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Dive into the research topics where Samuel R. Dominguez is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel R. Dominguez.


The Lancet Respiratory Medicine | 2014

Effectiveness of neuraminidase inhibitors in reducing mortality in patients admitted to hospital with influenza A H1N1pdm09 virus infection: a meta-analysis of individual participant data

Stella G. Muthuri; Sudhir Venkatesan; Puja R. Myles; Jo Leonardi-Bee; Tarig Saleh Al Khuwaitir; Adbullah Al Mamun; Ashish P. Anovadiya; Eduardo Azziz-Baumgartner; Clarisa Báez; Matteo Bassetti; Bojana Beovic; Barbara Bertisch; Isabelle Bonmarin; Robert Booy; Víctor Hugo Borja-Aburto; Heinz Burgmann; Bin Cao; Jordi Carratalà; Justin T. Denholm; Samuel R. Dominguez; Péricles Almeida Delfino Duarte; Gal Dubnov-Raz; Marcela Echavarria; Sergio Fanella; Zhancheng Gao; Patrick Gérardin; Maddalena Giannella; Sophie Gubbels; Jethro Herberg; Anjarath L. Higuera Iglesias

BACKGROUND Neuraminidase inhibitors were widely used during the 2009-10 influenza A H1N1 pandemic, but evidence for their effectiveness in reducing mortality is uncertain. We did a meta-analysis of individual participant data to investigate the association between use of neuraminidase inhibitors and mortality in patients admitted to hospital with pandemic influenza A H1N1pdm09 virus infection. METHODS We assembled data for patients (all ages) admitted to hospital worldwide with laboratory confirmed or clinically diagnosed pandemic influenza A H1N1pdm09 virus infection. We identified potential data contributors from an earlier systematic review of reported studies addressing the same research question. In our systematic review, eligible studies were done between March 1, 2009 (Mexico), or April 1, 2009 (rest of the world), until the WHO declaration of the end of the pandemic (Aug 10, 2010); however, we continued to receive data up to March 14, 2011, from ongoing studies. We did a meta-analysis of individual participant data to assess the association between neuraminidase inhibitor treatment and mortality (primary outcome), adjusting for both treatment propensity and potential confounders, using generalised linear mixed modelling. We assessed the association with time to treatment using time-dependent Cox regression shared frailty modelling. FINDINGS We included data for 29,234 patients from 78 studies of patients admitted to hospital between Jan 2, 2009, and March 14, 2011. Compared with no treatment, neuraminidase inhibitor treatment (irrespective of timing) was associated with a reduction in mortality risk (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0·81; 95% CI 0·70-0·93; p=0·0024). Compared with later treatment, early treatment (within 2 days of symptom onset) was associated with a reduction in mortality risk (adjusted OR 0·48; 95% CI 0·41-0·56; p<0·0001). Early treatment versus no treatment was also associated with a reduction in mortality (adjusted OR 0·50; 95% CI 0·37-0·67; p<0·0001). These associations with reduced mortality risk were less pronounced and not significant in children. There was an increase in the mortality hazard rate with each days delay in initiation of treatment up to day 5 as compared with treatment initiated within 2 days of symptom onset (adjusted hazard ratio [HR 1·23] [95% CI 1·18-1·28]; p<0·0001 for the increasing HR with each days delay). INTERPRETATION We advocate early instigation of neuraminidase inhibitor treatment in adults admitted to hospital with suspected or proven influenza infection. FUNDING F Hoffmann-La Roche.


Lancet Infectious Diseases | 2015

A novel outbreak enterovirus D68 strain associated with acute flaccid myelitis cases in the USA (2012–14): a retrospective cohort study

Alexander L. Greninger; Samia N. Naccache; Kevin Messacar; Anna Clayton; Guixia Yu; Sneha Somasekar; Scot Federman; Doug Stryke; Christopher Anderson; Shigeo Yagi; Sharon Messenger; Debra A. Wadford; Dongxiang Xia; James Watt; Keith Van Haren; Samuel R. Dominguez; Carol A. Glaser; Grace M. Aldrovandi; Charles Y. Chiu

