. Anderson; Robert C. Kaplan; Tiffany G. Harris; Barbara V. Howard; Judith Wylie-Rosett; Robert D. Burk; Howard D. Strickler

BACKGROUND The positive association between obesity and postmenopausal breast cancer has been attributed, in part, to the fact that estrogen, a risk factor for breast cancer, is synthesized in adipose tissue. Obesity is also associated with high levels of insulin, a known mitogen. However, no prospective studies have directly assessed associations between circulating levels of insulin and/or insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I, a related hormone, and the risk of breast cancer independent of estrogen level. METHODS We conducted a case-cohort study of incident breast cancer among nondiabetic women who were enrolled in the Womens Health Initiative Observational Study (WHI-OS), a prospective cohort of 93,676 postmenopausal women. Fasting serum samples obtained at study entry from 835 incident breast cancer case subjects and from a subcohort of 816 randomly chosen WHI-OS subjects were tested for levels of insulin, glucose, total IGF-I, free IGF-I, insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3, and estradiol. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate associations between levels of the serologic factors and baseline characteristics (including body mass index [BMI]) and the risk of breast cancer. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results Insulin levels were positively associated with the risk of breast cancer (hazard ratio [HR] for highest vs lowest quartile of insulin level = 1.46, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.00 to 2.13, P(trend) = .02); however, the association with insulin level varied by hormone therapy (HT) use (P(interaction) = .01). In a model that controlled for multiple breast cancer risk factors including estradiol, insulin level was associated with breast cancer only among nonusers of HT (HR for highest vs lowest quartile of insulin level = 2.40, 95% CI = 1.30 to 4.41, P(trend) < .001). Obesity (BMI >or=30 kg/m(2)) was also associated with the risk of breast cancer among nonusers of HT (HR for BMI >or=30 kg/m(2) vs 18.5 to <25 kg/m(2) = 2.12, 95% CI = 1.26 to 3.58, P(trend) = .003); however, this association was attenuated by adjustment for insulin (P(trend) = .40). CONCLUSION These data suggest that hyperinsulinemia is an independent risk factor for breast cancer and may have a substantial role in explaining the obesity-breast cancer relationship.

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Taha E. Taha

Johns Hopkins University

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Kathryn Anastos

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Qiuhu Shi

New York Medical College

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Paolo G. Miotti

National Institutes of Health

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