Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Lauren C. Tantalo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lauren C. Tantalo.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004

Normalization of cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities after neurosyphilis therapy: does HIV status matter?

Christina M. Marra; Clare L. Maxwell; Lauren C. Tantalo; Molly Eaton; Anne Rompalo; Charles Raines; Bradley P. Stoner; James J. Corbett; Michael Augenbraun; Mark Zajackowski; Romina Kee; Sheila A. Lukehart

To identify factors that affect normalization of laboratory measures after treatment for neurosyphilis, 59 subjects with neurosyphilis underwent repeated lumbar punctures and venipunctures after completion of therapy. The median duration of follow-up was 6.9 months. Stepwise Cox regression models were used to determine the influence of clinical and laboratory features on normalization of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), white blood cells (WBCs), CSF protein concentration, CSF Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) reactivity, and serum rapid plasma reagin (RPR) titer. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected subjects were 2.5 times less likely to normalize CSF-VDRL reactivity than were HIV-uninfected subjects. HIV-infected subjects with peripheral blood CD4+ T cell counts of < or =200 cells/ mu L were 3.7 times less likely to normalize CSF-VDRL reactivity than were those with CD4+ T cell counts of >200 cells/ mu L. CSF WBC count and serum RPR reactivity were more likely to normalize but CSF-VDRL reactivity was less likely to normalize with higher baseline values. Future studies should address whether more intensive therapy for neurosyphilis is warranted in HIV-infected individuals.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008

Normalization of Serum Rapid Plasma Reagin Titer Predicts Normalization of Cerebrospinal Fluid and Clinical Abnormalities after Treatment of Neurosyphilis

Christina M. Marra; Clare L. Maxwell; Lauren C. Tantalo; Sharon K. Sahi; Sheila A. Lukehart

BACKGROUND Success of neurosyphilis treatment is defined by normalization of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and clinical abnormalities. The goal of this study was to determine whether normalization of serum rapid plasma reagin (RPR) titer could accurately predict treatment success. METHODS One hundred ten patients who were enrolled in a longitudinal study of CSF abnormalities in syphilis had asymptomatic syphilitic meningitis, symptomatic syphilitic meningitis, or syphilitic eye disease and were treated for neurosyphilis. At 4, 7, and 13 months after treatment, serum RPR titer and CSF and clinical abnormalities were analyzed for normalization. Odds ratios for normalization of each CSF and clinical abnormality when serum RPR titer had normalized and the positive predictive value of normalization of serum RPR titer for normalization of CSF and clinical abnormalities were determined. RESULTS Serum RPR titer had normalized in 63 patients (57%) by 4 months after treatment, in 94 (85%) by 7 months, and in 97 (88%) by 13 months. Except for CSF protein concentration, normalization of serum RPR titer predicted normalization of other CSF and clinical abnormalities in >80% of patients at 4 months, >85% at 7 months, and >90% at 13 months. The odds of normalization of CSF and clinical abnormalities were 28-57-fold higher when serum RPR titer had normalized, compared with when it had not. Normalization of serum RPR titer was consistently less accurate in predicting treatment success in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients who were not receiving antiretroviral therapy, compared with those who were receiving such therapy. CONCLUSIONS In most instances, normalization of serum RPR titer correctly predicts success of treatment of neurosyphilis, and follow-up lumbar puncture can be avoided.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2006

Antibiotic Selection May Contribute to Increases in Macrolide-Resistant Treponema pallidum

Christina M. Marra; April P. Colina; Charmie Godornes; Lauren C. Tantalo; Maritza Puray; Arturo Centurion-Lara; Sheila A. Lukehart

To determine whether the 23S rRNA mutation that confers macrolide resistance is present in >1 Treponema pallidum strain, 58 isolates collected between 2001 and 2005 were screened for this mutation and for an unrelated sequence that distinguishes between strains. The odds of identifying a macrolide-resistant strain increased over time (P=.006). In subjects who had received macrolides in the previous year, the relative risk of harboring a resistant strain was 2.2 (95% confidence interval, 1.1-4.4; P=.02). The macrolide-resistant strains were not identical. These findings suggest that macrolide resistance may be increasing in multiple strains in response to antibiotic pressure.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2010

CXCL13 as a cerebrospinal fluid marker for neurosyphilis in HIV-infected patients with syphilis.

