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Dive into the research topics where Kim Hung Lo is active.

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Featured researches published by Kim Hung Lo.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2009

A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of tumor necrosis factor-α blockade in severe persistent asthma

Sally E. Wenzel; Peter J. Barnes; Eugene R. Bleecker; Jean Bousquet; William W. Busse; Sven Erik Dahlén; Stephen T. Holgate; Deborah A. Meyers; Klaus F. Rabe; Adam Antczak; James W. Baker; Ildiko Horvath; Zsuzsanna Mark; David I. Bernstein; Edward Kerwin; Rozsa Schlenker-Herceg; Kim Hung Lo; Rosemary Watt; Elliot S. Barnathan; Pascal Chanez

RATIONALE The treatment effect of golimumab, a human monoclonal antibody against tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, in severe persistent asthma is unknown. OBJECTIVES To assess the safety and efficacy of golimumab in a large population of patients with uncontrolled, severe persistent asthma. METHODS From 2004 to 2006, 309 patients with severe and uncontrolled asthma, despite high-dose inhaled corticosteroids and long-acting beta(2) agonists, were randomized 1:1:1:1 to monthly subcutaneous injections of placebo or golimumab (50, 100, or 200 mg) through Week 52. Coprimary endpoints were the change from baseline through Week 24 in prebronchodilator percent-predicted FEV(1) and the number of severe asthma exacerbations through Week 24. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS No significant differences were observed for the change in percent-predicted FEV1 (least squares mean: placebo, 2.44 [95% confidence interval (CI) -0.574 to 5.461]; combined 100-mg and 200-mg, 2.91 [0.696-5.116]) or severe exacerbations (mean +/- SD: placebo, 0.5 +/- 1.07 vs. combined 100-mg and 200-mg 0.5 +/- 0.97) through week 24. Through Week 24, 2.6% of patients treated with placebo vs. 19.5% of those treated with golimumab discontinued the study agent, and 1.3% and 7.8% discontinued study participation, respectively. An unfavorable risk-benefit profile led to early discontinuation of study-agent administration after the Week-24 database lock. Through Week 76, 20.5% of patients treated with placebo and 30.3% of patients treated with golimumab experienced serious adverse events, with serious infections occurring more frequently in golimumab-treated patients. One death and all eight malignancies occurred in the active groups. CONCLUSIONS Overall, treatment with golimumab did not demonstrate a favorable risk-benefit profile in this study population of patients with severe persistent asthma. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT00207740).


European Respiratory Journal | 2008

Efficacy of infliximab in extrapulmonary sarcoidosis: results from a randomised trial

Marc A. Judson; Robert P. Baughman; U. Costabel; Susan Flavin; Kim Hung Lo; Mani S. Kavuru; Marjolein Drent; Daniel A. Culver; Gerald S. Davis; C.M. Fogarty; Gary W. Hunninghake; Alvin S. Teirstein; M. Mandel; Daniel McNally; L. Tanoue; Lee S. Newman; Yasmine S. Wasfi; Herbert Patrick; Milton D. Rossman; Ganesh Raghu; Om P. Sharma; David S. Wilkes; Henry Yeager; J.F. Donahue; M. Kaye; Nadera J. Sweiss; N. Vetter; Michiel Thomeer; M. Brutsche; Laurent P. Nicod

The aim of the present study was to investigate the efficacy of infliximab for the treatment of extrapulmonary sarcoidosis. A prospective, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was conducted, with infliximab at 3 and 5 mg·kg−1 body weight administered over 24 weeks. Extrapulmonary organ severity was determined by a novel severity tool (extrapulmonary physician organ severity tool; ePOST) with an adjustment for the number of organs involved (ePOSTadj). In total, 138 patients enrolled in the trial of infliximab versus placebo for the treatment of chronic corticosteroid-dependent pulmonary sarcoidosis. The baseline severity of extrapulmonary organ involvement, as measured by ePOST, was similar across treatment groups. After 24 weeks of drug-therapy study, the change from baseline to week 24 in ePOST was greater for the combined infliximab group compared with the placebo group. After adjustment for the number of extrapulmonary organs involved, the improvement in ePOSTadj observed in the combined infliximab group was also greater than that observed in placebo-treated patients, after 24 weeks of therapy. The improvements in ePOST and ePOSTadj were not maintained during a subsequent 24-week washout period. Infliximab may be beneficial compared with placebo in the treatment of extrapulmonary sarcoidosis in patients already receiving corticosteroids, as assessed by the severity tool described in the present study.


