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Featured researches published by Peter Rabiah.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012

Prematurity and Severity Are Associated With Toxoplasma gondii Alleles (NCCCTS, 1981–2009)

Rima McLeod; Kenneth M. Boyer; Daniel Lee; Ernest Mui; Kristen Wroblewski; Theodore Karrison; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Shawn Withers; Charles N. Swisher; Peter T. Heydemann; Mari Sautter; Jane Babiarz; Peter Rabiah; Paul Meier; Michael E. Grigg

BACKGROUND Congenital toxoplasmosis is a severe, life-altering disease in the United States. A recently developed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) distinguishes Toxoplasma gondii parasite types (II and not exclusively II [NE-II]) by detecting antibodies in human sera that recognize allelic peptide motifs of distinct parasite types. METHODS ELISA determined parasite serotype for 193 congenitally infected infants and their mothers in the National Collaborative Chicago-based Congenital Toxoplasmosis Study (NCCCTS), 1981-2009. Associations of parasite serotype with demographics, manifestations at birth, and effects of treatment were determined. RESULTS Serotypes II and NE-II occurred in the United States with similar proportions during 3 decades. For persons diagnosed before or at birth and treated in infancy, and persons diagnosed after 1 year of age who missed treatment in infancy, proportions were similar (P = .91). NE-II serotype was more common in hot, humid regions (P = .02) but was also present in other regions. NE-II serotype was associated with rural residence (P < .01), lower socioeconomic status (P < .001), and Hispanic ethnicity (P < .001). Prematurity (P = .03) and severe disease at birth (P < .01) were associated with NE-II serotype. Treatment with lower and higher doses of pyrimethamine with sulfadizine improved outcomes relative to those outcomes of persons in the literature who did not receive such treatment. CONCLUSIONS Type II and NE-II parasites cause congenital toxoplasmosis in North America. NE-II serotype was more prevalent in certain demographics and associated with prematurity and severe disease at birth. Both type II and NE-II infections improved with treatment. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION NCT00004317.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2008

Longitudinal Study of New Eye Lesions in Children with Toxoplasmosis Who Were Not Treated During the First Year of Life

Laura Phan; Kristen Kasza; Jessica Jalbrzikowski; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Paul Latkany; Annie Kuo; William F. Mieler; Sanford M. Meyers; Peter Rabiah; Kenneth M. Boyer; Charles N. Swisher; Marilyn B. Mets; Nancy Roizen; Simone Cezar; Mari Sautter; Jack Remington; Paul Meier; Rima McLeod

PURPOSE To determine the incidence of new chorioretinal lesions in children with toxoplasmosis diagnosed after, and therefore not treated during, their first year. DESIGN Prospective longitudinal cohort study. METHODS Thirty-eight children were evaluated in Chicago between 1981 and 2005 for new chorioretinal lesions. Thirty-eight children and mothers had serum IgG antibody to Toxoplasma gondii. RESULTS Twenty-eight of 38 children had one of the following: diagnosis with serum antibody to T. gondii indicative of chronic infection at age 24 months, central nervous system calcifications, hydrocephalus, illness compatible with congenital toxoplasmosis perinatally but not diagnosed at that time. Twenty-five returned for follow-up during 1981 to 2005. Their mean (range) age at last exam was 10.9 +/- 5.7 (range, 3.5 to 27.2) years and mean follow-up was 5.7 +/- 2.9 years. Eighteen (72%) children developed at least one new lesion. Thirteen (52%) had new central lesions, 11 (44%) had new peripheral lesions, and six (24%) had both. Thirteen (52%) had new lesions diagnosed at age > or =10 years. New lesions were found at more than one visit in four (22%), and bilateral new lesions developed in seven (39%) of 18 children who developed new lesions. Of 10 additional children with eye findings and serologic tests indicative of chronic infection, six returned for follow-up, four (67%) developing new lesions at > or =10 years of age. CONCLUSIONS More than 70% developed new chorioretinal lesions. New lesions were commonly diagnosed after the first decade of life.