Christina M. Marra; Lauren C. Tantalo; Sharon K. Sahi; Clare L. Maxwell; Sheila A. Lukehart

Background: Asymptomatic neurosyphilis is more difficult to diagnose in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients because HIV itself can cause cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis. The proportion of CSF lymphocytes that are B cells is elevated in neurosyphilis, suggesting that the CSF concentration of the B cell chemoattractant, chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 13 (CXCL13) concentration may also be elevated. Methods: CSF and blood were collected from 199 HIV-infected patients with syphilis and neurosyphilis. Serum and CSF CXCL13 concentrations were determined. Results: Patients with neurosyphilis had higher CSF and serum CXCL13 concentrations compared to patients with syphilis but not neurosyphilis. The odds of having symptomatic neurosyphilis were increased by 2.23-fold for every log increase in CSF CXCL13 concentration and were independent of CSF white blood cell and plasma HIV RNA concentrations, peripheral blood CD4+ T cell count and use of antiretroviral medications. A cut-off of 10 pg/mL CSF CXCL13 had high sensitivity and a cut-off of 250 pg/mL or evidence of intrathecal synthesis of CXCL13 had high specificity for diagnosis of both symptomatic and asymptomatic neurosyphilis. CSF concentrations of CXCL13 declined after treatment for neurosyphilis. Conclusions: CSF CXCL13 concentration may be particularly useful for diagnosis of neurosyphilis in HIV-infected patients because it is independent of CSF pleocytosis and markers of HIV disease.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

Treponema pallidum strain-specific differences in neuroinvasion and clinical phenotype in a rabbit model.

Lauren C. Tantalo; Sheila A. Lukehart; Christina M. Marra

BACKGROUND The relationship between neuroinvasion and other manifestations of syphilis and the infecting strain of Treponema pallidum is not known. METHODS Six groups of 8 rabbits were intravenously infected with 1 x 108 organisms from 1 of 6 strains of T. pallidum. Rabbits were examined 2-3 times/week; blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were collected weekly and every 2 weeks, respectively, for 10-12 weeks. Degree of CSF pleocytosis and skin-lesion severity were estimated by the area under the white blood cell-versus-time and lesion-versus-time curves. RESULTS Maximum serum Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test titers, time to maximum titer, degree of CSF pleocytosis, and severity of skin lesions differed significantly among infecting strains. Overall, T. pallidum was identified, by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, in CSF from 13 (27.7%) of 47 rabbits and was never identified in CSF from rabbits infected with 1 of the strains. The time course of detection varied by infecting strain. Severity of skin lesions and of CSF pleocytosis were inversely correlated (P=.005). CONCLUSIONS There are particularly neuroinvasive T. pallidum strains, and the clinical phenotype of infection varies with infecting strain. This information could ultimately be used to identify patients at increased risk for neuroinvasion and, thus, at risk for neurosyphilis.


Neurology | 2004

Alternative cerebrospinal fluid tests to diagnose neurosyphilis in HIV-infected individuals.