BACKGROUND Enterovirus D68 was implicated in a widespread outbreak of severe respiratory illness across the USA in 2014 and has also been reported sporadically in patients with acute flaccid myelitis. We aimed to investigate the association between enterovirus D68 infection and acute flaccid myelitis during the 2014 enterovirus D68 respiratory outbreak in the USA. METHODS Patients with acute flaccid myelitis who presented to two hospitals in Colorado and California, USA, between Nov 24, 2013, and Oct 11, 2014, were included in the study. Additional cases identified from Jan 1, 2012, to Oct 4, 2014, via statewide surveillance were provided by the California Department of Public Health. We investigated the cause of these cases by metagenomic next-generation sequencing, viral genome recovery, and enterovirus D68 phylogenetic analysis. We compared patients with acute flaccid myelitis who were positive for enterovirus D68 with those with acute flaccid myelitis but negative for enterovirus D68 using the two-tailed Fishers exact test, two-sample unpaired t test, and Mann-Whitney U test. FINDINGS 48 patients were included: 25 with acute flaccid myelitis, two with enterovirus-associated encephalitis, five with enterovirus-D68-associated upper respiratory illness, and 16 with aseptic meningitis or encephalitis who tested positive for enterovirus. Enterovirus D68 was detected in respiratory secretions from seven (64%) of 11 patients comprising two temporally and geographically linked acute flaccid myelitis clusters at the height of the 2014 outbreak, and from 12 (48%) of 25 patients with acute flaccid myelitis overall. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that all enterovirus D68 sequences associated with acute flaccid myelitis grouped into a clade B1 strain that emerged in 2010. Of six coding polymorphisms in the clade B1 enterovirus D68 polyprotein, five were present in neuropathogenic poliovirus or enterovirus D70, or both. One child with acute flaccid myelitis and a sibling with only upper respiratory illness were both infected by identical enterovirus D68 strains. Enterovirus D68 viraemia was identified in a child experiencing acute neurological progression of his paralytic illness. Deep metagenomic sequencing of cerebrospinal fluid from 14 patients with acute flaccid myelitis did not reveal evidence of an alternative infectious cause to enterovirus D68. INTERPRETATION These findings strengthen the putative association between enterovirus D68 and acute flaccid myelitis and the contention that acute flaccid myelitis is a rare yet severe clinical manifestation of enterovirus D68 infection in susceptible hosts. FUNDING National Institutes of Health, University of California, Abbott Laboratories, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


The Lancet | 2015

A cluster of acute flaccid paralysis and cranial nerve dysfunction temporally associated with an outbreak of enterovirus D68 in children in Colorado, USA

Kevin Messacar; Teri Schreiner; John Maloney; Adam Wallace; Jan Ludke; M Stephen Oberste; W. Allan Nix; Christine C. Robinson; Mary P. Glode; Mark J. Abzug; Samuel R. Dominguez

BACKGROUND Clusters of acute flaccid paralysis or cranial nerve dysfunction in children are uncommon. We aimed to assess a cluster of children with acute flaccid paralysis and cranial nerve dysfunction geographically and temporally associated with an outbreak of enterovirus-D68 respiratory disease. METHODS We defined a case of neurological disease as any child admitted to Childrens Hospital Colorado (Aurora, CO, USA) with acute flaccid paralysis with spinal-cord lesions involving mainly grey matter on imaging, or acute cranial nerve dysfunction with brainstem lesions on imaging, who had onset of neurological symptoms between Aug 1, 2014, and Oct 31, 2014. We used Poisson regression to assess whether the numbers of cases during the outbreak period were significantly greater than baseline case numbers from a historical control period (July 31, 2010, to July 31, 2014). FINDINGS 12 children met the case definition (median age 11·5 years [IQR 6·75-15]). All had a prodromal febrile illness preceding neurological symptoms by a median of 7 days (IQR 5·75-8). Neurological deficits included flaccid limb weakness (n=10; asymmetric n=7), bulbar weakness (n=6), and cranial nerve VI (n=3) and VII (n=2) dysfunction. Ten (83%) children had confluent, longitudinally extensive spinal-cord lesions of the central grey matter, with predominant anterior horn-cell involvement, and nine (75%) children had brainstem lesions. Ten (91%) of 11 children had cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis. Nasopharyngeal specimens from eight (73%) of 11 children were positive for rhinovirus or enterovirus. Viruses from five (45%) of 11 children were typed as enterovirus D68. Enterovirus PCR of cerebrospinal fluid, blood, and rectal swabs, and tests for other causes, were negative. Improvement of cranial nerve dysfunction has been noted in three (30%) of ten children. All ten children with limb weakness have residual deficits. INTERPRETATION We report the first geographically and temporally defined cluster of acute flaccid paralysis and cranial nerve dysfunction in children associated with an outbreak of enterovirus-D68 respiratory illness. Our findings suggest the possibility of an association between enterovirus D68 and neurological disease in children. If enterovirus-D68 infections continue to happen in an endemic or epidemic pattern, development of effective antiviral or immunomodulatory therapies and vaccines should become scientific priorities. FUNDING National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2007

Detection of Group 1 Coronaviruses in Bats in North America

Samuel R. Dominguez; Thomas J. O’Shea; Lauren Oko; Kathryn V. Holmes

Bats of 2 species harbor group 1 coronaviruses.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2008

