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Dive into the research topics where Mary P. Fairchok is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary P. Fairchok.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2015

Epidemiologic, clinical, and virologic characteristics of human rhinovirus infection among otherwise healthy children and adults: Rhinovirus among adults and children

Wei Ju Chen; John C. Arnold; Mary P. Fairchok; Patrick Danaher; Erin Mcdonough; Patrick J. Blair; Josefina Garcia; Eric S. Halsey; Christina Schofield; Martin G. Ottolini; Deepika Mor; Michelande Ridore; Timothy H. Burgess; Eugene V. Millar

Abstract Background human rhinovirus (HRV) is a major cause of influenza-like illness (ILI) in adults and children. Differences in disease severity by HRV species have been described among hospitalized patients with underlying illness. Less is known about the clinical and virologic characteristics of HRV infection among otherwise healthy populations, particularly adults. Objectives to characterize molecular epidemiology of HRV and association between HRV species and clinical presentation and viral shedding. Study design observational, prospective, facility-based study of ILI was conducted from February 2010 to April 2012. Collection of nasopharyngeal specimens, patient symptoms, and clinical information occurred on days 0, 3, 7, and 28. Patients recorded symptom severity daily for the first 7 days of illness in a symptom diary. HRV was identified by RT-PCR and genotyped for species determination. Cases who were co-infected with other viral respiratory pathogens were excluded from the analysis. We evaluated the associations between HRV species, clinical severity, and patterns of viral shedding. Results eighty-four HRV cases were identified and their isolates genotyped. Of these, 62 (74%) were >18 years. Fifty-four were HRV-A, 11HRV-B, and 19HRV-C. HRV-C infection was more common among children than adults (59% vs. 10%, P <0.001). Among adults, HRV-A was associated with higher severity of upper respiratory symptoms compared to HRV-B (P =0.02), but no such association was found in children. In addition, adults shed HRV-A significantly longer than HRV-C (P trend=0.01). Conclusions among otherwise healthy adults with HRV infection, we observed species-specific differences in respiratory symptom severity and duration of viral shedding.


Vaccine | 2015

Vaccine-associated reduction in symptom severity among patients with influenza A/H3N2 disease.

Robert Deiss; John C. Arnold; Wei Ju Chen; Sara Echols; Mary P. Fairchok; Christina Schofield; Patrick J. Danaher; Erin Mcdonough; Michelande Ridore; Deepika Mor; Timothy H. Burgess; Eugene V. Millar

BACKGROUND The moderate level of protection conferred by influenza vaccines is well-known, but the vaccines ability to attenuate symptom severity among vaccinated individuals (i.e., vaccine failures) has not been established. METHODS We enrolled otherwise healthy adults who presented with influenza-like illness (ILI) at five US military hospitals between 2009 and 2014. Influenza was diagnosed and subtyped by PCR. Individual and composite severity scores were compared between those who had vs. had not received the seasonal influenza vaccine >14 days prior to enrollment. RESULTS A total of 155 cases of influenza (A/H1N1, n=69; A/H3N2, n=66; A/untyped, n=3; B, n=17) were identified, of whom 111 (72%; A/H1N1, n=44; A/H3N2, n=52; A/untyped, n=3; B, n=12) had been vaccinated. Women were significantly less likely to be vaccinated than men (49% vs. 89%; p<0.01). In multivariate analysis, vaccinated individuals were significantly less likely to report a fever >101°F (OR 0.24; 95% CI [0.10, 0.62]) and more likely to report myalgias (OR 3.31; 95% CI [1.22, 8.97]) than vaccinated individuals. Among patients with A/H3N2 infection, upper respiratory and total symptom severity scores were significantly lower for vaccinated patients during the first 2 days of illness, and differences in total symptom severity persisted over 7 days (p<0.05 for all comparisons). Differences across additional symptom categories (lower respiratory and systemic) were also observed throughout 7 days of illness in bivariate analyses. Differences in symptom severity were not observed between vaccinated and unvaccinated participants with A/H1N1 infection. CONCLUSIONS Among patients with A/H3N2 infection, receipt of seasonal influenza vaccine was associated with reduced symptom severity. Patient-centered discussion about the benefits of influenza vaccination should be expanded to include the possibility that the vaccine could attenuate symptoms.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017

Mosquito Exposure and Chikungunya and Dengue Infection among Travelers during the Chikungunya Outbreak in the Americas