Christina M. Marra; Lauren C. Tantalo; Clare L. Maxwell; K. Dougherty; B. Wood

Objective: To identify alternatives to the CSF-Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test for the diagnosis of neurosyphilis in HIV-infected individuals. Methods: CSF fluorescent treponemal antibody (FTA) reactivity and % CSF lymphocytes that were B cells in fresh and frozen samples were determined for 47 HIV-infected cases with syphilis and 26 HIV-infected controls. As for serum, CSF fluorescent treponemal antibody reactivity ≥2+ was considered positive. Based on the results in controls and cases with normal CSF measures, cut-offs for elevated CSF B cells were proposed to be ≥9% in fresh and ≥20% in frozen samples. Neurosyphilis was defined as a reactive CSF-VDRL. Results: CSF-FTA-ABS (absorbed) and CSF-FTA (unabsorbed and undiluted) were 100% sensitive for the diagnosis of neurosyphilis. Elevated % CSF B cells in fresh and cryopreserved samples was specific (100%) but not sensitive (40 and 43%) in post hoc analyses. The results of CSF-FTA and assessment of % CSF B cells together allowed 16% of cases with pleocytosis but nonreactive CSF-VDRL to be diagnosed with neurosyphilis and 26% to be diagnosed as not having neurosyphilis. Conclusion: When the CSF-VDRL is nonreactive, CSF-FTA and % CSF B cells may help exclude or establish the diagnosis of neurosyphilis.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2012

Two Mutations associated with Macrolide Resistance in Treponema pallidum: Increasing Prevalence and Correlation with Molecular Strain Type in Seattle, Washington

Matthew Grimes; Sharon K. Sahi; B. Charmie Godornes; Lauren C. Tantalo; Neal Roberts; David Bostick; Christina M. Marra; Sheila A. Lukehart

Background Although azithromycin promised to be a safe and effective single-dose oral treatment of early syphilis, azithromycin treatment failure has been documented and is associated with mutations in the 23S rDNA of corresponding Treponema pallidum strains. The prevalence of strains harboring these mutations varies throughout the United States and the world. We examined T. pallidum strains circulating in Seattle, Washington, from 2001 to 2010 to determine the prevalence of 2 mutations associated with macrolide resistance and to determine whether these mutations were associated with certain T. pallidum strain types. Methods Subjects were enrolled in a separate ongoing study of cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities in patients with syphilis. T. pallidum DNA purified from blood and T. pallidum strains isolated from blood or cerebrospinal fluid were analyzed for two 23S rDNA mutations and for the molecular targets used in an enhanced molecular stain typing system. Results Nine molecular strain types of T. pallidum were identified in Seattle from 2001 to 2010. Both macrolide resistance mutations were identified in Seattle strains, and the prevalence of resistant T. pallidum exceeded 80% in 2005 and increased through 2010. Resistance mutations were associated with discrete molecular strain types of T. pallidum. Conclusions Macrolide-resistant T. pallidum strains are highly prevalent in Seattle, and each mutation is associated with discrete strain types. Macrolides should not be considered for treatment of syphilis in regions where prevalence of the mutations is high. Combining the resistance mutations with molecular strain typing permits a finer analysis of the epidemiology of syphilis in a community.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Antigenic Variation in Treponema pallidum: TprK Sequence Diversity Accumulates in Response to Immune Pressure during Experimental Syphilis

Lorenzo Giacani; Barbara J. Molini; Eric Y. Kim; B. Charmie Godornes; B. Troy Leader; Lauren C. Tantalo; Arturo Centurion-Lara; Sheila A. Lukehart

Pathogens that cause chronic infections often employ antigenic variation to evade the immune response and persist in the host. In Treponema pallidum (T. pallidum), the causative agent of syphilis, the TprK Ag undergoes variation of seven V regions (V1–V7) by nonreciprocal recombination of silent donor cassettes with the tprK expression site. These V regions are the targets of the host humoral immune response during experimental infection. The present study addresses the causal role of the acquired immune response in the selection of TprK variants in two ways: 1) by investigating TprK variants arising in immunocompetent versus immunosuppressed hosts; and 2) by investigating the effect of prior specific immunization on selection of TprK variants during infection. V region diversity, particularly in V6, accumulates more rapidly in immunocompetent rabbits than in pharmacologically immunosuppressed rabbits (treated with weekly injections of methylprednisolone acetate). In a complementary experiment, rabbits preimmunized with V6 region synthetic peptides had more rapid accumulation of V6 variant treponemes than control rabbits. These studies demonstrate that the host immune response selects against specific TprK epitopes expressed on T. pallidum, resulting in immune selection of new TprK variants during infection, confirming a role for antigenic variation in syphilis.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2012

The rapid plasma reagin test cannot replace the venereal disease research laboratory test for neurosyphilis diagnosis.

