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Dive into the research topics where Susan A. Fiscus is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan A. Fiscus.


The Lancet | 1997

Reduction of concentration of HIV-1 in semen after treatment of urethritis: implications for prevention of sexual transmission of HIV-1

Myron S. Cohen; Irving Hoffman; Rachel A. Royce; Peter N. Kazembe; John R. Dyer; Celine Costello Daly; Dick Zimba; Pietro Vernazza; Martin Maida; Susan A. Fiscus; Joseph J. Eron

BACKGROUND Transmission of HIV-1 is predominantly by heterosexual contact in sub-Saharan Africa, where sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are also common. Epidemiological studies suggest that STDs facilitate transmission of HIV-1, but the biological mechanism remains unclear. We investigated the hypothesis that STDs increase the likelihood of transmission of HIV-1 through increased concentration of the virus in semen. METHODS HIV-1 RNA concentrations were measured in seminal and blood plasma from 135 HIV-1-seropositive men in Malawi; 86 had urethritis and 49 controls did not have urethritis. Men with urethritis received antibiotic treatment according to the guidelines of the Malawian STD Advisory Committee. Samples were analysed at baseline and at week 1 and week 2 after antibiotic therapy in urethritis patients, and at baseline and week 2 in the control group. FINDINGS HIV-1-seropositive men with urethritis had HIV-1 RNA concentrations in seminal plasma eight times higher than those in seropositive men without urethritis (12.4 vs 1.51 x 10(4) copies/mL, p = 0.035), despite similar CD4 counts and concentrations of blood plasma viral RNA. Gonorrhoea was associated with the greatest concentration of HIV-1 in semen (15.8 x 10(4) copies/mL). After the urethritis patients received antimicrobial therapy directed against STDs, the concentration of HIV-1 RNA in semen decreased significantly (from 12.4 x 10(4) copies/mL to 8.91 x 10(4) copies/mL at 1 week [p = 0.03] and 4.12 x 10(4) copies/mL at 2 weeks [p = 0.0001]). Blood plasma viral RNA concentrations did not change. There was no significant change in seminal plasma HIV-1 RNA concentrations during the 2-week period in the control group (p = 0.421). INTERPRETATION These results suggest that urethritis increases the infectiousness of men with HIV-1 infection. HIV-1-control programmes, which include detection and treatment of STDs in patients already infected with HIV-1, may help to curb the epidemic. Targeting of gonococcal urethritis may be a particularly effective strategy.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1996

The Relation of Virologic and Immunologic Markers to Clinical Outcomes after Nucleoside Therapy in HIV-Infected Adults with 200 to 500 CD4 Cells per Cubic Millimeter

David Katzenstein; Scott M. Hammer; Michael D. Hughes; Holly Gundacker; J. Brooks Jackson; Susan A. Fiscus; Suraiya Rasheed; Tarek Elbeik; Richard C. Reichman; Anthony J. Japour; Thomas C. Merigan; Martin S. Hirsch

BACKGROUND We studied measures of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication, the viral phenotype, and immune function (CD4 cell counts) and the relation of changes in these indicators to clinical outcomes in a subgroup of patients in a controlled trial of early antiretroviral treatment for HIV, the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Study 175. METHODS The 391 subjects, each of whom entered the study with a single screening CD4 cell count of 200 to 500 per cubic millimeter, were randomly assigned to receive zidovudine alone, didanosine alone, zidovudine plus didanosine, or zidovudine plus zalcitabine. Plasma concentrations of HIV RNA were assessed in 366 subjects, and viral isolates from 332 subjects were assayed for the presence of the syncytium-inducing phenotype. RESULTS After eight weeks, the mean (+/-SE) decrease from base line in the concentration of HIV RNA, expressed as the change in the base 10 log of the number of copies per milliliter, was 0.26+/-0.06 for patients treated with zidovudine alone, 0.65+/-0.07 for didanosine alone, 0.93+/-0.10 for zidovudine plus didanosine, and 0.89+/-0.06 for zidovudine plus zalcitabine (P<0.001 for each of the pairwise comparisons with zidovudine alone). Multivariate proportional-hazards models showed that higher base-line concentrations of plasma HIV RNA, less suppression of plasma HIV RNA by treatment, and the presence of the syncytium-inducing phenotype were significantly associated with an increased risk of progression to the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and death. After adjustment for these measures of viral replication and for the viral phenotype, CD4 cell counts were not significant predictors of clinical outcome. CONCLUSIONS Both the risk of the progression of HIV disease and the efficacy of antiretroviral therapy are strongly associated with the plasma level of HIV RNA and with the viral phenotype. The changes in the plasma concentration of HIV RNA predict the changes in CD4 cell counts and survival after treatment with reverse-transcriptase inhibitors.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Quantitating the Multiplicity of Infection with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Subtype C Reveals a Non-Poisson Distribution of Transmitted Variants