David A. Lindholm; Todd Myers; Susana Widjaja; Edward Grant; Kalyani Telu; Tahaniyat Lalani; Jamie Fraser; Mary P. Fairchok; Anuradha Ganesan; Mark D. Johnson; Anjali N. Kunz; David R. Tribble; Heather C. Yun

AbstractTravelers are at risk for arbovirus infection. We prospectively enrolled 267 Department of Defense beneficiaries traveling to chikungunya-outbreak regions in the Americas between December 2013 and May 2015 and assessed travel characteristics and serologic exposure to chikungunya virus (CHIKV) and dengue virus (DENV). Ten ill-returning travelers were also assessed retrospectively. Self-reported mosquito exposure was common (64% of 198 evaluable travelers saw mosquitoes; 53% of 201 reported ≥ 1 bite). Increased exposure was associated with active-duty travelers (odds ratio [OR] = 2.6 [1.3-5.4] for seeing mosquitoes) or travelers visiting friends and relatives (VFR) (OR = 3.5 [1.0-10.0] for high-intensity bite exposure). Arbovirus infection was defined as seroconversion on plaque reduction neutralization testing (PRNT) of pre- and posttravel sera. For ill subjects enrolled posttravel, infection was defined by a positive convalescent PRNT and/or a positive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction for CHIKV or DENV. We identified seven cases of arbovirus infection: four with CHIKV, five with DENV, and two with both. The composite attack rate for CHIKV and DENV infection was 3.7% of 108 evaluable, immunologically naïve, prospectively assessed travelers; there was serologic and/or polymerase chain reaction evidence of arbovirus infection in three of four evaluable (three of 10 total) ill-returning travelers. We identified both symptomatic and asymptomatic cases. Military purpose of travel and VFR travel accounted for five of seven cases. Pretravel counseling is important and should target higher risk groups. Given a shared vector between CHIKV, DENV, and Zika virus (ZIKV), this study can also help guide counseling for travelers to ZIKV-outbreak regions.


Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses | 2018

Species-specific clinical characteristics of human coronavirus infection among otherwise healthy adolescents and adults

Monique Bouvier; Wei-Ju Chen; John C. Arnold; Mary P. Fairchok; Patrick J. Danaher; Tahaniyat Lalani; Leslie Malone; Deepika Mor; Michelande Ridoré; Timothy Burgess; Eugene V. Millar

Human coronavirus (HCoV) is a known cause of influenza‐like illness (ILI). In a multisite, observational, longitudinal study of ILI among otherwise healthy adolescents and adults, 12% of subjects were PCR‐positive for HCoV. The distribution of species was as follows: HCoV‐OC43 (34%), HCoV‐229E (28%), HCoV‐NL63 (22%), and HCoV‐HKU1 (16%). We did not observe species‐specific differences in the clinical characteristics of HCoV infection, with the exception of HCoV‐HKU1, for which the severity of gastrointestinal symptoms trended higher on the fourth day of illness.


Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses | 2016

Type-specific clinical characteristics of adenovirus-associated influenza-like illness at five US military medical centers, 2009-2014.

Michael Koren; John C. Arnold; Mary P. Fairchok; Tahaniyat Lalani; Patrick Danaher; Christina Schofield; Michael Rajnik; Erin Hansen; Deepika Mor; Wei-Ju Chen; Michelande Ridoré; Timothy Burgess; Eugene V. Millar

Adenovirus is a recognized cause of influenza‐like illness (ILI). The proportion of ILI attributable to adenovirus is not known. Moreover, knowledge gaps remain with respect to the epidemiologic, virologic, and clinical characteristics of adenovirus‐associated ILI among otherwise healthy individuals.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2015

Neuraminidase inhibitor therapy in a military population

Mary P. Fairchok; Wei Ju Chen; John C. Arnold; Christina Schofield; Patrick J. Danaher; Erin Mcdonough; Martin G. Ottolini; Deepika Mor; Michelande Ridore; Timothy Burgess; Eugene V. Millar

BACKGROUND Although neuraminidase inhibitors (NI) are the mainstay of treatment for influenza infection, prescribing practice for these agents is not well described. Additionally, benefit is contested. OBJECTIVES We examined provider prescriptions of NI during the 2009 pandemic and post-pandemic periods. We also evaluated the effectiveness of NI in reducing severity of influenza infection. STUDY DESIGN Data on NI prescription and severity of influenza infection were compiled in healthy pediatric and adult beneficiaries enrolled in a prospective study of influenza like illness conducted at five military medical centers over five years. Subjects underwent nasal swabs to determine viral etiology of their infection. Demographic, medication and severity data were collected. Subjects with positive influenza were included. RESULTS Two hundred sixty three subjects were influenza positive [38% [H1N1] pdm09, 38.4% H3N2, and 20.5% B); 23.9% were treated with NI. NI were initiated within 48h in 63% of treated subjects. Although NI use increased over the five years of the study, early use declined. Most measures for severity of illness were not significantly reduced with NI; adults treated within 48h had only a modest reduction in duration and severity of some of their symptoms. CONCLUSIONS NI use in our population is increasing, but early use is not. NI use resulted in no reduction in complications of illness. Resolution of symptoms and reduction in severity of some symptoms were slightly better in adults who were treated early. These modest benefits do not support routine treatment with NI in otherwise healthy individuals with influenza.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2018

