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Dive into the research topics where Jessica M. Fogel is active.

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Featured researches published by Jessica M. Fogel.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2014

Nondisclosure of HIV Status in a Clinical Trial Setting: Antiretroviral Drug Screening Can Help Distinguish Between Newly Diagnosed and Previously Diagnosed HIV Infection

Mark A. Marzinke; William Clarke; Lei Wang; Vanessa Cummings; Ting Yuan Liu; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Autumn Breaud; Sam Griffith; Susan Buchbinder; Steven Shoptaw; Carlos del Rio; Manya Magnus; Sharon Mannheimer; Sheldon D. Fields; Kenneth H. Mayer; Darrell P. Wheeler; Beryl A. Koblin; Susan H. Eshleman; Jessica M. Fogel

In The HIV Prevention Trials Network 061 study, 155 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected men reported no prior HIV diagnosis; 83 of those men had HIV RNA levels of <1000 copies/mL at enrollment. Antiretroviral drug testing revealed that 65 of the 83 (78.3%) men were on antiretroviral treatment. Antiretroviral drug testing can help distinguish between newly diagnosed and previously diagnosed HIV infection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013

Undisclosed Antiretroviral Drug Use in a Multinational Clinical Trial (HIV Prevention Trials Network 052)

Jessica M. Fogel; Lei Wang; Teresa L. Parsons; San San Ou; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Ying Q. Chen; Victor Mudhune; Mina C. Hosseinipour; Johnstone Kumwenda; James Hakim; Suwat Chariyalertsak; Ravindre Panchia; Ian Sanne; Nagalingeswaran Kumarasamy; Beatriz Grinsztejn; Joseph Makhema; José Henrique Pilotto; Breno Santos; Kenneth H. Mayer; Marybeth McCauley; Theresa Gamble; Namandjé N. Bumpus; Craig W. Hendrix; Myron S. Cohen; Susan H. Eshleman

The HIV Prevention Trials Network 052 study enrolled serodiscordant couples. Index participants infected with human immunodeficiency virus reported no prior antiretroviral (ARV) treatment at enrollment. ARV drug testing was performed retrospectively using enrollment samples from a subset of index participants. ARV drugs were detected in 45 of 96 participants (46.9%) with an undetectable viral load, 2 of 48 (4.2%) with a low viral load, and 1 of 65 (1.5%) with a high viral load (P < .0001); they were also detected in follow-up samples from participants who were not receiving study-administered treatment. ARV drug testing may be useful in addition to self-report of ARV drug use in some clinical trial settings.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2011

Initiation of Antiretroviral Treatment in Women After Delivery Can Induce Multiclass Drug Resistance in Breastfeeding HIV-Infected Infants

Jessica M. Fogel; Qing Li; Taha E. Taha; Donald R. Hoover; Newton Kumwenda; Lynne M. Mofenson; Johnstone Kumwenda; Mary Glenn Fowler; Michael C. Thigpen; Susan H. Eshleman

BACKGROUND The World Health Organization currently recommends initiation of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected lactating women with CD4+ cell counts <350 cells/μL or stage 3 or 4 disease. We analyzed antiretroviral drug resistance in HIV-infected infants in the Post Exposure Prophylaxis of Infants trial whose mothers initiated HAART postpartum (with a regimen of nevirapine [NVP], stavudine, and lamivudine). Infants in the trial received single-dose NVP and a week of zidovudine (ZDV) at birth; some infants also received extended daily NVP prophylaxis, with or without extended ZDV prophylaxis. METHODS We analyzed drug resistance in plasma samples collected from all HIV-infected infants whose mothers started HAART in the first postpartum year. Resistance testing was performed using the first plasma sample collected within 6 months after maternal HAART initiation. Categorical variables were compared by exact or trend tests; continuous variables were compared using rank-sum tests. RESULTS Multiclass resistance (MCR) was detected in HIV from 11 (29.7%) of 37 infants. Infants were more likely to develop MCR infection if their mothers initiated HAART earlier in the postpartum period (by 14 weeks vs after 14 weeks and up to 6 months vs after 6 months, P = .0009), or if the mother was exclusively breastfeeding at the time of HAART initiation (exclusive breastfeeding vs mixed feeding vs no breastfeeding, P = .003). CONCLUSIONS Postpartum maternal HAART initiation was associated with acquisition of MCR in HIV-infected breastfeeding infants. The risk was higher among infants whose mothers initiated HAART closer to the time of delivery or were still exclusively breastfeeding when they first reported HAART use.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2017

Treatment as Prevention: Characterization of partner infections in the HIV Prevention Trials Network 052 trial.