Global Distribution of Novel Rhinovirus Genotype

Thomas Briese; Neil Renwick; Marietjie Venter; Richard G. Jarman; Dhrubaa Ghosh; Sophie Köndgen; Sanjaya K. Shrestha; A. Mette Hoegh; Inmaculada Casas; Edgard V. Adjogoua; Chantal Akoua-Koffi; Khin Saw Aye Myint; David T. Williams; Glenys Chidlow; Ria van den Berg; Cristina Calvo; Orienka Koch; Gustavo Palacios; Vishal Kapoor; Joseph Villari; Samuel R. Dominguez; Kathryn V. Holmes; Gerry Harnett; David Smith; John S. Mackenzie; Heinz Ellerbrok; Brunhilde Schweiger; Kristian Schønning; Mandeep S. Chadha; Fabian H. Leendertz

Global surveillance for a novel rhinovirus genotype indicated its association with community outbreaks and pediatric respiratory disease in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and North America. Molecular dating indicates that these viruses have been circulating for at least 250 years.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2008

Multiplex MassTag-PCR for respiratory pathogens in pediatric nasopharyngeal washes negative by conventional diagnostic testing shows a high prevalence of viruses belonging to a newly recognized rhinovirus clade

Samuel R. Dominguez; Thomas Briese; Gustavo Palacios; Jeffrey Hui; Joseph Villari; Vishal Kapoor; Rafal Tokarz; Mary P. Glode; Marsha S. Anderson; Christine C. Robinson; Kathryn V. Holmes; W. Ian Lipkin

Abstract Background Respiratory infections are the most common infectious diseases in humans worldwide and are a leading cause of death in children less than 5 years of age. Objectives Identify candidate pathogens in pediatric patients with unexplained respiratory disease. Study design Forty-four nasopharyngeal washes collected during the 2004–2005 winter season from pediatric patients with respiratory illnesses that tested negative for 7 common respiratory pathogens by culture and direct immunofluorescence assays were analyzed by MassTag-PCR. To distinguish human enteroviruses (HEV) and rhinoviruses (HRV), samples positive for picornaviruses were further characterized by sequence analysis. Results Candidate pathogens were detected by MassTag PCR in 27 of the 44 (61%) specimens that previously were rated negative. Sixteen of these 27 specimens (59%) contained picornaviruses; of these 9 (57%) contained RNA of a recently discovered clade of rhinoviruses. Bocaviruses were detected in three patients by RT-PCR. Conclusions Our study confirms that multiplex MassTag-PCR enhances the detection of pathogens in clinical specimens, and shows that previously unrecognized rhinoviruses, that potentially form a species HRV-C, may cause a significant amount of pediatric respiratory disease.


Genome Medicine | 2016

Erratum to: Clinical metagenomic identification of Balamuthia mandrillaris encephalitis and assembly of the draft genome: the continuing case for reference genome sequencing

Alexander L. Greninger; Kevin Messacar; Thelma H. Dunnebacke; Samia N. Naccache; Scot Federman; Jerome Bouquet; David M. Mirsky; Yosuke Nomura; Shigeo Yagi; Carol A. Glaser; Michael Vollmer; Craig A. Press; B. K. Kleinschmidt-DeMasters; Samuel R. Dominguez; Charles Y. Chiu

Author details Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of California, 185 Berry Street, San Francisco 94107 CA, USA. UCSF-Abbott Viral Diagnostics and Discovery Center, San Francisco 91407 CA, USA. Children’s Hospital Colorado and University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA. California Department of Public Health, Richmond, CA, USA. Kaiser Permanente Hospital, Oakland, CA, USA. John Muir Hospital, Walnut Creek, CA, USA. Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of California, San Francisco 94107 CA, USA.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Hospitalized children with 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1): comparison to seasonal influenza and risk factors for admission to the ICU.

Dayanand Bagdure; Donna Curtis; Emily L. Dobyns; Mary P. Glode; Samuel R. Dominguez

Background Limited data are available describing the clinical presentation and risk factors for admission to the intensive care unit for children with 2009 H1N1 infection. Methods We conducted a retrospective chart review of all hospitalized children with 2009 influenza A (H1N1) and 2008–09 seasonal influenza at The Childrens Hospital, Denver, Colorado. Results Of the 307 children identified with 2009 H1N1 infections, the median age was 6 years, 61% were male, and 66% had underlying medical conditions. Eighty children (26%) were admitted to the ICU. Thirty-two (40%) of the ICU patients required intubation and 17 (53%) of the intubated patients developed acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Four patients required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Eight (3%) of the hospitalized children died. Admission to the ICU was significantly associated with older age and underlying neurological condition. Compared to the 90 children admitted during the 2008–09 season, children admitted with 2009 H1N1 influenza were significantly older, had a shorter length of hospitalization, more use of antivirals, and a higher incidence of ARDS. Conclusions Compared to the 2008–09 season, hospitalized children with 2009 H1N1 influenza were much older and had more severe respiratory disease. Among children hospitalized with 2009 H1N1 influenza, risk factors for admission to the ICU included older age and having an underlying neurological condition. Children under the age of 2 hospitalized with 2009 H1N1 influenza were significantly less likely to require ICU care compared to older hospitalized children.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Role of the Spike Glycoprotein of Human Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) in Virus Entry and Syncytia Formation