Ocular Immunology and Inflammation | 2011

Clinical Manifestations of Ocular Toxoplasmosis

Emmanuelle Delair; Paul Latkany; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Peter Rabiah; Rima McLeod; Antoine P. Brézin

Clinical manifestations of ocular toxoplasmosis are reviewed. Findings of congenital and acute acquired ocular toxoplasmosis include retinal scars, white-appearing lesions in the active phase often associated with vitritis. Complications can include fibrous bands, secondary serous or rhegmatogenous retinal detachments, optic neuritis and neuropathy, cataracts, increased intraocular pressure during active infection, and choroidal neovascular membranes. Recurrences in untreated congenital toxoplasmosis occur in teenage years. Manifestations at birth are less severe, and recurrences are fewer in those who were treated promptly early in the course of their disease in utero and in the first year of life. Severe retinal involvement is common at diagnosis of symptomatic congenital toxoplasmosis in the United States and Brazil. Acute acquired infections also may be complicated by toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis, with recurrences most common close to the time of acquisition. Suppressive treatment can reduce recurrent disease.


Archives of Ophthalmology | 2008

Toxoplasmosis-associated neovascular lesions treated successfully with ranibizumab and antiparasitic therapy

J. Benevento; R. D. Jager; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Paul Latkany; William F. Mieler; Mari Sautter; Sanford M. Meyers; Marilyn B. Mets; Michael A. Grassi; Peter Rabiah; Kennneth Boyer; Charles N. Swisher; Rima McLeod

Joseph D. Benevento, MD1, Rama D. Jager, MD, MBA1, A. Gwendolyn Noble, MD, PhD2, Paul Latkany, MD1,3, William F. Mieler, MD1, Mari Sautter, BA1, Sanford Meyers, MD1, Marilyn Mets, MD2, Michael A. Grassi, MD1, Peter Rabiah, MD1, Kennneth Boyer, MD4, Charles Swisher, MD2, and Rima McLeod, MD1,* other members of the Toxoplasmosis Study Group† 1University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 2Children’s Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL 3St. Luke’s Roosevelt Hospital, The New York Eye & Ear Infirmary, New York, NY 4Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL


JAMA Ophthalmology | 2014

Postoperative Glaucoma Following Infantile Cataract Surgery: An Individual Patient Data Meta-analysis

Asimina Mataftsi; Anna-Bettina Haidich; Stamatia Kokkali; Peter Rabiah; Eileen E. Birch; David R. Stager; Richard Cheong-Leen; Vineet Singh; James E. Egbert; William F. Astle; Scott R. Lambert; Purohit Amitabh; Arif O. Khan; John Grigg; Malamatenia Arvanitidou; Stavros A. Dimitrakos; Ken K. Nischal

IMPORTANCE Infantile cataract surgery bears a significant risk for postoperative glaucoma, and no consensus exists on factors that may reduce this risk. OBJECTIVE To assess the effect of primary intraocular lens implantation and timing of surgery on the incidence of postoperative glaucoma. DATA SOURCES We searched multiple databases to July 14, 2013, to identify studies with eligible patients, including PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, ISI Web of Science, Scopus, Central, Google Scholar, Intute, and Tripdata. We also searched abstracts of ophthalmology society meetings. STUDY SELECTION We included studies reporting on postoperative glaucoma in infants undergoing cataract surgery with regular follow-up for at least 1 year. Infants with concurrent ocular anomalies were excluded. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS Authors of eligible studies were invited to contribute individual patient data on infants who met the inclusion criteria. We also performed an aggregate data meta-analysis of published studies that did not contribute to the individual patient data. Data were pooled using a random-effects model. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Time to glaucoma with the effect of primary implantation, additional postoperative intraocular procedures, and age at surgery. RESULTS Seven centers contributed individual patient data on 470 infants with a median age at surgery of 3.0 months and median follow-up of 6.0 years. Eighty patients (17.0%) developed glaucoma at a median follow-up of 4.3 years. Only 2 of these patients had a pseudophakic eye. The risk for postoperative glaucoma appeared to be lower after primary implantation (hazard ratio [HR], 0.10 [95% CI, 0.01-0.70]; P = .02; I(2) = 34%), higher after surgery at 4 weeks or younger (HR, 2.10 [95% CI, 1.14-3.84]; P = .02; I(2) = 0%), and higher after additional procedures (HR, 2.52 [95% CI, 1.11-5.72]; P = .03; I(2) = 32%). In multivariable analysis, additional procedures independently increased the risk for glaucoma (HR, 2.25 [95% CI, 1.20-4.21]; P = .01), and primary implantation independently reduced it (HR, 0.10 [95% CI, 0.01-0.76]; P = .03). Results were similar in the aggregate data meta-analysis that included data from 10 published articles. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Although confounding factors such as size of the eye and surgeon experience are not accounted for in this meta-analysis, the risk for postoperative glaucoma after infantile cataract surgery appears to be influenced by the timing of surgery, primary implantation, and additional intraocular surgery.


