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Dive into the research topics where Ruth H. Whitham is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruth H. Whitham.


Annals of Neurology | 2007

Glatiramer acetate in primary progressive multiple sclerosis: Results of a multinational, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Jerry S. Wolinsky; Ponnada A. Narayana; Paul O'Connor; Patricia K. Coyle; Corey C. Ford; Kenneth Johnson; Aaron E. Miller; Lillian Pardo; Shaul Kadosh; David Ladkani; Lorne F. Kastrukoff; Pierre Duquette; Mark S. Freedman; Marc Debouverie; Catherine Lubetski; Gilles Edan; Etienne Roullet; Christian Confavreux; Alan J. Thompson; Lance Blumhardt; Stanley Hawkins; Thomas F. Scott; Daniel Wynn; Joanna Cooper; Stephen Thurston; Stanton B. Elias; Clyde Markowitz; David Mattson; John H. Noseworthy; Elizabeth A. Shuster

To determine whether glatiramer acetate (GA) slows accumulation of disability in primary progressive multiple sclerosis.


Nature Medicine | 1996

Treatment of multiple sclerosis with T–cell receptor peptides: Results of a double–blind pilot trial

Arthur A. Vandenbark; Yuan K. Chou; Ruth H. Whitham; Michele Mass; Abigail C. Buenafe; Diane Liefeld; Daniel Kavanagh; Shelley A. Cooper; George A. Hashim; Halina Offner; Dennis Bourdette

A T–cell receptor (TCR) peptide vaccine from the Vβ5.2 sequence expressed in multiple sclerosis (MS) plaques and on myelin basic protein (MBP)–specific T cells boosted peptide–reactive T cells in patients with progressive MS. Vaccine responders had a reduced MBP response and remained clinically stable without side effects during one year of therapy, whereas nonresponders had an increased MBP response and progressed clinically. Peptide–specific T helper 2 cells directly inhibited MBP–specific T helper 1 cells in vitro through the release of interleukin–10, implicating a bystander suppression mechanism that holds promise for treatment of MS and other autoimmune diseases.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2003

Functional assay for human CD4+CD25+ Treg cells reveals an age-dependent loss of suppressive activity.

Laura Tsaknaridis; Leslie Spencer; Nicole Culbertson; Kevin Hicks; Dorian LaTocha; Yuan K. Chou; Ruth H. Whitham; Antony C. Bakke; Richard E. Jones; Halina Offner; Dennis Bourdette; Arthur A. Vandenbark

CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg cells) prevent T cell‐mediated autoimmune diseases in rodents. To develop a functional Treg assay for human blood cells, we used FACS‐ or bead‐sorted CD4+CD25+ T cells from healthy donors to inhibit anti‐CD3/CD28 activation of CD4+CD25− indicator T cells. The data clearly demonstrated classical Treg suppression of CD4+CD25− indicator cells by both CD4+CD25+high and CD4+CD25+low T cells obtained by FACS or magnetic bead sorting. Suppressive activity was found in either CD45RO− (naive) or CD45RO+ (memory) subpopulations, was independent of the TCR signal strength, required cell–cell contact, and was reversible by interleukin‐2 (IL‐2). Of general interest is that a wider sampling of 27 healthy donors revealed an age‐ but not gender‐dependent loss of suppressive activity in the CD4+CD25+ population. The presence or absence of suppressive activity in CD4+CD25+ T cells from a given donor could be demonstrated consistently over time, and lack of suppression was not due to method of sorting, strength of signal, or sensitivity of indicator cells. Phenotypic markers did not differ on CD4+CD25+ T cells tested ex vivo from suppressive vs. nonsuppressive donors, although, upon activation in vitro, suppressive CD4+CD25+ T cells had significantly higher expression of both CTLA‐4 and GITR than CD4+CD25− T cells from the same donors. Moreover, antibody neutralization of CTLA‐4, GITR, IL‐10, or IL‐17 completely reversed Treg‐induced suppression. Our results are highly consistent with those reported for murine Treg cells and are the first to demonstrate that suppressive activity of human CD4+CD25+ T cells declines with age. Published 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1992