Chest | 2009

Changes in Chest Roentgenogram of Sarcoidosis Patients During a Clinical Trial of Infliximab Therapy Comparison of Different Methods of Evaluation

Robert P. Baughman; Ralph Shipley; Sujal Desai; Marjolein Drent; Marc A. Judson; Ulrich Costabel; Roland M. du Bois; Mani S. Kavuru; Rozsa Schlenker-Herceg; Susan Flavin; Kim Hung Lo; Elliot S. Barnathan

BACKGROUND The best method to interpret the chest roentgenogram and its sensitivity to detect effect of treatment for sarcoidosis remains unclear. In a double-blind, randomized trial of infliximab for chronic pulmonary sarcoidosis, changes in serial chest roentgenograms were examined by radiologists, blinded to order or treatment. METHODS Chest roentgenograms were obtained at 0, 6, and 24 weeks of therapy with either placebo, 3 mg/kg infliximab, or 5 mg/kg infliximab. Films were reviewed in random order by two independent radiologists, unaware of treatment. The films were compared using two methods: the prespecified objective assessment, a scoring system previously proposed by Muers; and the post hoc assessment, a 5-point Likert scale global assessment between two films. RESULTS Of 138 patients enrolled in the study, chest roentgenograms for all studies were available on 130 patients. There was only fair agreement between the two radiologists in the original stage of the chest roentgenogram (weighted kappa = 0.43; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.32 to 0.54). For the Likert scale of global assessment of change, there was good agreement between the two readers (weighted kappa = 0.61; 95% CI, 0.51 to 0.71). There was good correlation between the two readers for the various components of the Muers score, especially the reticulonodular (R) score (R = 0.578; p < 0.05). The initial R score was positively correlated with improvement in FVC with infliximab therapy (R = 0.239; p < 0.05). CONCLUSION Global assessment and the Muers scoring system were associated with good agreement between two expert readers. Improvement in both scores correlated with improvement in FVC. TRIAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00073437.


American Journal of Clinical Dermatology | 2008

Chronic Facial Sarcoidosis Including Lupus Pernio Clinical Description and Proposed Scoring Systems

Robert P. Baughman; Marc A. Judson; Alvin S. Teirstein; Elyse E. Lower; Kim Hung Lo; Rozsa Schlenker-Herceg; Elliot S. Barnathan

AbstractBackground: Facial lesions including lupus pernio are often a form of chronic cutaneous sarcoidosis. Objective: To evaluate the intra- and inter-observer consistency of objective measures of chronic facial lesions. Method: This was a retrospective study of patients with chronic cutaneous facial lesions including lupus pernio. The lesions were evaluated using two methods. Results: Of the 25 patients studied, 23 were women and 24 were African American. Lungs (24 patients), sinuses (11 patients), and eyes (7 patients) were also affected. The Sarcoidosis Activity and Severity Index (SASI) characterized individual areas of the face, with 95% of the observations being less than 2 points from the median. A facial SASI total gave a score for the entire face and 93.2% of the scores were within 3 points of the median. Conclusion: Patients with sarcoidosis and chronic facial lesions often have lung, sinus, and eye involvement. The SASI is a reproducible scoring system for chronic facial lesions.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2011

Inflammatory Profile and Response to Anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor Therapy in Patients with Chronic Pulmonary Sarcoidosis†

Matthew J. Loza; Carrie Brodmerkel; Roland M. du Bois; Marc A. Judson; Ulrich Costabel; Marjolein Drent; Mani S. Kavuru; Susan Flavin; Kim Hung Lo; Elliot S. Barnathan; Robert P. Baughman

