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Featured researches published by Lisa C. Goldfeder.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

Linezolid for Treatment of Chronic Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Myungsun Lee; Jong Seok Lee; Matthew W. Carroll; Hongjo Choi; Seonyeong Min; Laura E. Via; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Eunhwa Kang; Boyoung Jin; Hyunchul Kim; Han-Seung Jeon; Ina Jeong; Joon Sung Joh; Ray Y. Chen; Kenneth N. Olivier; Pamela A. Shaw; Dean Follmann; Sun Dae Song; Jong-Koo Lee; Duk-Hyoung Lee; Cheon Tae Kim; Véronique Dartois; Seung-Kyu Park; Sang-Nae Cho; Clifton E. Barry

BACKGROUND Linezolid has antimycobacterial activity in vitro and is increasingly used for patients with highly drug-resistant tuberculosis. METHODS We enrolled 41 patients who had sputum-culture-positive extensively drug-resistant (XDR) tuberculosis and who had not had a response to any available chemotherapeutic option during the previous 6 months. Patients were randomly assigned to linezolid therapy that started immediately or after 2 months, at a dose of 600 mg per day, without a change in their background regimen. The primary end point was the time to sputum-culture conversion on solid medium, with data censored 4 months after study entry. After confirmed sputum-smear conversion or 4 months (whichever came first), patients underwent a second randomization to continued linezolid therapy at a dose of 600 mg per day or 300 mg per day for at least an additional 18 months, with careful toxicity monitoring. RESULTS By 4 months, 15 of the 19 patients (79%) in the immediate-start group and 7 of the 20 (35%) in the delayed-start group had culture conversion (P=0.001). Most patients (34 of 39 [87%]) had a negative sputum culture within 6 months after linezolid had been added to their drug regimen. Of the 38 patients with exposure to linezolid, 31 (82%) had clinically significant adverse events that were possibly or probably related to linezolid, including 3 patients who discontinued therapy. Patients who received 300 mg per day after the second randomization had fewer adverse events than those who continued taking 600 mg per day. Thirteen patients completed therapy and have not had a relapse. Four cases of acquired resistance to linezolid have been observed. CONCLUSIONS Linezolid is effective at achieving culture conversion among patients with treatment-refractory XDR pulmonary tuberculosis, but patients must be monitored carefully for adverse events. (Funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Ministry of Health and Welfare, South Korea; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00727844.).


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2008

Extensively Drug‐Resistant Tuberculosis in South Korea: Risk Factors and Treatment Outcomes among Patients at a Tertiary Referral Hospital

Christie Y. Jeon; Soo Hee Hwang; Jin Hong Min; D. Rebecca Prevots; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Hyeyoung Lee; Seok Yong Eum; Doo Soo Jeon; Hyung Seok Kang; Jin Hee Kim; Byoung Ju Kim; Dae Yeon Kim; Steven M. Holland; Seung Kyu Park; Sang-Nae Cho; Clifton E. Barry; Laura E. Via

BACKGROUND Extensively drug-resistant (XDR) tuberculosis (TB) is a major public health threat in South Korea. METHODS We analyzed baseline epidemiological data for 250 patients enrolled in an ongoing prospective observational study of TB at a large tertiary referral hospital in South Korea. RESULTS Twenty-six subjects with XDR TB were identified; all were patients who had previously received TB therapy. Cumulative previous treatment duration (range, 18-34 months; odds ratio [OR], 5.6; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.0-59), number of previously received second-line anti-TB drugs (OR, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.1-1.5), and female sex (OR, 3.2; 95% CI, 1.1-8.3) were significantly associated with XDR TB in crude analyses. After controlling for other factors in a multivariable model, cumulative previous treatment duration remained significantly associated with XDR TB (OR, 5.8; 95% CI, 1.0-61). Subjects with XDR TB were more likely to produce culture-positive sputum at 6 months, compared with patients with non-multidrug resistant TB (risk ratio, 13; 95% CI, 5.1-53). Kanamycin resistance was found to be predictive of 6-month culture positivity after adjustment for ofloxacin and streptomycin resistance (risk ratio, 3.9; 95% CI, 1.9-11). CONCLUSIONS XDR TB was found to be associated with the cumulative duration of previous treatment with second-line TB drugs among subjects in a tertiary care TB hospital. Patients with XDR TB were more likely to not respond to therapy, and successful conversion of sputum culture results to negative was correlated with initial susceptibility to both fluoroquinolones and kanamycin but not to streptomycin.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