Frequency of T cells specific for myelin basic protein and myelin proteolipid protein in blood and cerebrospinal fluid in multiple sclerosis

Yuan K. Chou; Dennis Bourdette; Halina Offner; Ruth H. Whitham; Run Ying Wang; George A. Hashim; Arthur A. Vandenbark

T cell sensitization to two myelin components, myelin basic protein (MBP) and myelin proteolipid protein (PLP), may be important to the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS). Using the limiting dilution assay, we demonstrated that the blood of MS patients had an increased frequency of MBP-reactive T cells compared with normal subjects and patients with other neurological diseases (OND) and rheumatoid arthritis. There was no difference in T cell frequency to a synthetic peptide, PLP139-151, or Herpes simplex virus. Within cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), 37% of IL-2/IL-4-reactive T cell isolates from MS patients responded either to MBP or PLP139-151 while only 5% of similar isolates from OND patients responded to these myelin antigens. The mean relative frequency of MBP-reactive T cells within CSF from MS patients was significantly higher than that of OND patients (22 x 10(-5) cells versus 1 x 10(-5) cells) and was similar to that of MBP reactive T cells within the central nervous system of rats with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. These results lend new support to the hypothesis that myelin-reactive T cells mediate disease in MS.


Neurology | 1992

Inter‐ and intrarater scoring agreement using grades 1.0 to 3.5 of the Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS)

Donald E. Goodkin; Diane Cookfair; Karl Wende; Dennis Bourdette; Patrick M. Pullicino; B. Scherokman; Ruth H. Whitham

We determined inter- and intrarater Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scoring agreement for four trained examining physicians who evaluated 10 clinically stable multiple sclerosis patients. These patients had previously been determined to have EDSS scores of 1.0 to 3.5 and were scheduled to participate in a funded clinical trial of intramuscular recombinant interferon-beta. Intrarater reliability was greater than interrater reliability for scoring the EDSS and all of its component functional systems scores (FSS). Specifically, individual examiners were able to reproduce three serial examination scores on the same patient on the same day (intrarater agreement) within 1.0 EDSS or 2.0 individual FSS points. Reproducible scoring across examiners (interrater agreement), however, could only be accomplished within 1.5 EDSS or 3.0 individual FSS points. Additionally, the interrater scoring variability in our patients is greater than that previously reported for patients with higher EDSS scores. We conclude that clinical trials that employ the EDSS as an outcome measure of treatment efficacy should include inter- and intrarater agreement data for all examining physicians. Most importantly, studies using a single examining physician to evaluate individual patients throughout the course of a clinical trial will require less change in the EDSS to reliably measure disease activity than will studies using more than one examining physician to evaluate individual patients throughout the trial.


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 1995

A phase III trial of intramuscular recombinant interferon beta as treatment for exacerbating-remitting multiple sclerosis: design and conduct of study and baseline characteristics of patients

Lawrence Jacobs; Diane Cookfair; Ra Rudick; Rm Herndon; J R Richert; Am Salazar; Js Fischer; De Goodkin; Cv Granger; Jh Simon; Lj Emrich; David M. Bartoszak; Dennis Bourdette; J. Braiman; Carol M. Brownscheidle; Michael E. Coats; Stanley Cohan; David S. Dougherty; R. P. Kinkel; Michele Mass; Frederick Munschauer; Roger L. Priore; Patrick M. Pullicino; Barbara J. Scherokman; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman; Ruth H. Whitham

The design and conduct of a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multicenter, phase III study of recombinant interferon beta-1a (IFN-β-1a) as treatment for exacerbating-remitting MS are described, as are baseline characteristics of the study population. The purpose of the study was to determine if 6.0 × 106 IU (30 μg) of IFN-β-1a, administered by weekly intramuscular (i.m.) injections, was effective in delaying the onset of sustained disability. The primary outcome measure was time to onset of treatment failure, defined as a worsening on the Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) of greater than or equal to 1.0 point compared with baseline, persisting for at least 6 months. An intent-to-treat design was used. The primary outcome measure was analyzed using the Mantel-Cox log-rank statistic and Kaplan-Meier survival curves. Secondary outcomes included quantitative measures of upper and lower extremity function, neuropsychological test performance, functional and quality of life assessments and several measures derived from annual brain MRI studies. Entry criteria included prestudy exacerbation rates of at least 0.67 per year and EDSS scores of 1.0–3.5. A total of 301 MS patients were randomly assigned to receive weekly i.m. injections of IFN-β-1a or placebo. The average age of the study population at entry was 37 years; 92% were Caucasian and 73% were women. The mean prestudy disease duration was 6.5 years, mean prestudy exacerbation rate was 1.2 per year and the mean EDSS score was 2.3. The randomization yielded well-balanced treatment arms. Various aspects of the study are discussed, including: (1) the decision to focus study design on sustained disability; (2) the rationale for the treatment regimen; (3) measures taken to assure the reliability of the primary outcome measure; and (4) a description of the secondary outcome measures.


