Juan J.L. Lertora
National Institutes of Health
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Juan J.L. Lertora.
Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology | 2008
Albert W. Dreisbach; Juan J.L. Lertora
Background: Chronic renal failure (CRF) has been shown to significantly reduce the nonrenal clearance and alter bioavailability of drugs predominantly metabolized by the liver and intestine. Objectives: The purpose of this article is to review all significant animal and clinical studies dealing with the effect of CRF on drug metabolism and transport. Methods: A search of the National Library of Medicine PubMed was done with terms such as chronic renal failure, cytochrome P450 [CYP], liver metabolism, efflux drug transport and uptake transport, including relevant articles back to 1969. Results: Animal studies in CRF have shown a significant downregulation (40 – 85%) of hepatic and intestinal CYP metabolism. High levels of parathyroid hormone, cytokines and uremic toxins have been shown to reduce CYP activity. Phase II reactions and drug transporters such as P-glycoprotein and organic anion transporting polypeptide are also affected. Conclusion: CRF alters intestinal, renal and hepatic drug metabolism and transport producing a clinically significant impact on drug disposition and increasing the risk for adverse drug reactions.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002
Mark Rozans; Albert W. Dreisbach; Juan J.L. Lertora; Marc J. Kahn
PURPOSE Cancer is, unfortunately, often a terminal disease. The goal of therapy for many patients with cancer is palliation of symptoms common at the end of life, including pain, depression, and cognitive dysfunction. Methylphenidate is a psychostimulant most commonly used in the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. In this report, we review the use of methylphenidate in the palliative care of patients with cancer. METHODS This review was written on the basis of a computerized literature search of Medline. We considered all English language publications from 1966 to present using the following key words: methylphenidate, palliative care, and cancer. Forty-nine articles were identified as being relevant for this review. RESULTS On the basis of this review, we came to the conclusion that methylphenidate is used to ameliorate opioid-induced somnolence, to augment the analgesic effects of opioids, to treat depression, and to improve cognitive function in patients with cancer. CONCLUSION The medical literature supports the palliative use of methylphenidate in the care of patients with cancer. Further placebo-controlled trials are needed to elucidate the precise role that methylphenidate will have in providing symptom relief to dying patients.
Seminars in Dialysis | 2003
Albert W. Dreisbach; Juan J.L. Lertora
There is abundant evidence that chronic renal failure (CRF) and end‐stage renal disease (ESRD) alter drug disposition by affecting protein and tissue binding and reducing systemic clearance of renally cleared drugs. What is not fully appreciated is that CRF can significantly reduce nonrenal clearance and alter the bioavailability of drugs predominantly metabolized by the liver. Animal studies in CRF have shown a major down‐regulation (40–85%) of hepatic cytochrome P‐450 metabolism involving specific isozymes. Phase II reactions such as acetylation and glucuronidation are also involved, with some isozymes showing induction and others inhibition. Hepatic enzymes exhibiting genetic polymorphisms such as N‐acetyl‐transferase‐2 (NAT‐2), which is responsible for the rapid and slow acetylator phenotypes, have been shown to be inhibited by ESRD and reversed by transplantation. There is some evidence pointing to the possibility of inhibitory factors circulating in the serum in ESRD patients which may be dialyzable. This review includes all significant animal and clinical studies using the search terms “chronic renal failure,”“cytochrome P‐450,” and “liver metabolism” over the past 10 years obtained from the National Library of Medicine MEDLINE database, including relevant articles back to 1969.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2010
Daniel G. Bausch; Christiane M. Hadi; Sheik Humarr Khan; Juan J.L. Lertora
Abstract Lassa fever is an acute viral hemorrhagic illness; the virus is endemic in West Africa and also of concern with regard to bioterrorism. Transmission of Lassa virus between humans may occur through direct contact with infected blood or bodily secretions. Oral administration of the antiviral drug ribavirin is often considered for postexposure prophylaxis, but no systematically collected data or uniform guidelines exist for this indication. Furthermore, the relatively low secondary attack rates for Lassa fever, the restriction of the area of endemicity to West Africa, and the infrequency of high-risk exposures make it unlikely that controlled prospective efficacy trials will ever be possible. Recommendations for postexposure use of ribavirin can therefore be made only on the basis of a thorough understanding and logical extrapolation of existing data. Here, we review the pertinent issues and propose guidelines based on extensive review of the literature, as well as our experience in this field. We recommend oral ribavirin postexposure prophylaxis for Lassa fever exclusively for definitive high-risk exposures. These guidelines may also serve for exposure to other hemorrhagic fever viruses susceptible to ribavirin.
