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Featured researches published by James W. Curran.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1984

Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) associated with transfusions.

James W. Curran; Lawrence Dn; Harold W. Jaffe; Jonathan E. Kaplan; Zyla Ld; Mary E. Chamberland; Robert A. Weinstein; Lui Kj; Lawrence B. Schonberger; Thomas J. Spira

Of 2157 patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) whose cases were reported to the Centers for Disease Control by August 22, 1983, 64 (3 per cent) with AIDS and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia had no recognized risk factors for AIDS. Eighteen of these (28 per cent) had received blood components within five years before the onset of illness. These patients with transfusion-associated AIDS were more likely to be white (P = 0.00008) and older (P = 0.0013) than other patients with no known risk factors. They had received blood 15 to 57 months (median, 27.5) before the diagnosis of AIDS, from 2 to 48 donors (median, 14). At least one high-risk donor was identified by interview or T-cell-subset analysis in each of the seven cases in which investigation of the donors was complete; five of the six high-risk donors identified during interview also had low T-cell helper/suppressor ratios, and four had generalized lymphadenopathy according to history or examination. These findings strengthen the evidence that AIDS may be transmitted in blood.


Science | 1992

Molecular Epidemiology of HIV Transmission in a Dental Practice

Chin-Yih Ou; Carol A. Ciesielski; Gerald Myers; Claudiu I. Bandea; Chi-Cheng Luo; Bette T. Korber; James I. Mullins; Gerald Schochetman; Ruth L. Berkelman; A. Nikki Economou; John J. Witte; Lawrence J. Furman; Glen A. Satten; Kersti A. Maclnnes; James W. Curran; Harold W. Jaffe

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmission from infected patients to health-care workers has been well documented, but transmission from an infected healthcare worker to a patient has not been reported. After identification of an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patient who had no known risk factors for HIV infection but who had undergone an invasive procedure performed by a dentist with AIDS, six other patients of this dentist were found to be HIV-infected. Molecular biologic studies were conducted to complement the epidemiologic investigation. Portions of the HIV proviral envelope gene from each of the seven patients, the dentist, and 35 HIV-infected persons from the local geographic area were amplified by polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. Three separate comparative genetic analyses—genetic distance measurements, phylogenetic tree analysis, and amino acid signature pattern analysis—showed that the viruses from the dentist and five dental patients were closely related. These data, together with the epidemiologic investigation, indicated that these patients became infected with HIV while receiving care from a dentist with AIDS.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Perinatal Transmission of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 to Infants of Seropositive Women in Zaire

Robert W. Ryder; Wato Nsa; Susan E. Hassig; Frieda Behets; Mark Rayfield; Bayende Ekungola; Ann Marie Nelson; Utshudi Mulenda; Henry Francis; Kashamuka Mwandagalirwa; Farzin Davachi; Martha F. Rogers; Nzila Nzilambi; Alan E. Greenberg; Jonathan M. Mann; Thomas C. Quinn; Peter Piot; James W. Curran

To examine perinatal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in Zaire, we screened 8108 women who gave birth at one of two Kinshasa hospitals that serve populations of markedly different socioeconomic status. For up to one year, we followed the 475 infants of the 466 seropositive women (5.8 percent of those screened) and the 616 infants of 606 seronegative women matched for age, parity, and hospital. On the basis of clinical criteria, 85 of the seropositive women (18 percent) had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The infants of seropositive mothers, as compared with those of seronegative mothers, were more frequently premature, had lower birth weights, and had a higher death rate in the first 28 days (6.2 vs. 1.2 percent; P less than 0.0001). The patterns were similar at the two hospitals. Twenty-one percent of the cultures for HIV-1 of 92 randomly selected cord-blood samples from infants of seropositive women were positive. T4-cell counts were performed in 37 seropositive women, and cord blood from their infants was cultured. The cultures were positive in the infants of 6 of the 18 women with antepartum T4 counts of 400 or fewer cells per cubic millimeter, as compared with none of the infants of the 19 women with more than 400 T4 cells per cubic millimeter (P = 0.02). One year later, 21 percent of the infants of the seropositive mothers had died as compared with 3.8 percent of the control infants (P less than 0.001), and 7.9 percent of their surviving infants had AIDS. We conclude that the mortality rates among children of seropositive mothers are high regardless of socioeconomic status, and that perinatal transmission of HIV-1 has a major adverse effect on infant survival in Kinshasa.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1982

The Prevention of Hepatitis B with Vaccine: Report of the Centers for Disease Control Multi-Center Efficacy Trial Among Homosexual Men

Donald P. Francis; Stephen C. Hadler; Sumner E. Thompson; James E. Maynard; David G. Ostrow; Norman L. Altman; Erwin H. Braff; Paul M. O'Malley; Donald Hawkins; Franklyn N. Judson; Kent A. Penley; Thom Nylund; Graham Christie; Frank Meyers; Joseph N. Moore; Ann Gardner; Irene L. Doto; Joe H. Miller; Gladys H. Reynolds; Bert L. Murphy; Charles A. Schable; Brian T. Clark; James W. Curran; Allan G. Redeker

A randomized, double-blind, vaccine/placebo trial of the Merck 20-micrograms hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccine was done among 1402 homosexual men attending venereal disease clinics in five American cities. Vaccination was followed by only minimal side effects. Two doses of vaccine induced antibody in 80% of vaccine recipients. A booster dose 6 months after the first dose induced antibody in 85% of recipients and markedly increased the proportion of recipients who produced high antibody titers. The incidence of HBV events was markedly less in the vaccine recipients compared to that in the placebo recipients (p = 0.0004). Between month 3 and 15 after the first dose, 56 more significant HBV events (hepatitis, or hepatitis B surface antigen positive, or both) occurred in the placebo group while only 11 occurred in the vaccine group. Ten of the 11 HBV events in the vaccine recipients occurred in hypo- or nonresponders to the vaccine. This vaccine appears to be safe, immunogenic, and efficacious in preventing infection with hepatitis B virus.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1983

National Case-Control Study of Kaposi's Sarcoma and Pneumocystis carinii Pneumonia in Homosexual Men: Part 1, Epidemiologic Results

Harold W. Jaffe; Keewhan Choi; Pauline A. Thomas; Harry W. Haverkos; David M. Auerbach; Mary E. Guinan; Martha F. Rogers; Thomas J. Spira; William W. Darrow; Mark A. Kramer; Stephen Friedman; James Monroe; Alvin E. Friedman-Kien; Linda Laubenstein; Michael F. Marmor; Bijan Safai; Selma K. Dritz; Salvatore J. Crispi; Shirley L. Fannin; John P. Orkwis; Alexander Kelter; Wilmon R. Rushing; Stephen B. Thacker; James W. Curran

To identify risk factors for the occurrence of Kaposis sarcoma and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in homosexual men, we conducted a case-control study in New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Atlanta. Fifty patients (cases) (39 with Kaposis sarcoma, 8 with pneumocystis pneumonia, and 3 with both) and 120 matched homosexual male controls (from sexually transmitted disease clinics and private medical practices) participated in the study. The variable most strongly associated with illness was a larger number of male sex partners per year (median, 61 for patients; 27 and 25 for clinic and private practice controls, respectively). Compared with controls, cases were also more likely to have been exposed to feces during sex, have had syphilis and non-B hepatitis, have been treated for enteric parasites, and have used various illicit substances. Certain aspects of a lifestyle shared by a subgroup of the male homosexual population are associated with an increased risk of Kaposis sarcoma and pneumocystis pneumonia.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1992

Transmission of Human Immunodeficiency Virus in a Dental Practice

Carol A. Ciesielski; Donald W. Marianos; Chin-Yih Ou; Robert Dumbaugh; John J. Witte; Ruth L. Berkelman; Barbara F. Gooch; Gerald Myers; Chi-Ching Luo; Gerald Schochetman; James T. Howell; Alan Lasch; Kenneth Bell; Nikki Economou; Bob Scott; Lawrence J. Furman; James W. Curran; Jaffe Harold

OBJECTIVE To determine if patients of a dentist with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) became infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) during their dental care and, if so, to identify possible mechanisms of transmission. DESIGN Retrospective epidemiologic follow-up of the dentist, his office practice, and his former patients. SETTING The practice of a dentist with AIDS in Florida. PARTICIPANTS A dentist with AIDS, his health care providers and employees, and former patients of the dentist, including eight HIV-infected patients. MEASUREMENTS Identification of risks for HIV transmission (if present), degree of genetic relatedness of the viruses, and identification of infection control and other office practices. RESULTS Five of the eight HIV-infected patients had no confirmed exposures to HIV other than the dental practice and were infected with HIV strains that were closely related to those of the dentist. Each of the five had invasive dental procedures, done by the dentist after he was diagnosed with AIDS. Four of these five patients shared visit days (P greater than 0.2). Breaches in infection control and other dental office practices to explain these transmissions could not be identified. CONCLUSION Although the specific incident that resulted in HIV transmission to these patients remains uncertain, the epidemiologic evidence supports direct dentist-to-patient transmission rather than a patient-to-patient route.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1985

The Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome in a Cohort of Homosexual Men: A Six-Year Follow-up Study

Harold W. Jaffe; William W. Darrow; Dean F. Echenberg; Paul M. O'Malley; Jane P. Getchell; Kalyanaraman Vs; Byers Rh; Drennan Dp; Braff Eh; James W. Curran

A cohort of 6875 homosexual men, initially seen at the San Francisco City Clinic between 1978 and 1980, were studied to determine the incidence and prevalence of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, related conditions, and infection with the human T-lymphotropic virus, type III/lymphadenopathy-associated virus (HTLV-III/LAV). By December 1984, 2.4% of the men had the syndrome; mortality attributable to the syndrome in 1984 was 600/100 000. For each man with the syndrome in a representative sample of 474 cohort members seen in 1984, 7.5 men had generalized lymphadenopathy, 1.1 had other prodromal findings, and 0.8 had hematologic abnormalities. Prevalence of serum antibodies to HTLV-III/LAV, measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, increased from 4.5% in 1978 to 67.4% in 1984. Of 31 persons who were seropositive and without the syndrome between 1978 and 1980, 2 developed the syndrome and 8 developed related conditions during a median follow-up of 61 months. Over a 6-year period, two thirds of cohort members were infected with HTLV-III/LAV and almost one third developed related conditions.


American Journal of Public Health | 1987

Risk factors for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections in homosexual men.

William W. Darrow; D F Echenberg; Harold W. Jaffe; Paul M. O'Malley; R H Byers; Jane P. Getchell; James W. Curran

To clarify risk factors for infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) we selected at random 785 homosexual men who had participated in studies of hepatitis B in San Francisco in 1978-80 for a follow-up study of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Although most had not been contacted in over five years, 492 (63 per cent) were located and enrolled. The 240 (67 per cent) who had developed antibodies to HIV, as measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), were compared with 119 who had remained seronegative. In multivariate analyses, receptive anal intercourse with ejaculation by nonsteady sexual partners, many sexual partners per month, and other indicators of high levels of sexual activity were highly associated with seroconversions. None of the sexual practices that we studied appeared to offer protection against HIV infection.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Prevalence of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus among University Students

Helene D. Gayle; Richard P. Keeling; Miguel Garcia-Tunon; Barbara Kilbourne; John P. Narkunas; Fred R. Ingram; Martha F. Rogers; James W. Curran

BACKGROUND AND METHODS To estimate the magnitude of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) epidemic among university students, we conducted a blinded HIV-seroprevalence survey at 19 universities throughout the United States. HIV-antibody testing was performed on blood collected for routine medical purposes at the student health centers of the participating institutions. At each campus, from 250 to 1000 blood specimens were collected consecutively and tested for HIV antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western blot analysis. Nonidentifying demographic data were linked with the test results. RESULTS Of 16,863 specimens in the sample, 30 (0.2 percent) were positive for antibodies to HIV. Positive specimens were found at 9 of the 19 schools. All were from students over 18 years old; 19 (63 percent) were from students over 24. All but 2 of the 30 infected students were men. The seroprevalence rate for men was 0.5 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 0.3 to 0.7), and for women it was 0.02 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 0.002 to 0.066). Seroprevalence increased with age--from 0.08 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 0.04 to 0.15) for students 18 to 24 years old to 1.0 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 0.2 to 2.9) for those 40 or older. CONCLUSIONS HIV infection is present on U.S. university campuses, although the rate appears to be far lower than that of populations known to be at high risk. The potential clearly exists, however, for the further spread of HIV infection in this population, and preventive measures are needed.


The American Journal of Medicine | 1984

Cluster of Cases of the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome Patients Linked by Sexual Contact

David M. Auerbach; William W. Darrow; Harold W. Jaffe; James W. Curran

The possibility that homosexual men with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) had been sexual partners of each other was studied. Of the first 19 homosexual male AIDS patients reported from southern California, names of sexual partners were obtained for 13. Nine of the 13 patients had sexual contact with one or more AIDS patients within five years of the onset of symptoms. Four of the patients from southern California had contact with a non-Californian AIDS patient, who was also the sexual partner of four AIDS patients from New York City. Ultimately, 40 patients in 10 cities were linked by sexual contact. On the basis of six pairs of patients, a mean latency period of 10.5 months (range seven to 14 months) is estimated between sexual contact and symptom onset. The finding of a cluster of AIDS patients linked by sexual contact is consistent with the hypothesis that AIDS is caused by an infectious agent.

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Thomas C. Quinn

National Institutes of Health

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Haile T. Debas

University of California

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Harry W. Haverkos

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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Ann M. Hardy

United States Department of Health and Human Services

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Henry Francis

National Institutes of Health

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William W. Darrow

Florida International University

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Jane P. Getchell

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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