PET/CT imaging correlates with treatment outcome in patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis

Ray Y. Chen; Lori E. Dodd; Myungsun Lee; Praveen Paripati; Dima A. Hammoud; James M. Mountz; Doosoo Jeon; Nadeem Zia; Homeira Zahiri; M. Teresa Coleman; Matthew W. Carroll; Jong Doo Lee; Yeon Joo Jeong; Peter Herscovitch; Saher Lahouar; Michael Tartakovsky; Alexander Rosenthal; Sandeep Somaiyya; Soyoung Lee; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Ying Cai; Laura E. Via; Seung Kyu Park; Sang-Nae Cho; Clifton E. Barry

PET/CT imaging in humans with TB correlates with drug response and final treatment outcomes. Visualizing Drug Responses in TB A pair of papers by Chen et al. and Coleman et al. investigate how changes in quantitative positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scans in both nonhuman primates and humans can be used as early surrogate markers of treatment efficacy in tuberculosis. The Coleman et al. study shows that treatment of Mtb-infected macaques with linezolid and the second-generation oxazolidinone AZD5847 resulted in a reduced bacterial load at necropsy and reduced FDG PET avidity and CT-quantified lung pathology. Similar PET/CT changes were seen in human patients infected with extensively drug-resistant Mtb and treated with linezolid. The companion study by Chen et al. corroborated this effect in a prospective analysis of patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis and demonstrated that early PET/CT changes predicted final treatment outcomes. Definitive clinical trials of new chemotherapies for treating tuberculosis (TB) require following subjects until at least 6 months after treatment discontinuation to assess for durable cure, making these trials expensive and lengthy. Surrogate endpoints relating to treatment failure and relapse are currently limited to sputum microbiology, which has limited sensitivity and specificity. We prospectively assessed radiographic changes using 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluoro-d-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) at 2 and 6 months (CT only) in a cohort of subjects with multidrug-resistant TB, who were treated with second-line TB therapy for 2 years and then followed for an additional 6 months. CT scans were read semiquantitatively by radiologists and were computationally evaluated using custom software to provide volumetric assessment of TB-associated abnormalities. CT scans at 6 months (but not 2 months) assessed by radiologist readers were predictive of outcomes, and changes in computed abnormal volumes were predictive of drug response at both time points. Quantitative changes in FDG uptake 2 months after starting treatment were associated with long-term outcomes. In this cohort, some radiologic markers were more sensitive than conventional sputum microbiology in distinguishing successful from unsuccessful treatment. These results support the potential of imaging scans as possible surrogate endpoints in clinical trials of new TB drug regimens. Larger cohorts confirming these results are needed.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2010

Genetic Diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from a Tertiary Care Tuberculosis Hospital in South Korea

Isdore Chola Shamputa; Jong Seok Lee; Caroline Allix-Béguec; Eunjin Cho; Jiim Lee; Vignesh Rajan; Eun Gae Lee; Jin Hong Min; Matthew W. Carroll; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Jin Hee Kim; Hyung Seok Kang; Soohee Hwang; Seok-Yong Eum; Seung Kyu Park; Hyeyoung Lee; Philip Supply; Sang-Nae Cho; Laura E. Via; Clifton E. Barry

ABSTRACT Tuberculosis (TB) remains an immense public health problem in the Republic of Korea despite a more than fivefold decrease in the prevalence of the disease over the last 3 decades. The rise in drug-resistant TB has compounded the situation. We analyzed 208 clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis from the National Masan Tuberculosis Hospital by spoligotyping, IS6110 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), and 24-locus-based mycobacterial interspersed repetitive unit-variable number tandem repeat (MIRU-VNTR) typing to assess the diversity and transmission dynamics of the tubercle bacilli in the Republic of Korea. The majority of the isolates (97.1%) belonged to the Beijing genotype. Cluster analysis by MIRU-VNTR yielded a low clustering rate of 22.3%, with most of the clusters comprising isolates with diverse drug resistance patterns. The discriminatory capacity of the typing methods was high for RFLP and MIRU-VNTR (allelic diversity [h] = 0.99) but low for spoligotyping (h = 0.31). Although analysis of 19 MIRU-VNTR loci was needed to achieve maximum discrimination, an informative set of 8 loci (960, 1955, 2163b, 2165, 2996, 3192, 4052, and 4348) (h = 0.98) that was able to differentiate most of the closely related strains was identified. These findings suggest that 24-locus-based MIRU-VNTR typing is a likely suitable alternative to RFLP to differentiate clinical isolates in this setting, which is dominated by M. tuberculosis Beijing strains. Within the study limits, our results also suggest that the problem of drug-resistant TB in the Republic of Korea may be largely due to acquired resistance as opposed to transmission.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2010