Christina M. Marra; Lauren C. Tantalo; Clare L. Maxwell; Emily L. Ho; Sharon K. Sahi; Trudy Jones

Background: The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test is a mainstay for neurosyphilis diagnosis, but it lacks diagnostic sensitivity and is logistically complicated. The rapid plasma reagin (RPR) test is easier to perform, but its appropriateness for use on CSF is controversial. Methods: RPR reactivity was determined for CSF from 149 individuals with syphilis using 2 methods. The CSF-RPR was performed according to the method for serum. The CSF-RPR-V was performed using the method recommended for the CSF-VDRL. Laboratory-defined neurosyphilis included reactive CSF-fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption test and CSF white blood cells >20/uL. Symptomatic neurosyphilis was defined as vision loss or hearing loss. Results: CSF-VDRL was reactive in 45 (30.2%) patients. Of these, 29 (64.4%) were CSF-RPR reactive and 37 (82.2%) were CSF-RPR-V reactive. There were no instances where the CSF-VDRL was nonreactive but the CSF-RPR or CSF-RPR-V was reactive. Among the 28 samples that were reactive in all 3 tests, CSF-VDRL titers (median [IQR], 1:4 [1:4–1:16]) were significantly higher than CSF-RPR (1:2 [1:1–1:4], P = 0.0002) and CSF-RPR-V titers (1:4 [1:2–1:8], P = 0.01). The CSF RPR and the CSF-RPR-V tests had lower sensitivities than the CSF-VDRL: 56.4% and 59.0% versus 71.8% for laboratory-diagnosed neurosyphilis and 51.5% and 57.6% versus 66.7% for symptomatic neurosyphilis. Conclusions: Compared with the CSF-VDRL, the CSF-RPR has a high false-negative rate, thus not improving upon this known limitation of the CSF-VDRL for neurosyphilis diagnosis. Adapting the RPR procedure to mimic the CSF-VDRL decreased, but did not eliminate, the number of false negatives and did not avoid all the logistical complications of the CSF-VDRL.


Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2016

Molecular Typing of Treponema pallidum in Ocular Syphilis

Sara E. Oliver; Sharon K. Sahi; Lauren C. Tantalo; Charmie Godornes; Robyn Neblett Fanfair; Lauri E. Markowitz; Sheila A. Lukehart; Christina M. Marra

Background Syphilis can have many clinical manifestations, including eye involvement, or “ocular syphilis.” In 2015, an increase in reported cases of ocular syphilis and potential case clusters raised concern for an oculotropic strain of Treponema pallidum, the infectious agent of syphilis. Molecular typing was used to examine strains found in cases of ocular syphilis in the United States. Methods In 2015, after a clinical advisory issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, pretreatment clinical specimens from US patients with ocular syphilis were sent to a research laboratory for molecular analysis of T. pallidum DNA. Molecular typing was conducted on these specimens, and results were compared with samples collected from Seattle patients diagnosed with syphilis, but without ocular symptoms. Results Samples were typed from 18 patients with ocular syphilis and from 45 patients with syphilis, but without ocular symptoms. Clinical data were available for 14 ocular syphilis patients: most were men, human immunodeficiency virus–infected, and had early syphilis. At least 5 distinct strain types of Treponema pallidum were identified in these patients, and 9 types were identified in the Seattle nonocular patients. 14d/g was the most common type in both groups. An unusual strain type was detected in a small cluster of ocular syphilis patients in Seattle. Conclusions Ocular syphilis is a serious sequela of syphilis. In this preliminary study, clear evidence of a predominant oculotropic strain causing ocular syphilis was not detected. Identification of cases and prompt treatment is critical in the management of ocular syphilis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Lauren C. Tantalo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sharon K. Sahi

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emily L. Ho

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Trudy Jones

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge