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Dive into the research topics where Jenny Guek Hong Low is active.

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Featured researches published by Jenny Guek Hong Low.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2005

Nebulized Colistin in the Treatment of Pneumonia Due to Multidrug-Resistant Acinetobacter baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Andrea L. Kwa; ChinSiew Loh; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Asok Kurup; Vincent H. Tam

Twenty-one patients with multidrug-resistant (MDR) Acinetobacter baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia were treated with nebulized polymyxin E (colistin). Overall clinical and microbiological response rates were 57.1% and 85.7%, respectively. Nebulized colistin may be reasonably efficacious and safe for treatment of MDR pneumonia. Its role in therapy warrants further investigation in comparative studies.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2008

Decision Tree Algorithms Predict the Diagnosis and Outcome of Dengue Fever in the Early Phase of Illness

Lukas Tanner; Mark Schreiber; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Adrian Ong; Thomas Tolfvenstam; Yee-Ling Lai; Lee Ching Ng; Yee Sin Leo; Le Thi Puong; Subhash G. Vasudevan; Cameron P. Simmons; Martin L. Hibberd; Eng Eong Ooi

Background Dengue is re-emerging throughout the tropical world, causing frequent recurrent epidemics. The initial clinical manifestation of dengue often is confused with other febrile states confounding both clinical management and disease surveillance. Evidence-based triage strategies that identify individuals likely to be in the early stages of dengue illness can direct patient stratification for clinical investigations, management, and virological surveillance. Here we report the identification of algorithms that differentiate dengue from other febrile illnesses in the primary care setting and predict severe disease in adults. Methods and Findings A total of 1,200 patients presenting in the first 72 hours of acute febrile illness were recruited and followed up for up to a 4-week period prospectively; 1,012 of these were recruited from Singapore and 188 from Vietnam. Of these, 364 were dengue RT-PCR positive; 173 had dengue fever, 171 had dengue hemorrhagic fever, and 20 had dengue shock syndrome as final diagnosis. Using a C4.5 decision tree classifier for analysis of all clinical, haematological, and virological data, we obtained a diagnostic algorithm that differentiates dengue from non-dengue febrile illness with an accuracy of 84.7%. The algorithm can be used differently in different disease prevalence to yield clinically useful positive and negative predictive values. Furthermore, an algorithm using platelet count, crossover threshold value of a real-time RT-PCR for dengue viral RNA, and presence of pre-existing anti-dengue IgG antibodies in sequential order identified cases with sensitivity and specificity of 78.2% and 80.2%, respectively, that eventually developed thrombocytopenia of 50,000 platelet/mm3 or less, a level previously shown to be associated with haemorrhage and shock in adults with dengue fever. Conclusion This study shows a proof-of-concept that decision algorithms using simple clinical and haematological parameters can predict diagnosis and prognosis of dengue disease, a finding that could prove useful in disease management and surveillance.


Antiviral Research | 2011

Celgosivir treatment misfolds dengue virus NS1 protein, induces cellular pro-survival genes and protects against lethal challenge mouse model.

Abhay P. S. Rathore; Prasad N. Paradkar; Satoru Watanabe; Kah Hin Tan; Cynthia Sung; John Connolly; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Eng Eong Ooi; Subhash G. Vasudevan

Dengue virus (DENV) infections continue to spread aggressively around the world. Here we demonstrate that celgosivir (6-O-butanoyl castanospermine), strongly inhibits all four DENV serotypes. We show by fluorescence microscopy that the antiviral mechanism of celgosivir, is in part, due to misfolding and accumulation of DENV non-structural protein 1 (NS1) in the endoplasmic reticulum. Moreover, celgosivir modulates the hosts unfolded protein response (UPR) for its antiviral action. Significantly, celgosivir is effective in lethal challenge mouse models that recapitulate primary or secondary antibody-dependent enhanced DENV infection. Celgosivir treated mice showed enhanced survival, reduced viremia and robust immune response, as reflected by serum cytokine analysis. Importantly, survival increased even after treatment was delayed till 2 days post-infection. Together the present study suggests that celgosivir, which has been clinically determined to be safe in humans, may be a valuable candidate for clinical testing in dengue patients.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Genomic epidemiology of a dengue virus epidemic in urban Singapore.