Polymorphisms Associated with Resistance and Cross-Resistance to Aminoglycosides and Capreomycin in Mycobacterium tuberculosis Isolates from South Korean Patients with Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Laura E. Via; Sang-Nae Cho; Soohee Hwang; Hyeeun Bang; Seung Kyu Park; Hyung Seok Kang; Doosoo Jeon; Seon Yeong Min; Taegwon Oh; Yeun Kim; Young Mi Kim; Vignesh Rajan; Sharon Y. Wong; Isdore Chola Shamputa; Matthew W. Carroll; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Song A. Lee; Steven M. Holland; Seok-Yong Eum; Hyeyoung Lee; Clifton E. Barry

ABSTRACT The aminoglycosides streptomycin, amikacin, and kanamycin and the cyclic polypeptide capreomycin are all widely used in second-line therapy for patients who develop multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. We have characterized a set of 106 clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis using phenotypic drug susceptibility testing (DST) to determine the extent of resistance to each agent and cross-resistance between agents. These results were compared with polymorphisms in the DNA sequences of ribosome-associated genes previously implicated in resistance and with the clinical outcomes of subjects from whom these isolates were obtained. Thirty-six (34%) of these isolates displayed resistance to one or more of these agents, and the majority of these (20 of 36) showed cross-resistance to one or more agents. Most (33 of 36) of the resistant isolates showed polymorphisms in the 16S ribosome components RpsL and rrs. Three resistant strains (3 of 36) were identified that had no known polymorphisms in ribosomal constituents. For kanamycin and streptomycin, molecular DST significantly outperformed phenotypic DST using the absolute concentration method for predicting 4-month sputum conversion (likelihood ratios of 4.0 and 2.0, respectively) and was equivalent to phenotypic DST using the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards (NCCLS)-approved agar proportion method for estimating MIC (likelihood ratio, 4.0). These results offer insight into mechanisms of resistance and cross-resistance among these agents and suggest that the development of rapid molecular tests to distinguish polymorphisms would significantly enhance clinical utility of this important class of second-line antituberculosis drugs.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

Evaluation of Prime/Boost Regimens Using Recombinant Poxvirus/Tyrosinase Vaccines for the Treatment of Patients with Metastatic Melanoma

Kimberly R. Lindsey; Linda Gritz; Richard M. Sherry; Andrea Abati; Patricia Fetsch; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Monica Gonzales; Kimberly Zinnack; Linda Rogers-Freezer; Leah R. Haworth; Sharon A. Mavroukakis; Donald E. White; Seth M. Steinberg; Nicholas P. Restifo; Dennis Panicali; Steven A. Rosenberg; Suzanne L. Topalian

Purpose: Two clinical trials were conducted to evaluate the clinical efficacy and immunologic impact of vaccination against the tyrosinase protein plus systemic interleukin 2 (IL-2) administration in patients with advanced metastatic melanoma. Experimental Design: Full-length tyrosinase was employed as an immunogen to induce diverse immunologic responses against a commonly expressed melanoma antigen. Heterologous prime/boost vaccination with recombinant vaccinia and fowlpox vectors encoding tyrosinase was first explored in a randomized three-arm phase II trial, in which vaccines were administered alone or concurrently with low-dose or high-dose IL-2. In a subsequent single cohort phase II trial, all patients received the same vaccines and high-dose IL-2 sequentially rather than concurrently. Results: Among a total of 64 patients treated on these trials, 8 objective partial responses (12.5%) were observed, all in patients receiving high-dose IL-2. Additional patients showed evidence of lesional regression (mixed tumor response) or overall regression that did not achieve partial response status (minor response). In vitro evidence of enhanced immunity against tyrosinase following protocol treatments was documented in 3 of 49 (6%) patients tested serologically, 3 of 23 (13%) patients tested for T-cell recognition of individual tyrosinase peptides, and 4 of 16 (25%) patients tested for T-cell recognition of full-length tyrosinase protein with real-time reverse transcription-PCR techniques. Conclusions: Whereas prime/boost immunization with recombinant vaccinia and fowlpox viruses enhanced antityrosinase immunity in some patients with metastatic melanoma, it was ineffective alone in mediating clinical benefit, and in combination with IL-2 did not mediate clinical benefit significantly different from that expected from treatment with IL-2 alone.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2013

