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Dive into the research topics where Kenneth F. Wagner is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenneth F. Wagner.


Science | 1996

Antiviral effect and ex vivo CD4+ T cell proliferation in HIV-positive patients as a result of CD28 costimulation.

Bruce L. Levine; Joseph D. Mosca; James L. Riley; Richard G. Carroll; Maryanne Vahey; Linda L. Jagodzinski; Kenneth F. Wagner; Douglas L. Mayers; Donald S. Burke; Owen S. Weislow; Daniel C. St. Louis; Carl H. June

Because stimulation of CD4+ lymphocytes leads to activation of human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) replication, viral spread, and cell death, adoptive CD4+ T cell therapy has not been possible. When antigen and CD28 receptors on cultured T cells were stimulated by monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to CD3 and CD28 that had been immobilized, there was an increase in the number of polyclonal CD4+ T cells from HIV-infected donors. Activated cells predominantly secreted cytokines associated with T helper cell type 1 function. The HIV-1 viral load declined in the absence of antiretroviral agents. Moreover, CD28 stimulation of CD4+ T cells from uninfected donors rendered these cells highly resistant to HIV-1 infection. Immobilization of CD28 mAb was crucial to the development of HIV resistance, as cells stimulated with soluble CD28 mAb were highly susceptible to HIV infection. The CD28-mediated antiviral effect occurred early in the viral life cycle, before HIV-1 DNA integration. These data may facilitate immune reconstitution and gene therapy approaches in persons with HIV infection.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1998

Once Weekly Azithromycin Therapy for Prevention of Mycobacterium avium Complex Infection in Patients with AIDS: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Multicenter Trial

Edward C. Oldfield; W. Jeffrey Fessel; Michael W. Dunne; Gordon M. Dickinson; Mark R. Wallace; William Byrne; Raymond T. Chung; Kenneth F. Wagner; Scott F. Paparello; Daniel B. Craig; Gregory P. Melcher; Margan J. Zajdowicz; Richard F. Williams; J. William Kelly; Michael Zelasky; Leonid Heifets; Jonathan D. Berman

We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter trial of azithromycin (1,200 mg once weekly) for the prevention of Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infection in patients with AIDS and a CD4 cell count of < 100/mm3. In an intent-to-treat analysis through the end of therapy plus 30 days, nine (10.6%) of 85 azithromycin recipients and 22 (24.7%) of 89 placebo recipients developed MAC infection (hazard ratio, 0.34; P = .004). There was no difference in the ranges of minimal inhibitory concentrations of either clarithromycin or azithromycin for the five breakthrough (first) MAC isolates from the azithromycin group and the 18 breakthrough MAC isolates from the placebo group. Of the 76 patients who died during the study, four (10.5%) of 38 azithromycin recipients and 12 (31.6%) of 38 placebo recipients had a MAC infection followed by death (P = .025). For deaths due to all causes, there was no difference in time to death or number of deaths between the two groups. Episodes of non-MAC bacterial infection per 100 patient years occurred in 43 azithromycin recipients and 88 placebo recipients (relative risk, 0.49; 95% confidence interval, 0.33-0.73). The most common toxic effect noted during the study was gastrointestinal, reported by 78.9% of azithromycin recipients and 27.5% of placebo recipients. Azithromycin given once weekly is safe and effective in preventing disseminated MAC infection, death due to MAC infection, and respiratory tract infections in patients with AIDS and CD4 cell counts of < 100/mm3.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 1994

Dideoxynucleoside resistance emerges with prolonged zidovudine monotherapy. The RV43 Study Group.

D L Mayers; Anthony J. Japour; J M Arduino; S M Hammer; R Reichman; Kenneth F. Wagner; Raymond T. Chung; James R. Lane; Clyde S. Crumpacker; G X McLeod

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates resistant to zidovudine (ZDV) have previously been demonstrated to exhibit in vitro cross-resistance to other similar dideoxynucleoside agents which contain a 3-azido group. However, cross-resistance to didanosine (ddI) or dideoxycytidine (ddC) has been less well documented. ZDV, ddI, and ddC susceptibility data have been collected from clinical HIV-1 isolates obtained by five clinical centers and their respective retrovirology laboratories. All subjects were treated only with ZDV. Clinical HIV-1 isolates were isolated, amplified, and assayed for drug susceptibility in standardized cultures of phytohemagglutinin-stimulated donor peripheral blood mononuclear cells obtained from healthy seronegative donors. All five cohorts showed a correlation between decreased in vitro susceptibility to ZDV and decreased susceptibility to ddI and ddC. For each 10-fold decrease in ZDV susceptibility, an average corresponding decrease of 2.2-fold in ddI susceptibility was observed (129 isolates studied; P < 0.001, Fishers test of combined significance). Similarly, susceptibility to ddC decreased 2.0-fold for each 10-fold decrease in ZDV susceptibility (82 isolates studied; P < 0.001, Fishers test of combined significance). These data indicate that a correlation exists between HIV-1 susceptibilities to ZDV and ddI or ddC for clinical HIV-1 isolates.


Cytometry | 1997

Measurement of CD69 induction in the assessment of immune function in asymptomatic HIV-infected individuals

S.P. Perfetto; T.E. Hickey; Patrick J. Blair; Vernon C. Maino; Kenneth F. Wagner; S. Zhou; Douglas L. Mayers; D C St Louis; Carl H. June; Jeffrey N. Siegel

Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from many asymptomatic HIV-infected patients exhibit defects in cytokine production and impaired proliferative responses in vitro but the mechanisms underlying this subclinical immune deficiency are controversial. To determine whether abnormalities in the earliest events following receptor engagement may help to explain the in vitro immune dysfunction, we measured the inducibility of the early activation marker CD69 in T cells from asymptomatic HIV-infected individuals in response to stimulation with anti-CD2 or anti-CD3 mAb. In a whole blood assay, we found that induction of CD69 was markedly impaired in CD4+ T cells from later-stage HIV-infected patients (CD4 counts 200-400/mm3) compared to uninfected controls. Among early stage patients (CD4 > 400/mm3), a subset (29%) had impaired CD69 induction. CD69 responses were equally depressed after stimulation through the CD3 or CD2 receptor pathways. Survey of a panel of immunophenotypic markers and propensity for apoptosis demonstrated a significant association between depressed induction of CD69 and decreased percentages of CD4+CD26+ and CD4+CD95+ cells but no association with the level of apoptosis. These data indicate that defects in T lymphocyte activation through CD3 and CD2 can be measured within hours of receptor stimulation in asymptomatic HIV-infected individuals and might be useful to monitor as an indicator of immune function in these patients.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 1997

Impaired Induction of the Apoptosis-Protective Protein Bcl-xL in Activated PBMC from Asymptomatic HIV-Infected Individuals

Patrick J. Blair; Lawrence H. Boise; Stephen P. Perfetto; Bruce L. Levine; Gil McCrary; Kenneth F. Wagner; Daniel C. St. Louis; Craig B. Thompson; Jeffrey N. Siegel; Carl H. June

Progression to AIDS in asymptomatic HIV-infected individuals is characterized by a gradual but progressive loss of CD4+ T cells. While the mechanisms underlying this decline are currently unknown, recent evidence suggests that these cells are abnormally sensitive to apoptosis in response to activation signals. Recent work has implicated downregulation of Bcl-2 with the increased spontaneous apoptosis in lymphocytes from HIV-infected patients. We have evaluated the roles of the apoptosis-protective proteins Bcl-2 and Bcl-x in stimulated PBMC from asymptomatic HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected individuals. We found that Bcl-2 was constitutively expressed in PBMC from both HIV-infected and uninfected samples. However, Bcl-x induction was delayed and responses were decreased in stimulated HIV-infected samples. Additionally, single-cell intracellular staining of Bcl-x revealed a significant inverse correlation between PWM-induced Bcl-x expression and apoptosis (r = −0.695, P = 0.005). This was confirmed at the single-cell level in direct experiments when stimulated cells were sorted based on Bcl-x induction and then measured for apoptosis. Furthermore, low Bcl-x expression was not due to reduced lymphocyte activation following PWM stimulation. Our data indicate that the induction of Bcl-x is markedly impaired in asymptomatic HIV-infected patients and that stimuli which induce inadequate expression of Bcl-x are associated with increased levels of apoptosis in these cells.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 1998

Size and duration of zidovudine benefit in 1003 HIV-infected patients: U.S. Army, Navy, and Air Force natural history data

Lytt I. Gardner; Shannon H. Harrison; Craig W. Hendrix; Stephen P. Blatt; Kenneth F. Wagner; Raymond C.-Y. Chung; Richard W. Harris; David L. Cohn; Donald S. Burke; Douglas L. Mayers