Current Pediatrics Reports | 2014

Management of Congenital Toxoplasmosis

Rima McLeod; Joseph Lykins; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Peter Rabiah; Charles N. Swisher; Peter T. Heydemann; David G. McLone; David M. Frim; Shawn Withers; Fatima Clouser; Kenneth M. Boyer

Prompt diagnosis and rapid initiation of medical treatment are critical for the best outcomes in infants with congenital toxoplasmosis. This is important for pregnant women, fetuses, and infants, including those with active retinitis and choroidal neovascular membranes. For hydrocephalus, prompt placement of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt is key for improved outcomes. Pyrimethamine and Sulfadiazine with Leucovorin are first-line medicines. For later recurrences of active retinitis, Azithromycin or Clindamycin are sometimes substituted for Sulfadiazine as second-line treatments, given with Pyramethamine. Following resolution of active retinitis, these medicines may be useful without Pyrimethamine for suppression and avoid the risk of hypersensitivity from Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole. Antibody to VEGF, in conjunction with antimicrobial therapy, results in resolution of choroidal neovascular membranes. Serologic screening of seronegative pregnant women to detect primary infection during gestation, and facilitating medicine administration and thereby preventing or treating fetal infection, is an optimal, apparently cost-effective, means to reduce disease. Definitively curative medicines currently being developed likely will improve future management and outcomes of this disease.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2015

Patterns of Hydrocephalus Caused by Congenital Toxoplasma gondii Infection Associate With Parasite Genetics

Samuel L. Hutson; Kelsey Wheeler; David G. McLone; David M. Frim; Richard D. Penn; Charles N. Swisher; Peter T. Heydemann; Kenneth M. Boyer; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Peter Rabiah; Shawn Withers; Jose G. Montoya; Kristen Wroblewski; Theodore Karrison; Michael E. Grigg; Rima McLeod

Four anatomical patterns of hydrocephalus secondary to congenital Toxoplasma gondii infection were identified and characterized for infants enrolled in the National Collaborative Chicago-based Congenital Toxoplasmosis Study. Analysis of parasite serotype revealed that different anatomical patterns associate with Type-II vs Not-Exclusively Type-II strains (NE-II) (P = .035).


Infection and Immunity | 2014

ALOX12 in Human Toxoplasmosis

William H. Witola; Susan Ruosu Liu; Alexandre Montpetit; Ruth Welti; Magali Hypolite; Mary R. Roth; Ying Zhou; Ernest Mui; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; Gilbert J. Fournié; Pierre Cavailles; Cordelia Bisanz; Kenneth M. Boyer; Shawn Withers; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Charles N. Swisher; Peter T. Heydemann; Peter Rabiah; Stephen P. Muench; Rima McLeod