Zhaohui Qian; Samuel R. Dominguez; Kathryn V. Holmes

Little is known about the biology of the emerging human group c betacoronavirus, Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV). Because coronavirus spike glycoproteins (S) mediate virus entry, affect viral host range, and elicit neutralizing antibodies, analyzing the functions of MERS-CoV S protein is a high research priority. MERS-CoV S on lentivirus pseudovirions mediated entry into a variety of cell types including embryo cells from New World Eptesicus fuscus bats. Surprisingly, a polyclonal antibody to the S protein of MHV, a group a murine betacoronavirus, cross-reacted in immunoblots with the S2 domain of group c MERS-CoV spike protein. MERS pseudovirions released from 293T cells contained only uncleaved S, and pseudovirus entry was blocked by lysosomotropic reagents NH4Cl and bafilomycin and inhibitors of cathepsin L. However, when MERS pseudovirions with uncleaved S protein were adsorbed at 4°C to Vero E6 cells, brief trypsin treatment at neutral pH triggered virus entry at the plasma membrane and syncytia formation. When 293T cells producing MERS pseudotypes co-expressed serine proteases TMPRSS-2 or -4, large syncytia formed at neutral pH, and the pseudovirions produced were non-infectious and deficient in S protein. These experiments show that if S protein on MERS pseudovirions is uncleaved, then viruses enter by endocytosis in a cathepsin L-dependent manner, but if MERS-CoV S is cleaved, either during virus maturation by serine proteases or on pseudovirions by trypsin in extracellular fluids, then viruses enter at the plasma membrane at neutral pH and cause massive syncytia formation even in cells that express little or no MERS-CoV receptor. Thus, whether MERS-CoV enters cells within endosomes or at the plasma membrane depends upon the host cell type and tissue, and is determined by the location of host proteases that cleave the viral spike glycoprotein and activate membrane fusion.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2009

Detection of four human coronaviruses in respiratory infections in children: a one-year study in Colorado.

Samuel R. Dominguez; Christine C. Robinson; Kathryn V. Holmes

Lower respiratory tract infections are the leading cause of death in children worldwide. Studies on the epidemiology and clinical associations of the four human non‐SARS human coronaviruses (HCoVs) using sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays are needed to evaluate the clinical significance of HCoV infections worldwide. Pediatric respiratory specimens (1,683) submitted to a diagnostic virology laboratory over a 1‐year period (December 2004–November 2005) that were negative for seven respiratory viruses by conventional methods were tested for RNA of four HCoVs using sensitive RT‐PCR assays. Coronavirus RNAs were detected in 84 (5.0%) specimens: HCoV‐NL63 in 37 specimens, HCoV‐OC43 in 34, HCoV‐229E in 11, and HCoV‐HKU1 in 2. The majority of HCoV infections occurred during winter months, and over 62% were in previously healthy children. Twenty‐six (41%) coronavirus positive patients had evidence of a lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI), 17 (26%) presented with vomiting and/or diarrhea, and 5 (8%) presented with meningoencephalitis or seizures. Respiratory specimens from one immunocompromised patient were persistently positive for HCoV‐229E RNA for 3 months. HCoV‐NL63‐positive patients were nearly twice as likely to be hospitalized (P = 0.02) and to have a LRTI (P = 0.04) than HCoV‐OC43‐positive patients. HCoVs are associated with a small, but significant number (at least 2.4% of total samples submitted), of both upper and lower respiratory tract illnesses in children in Colorado. Our data raise the possibility that HCoV may play a role in gastrointestinal and CNS disease. Additional studies are needed to investigate the potential roles of HCoVs in these diseases. J. Med. Virol. 81:1597–1604, 2009.

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Kevin Messacar

University of Colorado Denver

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Christine C. Robinson

University of Colorado Hospital

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Mary P. Glode

Food and Drug Administration

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Kathryn V. Holmes

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Marsha S. Anderson

University of Colorado Denver

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Suchitra Rao

University of Colorado Denver

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Daniel Olson

University of Colorado Denver

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Edwin J. Asturias

University of Colorado Denver

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