Susan H. Eshleman; Sarah E. Hudelson; Andrew D. Redd; Ronald Swanstrom; San San Ou; Xinyi Cindy Zhang; Li Hua Ping; Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Stephen F. Porcella; Matthew F. Sievers; Craig Martens; Daniel P. Bruno; Elena Dukhovlinova; Marybeth McCauley; Theresa Gamble; Jessica M. Fogel; Devin Sabin; Thomas C. Quinn; Laurence Gunde; Madalitso Maliwichi; Nehemiah Nhando; Victor Akelo; Sikhulile Moyo; Ravindre Panchia; Nagalingeswaran Kumarasamy; Nuntisa Chotirosniramit; Marineide Gonçalves de Melo; José Henrique Pilotto; Beatriz Grinsztejn; Kenneth H. Mayer

Abstract: HIV Prevention Trials Network 052 demonstrated that antiretroviral therapy (ART) prevents HIV transmission in serodiscordant couples. HIV from index–partner pairs was analyzed to determine the genetic linkage status of partner infections. Forty-six infections were classified as linked, indicating that the index was the likely source of the partners infection. Lack of viral suppression and higher index viral load were associated with linked infection. Eight linked infections were diagnosed after the index started ART: 4 near the time of ART initiation and 4 after ART failure. Linked infections were not observed when the index participant was stably suppressed on ART.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Association of HIV Diversity and Survival in HIV-Infected Ugandan Infants

Maria M. James; Lei Wang; Philippa Musoke; Deborah Donnell; Jessica M. Fogel; William I. Towler; Leila Khaki; Clemensia Nakabiito; J. Brooks Jackson; Susan H. Eshleman

Background The level of viral diversity in an HIV-infected individual can change during the course of HIV infection, reflecting mutagenesis during viral replication and selection of viral variants by immune and other selective pressures. Differences in the level of viral diversity in HIV-infected infants may reflect differences in viral dynamics, immune responses, or other factors that may also influence HIV disease progression. We used a novel high resolution melting (HRM) assay to measure HIV diversity in Ugandan infants and examined the relationship between diversity and survival through 5 years of age. Methods Plasma samples were obtained from 31 HIV-infected infants (HIVNET 012 trial). The HRM assay was used to measure diversity in two regions in the gag gene (Gag1 and Gag2) and one region in the pol gene (Pol). Results HRM scores in all three regions increased with age from 6–8 weeks to 12–18 months (for Gag1: P = 0.005; for Gag2: P = 0.006; for Pol: P = 0.016). Higher HRM scores at 6–8 weeks of age (scores above the 75th percentile) were associated with an increased risk of death by 5 years of age (for Pol: P = 0.005; for Gag1/Gag2 (mean of two scores): P = 0.003; for Gag1/Gag2/Pol (mean of three scores): P = 0.002). We did not find an association between HRM scores and other clinical and laboratory variables. Conclusions Genetic diversity in HIV gag and pol measured using the HRM assay was typically low near birth and increased over time. Higher HIV diversity in these regions at 6–8 weeks of age was associated with a significantly increased risk of death by 5 years of age.


AIDS | 2011

Analysis of nevirapine resistance in HIV-infected infants who received extended nevirapine or nevirapine/zidovudine prophylaxis.

Jessica M. Fogel; Donald R. Hoover; Jin Sun; Lynne M. Mofenson; Mary Glenn Fowler; Allan W. Taylor; Newton Kumwenda; Taha E. Taha; Susan H. Eshleman