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1991
Juan J.L. Lertora; Arvind B. Rege; Jessica T Lacour; Nicholas Ferencz; William J. George; Russell VanDyke; Krishna C. Agrawal; Newton E. Hyslop
Single‐dose and steady‐state pharmacokinetics of the antiviral agent ribavirin were studied in seven male, asymptomatic, human immunodeficiency virus‐seropositive subjects. After a single 400 mg intravenous infusion, mean terminal plasma half‐life (t½) was 27.1 hours, mean volume of distribution was 802 L, and mean total plasma clearance was 26.1 L/hr. Renal clearance was 39% of total clearance and it exceeded creatinine clearance. Oral bioavailability was 44.6%. With long‐term dosing (400 mg orally twice a day) ribavirin accumulated, reaching steady state in 2 to 4 weeks in plasma and red blood cells. Red blood cell concentrations greatly exceeded plasma concentrations (60:1). Plasma concentrations at steady state (trough) were 10‐ to 14‐fold higher than the corresponding single‐dose concentrations. The terminal t½ (washout) after 16 weeks greatly exceeded the t½ observed after a single oral dose (151 versus 29.6 hours). Ribavirin‐induced reductions in hemoglobin ranging from 0.8 to 3.5 gm/dl were well tolerated. There was no significant reduction in CD4 lymphocytes during treatment with ribavirin for 16 weeks in subjects who had more than 200 CD4 cells at entry and who also remained free of opportunistic infections during 24 weeks of observation.
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007
Susan E. Cohn; Jeong Gun Park; D. H. Watts; Alice Stek; Jane Hitti; Pamela A. Clax; Song Yu; Juan J.L. Lertora
We conducted an open‐label, steady‐state pharmacokinetic (PK) study of drug interactions among HIV‐infected women treated with depo‐medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) while on nucleoside analogues plus nelfinavir (N=21), efavirenz (N=17), or nevirapine (N=16); or nucleosides only or no antiretroviral therapy as a control group (N=16). PK parameters were estimated using non‐compartmental analysis, with between‐group comparisons of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) PKs and within‐subject comparisons of ARV PKs before and 4 weeks after DMPA dosing. Plasma progesterone levels were measured at baseline and at 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 weeks after DMPA dosing. There were no significant changes in MPA area under the concentration curve, peak or trough concentrations, or apparent clearance in the nelfinavir, efavirenz, or nevirapine groups compared to the control group. Minor changes in nelfinavir and nevirapine drug exposure were seen after DMPA, but were not considered clinically significant. Suppression of ovulation was maintained.
Peptides | 2007
Min Li; Jerome L. Maderdrut; Juan J.L. Lertora; Vecihi Batuman
We have recently shown significant renoprotective effects with the administration of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) in models of myeloma kidney. PACAP markedly inhibited the production of proinflammatory cytokines stimulated by immunoglobulin light chains in human renal proximal tubule epithelial cells and in the kidneys of rats infused with myeloma light chains. PACAP was also shown to suppress the proliferation of human kappa and lambda light chain-secreting multiple myeloma-derived cells. In this case study, an 81-year-old male patient with active multiple myeloma and myeloma kidney was infused intravenously with synthetic human PACAP38 at a rate of 4 pmol/kg/min for 120 min. The continuous infusion increased the level of PACAP38 in blood, with a plateau at about 0.2 nM during the infusion. The level of PACAP in the blood rapidly declined after the cessation of administration with a half-life of about 5-10 min. The continuous infusion did not significantly alter the basal glucose level, blood gases or blood pressure. There was a large reduction in free lambda light chains in urine after the start of the treatment with PACAP. These studies show that PACAP can be safely used in humans and suggest that it could be used as a novel therapeutic agent for the treatment of multiple myeloma and myeloma kidney.
Contraception | 2008
D. Heather Watts; Jeong Gun Park; Susan E. Cohn; Song Yu; Jane Hitti; Alice Stek; Pamela A. Clax; Laila I. Muderspach; Juan J.L. Lertora
BACKGROUND Concomitant use of antiretroviral (ARV) and hormonal contraceptives may change the metabolism of each and the resulting safety profiles. We evaluated the safety and tolerability of depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA) among women on ARV. STUDY DESIGN HIV-infected women on selected ARV regimens or no ARV were administered DMPA 150 mg intramuscularly and evaluated for 12 weeks for adverse events, changes in CD4+ count and HIV RNA levels, and ovulation. RESULTS Seventy evaluable subjects were included, 16 on nucleoside only or no ARV, 21 on nelfinavir-containing regimens, 17 on efavirenz-containing regimens and 16 on nevirapine-containing regimens. Nine Grade 3 or 4 adverse events occurred in seven subjects; none were judged related to DMPA. The most common findings possibly related to DMPA were abnormal vaginal bleeding (nine, 12.7%), headache (three, 4.2%), abdominal pain, mood changes, insomnia, anorexia and fatigue, each occurring in two (2.9%) subjects. No significant changes in CD4+ count or HIV RNA levels occurred with DMPA. No evidence of ovulation was detected, and no pregnancies occurred. CONCLUSIONS The clinical profile associated with DMPA administration in HIV-infected women, most on ARV, appears similar to that seen in HIV-uninfected women. DMPA prevented ovulation and did not affect CD4+ counts or HIV RNA levels. In concert with previously published DMPA/ARV interaction data, these data suggest that DMPA can be used safely by HIV-infected women on the ARV studied.
Annals of Internal Medicine | 1979
G. Paul Stec; Juan J.L. Lertora; Arthur J. Atkinson; Mary Jane Nevin; William Kushner; Charles Jones; Frank R. Schmid; Joseph Askenazi
Excerpt We describe here the case of a patient with a procainamide-induced systemic lupus erythematosus-like reaction whose arthralgias improved during antiarrhythmic therapy with the major metabol...
Regulatory Peptides | 2008
Min Li; Jerome L. Maderdrut; Juan J.L. Lertora; Akira Arimura; Vecihi Batuman
Renal involvement in patients with multiple myeloma complicates their treatment and shortens their life-span. The main renal lesion is a tubulointerstitial transformation with fibrosis, frequently associated with cast formation in the distal nephron that results from co-precipitation of pathological immunoglobulin light chains with Tamm-Horsfall proteins. The human renal proximal tubular reabsorption of excessive light chains by endocytosis causes cellular protein overload and activates the transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NFkappaB). The activation of NFkappaB promotes the synthesis of inflammatory cytokines and activates signaling pathways, such as mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, Jun kinase, and p38 MAPK, thus promoting interstitial inflammation and fibrosis. We tested the concept that pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a member of the secretin/vasoactive intestinal peptide family, could prevent the development of cast nephropathies. PACAP38 inhibited myeloma light chain-induced proinflammatory cytokine expression with greater potency than dexamethasone, and attenuated the resulting cell damage in the renal proximal tubule epithelial cells. The results indicated that its effects are mediated through inhibition of phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and nuclear translocation of the p50 subunit of NFkappaB via both the PAC(1) and VPAC(1) receptors. PACAP was also shown to be efficacious in other common in vivo animal models for kidney hypertrophies, including streptozotocin-induced diabetic nephropathy and gentamicin-induced nephrotoxicity. Thus, our studies suggest that PACAP38 could be used as a cytoprotective agent that would be effective in the treatment of renal tubule injury in multiple myeloma and other chronic kidney diseases.