Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara
Federal University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara.
Clinical Transplantation | 2012
Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Christini Takemi Emori; Patricia da Silva Fucuta Pereira; Renata M. Perez; José Osmar Medina Pestana; Valéria Pereira Lanzoni; I. Silva; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia Cardoso Gomes Ferraz
information regarding histological progression of hepatitis C after renal transplant (RTx) is scarce.
Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2015
Raul Carlos Wahle; Renata M. Perez; Patricia da Silva Fucuta Pereira; Elze Maria Gomes Oliveira; Christini Takemi Emori; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Ivonete Sandra de Souza Silva; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz
In coinfected HBV/HCV patients, HBV replication is usually suppressed by HCV over the time. No study to date has evaluated the HBV viremia in long-term follow-up after HCV treatment in hemodialysis patients with HBV/HCV coinfection. This study aimed to assess the evolution of HBV viremia after HCV treatment in this special population. Ten hemodialysis patients with HBV/HCV coinfection with dominant HCV infection (HBV lower than 2000 IU/mL) and significant fibrosis were treated with interferon-alpha 3 MU 3×/week for 12 months and could be followed for at least 36 months after HCV treatment. Six cases of HBV reactivation (60%) during follow-up were observed and 5/6 had been successfully treated for HCV. Patients with HBV reactivation received anti-HBV therapy. Our preliminary findings indicate that treatment of hepatitis C in HBV/HCV coinfected hemodialysis patients may favor HBV reactivation. Thus, continued monitoring of HBV viremia must be recommended and prompt anti-HBV therapy should be implemented.
International Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013
Patricia da Silva Fucuta Pereira; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Renata M. Perez; Ana Cristina de Castro Amaral Feldner; Isaura Cunha de Melo; I. Silva; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz
OBJECTIVE The aim of the present study was to determine whether hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA present at week 12 is a good predictor of the response to interferon (IFN) monotherapy in hemodialysis patients with hepatitis C. METHODS Hemodialysis patients with hepatitis C who were treated between 1997 and 2008 with IFN monotherapy for 48 weeks without dose reduction were included. The predictive value of HCV RNA at week 12 for achieving a sustained virological response (SVR) was determined. RESULTS Forty patients (mean age 47±9 years; 75% males and 80% with genotype 1) were included. Septal fibrosis or cirrhosis was observed in 38% of these patients. Twelve (30%) of the 40 patients achieved SVR. HCV RNA was undetectable at week 12 in 68%. The positive predictive value of HCV RNA at week 12 was 45% and the negative predictive value was 100%. CONCLUSIONS The presence of HCV RNA at week 12 had a high negative predictive value for SVR in hemodialysis patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with IFN for 48 weeks. Therefore, if HCV RNA is detected at week 12, treatment should be discontinued due to the low probability of a sustained response.
Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016
Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Christini Takemi Emori; Renata M. Perez; Maria Cássia Jacintho Mendes-Correa; Adalgisa de Souza Paiva Ferreira; Ana Cristina de Castro Amaral Feldner; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Roberto J. Carvalho Filho; I. Silva; Maria Lucia Cardoso Gomes Ferraz
Brazil is one of the 22 countries that concentrates 80% of global tuberculosis cases concomitantly to a large number of hepatitis C carriers and some epidemiological risk scenarios are coincident for both diseases. We analyzed tuberculosis cases that occurred during α-interferon-based therapy for hepatitis C in reference centers in Brazil between 2001 and 2012 and reviewed their medical records. Eighteen tuberculosis cases were observed in patients submitted to hepatitis C α-interferon-based therapy. All patients were human immunodeficiency virus-negative. Nine patients (50%) had extra-pulmonary tuberculosis; 15 (83%) showed significant liver fibrosis. Hepatitis C treatment was discontinued in 12 patients (67%) due to tuberculosis reactivation and six (33%) had sustained virological response. The majority of patients had a favorable outcome but one died. Considering the evidences of α-IFN interference over the containment of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the immune impairment of cirrhotic patients, the increase of tuberculosis case reports during hepatitis C treatment with atypical and severe presentations and the negative impact on sustained virological response, we think these are strong arguments for latent tuberculosis infection screening before starting α-interferon-based therapy for any indication and even to consider IFN-free regimens against hepatitis C when a patient tests positive for latent tuberculosis infection.
European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2017
Rita Chelly Felix Tavares; Ana Cristina de Castro Amaral Feldner; João Renato Rebello Pinho; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Christini Takemi Emori; Roberto José de Carvalho-Filho; I. Silva; Rúbia Anita Ferraz Santana; Vanessa Fusco Duarte de Castro; Gregório T. F. Castoli; Charliana U. Cristovão; Maria Lucia Cardoso Gomes Ferraz
Background NS3 protease inhibitors (PIs) were the first direct antiviral agents used for the treatment of hepatitis C virus. The combination of second-wave PIs with other direct antiviral agents enabled the use of interferon-free regimens for chronic kidney disease patients on dialysis and renal transplant (RTx) recipients, populations in which the use of interferon and ribavirin is limited. However, the occurrence of PI resistance-associated variants (RAVs), both baseline and induced by therapy, has resulted in the failure of many treatment strategies. Methods The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of PI RAVs and of the Q80K polymorphism in chronic kidney disease patients on hemodialysis and RTx recipients. Direct sequencing of the NS3 protease was performed in 67 patients (32 hemodialysis and 35 RTx).Results RAVs to PIs were detected in 18% of the patients: V55A (9%), V36L (1.5%), T54S (1.5%), S122N (1.5%), I170L (1.5%), and M175L (1.5%). Only 1.5% of the patients carried the Q80K polymorphism. The frequency of these mutations was more than two times higher in patients infected with GT1a (25%) than GT1b (9.7%) (P=0.1). The mutations were detected in 20% of treatment-naive patients and in 15.6% of peginterferon/ribavirin-experienced patients (P=0.64). Furthermore, no mutation that would confer high resistance to PIs was detected.Conclusion The Q80K polymorphism was rare in the population studied. The occurrence of RAVs was common, with predominance in GT1a. However, the variants observed were those associated with a low level of resistance to PIs, facilitating the use of these drugs in this special group of patients.
Rheumatology International | 2010
Patricia da Silva Fucuta Pereira; Lara B. Lemos; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; I. Silva; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz
Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2009
Patricia da Silva Fucuta Pereira; I. Silva; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Christini Takemi Emori; Valéria Pereira Lanzoni; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz
Annals of Hepatology | 2015
Raul Carlos Wahle; Renata M. Perez; Christini Takemi Emori; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Patrícia da Silva Fucuta; Cristina M. Rocha; Ana Cristina de Castro Amaral Feldner; I. Silva; Roberto José de Carvalho-Filho; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2014
Isaura Cunha de Melo; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz; Renata M. Perez; Christine Takemi Emori; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Roberto José de Carvalho-Filho; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; I. Silva
Revista de Patologia Tropical | 2015
Christini Takemi Emori; Silvia Naomi de Oliveira Uehara; Roberto José de Carvalho-Filho; I. Silva; Ana Cristina de Castro Amaral Feldner; Valéria Pereira Lanzoni; Antonio Eduardo Benedito Silva; Maria Lucia G. Ferraz