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Dive into the research topics where Sundari Mase is active.

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Featured researches published by Sundari Mase.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2010

Linezolid in the Treatment of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Gisela F. Schecter; C. Scott; L. True; A. Raftery; Jennifer Flood; Sundari Mase

BACKGROUND Linezolid is a new antibiotic with activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in vitro and in animal studies. Several small case series suggest that linezolid is poorly tolerated because of the side effects of anemia/thrombocytopenia and peripheral neuropathy. To characterize our clinical experience with linezolid, the California Department of Public Health Tuberculosis Control Branchs Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB) Service reviewed cases in which the MDR-TB treatment regimens included linezolid therapy. METHODS Record review was performed for 30 patients treated with linezolid as part of an MDR-TB regimen. Data were collected on clinical and microbiological characteristics, linezolid tolerability, and treatment outcomes. The dosage of linezolid was 600 mg daily. Vitamin B6 at a dosage of 50-100 mg daily was used to mitigate hematologic toxicity. RESULTS During 2003-2007, 30 patients received linezolid for the treatment of MDR-TB. Patients had isolates resistant to a median of 5 drugs (range, 2-13 drugs). Of the 30 cases, 29 (97%) were pulmonary; of these 29, 21 (72%) had positive results of acid-fast bacilli smear, and 16 (55%) were cavitary. Culture conversion occurred in all pulmonary cases at a median of 7 weeks. At data censure (31 December 2008), 22 (73%) of 30 patients had successfully completed treatment. Five continued to receive treatment. There were no deaths. Three patients had a poor outcome, including 2 defaults and 1 treatment failure. Side effects occurred in 9 patients, including peripheral and optic neuropathy, anemia/thrombocytopenia, rash, and diarrhea. However, only 3 patients stopped linezolid treatment because of side effects. CONCLUSIONS Linezolid was well tolerated, had low rates of discontinuation, and may have efficacy in the treatment of MDR-TB.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2014

Treatment practices, outcomes, and costs of multidrug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis, United States, 2005-2007.

Suzanne M. Marks; Jennifer Flood; Barbara J. Seaworth; Yael Hirsch-Moverman; Lori R. Armstrong; Sundari Mase; Katya Salcedo; Peter Oh; Edward A. Graviss; Paul W. Colson; Lisa Armitige; Manuel Revuelta; Kathryn Sheeran

Drug resistance was extensive and care was complex; nevertheless, high rates of treatment completion were achieved albeit at considerable cost.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Botulism from Drinking Pruno

Duc J. Vugia; Sundari Mase; Barbara Cole; John Stiles; Jon Rosenberg; Linda Velasquez; Allen Radner; Greg Inami

Foodborne botulism occurred among inmates at 2 prisons in California in 2004 and 2005. In the first outbreak, 4 inmates were hospitalized, 2 of whom required intubation. In the second event, 1 inmate required intubation. Pruno, an alcoholic drink made illicitly in prisons, was the novel vehicle for these cases.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2010

Rapid drug susceptibility testing with a molecular beacon assay is associated with earlier diagnosis and treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in California.

Ritu Banerjee; Jennifer Allen; S.-Y. Grace Lin; Janice Westenhouse; Ed Desmond; Gisela F. Schecter; Cheryl Scott; Ann Raftery; Sundari Mase; James Watt; Jennifer Flood

ABSTRACT To assess the clinical impact of a molecular beacon (MB) assay that detects multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB), we retrospectively reviewed records of 127 MDR TB patients with and without MB testing between 2004 and 2007. Use of the MB assay reduced the time to detection and treatment of MDR TB.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2017

Systematic Review, Meta-analysis, and Cost-effectiveness of Treatment of Latent Tuberculosis to Reduce Progression to Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Suzanne M. Marks; Sundari Mase; Sapna Morris

Background. Evidence-based recommendations for treating persons having presumed latent tuberculosis (LTBI) after contact to infectious multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis (TB) are lacking because published data consist of small observational studies. Tuberculosis incidence in persons treated for latent MDR -TB infection is unknown. Methods. We conducted a systematic review of studies published 1 January 1994-31 December 2014 to analyze TB incidence, treatment completion and discontinuation, and cost-effectiveness. We considered contacts with LTBI effectively treated if they were on ≥1 medication to which their MDR-TB strain was likely susceptible. We selected studies that compared treatment vs nontreatment outcomes and performed a meta-analysis to estimate the relative risk of TB incidence and its 95% confidence interval. Results. We abstracted data from 21 articles that met inclusion criteria. Six articles presented outcomes for contacts who were treated compared with those not treated for MDR-LTBI; 10 presented outcomes only for treated contacts, and 5 presented outcomes only for untreated contacts. The estimated MDR-TB incidence reduction was 90% (9%-99%) using data from 5 comparison studies. We also found high treatment discontinuation rates due to adverse effects in persons taking pyrazinamide-containing regimens. Cost-effectiveness was greatest using a fluoroquinolone/ethambutol combination regimen. Conclusions. Few studies met inclusion criteria, therefore results should be cautiously interpreted. We found a reduced risk of TB incidence with treatment for MDR-LTBI, suggesting effectiveness in prevention of progression to MDR-TB, and confirmed cost-effectiveness. However, we found that pyrazinamide-containing MDR-LTBI regimens often resulted in treatment discontinuation due to adverse effects.


International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease | 2016

Characteristics and costs of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in-patient care in the United States, 2005-2007.

Suzanne M. Marks; Yael Hirsch-Moverman; Katya Salcedo; Edward A. Graviss; Peter Oh; Barbara Seaworth; Jennifer Flood; Lori R. Armstrong; L. Armitige; Sundari Mase

OBJECTIVE A population-based study of 135 multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patients reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) during 2005-2007 found 73% were hospitalized. We analyzed factors associated with hospitalization. METHODS We assessed statistically significant multivariable associations with US in-patient TB diagnosis, frequency of hospitalization, length of hospital stay, and in-patient direct costs to the health care system. RESULTS Of 98 hospitalized patients, 83 (85%) were foreign-born. Blacks, diabetics, or smokers were more likely, and patients with disseminated disease less likely, to receive their TB diagnosis while hospitalized. Patients aged ⩾65 years, those with the acquired immune-deficiency syndrome (AIDS), or with private insurance, were hospitalized more frequently. Excluding deaths, length of stay was greater for patients aged ⩾65 years, those with extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB), those residing in Texas, those with AIDS, those who were unemployed, or those who had TB resistant to all first-line medications vs. others. Average hospitalization cost per XDR-TB patient (US


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2017

High Rate of Treatment Completion in Program Settings With 12-Dose Weekly Isoniazid and Rifapentine for Latent Mycobacterium tuberculosis Infection

Amy L. Sandul; Nwabunie Nwana; J Mike Holcombe; Mark N. Lobato; Suzanne M. Marks; Risa M. Webb; Shu-Hua Wang; Brock Stewart; Phil Griffin; Garrett Hunt; Neha Shah; Asween Marco; Naveen Patil; Leonard Mukasa; Ruth N. Moro; John A. Jereb; Sundari Mase; Terence Chorba; Sapna Bamrah-Morris; Christine Ho

285 000) was 3.5 times that per MDR-TB patient (US


Public health action | 2018

The California Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis Consult Service: a partnership of state and local programs

Neha Shah; Janice Westenhouse; P. Lowenthal; Gisela F. Schecter; Lisa True; Sundari Mase; Pennan M. Barry; Jennifer Flood

81 000), in 2010 dollars. Hospitalization episode costs for MDR-TB rank third highest and those for XDR-TB highest among the principal diagnoses. CONCLUSIONS Hospitalization was common and remains a critical care component for patients who were older, had comorbidities, or required complex management due to XDR-TB. MDR-TB in-patient costs are among the highest for any disease.