ABSTRACT Sarcoidosis is an inflammatory, granulomatous disease of unknown etiology that most commonly afflicts the lungs. Despite aggressive immunosuppressive therapies, many sarcoidosis patients still chronically present significant symptoms. Infliximab, a therapeutic tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) monoclonal antibody (MAb), produced a small but significant improvement in forced vital capacity (FVC) in sarcoidosis patients in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase II clinical trial. In the current study, serum samples from this clinical trial were assessed to evaluate the underlying hypothesis that treatment with infliximab would reduce systemic inflammation associated with sarcoidosis, correlating with the extent of clinical response. A 92-analyte multiplex panel was used to assess the expression of serum proteins in 134 sarcoidosis patients compared with sera from 50 healthy controls. A strong systemic inflammatory profile was associated with sarcoidosis, with 29 analytes significantly elevated in sarcoidosis (false-discovery rate, <0.05 and >50% higher than controls). The associated analytes included chemokines, neutrophil-associated proteins, acute-phase proteins, and metabolism-associated proteins. This profile was evident despite patients receiving corticosteroids and immunosuppressive therapies. Following infliximab treatment, sarcoidosis patients expressing the highest levels of TNF-α, who had more severe disease, had the greatest improvement in FVC and reduction in serum levels of the inflammatory proteins MIP-1β and TNF-RII. This study supports the need for further exploration of anti-TNF therapy for chronic sarcoidosis patients, particularly for those expressing the highest serum levels of TNF-α.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2014

Radiographic benefit and maintenance of clinical benefit with intravenous golimumab therapy in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis despite methotrexate therapy: results up to 1 year of the phase 3, randomised, multicentre, double blind, placebo controlled GO-FURTHER trial

Michael E. Weinblatt; Rene Westhovens; A. Mendelsohn; L. Kim; Kim Hung Lo; S. Sheng; L. Noonan; J. Lu; Zhenhua Xu; Jocelyn H. Leu; Daniel Baker; Clifton O. Bingham

Objective Report on radiographic effects and maintenance of clinical benefit with intravenous golimumab 2 mg/kg+methotrexate (MTX) for up to week (wk) 52 in active rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods Patients (n=592) with active RA (≥6/66 swollen, ≥6/68 tender joints, C reactive protein (CRP) ≥1.0 mg/dL and positive for rheumatoid factor and/or anticyclic citrullinated protein antibody at screening) despite MTX ≥3 months (stable dose of 15–25 mg/week for ≥4 weeks) participated in this multicentre, international, randomised, double blind, placebo controlled, phase 3 study. Patients were randomised (2:1) to receive intravenous golimumab 2 mg/kg or placebo infusions at weeks 0 and 4 and then every 8 weeks; patients continued their stable MTX regimen. Placebo patients started golimumab 2 mg/kg at wk16 (early escape; <10% improvement in tender and swollen joints) or wk24 (crossover by design). Week 24 and wk52 radiographic (van der Heijde-Sharp (vdH-S) scores), clinical efficacy and safety data up to 1 year are reported here. Results Significant and rapid clinical improvement was observed up to wk24 of intravenous golimumab therapy. Golimumab+MTX treated patients demonstrated less radiographic progression than placebo treated patients at wk24 (vdH-S score mean change 0.03 vs 1.09; p<0.001) and wk52 (0.13 vs 1.22; p=0.001). Among patients with ≥20% improvement in the American College of Rheumatology response criteria or who achieved a ‘good’ or ‘moderate’ response according to the 28 joint Disease Activity Score employing CRP at wk24, approximately 80% maintained this response up until wk52. Through an average of 43.5 weeks of follow-up, 64.6% of patients receiving golimumab+MTX reported adverse events, most commonly non-serious infections. Conclusions In patients with active RA despite MTX, intravenous golimumab+MTX yielded significant inhibition of structural damage at wk24 and wk52, and sustained clinical improvement in signs and symptoms with no new safety signals up to 1 year. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00973479, EudraCT 2008–006 064–11.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2014

The Effect of Intravenous Golimumab on Health-related Quality of Life in Rheumatoid Arthritis: 24-week Results of the Phase III GO-FURTHER Trial

Clifton O. Bingham; Michael E. Weinblatt; Chenglong Han; T. Gathany; L. Kim; Kim Hung Lo; Daniel Baker; A. Mendelsohn; Rene Westhovens