Background:In the Post Exposure Prophylaxis of Infants (PEPI)-Malawi trial, infants received up to 14 weeks of extended nevirapine (NVP) or extended NVP with zidovudine (NVP + ZDV) to prevent postnatal HIV transmission. We examined emergence and persistence of NVP resistance in HIV-infected infants who received these regimens prior to HIV diagnosis. Methods:Infant plasma samples collected at 14 weeks of age were tested using the ViroSeq HIV Genotyping System and a sensitive point mutation assay, LigAmp (for K103N and Y181C). Samples collected at 6 and 12 months of age were analyzed using LigAmp. Results:At 14 weeks of age, NVP resistance was detected in samples from 82 (75.9%) of 108 HIV-infected infants. Although the frequency of NVP resistance detected by ViroSeq was lower in the extended NVP + ZDV arm than in the extended NVP arm, the difference was not statistically significant (38/55 = 69.1% vs. 44/53 = 83.0%, P = 0.12). Similar results were obtained using LigAmp. Using LigAmp, the proportion of infants who still had detectable NVP resistance at 6 and 12 months was similar among infants in the two study arms (at 6 months: 17/20 = 85.0% for extended NVP vs. 21/26 = 80.8% for extended NVP + ZDV, P = 1.00; at 12 months: 9/16 = 56.3% for extended NVP vs.10/13 = 76.9% for extended NVP + ZDV, P = 0.43). Conclusion:Infants exposed to extended NVP or extended NVP + ZDV had high rates of NVP resistance at 14 weeks of age, and resistant variants frequently persisted for 6–12 months. Frequency and persistence of NVP resistance did not differ significantly among infants who received extended NVP only vs. extended NVP + ZDV prophylaxis.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2013

Impact of Maternal and Infant Antiretroviral Drug Regimens on Drug Resistance in HIV-Infected Breastfeeding Infants.

Jessica M. Fogel; Anthony Mwatha; Paul G. Richardson; Elizabeth R. Brown; Tsungai Chipato; Michel W. Alexandre; Dhayendre Moodley; Ali Elbireer; Mark Mirochnick; Kathleen George; Lynne M. Mofenson; Sheryl Zwerski; Hoosen M. Coovadia; Susan H. Eshleman

Background: The HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) 046 trial evaluated the efficacy of extended infant nevirapine (NVP) administration for prevention of HIV transmission through breastfeeding. Infants received daily NVP up to 6 weeks of age. HIV-uninfected infants (the intent-to-treat group) received daily NVP or placebo up to 6 months of age. We analyzed emergence of NVP resistance in infants who acquired HIV infection despite prophylaxis. Methods: HIV genotyping was performed using the ViroSeq HIV Genotyping System. Medians and proportions were used to summarize data. Two-sided Fisher exact tests were used to evaluate associations between categorical variables. Results: NVP resistance was detected in 12 (92.3%) of 13 infants who were HIV-infected by 6 weeks and in 7 (28%) of 25 infants who were HIV-uninfected at 6 weeks and HIV-infected at 6 months of age (6/8 = 75% in the NVP arm, 1/17 = 5.9% in the placebo arm, P = 0.001). Among those 25 infants, 4 had mothers who initiated an antiretroviral treatment regimen by 6 months postpartum. In all 4 cases, the treatment regimen included a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NVP or efavirenz). NVP resistance was detected in all 4 of those infants by 6 months of age (4/4 = 100%). In contrast, only 3 (14.2%) of the remaining 21 HIV-infected infants whose mothers did not initiate antiretroviral treatment developed NVP resistance (P = 0.003). Conclusions: Extended NVP prophylaxis significantly increased the risk of NVP resistance in infants who acquired HIV infection after 6 weeks of age. Treatment of maternal HIV infection was also associated with emergence of NVP resistance in HIV-infected, breastfed infants.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2012

Use of a High Resolution Melting Assay to Analyze HIV Diversity in HIV-infected Ugandan Children

Maria M. James; Lei Wang; Deborah Donnell; Matthew M. Cousins; Linda Barlow-Mosha; Jessica M. Fogel; William I. Towler; Allison L. Agwu; Danstan Bagenda; Micheal Mubiru; Philippa Musoke; Susan H. Eshleman

Background: We used a novel high resolution melting (HRM) diversity assay to analyze HIV diversity in Ugandan children (age 0.6–12.4 years) who were enrolled in an observational study of antiretroviral treatment (ART). Children were maintained on ART if they were clinically and immunologically stable. Methods: HIV diversity was measured before ART (baseline) in 76 children and after 48 or 96 weeks of ART in 14 children who were not virally suppressed. HIV diversity (expressed as HRM scores) was measured in 6 regions of the HIV genome (2 in gag, 1 in pol, 3 in env). Results: Higher baseline HRM scores were significantly associated with older age (≥2 years, P ⩽ 0.001 for all 6 regions). HRM scores from different regions were weakly correlated. Higher baseline HRM scores in 3 regions (1 in gag, 2 in env) were associated with ART failure. HIV diversity was lower in 4 regions (2 in gag, 1 in pol, 1 in env) after 48–96 weeks of nonsuppressive ART compared with baseline. Conclusions: Higher levels of HIV diversity were observed in older children before ART, and higher levels of diversity in some regions of the HIV genome were associated with ART failure. Prolonged exposure to nonsuppressive ART was associated with a significant decrease in viral diversity in selected regions of the HIV genome.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2015