Neurology | 2015

The cost of multiple sclerosis drugs in the US and the pharmaceutical industry: Too big to fail?

Daniel M. Hartung; Dennis Bourdette; Sharia M. Ahmed; Ruth H. Whitham

Objective: To examine the pricing trajectories in the United States of disease-modifying therapies (DMT) for multiple sclerosis (MS) over the last 20 years and assess the influences on rising prices. Methods: We estimated the trend in annual drug costs for 9 DMTs using published drug pricing data from 1993 to 2013. We compared changes in DMT costs to general and prescription drug inflation during the same period. We also compared the cost trajectories for first-generation MS DMTs interferon (IFN)–β-1b, IFN-β-1a IM, and glatiramer acetate with contemporaneously approved biologic tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors. Results: First-generation DMTs, originally costing


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1999

Cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities in a phase III trial of Avonex® (IFNβ-1a) for relapsing multiple sclerosis

Richard A. Rudick; Diane Cookfair; Nancy Simonian; Richard M. Ransohoff; John R. Richert; Lawrence Jacobs; Robert M. Herndon; Andres M. Salazar; Jill S. Fischer; Carl V. Granger; Donald E. Goodkin; Jack H. Simon; David M. Bartoszak; Dennis Bourdette; Jonathan Braiman; Carol M. Brownscheidle; Michael E. Coats; Stanley Cohan; David S. Dougherty; R. P. Kinkel; Michele Mass; Frederick E. Munchsauer; Kathy O'Reilly; Roger L. Priore; Patrick M. Pullicino; Barbara J. Scherokman; Karl Wende; Bianca Weinstock-Guttman; Ruth H. Whitham

8,000 to


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2010

Memantine for cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis: a randomized placebo-controlled trial

Jesus Lovera; Elliot M. Frohman; Tr Brown; D. Bandari; L. Nguyen; Vijayshree Yadav; Olaf Stüve; J. Karman; K. Bogardus; G. Heimburger; L. Cua; G. Remingon; J. Fowler; T. Monahan; S. Kilcup; Y. Courtney; J. McAleenan; K. Butler; Katherine Wild; Ruth H. Whitham; Dennis Bourdette

11,000, now cost about


Multiple Sclerosis Journal | 2007

Ginkgo biloba for the improvement of cognitive performance in multiple sclerosis : a randomized, placebo-controlled trial

Jesus Lovera; Bridget Bagert; K. Smoot; Cynthia D. Morris; Rachel Frank; K. Bogardus; Katherine Wild; Barry S. Oken; Ruth H. Whitham; Dennis Bourdette

60,000 per year. Costs for these agents have increased annually at rates 5 to 7 times higher than prescription drug inflation. Newer DMTs commonly entered the market with a cost 25%–60% higher than existing DMTs. Significant increases in the cost trajectory of the first-generation DMTs occurred following the Food and Drug Administration approvals of IFN-β-1a SC (2002) and natalizumab (reintroduced 2006) and remained high following introduction of fingolimod (2010). Similar changes did not occur with TNF inhibitor biologics during these time intervals. DMT costs in the United States currently are 2 to 3 times higher than in other comparable countries. Conclusions: MS DMT costs have accelerated at rates well beyond inflation and substantially above rates observed for drugs in a similar biologic class. There is an urgent need for clinicians, payers, and manufacturers in the United States to confront the soaring costs of DMTs.

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Dennis N. Bourdette

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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