ABSTRACT ALOX12 is a gene encoding arachidonate 12-lipoxygenase (12-LOX), a member of a nonheme lipoxygenase family of dioxygenases. ALOX12 catalyzes the addition of oxygen to arachidonic acid, producing 12-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HPETE), which can be reduced to the eicosanoid 12-HETE (12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid). 12-HETE acts in diverse cellular processes, including catecholamine synthesis, vasoconstriction, neuronal function, and inflammation. Consistent with effects on these fundamental mechanisms, allelic variants of ALOX12 are associated with diseases including schizophrenia, atherosclerosis, and cancers, but the mechanisms have not been defined. Toxoplasma gondii is an apicomplexan parasite that causes morbidity and mortality and stimulates an innate and adaptive immune inflammatory reaction. Recently, it has been shown that a gene region known as Toxo1 is critical for susceptibility or resistance to T. gondii infection in rats. An orthologous gene region with ALOX12 centromeric is also present in humans. Here we report that the human ALOX12 gene has susceptibility alleles for human congenital toxoplasmosis (rs6502997 [P, <0.000309], rs312462 [P, <0.028499], rs6502998 [P, <0.029794], and rs434473 [P, <0.038516]). A human monocytic cell line was genetically engineered using lentivirus RNA interference to knock down ALOX12. In ALOX12 knockdown cells, ALOX12 RNA expression decreased and levels of the ALOX12 substrate, arachidonic acid, increased. ALOX12 knockdown attenuated the progression of T. gondii infection and resulted in greater parasite burdens but decreased consequent late cell death of the human monocytic cell line. These findings suggest that ALOX12 influences host responses to T. gondii infection in human cells. ALOX12 has been shown in other studies to be important in numerous diseases. Here we demonstrate the critical role ALOX12 plays in T. gondii infection in humans.


Social Science & Medicine | 2010

Chorioretinal lesions in mothers of children with congenital toxoplasmosis in the National Collaborative Chicago-based, Congenital Toxoplasmosis Study

A. Gwendolyn Noble; Paul Latkany; Jaroslaw Kusmierczyk; Marilyn B. Mets; Peter Rabiah; Kenneth M. Boyer; Jessica Jalbrzikowski; Kristen Wroblewski; Theodore Karrison; Charles N. Swisher; William F. Mieler; Paul Meier; Rima McLeod

AIMS: To determine whether mothers of children with congenital toxoplasmosis have chorioretinal lesions consistent with toxoplasmosis. METHODS: Prospective cohort study. Ophthalmologists in our study have examined 173 children with congenital toxoplasmosis in a hospital outpatient setting. These children were referred to us by their primary care physicians. One hundred and thirty mothers of these children had retina examinations of both eyes at least once. Main outcome measure was lesion(s) consistent with ocular toxoplasmosis. RESULTS: Of 130 mothers examined between 1991-2005, 10 (7.7%, 95% Confidence Interval 3.8%, 13.7%) had chorioretinal lesions which likely represent resolved toxoplasmic chorioretinitis. Most of these were small peripheral chorioretinal lesions. None reactivated between 1991-2005. CONCLUSIONS: Chorioretinal lesions consistent with quiescent ocular toxoplasmosis occur in mothers of children with congenital toxoplasmosis in the United States.


Ophthalmology | 2003

Penetrating needle injury of the eye causing cataract in children

Peter Rabiah

PURPOSE To review the presentation, management, and outcome of children with cataract caused by ocular needle penetration. DESIGN Retrospective, noncomparative interventional case series. PARTICIPANTS Forty-two children with cataract caused by ocular needle penetration. INTERVENTION Cataract surgery. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Best-corrected postoperative visual acuity. RESULTS Injuries were unintentional and occurred during unsupervised play. The type of needle involved was hypodermic in 24 cases, sewing in 7, and undetermined in 11. Endophthalmitis developed in 14 cases and retinal detachment in 6. Endophthalmitis occurred in 12 cases (50%) of hypodermic needle injury but in no case of sewing needle injury. With a mean postoperative follow-up of 2.3 years, the best-corrected visual acuity was 20/40 or better in 19 cases, 20/50 to 20/80 in 7, 20/100 to counting fingers in 6, light perception in 1, no light perception in 6, and undetermined in 3. Eyes with endophthalmitis and/or retinal detachment had a worse visual prognosis. CONCLUSIONS Ocular penetration causing cataract occurred in children during unsupervised play with inadequately stored or disposed of hypodermic or sewing needles. Endophthalmitis occurred frequently in injuries caused by hypodermic needles but not in those caused by sewing needles. Visual outcome after management was good in approximately half of the cases especially if endophthalmitis or retinal detachment did not develop.

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A. Gwendolyn Noble

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Charles N. Swisher

Children's Memorial Hospital

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Kenneth M. Boyer

Rush University Medical Center

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Peter T. Heydemann

Rush University Medical Center

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Paul Latkany

New York Eye and Ear Infirmary

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