Antiretroviral drug use and HIV drug resistance among HIV-infected Black men who have sex with men: HIV Prevention Trials Network 061

Iris Chen; Matthew B. Connor; William Clarke; Mark A. Marzinke; Vanessa Cummings; Autumn Breaud; Jessica M. Fogel; Oliver Laeyendecker; Sheldon D. Fields; Deborah Donnell; Sam Griffith; Hyman M. Scott; Steven Shoptaw; Carlos del Rio; Manya Magnus; Sharon Mannheimer; Darrell P. Wheeler; Kenneth H. Mayer; Beryl A. Koblin; Susan H. Eshleman

Background:HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) 061 enrolled black men who have sex with men in the United States. Some men with low/undetectable HIV RNA had unusual patterns of antiretroviral (ARV) drug use or had drugs detected in the absence of viral suppression. This report includes a comprehensive analysis of ARV drug use and drug resistance among men in HPTN 061 who were not virally suppressed. Methods:The analysis included 169 men who had viral loads >400 copies per milliliter at enrollment, including 3 with acute infection and 13 with recent infection. By self-report, 88 were previously diagnosed, including 31 in care; 137 men reported no ARV drug use. Samples from these 169 men and 23 seroconverters were analyzed with HIV genotyping and ARV drug assays. Results:Forty-eight (28%) of the 169 men had ≥1 drug resistance mutation (DRM); 19 (11%) had multiclass resistance. Sixty men (36%) had ≥1 ARV drug detected, 42 (70%) of whom reported no ARV drug use. Nine (23%) of 39 newly infected men had ≥1 DRM; 10 had ≥1 ARV drug detected. Unusual patterns of ARV drugs were detected more frequently in newly diagnosed men than previously diagnosed men. The rate of transmitted drug resistance was 23% based on HIV genotyping and self-reported ARV drug use but was 12% after adjusting for ARV drug detection. Conclusions:Many men in HPTN 061 had drug-resistant HIV, and many were at risk of acquiring additional DRMs. ARV drug testing revealed unusual patterns of ARV drug use and provided a more accurate estimate of transmitted drug resistance.


Hiv Clinical Trials | 2014

Failure to Identify HIV-Infected Individuals in a Clinical Trial Using a Single HIV Rapid Test for Screening

Estelle Piwowar-Manning; Jessica M. Fogel; Oliver Laeyendecker; Shauna Wolf; Vanessa Cummings; Mark A. Marzinke; William Clarke; Autumn Breaud; Sarah K. Wendel; Lei Wang; Priscilla Swanson; John Hackett; Sharon Mannheimer; Carlos del Rio; Irene Kuo; Nina T. Harawa; Beryl A. Koblin; Richard D. Moore; Joel N. Blankson; Susan H. Eshleman

Abstract Background: In the HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) 061 study, 8 (2.3%) of 348 HIV-infected participants identified as HIV uninfected at study enrollment using a single HIV rapid test for screening were found to be HIV infected after additional testing. Objectives: To evaluate the performance of different HIV assays for detection of HIV infection in HPTN 061 participants with missed infection and individuals with viral suppression. Methods: Plasma samples from 8 HPTN 061 participants, 17 elite controllers, and 101 individuals on antiretroviral treatment (ART) were tested for HIV with 3 rapid tests, 2 laboratory-based immunoassays, and a Western blot assay. The HPTN 061 samples were also tested with 2 HIV RNA assays and an antiretroviral drug assay. Results: Of the 8 HPTN 061 participants with missed infection, 1 was an elite controller, 1 was taking ART, 2 were missed because of testing or clerical errors, 1 had recent HIV infection (identified using a multi-assay algorithm), and 3 had acute HIV infection. Two (1.7%) of 118 individuals with viral suppression (both taking ART) had at least 1 false-negative test. Conclusions: In clinical trials, HIV infections can be missed for a variety of reasons. Using more than one assay to screen for HIV infection may reduce the number of missed infections.

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Autumn Breaud

Johns Hopkins University

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Ravindre Panchia

University of the Witwatersrand

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Mark A. Marzinke

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Ying Q. Chen

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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