Efficacy and Safety of Metronidazole for Pulmonary Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Matthew W. Carroll; Doosoo Jeon; James M. Mountz; Jong Doo Lee; Yeon Joo Jeong; Nadeem Zia; Myungsun Lee; Jong Seok Lee; Laura E. Via; Soyoung Lee; Seok-Yong Eum; Sung-Joong Lee; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Ying Cai; Boyoung Jin; Youngran Kim; Taegwon Oh; Ray Y. Chen; Lori E. Dodd; Wenjuan Gu; Véronique Dartois; Seung-Kyu Park; Cheon Tae Kim; Clifton E. Barry; Sang-Nae Cho

ABSTRACT Pulmonary lesions from active tuberculosis patients are thought to contain persistent, nonreplicating bacilli that arise from hypoxic stress. Metronidazole, approved for anaerobic infections, has antituberculosis activity against anoxic bacilli in vitro and in some animal models and may target persistent, nonreplicating bacilli. In this double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, pulmonary multidrug-resistant tuberculosis subjects were randomly assigned to receive metronidazole (500 mg thrice daily) or placebo for 8 weeks in addition to an individualized background regimen. Outcomes were measured radiologically (change on high-resolution computed tomography [HRCT]), microbiologically (time to sputum smear and culture conversion), and clinically (status 6 months after stopping therapy). Enrollment was stopped early due to excessive peripheral neuropathies in the metronidazole arm. Among 35 randomized subjects, 31 (15 metronidazole, 16 placebo) were included in the modified intent-to-treat analysis. There were no significant differences by arm in improvement of HRCT lesions from baseline to 2 or 6 months. More subjects in the metronidazole arm converted their sputum smear (P = 0.04) and liquid culture (P = 0.04) to negative at 1 month, but these differences were lost by 2 months. Overall, 81% showed clinical success 6 months after stopping therapy, with no differences by arm. However, 8/16 (50%) of subjects in the metronidazole group and 2/17 (12%) of those in the placebo group developed peripheral neuropathy. Subjects who received metronidazole were 4.3-fold (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1 to 17.1) more likely to develop peripheral neuropathies than subjects who received placebo. Metronidazole may have increased early sputum smear and culture conversion but was too neurotoxic to use over the longer term. Newer nitroimidazoles with both aerobic and anaerobic activity, now in clinical trials, may increase the sterilizing potency of future treatment regimens.


EBioMedicine | 2015

Linezolid Trough Concentrations Correlate with Mitochondrial Toxicity-Related Adverse Events in the Treatment of Chronic Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Taeksun Song; Myungsun Lee; Han Seung Jeon; Yumi Park; Lori E. Dodd; Véronique Dartois; Dean Follman; Jing Wang; Ying Cai; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Kenneth N. Olivier; Yingda Xie; Laura E. Via; Sang-Nae Cho; Clifton E. Barry; Ray Y. Chen

Long-term linezolid use is limited by mitochondrial toxicity-associated adverse events (AEs). Within a prospective, randomized controlled trial of linezolid to treat chronic extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, we serially monitored the translational competence of mitochondria isolated from peripheral blood of participants by determining the cytochrome c oxidase/citrate synthase activity ratio. We compared this ratio with AEs associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Linezolid trough concentrations were determined for 38 participants at both 600 mg and 300 mg doses. Those on 600 mg had a significantly higher risk of AE than those on 300 mg (HR 3·10, 95% CI 1·23–7 · 86). Mean mitochondrial function levels were significantly higher in patients before starting linezolid compared to their concentrations on 300 mg (P = 0·004) or 600 mg (P < 0·0001). Increasing mean linezolid trough concentrations were associated with lower mitochondrial function levels (Spearmans ρ = − 0.48; P = 0.005). Mitochondrial toxicity risk increased with increasing linezolid trough concentrations, with all patients with mean linezolid trough > 2 μg/ml developing an AE related to mitochondrial toxicity, whether on 300 mg or 600 mg. Therapeutic drug monitoring may be useful to prevent the development of mitochondrial toxicity associated with long-term linezolid use.