OBJECTIVESnThe studys objectives were to determine the size and duration of benefits of early versus delayed versus late treatment with zidovudine (ZDV) on disease progression and mortality in HIV-infected patients, and whether patients rapidly progressing before ZDV treatment had a different outcome from those not rapidly progressing before ZDV.nnnDESIGNnThe design was an inception cohort of 1003 HIV-infected patients. One hundred and seventy-four of the 1003 patients were treated before CD4 counts fell to <400 x 10(9)/L, (early treatment); 183 of 1003 patients were treated after CD4 counts fell to <400 x 10(9)/L but before clinical disease developed (delayed treatment); and 646 of the 1003 patients had either been treated after clinical disease developed or had not been treated at all by the end of follow-up (late treatment). Outcomes were progression to clinical HIV disease and mortality.nnnRESULTSnThe relative risk (RR) of progression for early versus delayed treatment was 0.58 (p < .03), and durability of ZDV benefits on progression was estimated at no more than 2.0 years; however, this estimate had wide confidence intervals. The RR of progression for delayed versus late treatment was 0.54 p < .0001, and durability of ZDV benefits was estimated at 1.74 years; this estimate had narrow confidence intervals. Survival was better for the early versus delayed treatment (RR = 0.55), but this difference was not statistically significant. In the subgroup of patients with more rapid CD4 decline prior to ZDV therapy, significant benefits on progression were observed for early versus delayed ZDV therapy (RR = 0.42, p = .02) and delayed versus late ZDV therapy (RR = 0.51; p = .0004). Duration of benefit was estimated to be 4.5 years (early versus delayed) and 1.7 years (delayed versus late). For patients with less rapid pre-ZDV decline in CD4 levels, a significant progression benefit was observed for delayed versus late therapy (RR = 0.50; p = .02). Duration of benefit in this subgroup was estimated to be 1.8 years. No significant benefit was found for early versus delayed treatment (RR = 1.12) in the less rapid pre-ZDV CD4 cell decline subgroup.nnnCONCLUSIONSnEarly treatment compared with delayed treatment was associated with a sizable reduction in HIV progression, but the duration of benefits was estimated to last only about 2 years. Delayed treatment compared with late treatment with ZDV was associated with substantial reduction of progression, but this reduction was also clearly limited in duration. Benefits on progression and mortality for the early treatment group were heavily dependent on the pre-ZDV CD4 slope. In the subgroup of patients with the most rapid pre-ZDV CD4 cell declines, the duration of benefit was much longer, possibly as long as 4 years.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1996

Immunization with Envelope Subunit Vaccine Products Elicits Neutralizing Antibodies against Laboratory-Adapted but Not Primary Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1

John R. Mascola; S. W. Snyder; O. S. Weislow; S. M. Belay; Robert B. Belshe; David H. Schwartz; Mary Lou Clements; Raphael Dolin; Barney S. Graham; Geoffrey J. Gorse; Michael C. Keefer; McElrath Mj; Mary Clare Walker; Kenneth F. Wagner; John G. McNeil; Francine McCutchan; Donald S. Burke


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1994

Two Antigenically Distinct Subtypes of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: Viral Genotype Predicts Neutralization Serotype

John R. Mascola; Joost Louwagie; Francine E. McCutchan; Carrie L. Fischer; Patricia A. Hegerich; Kenneth F. Wagner; Arnold K. Fowler; John G. McNeil; Donald S. Burke


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1997

Mucosal Immune Responses in Four Distinct Compartments of Women Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1: A Comparison by Site and Correlation with Clinical Information

Andrew W. Artenstein; Thomas C. VanCott; Karl V. Sitz; Merlin L. Robb; Kenneth F. Wagner; Steven C. D. Veit; Abby F. Rogers; Robin P. Garner; John W. Byron; Paul R. Burnett; Deborah L. Birx


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1989

Cure of Bacille Calmette-Guérin Vaccination Abscesses with Erythromycin

Philip M. Murphy; Douglas L. Mayers; Nadine F. Brock; Kenneth F. Wagner

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Carl H. June

University of Pennsylvania

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Jeffrey N. Siegel

National Institutes of Health

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John R. Mascola

National Institutes of Health

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Patrick J. Blair

National Institutes of Health

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Arnold K. Fowler

Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine

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D C St Louis

Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine

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Daniel C. St. Louis

Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine

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Francine McCutchan

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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