Heterotypic Infection and Spread of Rhinovirus A, B, and C among Childcare Attendees

Emily T. Martin; Jane Kuypers; Helen Y. Chu; Sydney Foote; Andrew N. Hashikawa; Mary P. Fairchok; Janet A. Englund

This longitudinal study of HRV detection in childcare attendees demonstrates sequence-confirmed clusters of rhinovirus within the context of continuous heterotypic circulation of multiple strains in both symptomatic and asymptomatic children.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Performance of the inFLUenza Patient-Reported Outcome (FLU-PRO) diary in patients with influenza-like illness (ILI)

John H. Powers; Elizabeth D. Bacci; Nancy Kline Leidy; Jiat Ling Poon; Sonja Stringer; Matthew J. Memoli; Alison Han; Mary P. Fairchok; Christian Coles; Jackie Owens; Wei Ju Chen; John C. Arnold; Patrick Danaher; Tahaniyat Lalani; Timothy Burgess; Eugene V. Millar; Michelande Ridoré; Andres Hernandez; Patricia Rodríguez-Zulueta; Hilda Ortega-Gallegos; Arturo Galindo-Fraga; Guillermo M. Ruiz-Palacios; Sarah Pett; William A. Fischer; Daniel Gillor; Laura Moreno Macias; Anna DuVal; Richard B. Rothman; Andrea Freyer Dugas; M. Lourdes Guerrero

Background The inFLUenza Patient Reported Outcome (FLU-PRO) measure is a daily diary assessing signs/symptoms of influenza across six body systems: Nose, Throat, Eyes, Chest/Respiratory, Gastrointestinal, Body/Systemic, developed and tested in adults with influenza. Objectives This study tested the reliability, validity, and responsiveness of FLU-PRO scores in adults with influenza-like illness (ILI). Methods Data from the prospective, observational study used to develop and test the FLU-PRO in influenza virus positive patients were analyzed. Adults (≥18 years) presenting with influenza symptoms in outpatient settings in the US, UK, Mexico, and South America were enrolled, tested for influenza virus, and asked to complete the 37-item draft FLU-PRO daily for up to 14-days. Analyses were performed on data from patients testing negative. Reliability of the final, 32-item FLU-PRO was estimated using Cronbach’s alpha (α; Day 1) and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC; 2-day reproducibility). Convergent and known-groups validity were assessed using patient global assessments of influenza severity (PGA). Patient report of return to usual health was used to assess responsiveness (Day 1–7). Results The analytical sample included 220 ILI patients (mean age = 39.3, 64.1% female, 88.6% white). Sixty-one (28%) were hospitalized at some point in their illness. Internal consistency reliability (α) of FLU-PRO Total score was 0.90 and ranged from 0.72–0.86 for domain scores. Reproducibility (Day 1–2) was 0.64 for Total, ranging from 0.46–0.78 for domain scores. Day 1 FLU-PRO scores correlated (≥0.30) with the PGA (except Gastrointestinal) and were significantly different across PGA severity groups (Total: F = 81.7, p<0.001; subscales: F = 6.9–62.2; p<0.01). Mean score improvements Day 1–7 were significantly greater in patients reporting return to usual health compared with those who did not (p<0.05, Total and subscales, except Gastrointestinal and Eyes). Conclusions Results suggest FLU-PRO scores are reliable, valid, and responsive in adults with influenza-like illness.


