R. Ursea
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by R. Ursea.
Journal of Autoimmunity | 2003
Robert B. Nussenblatt; Darby J. S. Thompson; Zhuqing Li; Jan S Peterson; Randy R Robinson; Richard S Shames; Sudha Nagarajan; Meina Tao Tang; Michelle Mailman; Gisela Velez; Chandra Roy; Grace A. Levy-Clarke; Eric B Suhler; Ali R. Djalilian; Hatice Nida Sen; S.Q. Al-Khatib; R. Ursea; Sunil Srivastava; Allison Bamji; Susan D. Mellow; Pushpa Sran; Thomas A. Waldmann; Ronald R. Buggage
Therapy for severe uveitis is frequently long-term immunosuppression using systemic corticosteroids and cytotoxic agents, but side effects make long-term therapy difficult. A long-term (>4 year) Phase I/II single armed interventional study using intravenous anti-IL-2 receptor alpha treatments (daclizumab) and a short-term Phase II study evaluating the use of a subcutaneous daclizumab formulation were conducted. Patients were tapered off their systemic immunosuppressive therapy and received daclizumab infusions or subcutaneous injections at intervals varying from 2 to 6 weeks. In the long-term study, seven of ten enrolled patients were tapered from their original immunosuppressive medications and maintained exclusively on repeated daclizumab infusions for control of their uveitis for over 4 years. No patient was permanently removed from therapy for an adverse event ascribed to the medication. The use of 6-week infusion intervals led to recurrence of uveitis, while 2- to 4-week intervals did not. Only one patient developed measurable anti-daclizumab antibodies but this disappeared when subcutaneous therapy was begun. In the short-term study, four of the five patients receiving the subcutaneous formulation met the study endpoints for success within the first 12 weeks. All five were successful by 26 weeks. These studies provide preliminary evidence that regularly administered long-term daclizumab therapy can be given in lieu of standard immunosuppression for years to treat severe uveitis and that subcutaneously administered daclizumab appeared to be a clinically viable treatment strategy. These studies suggest that anti-IL-2 receptor blockade could be useful in the treatment of Th1-mediated autoimmune conditions.
Ocular Immunology and Inflammation | 2007
Ronald R. Buggage; Grace A. Levy-Clarke; Hatice Nida Sen; R. Ursea; Sunil Srivastava; Eric B Suhler; Chandra R. Altemare; Gisela Velez; Jack A. Ragheb; Chi-Chao Chan; Robert B. Nussenblatt; Alison T. Bamji; Puspha Sran; Thomas Waldmann; Darby J. S. Thompson
Purpose: To investigate the safety and efficacy of daclizumab (Zenapax, humanized anti-Tac, HAT) in controlling the ocular manifestations of Behçets disease. Design: Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked clinical trial. Participants: Seventeen participants with Behçets disease experiencing at least two prior ocular attacks and requiring treatment with immunosuppressive agents for the ocular complications of Behçets disease. Methods: Participants received either intravenous placebo or daclizumab (1 mg/kg) infusions every two weeks for six weeks, then every four weeks while continuing their standard immunosuppressive regimens. If clinically indicated, tapering of the standard immunosuppressive medications was allowed after six months of study enrollment. Complete ocular and physical examinations and an adverse event assessment were performed at baseline and prior to each study infusion. Main Outcome Measures: Primary safety endpoints were the development of a life-threatening complication or a severe opportunistic infection. Primary efficacy outcomes were the number of ocular attacks and an assessment of systemic immunosuppressive medications required during the study, including the ability to taper concomitant immunosuppressive therapy. Results: Nine participants randomized to daclizumab and eight to placebo were followed monthly. Follow-up ranged from one to 34 months, with a median follow-up of 15 months. Two participants randomized to daclizumab discontinued study therapy prior to the end of the study for personal reasons. No participant experienced a safety endpoint, and visual acuity remained stable in all participants during the course of the study. Ten participants (six daclizumab, four placebo) experienced ocular attacks requiring therapy. The median ocular attack rate during the study was greater in the daclizumab arm than the placebo arm (median 1.27 vs. 0.17 attacks/year, respectively). Participants in the placebo arm also experienced a greater reduction in the immunosuppressive medication score compared to participants receiving daclizumab (median –4.0 vs. –1.0, respectively). Conclusions: The observed results in the placebo group demonstrate that careful follow-up and treatment with standard combination immunosuppressive therapy can be effective for the management of the ocular complications of Behçets disease. In our small study, there was no suggestion that daclizumab was beneficial in comparison with placebo. However, the low observed attack rate limited our ability to make a definitive treatment group comparison.
Archives of Ophthalmology | 2005
Wee-Kiak Lim; Chiaki Fujimoto; R. Ursea; Sankaranarayana P. Mahesh; Phyllis B. Silver; Chi-Chao Chan; Igal Gery; Robert B. Nussenblatt
Canadian Journal of Ophthalmology-journal Canadien D Ophtalmologie | 2006
Shree K. Kurup; Ronald R. Buggage; Grace Clarke; R. Ursea; Wee Kiak Lim; Robert B. Nussenblatt
Cornea | 2011
Toshiomi Okuno; Laura C. Hooper; R. Ursea; Janine A. Smith; Robert B. Nussenblatt; John J. Hooks; Kozaburo Hayashi
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2005
Wee Kiak Lim; R. Ursea; Koneti Rao; Ronald R. Buggage; Eric B Suhler; Faith Dugan; Chi-Chao Chan; Stephen E. Straus; Robert B. Nussenblatt
Journal of Autoimmunity | 2004
Robert B. Nussenblatt; Darby J. S. Thompson; Zhuqing Li; Chi C Chan; Jan S Peterson; Randy R Robinson; Richard S Shames; Sudha Nagarajan; Meina Tao Tang; Michelle Mailman; Gisela Velez; Chandra Roy; Grace A. Levy-Clarke; Eric B Sujler; Ali R. Djalilian; Hatice Nida Sen; S.Q. Al-Khatib; R. Ursea; Sunil Srivastava; Allison Bamji; Susan D. Mellow; Pushpa Sran; Thomas A. Waldmann; Ronald R. Buggage
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2004
R. Ursea; Robert B. Nussenblatt; Hatice Nida Sen; Ronald R. Buggage
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2004
Shree K. Kurup; R. Ursea; Jun Tang; Wee Kiak Lim; Hatice Nida Sen; S.S. Dahr; Ronald R. Buggage; Robert B. Nussenblatt
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2004
Jun Tang; R. Ursea; Ronald R. Buggage; Shree K. Kurup; Rafael C. Caruso