Journal of Clinical Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases | 2018

Pediatric tuberculosis consultations across 5 CDC regional tuberculosis training and medical consultation Centers

Anjeli Mase; Stephen Ryan; Greg Mader; Ana Alvarez; Lisa Armitige; Lisa Chen; George McSherry; John W. Wilson; Sundari Mase; Ritu Banerjee

Background Randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that the newest latent tuberculosis (LTBI) regimen, 12 weekly doses of directly observed isoniazid and rifapentine (3HP), is as efficacious as 9 months of isoniazid, with a greater completion rate (82% vs 69%); however, 3HP has not been assessed in routine healthcare settings. Methods Observational cohort of LTBI patients receiving 3HP through 16 US programs was used to assess treatment completion, adverse drug reactions, and factors associated with treatment discontinuation. Results Of 3288 patients eligible to complete 3HP, 2867 (87.2%) completed treatment. Children aged 2-17 years had the highest completion rate (94.5% [155/164]). Patients reporting homelessness had a completion rate of 81.2% (147/181). In univariable analyses, discontinuation was lowest among children (relative risk [RR], 0.44 [95% confidence interval {CI}, .23-.85]; P = .014), and highest in persons aged ≥65 years (RR, 1.72 [95% CI, 1.25-2.35]; P < .001). In multivariable analyses, discontinuation was lowest among contacts of patients with tuberculosis (TB) disease (adjusted RR [ARR], 0.68 [95% CI, .52-.89]; P = .005) and students (ARR, 0.45 [95% CI, .21-.98]; P = .044), and highest with incarceration (ARR, 1.43 [95% CI, 1.08-1.89]; P = .013) and homelessness (ARR, 1.72 [95% CI, 1.25-2.39]; P = .001). Adverse drug reactions were reported by 1174 (35.7%) patients, of whom 891 (76.0%) completed treatment. Conclusions Completion of 3HP in routine healthcare settings was greater overall than rates reported from clinical trials, and greater than historically observed using other regimens among reportedly nonadherent populations. Widespread use of 3HP for LTBI treatment could accelerate elimination of TB disease in the United States.


BMJ Global Health | 2018

Tuberculosis preventive treatment: the next chapter of tuberculosis elimination in India

Patrick K. Moonan; Sreenivas A. Nair; Reshu Agarwal; Vineet K. Chadha; Puneet K. Dewan; Umesh Gupta; Christine Ho; Timothy H. Holtz; Ajay Kumar; Nishant Kumar; Prahlad Kumar; Susan A. Maloney; Sundari Mase; John E. Oeltmann; C. N. Paramasivan; Malik Parmar; Kiran K Rade; Raghuram Rao; Virendra S Salhorta; Rohit Sarin; Sanjay Sarin; Kuldeep Singh Sachdeva; Sriram Selvaraju; Rupak Singla; Diya Surie; Jamhoih Tonsing; Tripathy Sp; Sunil D. Khaparde

Background: The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend expert consultation for multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) cases. In 2002, the California MDR-TB Service was created to provide expert MDR-TB consultations. We describe the characteristics, treatment outcomes and management of patients referred to the Service. Methods: Surveillance data were used for descriptive analysis of cases, with consultation during July 2002-December 2012. Clinical consultation data and modified World Health Organization indicators were used to assess the care and management of cases, with consultation from January 2009 to December 2012. Results: Of 339 MDR-TB patients, 140 received a consultation. The proportion of patients receiving a consultation increased from 12% in 2002 to 63% in 2012. There were 24 pre-extensively drug-resistant TB and 5 patients with extensively drug-resistant TB. The majority (n = 123, 88%) completed treatment, 5 (4%) died, 7 (5%) moved before treatment completion, 4 (3%) stopped treatment due to an adverse event and 1 (1%) had an unknown outcome. Indicator data showed that 86% underwent rapid molecular drug susceptibility testing, 98% received at least four drugs to which they had known or presumed susceptibility, and 93% culture converted within 6 months. Conclusions: Consultations with the MDR-TB Service increased over time. Results highlight successful treatment and indicator outcomes.

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Jennifer Flood

California Department of Public Health

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John A. Jereb

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Suzanne M. Marks

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Terence Chorba

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Katya Salcedo

California Department of Public Health

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Lori R. Armstrong

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Neha Shah

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Barbara J. Seaworth

University of Texas at Austin

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Barbara Seaworth

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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