Value in Health | 2017

Reliability, Validity, and Responsiveness of InFLUenza Patient-Reported Outcome (FLU-PRO©) Scores in Influenza-Positive Patients

John H. Powers; Elizabeth D. Bacci; M. Lourdes Guerrero; Nancy Kline Leidy; Sonja Stringer; Katherine Kim; Matthew J. Memoli; Alison Han; Mary P. Fairchok; Wei Ju Chen; John C. Arnold; Patrick Danaher; Tahaniyat Lalani; Michelande Ridoré; Timothy Burgess; Eugene V. Millar; Andres Hernandez; Patricia Rodríguez-Zulueta; Mary Smolskis; Hilda Ortega-Gallegos; Sarah Pett; William A. Fischer; Daniel Gillor; Laura Moreno Macias; Anna DuVal; Richard E. Rothman; Andrea Freyer Dugas; Guillermo M. Ruiz-Palacios

OBJECTIVES To assess the reliability, validity, and responsiveness of InFLUenza Patient-Reported Outcome (FLU-PRO©) scores for quantifying the presence and severity of influenza symptoms. METHODS An observational prospective cohort study of adults (≥18 years) with influenza-like illness in the United States, the United Kingdom, Mexico, and South America was conducted. Participants completed the 37-item draft FLU-PRO daily for up to 14 days. Item-level and factor analyses were used to remove items and determine factor structure. Reliability of the final tool was estimated using Cronbach α and intraclass correlation coefficients (2-day reliability). Convergent and known-groups validity and responsiveness were assessed using global assessments of influenza severity and return to usual health. RESULTS Of the 536 patients enrolled, 221 influenza-positive subjects comprised the analytical sample. The mean age of the patients was 40.7 years, 60.2% were women, and 59.7% were white. The final 32-item measure has six factors/domains (nose, throat, eyes, chest/respiratory, gastrointestinal, and body/systemic), with a higher order factor representing symptom severity overall (comparative fit index = 0.92; root mean square error of approximation = 0.06). Cronbach α was high (total = 0.92; domain range = 0.71-0.87); test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient, day 1-day 2) was 0.83 for total scores and 0.57 to 0.79 for domains. Day 1 FLU-PRO domain and total scores were moderately to highly correlated (≥0.30) with Patient Global Rating of Flu Severity (except nose and throat). Consistent with known-groups validity, scores differentiated severity groups on the basis of global rating (total: F = 57.2, P < 0.001; domains: F = 8.9-67.5, P < 0.001). Subjects reporting return to usual health showed significantly greater (P < 0.05) FLU-PRO score improvement by day 7 than did those who did not, suggesting score responsiveness. CONCLUSIONS Results suggest that FLU-PRO scores are reliable, valid, and responsive to change in influenza-positive adults.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2018

Influenza-Like Illness in Travelers to the Developing World

Stuart Wood; Mary P. Fairchok; Heather C. Yun; Anjali Kunz; Mark Johnson; Elizabeth Schnaubelt; Jamie Fraser; Ryan C. Maves; Tahaniyat Lalani; Kalyani Telu; Anuradha Ganesan; Indrani Mitra; David R. Tribble

Travelers to developing regions are at risk for development of influenza-like illness (ILI). Little is known of traveler and trip characteristics associated with the development of ILI. TravMil is a prospective observational study, enrolling subjects presenting to six military travel clinics or predeployment-screening sites. We analyzed pre- and post-travel surveys from travelers visiting regions outside of the continental United States, Western or Northern Europe, Canada, Australia, or New Zealand between January 2010 and March 2016. Influenza-like illness was defined as a self-reported fever associated with either sore throat or cough. Trip and traveler characteristics were analyzed to determine risk factors for the development of ILI. Two thousand nine hundred and thirty-two trips were recorded (55% male, median age 45 years, 69% white, 51% on vacation, median travel duration 17 days). The 2,337 trips included the number of self-reported influenza vaccinations in the preceding 5 years (median 5). Eleven percent of the trips were complicated by an ILI lasting a median of 5 days; 70% and 17% of these reported upper and lower respiratory tract infection, respectively, and 12% reported both. On multivariate analysis, increased risk of ILI was associated with female gender (odds ratio [OR]: 1.60 [confidence interval (CI): 1.25-2.05], P < 0.01), age (years) (OR: 1.01 [CI: 1.01-1.02], P < 0.01); and duration of travel (days) (OR: 1.01 [CI: 1.00-1.01], P < 0.01). Influenza-like illness is common in travelers, regardless of traveler characteristics, purpose of travel, destination, or season of year. Female gender, older age, and longer duration of travel were associated with an increased risk of ILI. Additional tools and strategies are needed to prevent ILI in international travelers.

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Eugene V. Millar

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Tahaniyat Lalani

Naval Medical Center Portsmouth

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John C. Arnold

Naval Medical Center San Diego

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Timothy Burgess

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Deepika Mor

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Michelande Ridore

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Wei Ju Chen

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Anuradha Ganesan

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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David R. Tribble

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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