Objective. To evaluate the effects of intravenous (IV) golimumab 2 mg/kg + methotrexate (MTX) on patient-reported measures of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) despite prior MTX therapy. Methods. In this randomized, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase III trial, adults with RA were randomly assigned to receive IV placebo (n = 197) or golimumab 2 mg/kg (n = 395) infusions at Week 0, Week 4, and every 8 weeks thereafter. All patients continued stable oral MTX (15–25 mg/wk). HRQOL assessments included Health Assessment Questionnaire-Disability Index (HAQ-DI; physical function), Medical Outcomes Study Short Form-36 questionnaire physical/mental component summary (SF-36 PCS/MCS) scores, EQ-5D assessment of current health state, Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue (FACIT-Fatigue) questionnaire, and disease effect on productivity [10-cm visual analog scale (VAS)]. Results. Mean HAQ-DI improvements from baseline were significantly greater with golimumab + MTX than placebo + MTX at Week 14 and Week 24 (p < 0.001). Significantly greater improvements in all 8 individual SF-36 subscores and both the SF-36 PCS and MCS scores (p < 0.001) also accompanied golimumab + MTX therapy. Improved EQ-5D and EQ-5D VAS (p < 0.001) and FACIT-Fatigue (p < 0.001) scores were also observed for golimumab + MTX-treated patients at Week 12, Week 16, and Week 24, and greater proportions of golimumab + MTX-treated patients had clinically meaningful improvements in these measures. Greater reductions in disease effect on productivity were observed with golimumab + MTX versus placebo + MTX at Week 24 (p < 0.001). Improvements in physical function, HRQOL, fatigue, and productivity significantly correlated with disease activity improvement. Conclusion. In active RA, IV golimumab + MTX significantly improved physical function, HRQOL, fatigue, and productivity using multiple measurement tools; all correlated with improvements in disease activity (NCT00973479, EudraCT 2008-006064-11).


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2017

Safety and Efficacy of Intravenous Golimumab in Patients With Active Psoriatic Arthritis

Arthur Kavanaugh; M. Elaine Husni; Diane D. Harrison; L. Kim; Kim Hung Lo; Jocelyn H. Leu; Elizabeth C. Hsia

To evaluate the safety and efficacy of intravenous (IV) golimumab treatment in psoriatic arthritis (PsA).


Respiratory Medicine | 2013

Long-term safety study of infliximab in moderate-to-severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Stephen I. Rennard; Susan Flavin; Prasheen Agarwal; Kim Hung Lo; Elliot S. Barnathan

RATIONALE There was an increased number of malignancies in infliximab-treated (5.7%) over placebo-treated (1.3%) patients in a 44-week, phase 2 clinical study of 234 patients with moderate-to-severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). OBJECTIVES To collect malignancy and mortality data from completed clinical studies of infliximab in COPD treatment. METHODS The multicenter, observational Remicade Safety Under Long-Term Study in COPD (RESULTS COPD) collected malignancy and mortality data every six months for five years from patients who received ≥1 study-agent dose in a phase 2 study. Co-primary endpoints were the number of patients with malignancy and the number of deaths. Secondary endpoints included the number of patients with a malignancy according to malignancy type. RESULTS There was a gap period between the end of the phase 2 study and the initiation of RESULTS COPD, during which six malignancies and 14 deaths were reported spontaneously for the 107 (45.7%) of 234 patients with long-term safety information. Twenty-eight patients (overall 12.0%; placebo 10.4%, infliximab 12.7%) reported malignancies, including 12 patients during RESULTS COPD. Twenty-six patients (overall 11.1%; placebo 9.1%, infliximab 12.1%) died, including nine during RESULTS COPD. Lung cancer was the most common malignancy type (placebo n = 2; infliximab n = 10). CONCLUSIONS The greater proportion of malignancies observed with infliximab versus placebo in a phase 2 study diminished over the long-term follow-up. Due to the observational nature, limited patient participation, potential reporting bias from the interim spontaneous reporting period, and unblinding of all patients, more definitive conclusions cannot be drawn.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2015

Maintenance of Clinical and Radiographic Benefit With Intravenous Golimumab Therapy in Patients With Active Rheumatoid Arthritis Despite Methotrexate Therapy: Week-112 Efficacy and Safety Results of the Open-Label Long-Term Extension of a Phase III, Double-Blind, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial.

Clifton O. Bingham; A. Mendelsohn; L. Kim; Zhenhua Xu; Jocelyn H. Leu; Chenglong Han; Kim Hung Lo; Rene Westhovens; Michael E. Weinblatt

To evaluate the safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetics, immunogenicity, and radiographic progression through 2 years of treatment with intravenous (IV) golimumab plus methotrexate (MTX) in an open‐label extension of a phase III trial of patients with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) despite MTX therapy.

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L. Kim

Janssen Pharmaceutica

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Elizabeth C. Hsia

University of Pennsylvania

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Mani S. Kavuru

East Carolina University

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