Chen, Ray Y; Via, Laura E; Dodd, Lori E; Walzl, Gerhard; Malherbe, Stephanus T; Loxton, André G; Dawson, Rodney; Wilkinson, Robert J; Thienemann, Friedrich; Tameris, Michele; Diacon, Andreas H; Liu, Xin; et al (2017). Using biomarkers to predict TB treatment duration (Predict TB): a prospective, randomized, noninferiority, treatment shortening clinical trial. Gates Open Research:1:9. | 2017

Using biomarkers to predict TB treatment duration (Predict TB): a prospective, randomized, noninferiority, treatment shortening clinical trial

Ray Y. Chen; Laura E. Via; Lori E. Dodd; Gerhard Walzl; Stephanus T. Malherbe; André G. Loxton; Rodney Dawson; Robert J. Wilkinson; Friedrich Thienemann; Michele Tameris; Mark Hatherill; Andreas H. Diacon; Xin Liu; Jin Xing; Xiaowei Jin; Zhenya Ma; Shouguo Pan; Guolong Zhang; Qian Gao; Qi Jiang; Hong Zhu; Lili Liang; Hongfei Duan; Taeksun Song; David Alland; Michael Tartakovsky; Alex Rosenthal; Christopher Whalen; Michael Duvenhage; Ying Cai

Background: By the early 1980s, tuberculosis treatment was shortened from 24 to 6 months, maintaining relapse rates of 1-2%. Subsequent trials attempting shorter durations have failed, with 4-month arms consistently having relapse rates of 15-20%. One trial shortened treatment only among those without baseline cavity on chest x-ray and whose month 2 sputum culture converted to negative. The 4-month arm relapse rate decreased to 7% but was still significantly worse than the 6-month arm (1.6%, P<0.01). We hypothesize that PET/CT characteristics at baseline, PET/CT changes at one month, and markers of residual bacterial load will identify patients with tuberculosis who can be cured with 4 months (16 weeks) of standard treatment. Methods: This is a prospective, multicenter, randomized, phase 2b, noninferiority clinical trial of pulmonary tuberculosis participants. Those eligible start standard of care treatment. PET/CT scans are done at weeks 0, 4, and 16 or 24. Participants who do not meet early treatment completion criteria (baseline radiologic severity, radiologic response at one month, and GeneXpert-detectable bacilli at four months) are placed in Arm A (24 weeks of standard therapy). Those who meet the early treatment completion criteria are randomized at week 16 to continue treatment to week 24 (Arm B) or complete treatment at week 16 (Arm C). The primary endpoint compares the treatment success rate at 18 months between Arms B and C. Discussion: Multiple biomarkers have been assessed to predict TB treatment outcomes. This study uses PET/CT scans and GeneXpert (Xpert) cycle threshold to risk stratify participants. PET/CT scans are not applicable to global public health but could be used in clinical trials to stratify participants and possibly become a surrogate endpoint. If the Predict TB trial is successful, other immunological biomarkers or transcriptional signatures that correlate with treatment outcome may be identified. Trial Registration: NCT02821832


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012

Rhabdomyolysis in a Patient Treated With Linezolid for Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Matthew W. Carroll; Hongjo Choi; Seonyeong Min; Soohee Hwang; Hyeeun Park; Taeksun Song; Yumi Park; Han-Seung Jeon; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Laura E. Via; Janette Lebron; Boyoung Jin; Ying Cai; Clifton E. Barry; Myungsun Lee

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Laura E. Via

National Institutes of Health

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Clifton E. Barry

National Institutes of Health

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Matthew W. Carroll

National Institutes of Health

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Myungsun Lee

National Institutes of Health

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Ray Y. Chen

National Institutes of Health

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Ying Cai

National Institutes of Health

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Lori E. Dodd

National Institutes of Health

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