Mark Schreiber; Edward C. Holmes; Swee Hoe Ong; Harold Soh; Wei Liu; Lukas Tanner; Pauline P. K. Aw; Hwee Cheng Tan; Lee Ching Ng; Yee Sin Leo; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Adrian Ong; Eng Eong Ooi; Subhash G. Vasudevan; Martin L. Hibberd

ABSTRACT Dengue is one of the most important emerging diseases of humans, with no preventative vaccines or antiviral cures available at present. Although one-third of the worlds population live at risk of infection, little is known about the pattern and dynamics of dengue virus (DENV) within outbreak situations. By exploiting genomic data from an intensively studied major outbreak, we are able to describe the molecular epidemiology of DENV at a uniquely fine-scaled temporal and spatial resolution. Two DENV serotypes (DENV-1 and DENV-3), and multiple component genotypes, spread concurrently and with similar epidemiological and evolutionary profiles during the initial outbreak phase of a major dengue epidemic that took place in Singapore during 2005. Although DENV-1 and DENV-3 differed in viremia and clinical outcome, there was no evidence for adaptive evolution before, during, or after the outbreak, indicating that ecological or immunological rather than virological factors were the key determinants of epidemic dynamics.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2011

Confirmed adult dengue deaths in Singapore: 5-year multi-center retrospective study

Yee-Sin Leo; Tun Linn Thein; Dale Fisher; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Helen M. L. Oh; Rajmohan L Narayanan; Victor C. Gan; Vernon J. Lee; David C. Lye

BackgroundDengue re-emerges in Singapore despite decades of effective vector control; the infection predominantly afflicts adults. Severe dengue not fulfilling dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) criteria according to World Health Organization (WHO) 1997 guideline was increasingly reported. A new WHO 2009 guideline emphasized warning signs and a wider range of severe dengue manifestations. We aim to evaluate the utility of these two guidelines in confirmed adult dengue fatalities.MethodsWe conducted a multi-center retrospective chart review of all confirmed adult dengue deaths in Singapore from 1 January 2004 to 31 December 2008.ResultsOf 28 adult dengue deaths, median age was 59 years. Male gender comprised 67.9% and co-morbidities existed in 75%. From illness onset, patients presented for admission at a median of 4 days and death occurred at a median of 12 days. Intensive care admission was required in 71.4%. Probable dengue was diagnosed in 32.1% by WHO 1997 criteria and 78.6% by WHO 2009. The earliest warning sign was persistent vomiting at a median of 1.5 days. Hematocrit change ≥20% concurrent with platelet count <20 × 10^9/L was associated with the shortest interval to death at a median of 3 days. Only 35.7% of death cases fulfilled DHF criteria by WHO 1997 versus severe dengue in 100.0% by WHO 2009 criteria. Deaths were due to shock and organ failure. Acute renal impairment occurred in 71.4%, impaired consciousness 57.1% and severe hepatitis 53.6%.ConclusionsIn our adult fatal dengue cohort, WHO 2009 criteria had higher sensitivity in diagnosing probable dengue and severe dengue compared with WHO 1997. As warning signs, persistent vomiting occurred early and hematocrit change ≥20% concurrent with platelet count <20 × 10^9/L preceded death most closely.


Antiviral Research | 2012

Dose- and schedule-dependent protective efficacy of celgosivir in a lethal mouse model for dengue virus infection informs dosing regimen for a proof of concept clinical trial.

Satoru Watanabe; Abhay P. S. Rathore; Cynthia Sung; Fan Lu; Yok Moi Khoo; John Connolly; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Eng Eong Ooi; How Sung Lee; Subhash G. Vasudevan

Celgosivir (6-O-butanoyl castanospermine), a pro-drug of the naturally occurring castanospermine, is an inhibitor of α-glucosidase I and II that is found to be a potent inhibitor of several enveloped viruses including all four serotypes of dengue virus. We showed previously that the compound fully protected AG129 mice from lethal infection with a mouse adapted dengue virus at a dose of 50mg/kg twice daily (BID) for 5days and was effective even after 48h delayed treatment. Here we show that the protection by celgosivir is dose- and schedule-dependent and that a twice-a-day regimen of 50, 25 or 10mg/kg is more protective than a single daily dose of 100mg/kg. Treatment with 50mg/kg BID castanospermine had comparable efficacy as 25mg/kg BID celgosivir, suggesting that celgosivir is approximately twice as potent as castanospermine with respect to in vivo antiviral efficacy. Pharmacokinetics (PK) studies of celgosivir in mice showed that it rapidly metabolized to castanospermine. Simulation of the PK data with the survival data for the various doses of celgosivir tested suggests that the steady-state minimum concentration is a critical parameter to note in choosing dose and schedule. These results influenced the selection of the dose regimen for a proof-of-concept clinical trial of celgosivir as a treatment against dengue fever.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Dengue virus activates polyreactive, natural IgG B cells after primary and secondary infection.

Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Dennis Berbulla Bela-ong; Ying Xiu Toh; Marie Flamand; Shamala Devi; Mickey Koh; Martin L. Hibberd; Eng Eong Ooi; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Yee Sin Leo; Feng Gu; Katja Fink

Background Dengue virus is transmitted by mosquitoes and has four serotypes. Cross-protection to other serotypes lasting for a few months is observed following infection with one serotype. There is evidence that low-affinity T and/or B cells from primary infections contribute to the severe syndromes often associated with secondary dengue infections. such pronounced immune-mediated enhancement suggests a dengue-specific pattern of immune cell activation. This study investigates the acute and early convalescent B cell response leading to the generation of cross-reactive and neutralizing antibodies following dengue infection. Methodology/Principal Findings We assayed blood samples taken from dengue patients with primary or secondary infection during acute disease and convalescence and compared them to samples from patients presenting with non-dengue related fever. Dengue induced massive early plasmablast formation, which correlated with the appearance of polyclonal, cross-reactive IgG for both primary and secondary infection. Surprisingly, the contribution of IgG to the neutralizing titer 4–7 days after fever onset was more than 50% even after primary infection. Conclusions/Significance Poly-reactive and virus serotype cross-reactive IgG are an important component of the innate response in humans during both primary and secondary dengue infection, and “innate specificities” seem to constitute part of the adaptive response in dengue. While of potential importance for protection during secondary infection, cross-reactive B cells will also compete with highly neutralizing B cells and possibly interfere with their development.


European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases | 2009

Clinical features and treatment outcomes of vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (VISA) and heteroresistant vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (hVISA) in a tertiary care institution in Singapore

R. K. C. Fong; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Tse-Hsien Koh; Asok Kurup

This retrospective case–control study was undertaken to review the clinical features associated with heteroresistant vancomycin-intermediate Staphylococcus aureus (hVISA) and vancomycin-intermediate S. aureus (VISA) infections and the local impact they have on clinical outcome. Compared with vancomycin-susceptible S. aureus (n = 30), hVISA and VISA infections (n = 10) are found to be associated with a longer period of prior glycopeptide use (P = 0.01), bone/joint (P < 0.01) and prosthetic infections (P = 0.04), as well as treatment failure, as evidenced by longer bacteremic (P < 0.01) and culture positivity (P < 0.01) periods. This was observed to have resulted in longer hospital length of stay (P < 0.01) and total antibiotic therapy duration (P = 0.01). There was, however, no significant difference in the overall patient mortality or the hospitalization cost (P = 0.12) in both groups. Clinicians should be cognizant of the association between hVISA/VISA with high bacterial load deep-seated infections. We recommend targeted and even universal screening for hVISA/VISA in methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) infections.


Antiviral Research | 2016

Optimizing celgosivir therapy in mouse models of dengue virus infection of serotypes 1 and 2: The search for a window for potential therapeutic efficacy

Satoru Watanabe; Kitti Wing Ki Chan; Geoffrey Dow; Eng Eong Ooi; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Subhash G. Vasudevan

Although the antiviral drug celgosivir, an α-glucosidase I inhibitor, is highly protective when given twice daily to AG129 mice infected with dengue virus, a similar regimen of twice daily dosing did not significantly reduce serum viral loads in patients in a recent clinical trial. This failure presumably might reflect the initiation of treatment when patients were already viremic. To better mimic the clinical setting, we used viruses isolated from patients to develop new mouse models of DENV1 and DENV2 infection and employed the models to test the twice daily treatment, begun either on the day of infection or on the third day post-infection, when the mice had peak of viremia. We found that, although the treatment started on day 0 was effective on viral load reduction, it provided no benefit when begun on day 3, indicating that in vivo antiviral efficacy becomes less prominent once viremia reaches the peak level. To determine if the therapeutic regimen in humans could be improved, we tested regimen of four-times daily treatment and found that the treatment significantly reduced viremia, suggesting that a similar regimen may be effective in a human clinical trial. A new clinical trial to investigate an altered dosing regimen has been approved (NCT02569827).


Vaccine | 2014

Safety and immunogenicity of a virus-like particle pandemic influenza A (H1N1) 2009 vaccine: Results from a double-blinded, randomized Phase I clinical trial in healthy Asian volunteers

Jenny Guek Hong Low; Lawrence S. Lee; Eng Eong Ooi; Kantharaj Ethirajulu; Pauline Yeo; Alex Matter; John Connolly; David Skibinski; Philippe Saudan; Martin F. Bachmann; Brendon J. Hanson; Qingshu Lu; Sebastian Maurer-Stroh; Sam Lim; Veronica Novotny-Diermayr

METHODS A novel, fully bacterially produced recombinant virus-like particle (VLP) based influenza vaccine (gH1-Qbeta) against A/California/07/2009(H1N1) was tested in a double-blind, randomized phase I clinical trial at two clinical sites in Singapore. The trial evaluated the immunogenicity and safety of gH1-Qbeta in the presence or absence of alhydrogel adjuvant. Healthy adult volunteers with no or low pre-existing immunity against A/California/07/2009 (H1N1) were randomized to receive two intramuscular injections 21 days apart, with 100μg vaccine, containing 42μg hemagglutinin antigen. Antibody responses were measured before and 21 days after each immunization by hemagglutination inhibition (HAI) assays. The primary endpoint was seroconversion on Day 42, defined as percentage of subjects which reach a HAI titer ≥40 or achieve an at least 4-fold rise in HAI titer (with pre-existing immunity). The co-secondary endpoints were safety and seroconversion on Day 21. RESULTS A total of 84 Asian volunteers were enrolled in this study and randomized to receive the adjuvanted (n=43) or the non-adjuvanted (n=41) vaccine. Of those, 43 and 37 respectively (95%) completed the study. There were no deaths or serious adverse events reported during this trial. A total of 535 adverse events occurred during treatment with 49.5% local solicited symptoms, of mostly (76.4%) mild severity. The most common treatment-related systemic symptom was fatigue. The non-adjuvanted vaccine met all primary and secondary endpoints and showed seroconversion in 62.2% and 70.3% of participants respectively on Day 21 and Day 42. While the adjuvanted vaccine showed an increased seroconversion from 25.5% (Day 21) to 51.2% (Day 42), it did not meet the immunogenicity endpoint. CONCLUSION In summary, non-adjuvanted gH1-Qbeta showed similar antibody mediated immunogenicity and a comparable safety profile in healthy humans to commercially available vaccines. These results warrant the consideration of this VLP vaccine platform for the vaccination against influenza infection (HSA CTC1300092).

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Eng Eong Ooi

National University of Singapore

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Asok Kurup

Singapore General Hospital

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Subhash G. Vasudevan

National University of Singapore

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Limin Wijaya

Singapore General Hospital

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Shirin Kalimuddin

Singapore General Hospital

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Satoru Watanabe

National University of Singapore

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Yee-Sin Leo

Tan Tock Seng Hospital

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Andrea L. Kwa

Singapore General Hospital

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Ban Hock Tan

Singapore General Hospital

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