Melissa-Rose Abrahams; Jeffrey A. Anderson; Elena E. Giorgi; Cathal Seoighe; Koleka Mlisana; Li-Hua Ping; Gayathri Athreya; Florette K. Treurnicht; Brandon F. Keele; Natasha Wood; Jesus F. Salazar-Gonzalez; Tanmoy Bhattacharya; Haitao Chu; Irving Hoffman; Shannon Galvin; Clement Mapanje; Peter N. Kazembe; R. Thebus; Susan A. Fiscus; Winston Hide; Myron S. Cohen; S. S. Abdool Karim; Barton F. Haynes; George M. Shaw; Beatrice H. Hahn; Bette T. Korber; R. Swanstrom; Carolyn Williamson

ABSTRACT Identifying the specific genetic characteristics of successfully transmitted variants may prove central to the development of effective vaccine and microbicide interventions. Although human immunodeficiency virus transmission is associated with a population bottleneck, the extent to which different factors influence the diversity of transmitted viruses is unclear. We estimate here the number of transmitted variants in 69 heterosexual men and women with primary subtype C infections. From 1,505 env sequences obtained using a single genome amplification approach we show that 78% of infections involved single variant transmission and 22% involved multiple variant transmissions (median of 3). We found evidence for mutations selected for cytotoxic-T-lymphocyte or antibody escape and a high prevalence of recombination in individuals infected with multiple variants representing another potential escape pathway in these individuals. In a combined analysis of 171 subtype B and C transmission events, we found that infection with more than one variant does not follow a Poisson distribution, indicating that transmission of individual virions cannot be seen as independent events, each occurring with low probability. While most transmissions resulted from a single infectious unit, multiple variant transmissions represent a significant fraction of transmission events, suggesting that there may be important mechanistic differences between these groups that are not yet understood.


AIDS | 2009

The public health approach to identify antiretroviral therapy failure: high-level nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance among Malawians failing first-line antiretroviral therapy

Mina C. Hosseinipour; Joep J. van Oosterhout; Ralf Weigel; Sam Phiri; Debbie Kamwendo; Neil T. Parkin; Susan A. Fiscus; Julie A. E. Nelson; Joseph J. Eron; Johnstone Kumwenda

Background:Over 150 000 Malawians have started antiretroviral therapy (ART), in which first-line therapy is stavudine/lamivudine/nevirapine. We evaluated drug resistance patterns among patients failing first-line ART on the basis of clinical or immunological criteria in Lilongwe and Blantyre, Malawi. Methods:Patients meeting the definition of ART failure (new or progressive stage 4 condition, CD4 cell count decline more than 30%, CD4 cell count less than that before treatment) from January 2006 to July 2007 were evaluated. Among those with HIV RNA of more than 1000 copies/ml, genotyping was performed. For complex genotype patterns, phenotyping was performed. Results:Ninety-six confirmed ART failure patients were identified. Median (interquartile range) CD4 cell count, log10 HIV-1 RNA, and duration on ART were 68 cells/μl (23–174), 4.72 copies/ml (4.26–5.16), and 36.5 months (26.6–49.8), respectively. Ninety-three percent of samples had nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor mutations, and 81% had the M184V mutation. The most frequent pattern included M184V and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor mutations along with at least one thymidine analog mutation (56%). Twenty-three percent of patients acquired the K70E or K65R mutations associated with tenofovir resistance; 17% of the patients had pan-nucleoside resistance that corresponded to K65R or K70E and additional resistance mutations, most commonly the 151 complex. Emergence of the K65R and K70E mutations was associated with CD4 cell count of less than 100 cells/μl (odds ratio 6.1) and inversely with the use of zidovudine (odds ratio 0.18). Phenotypic susceptibility data indicated that the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor backbone with the highest activity for subsequent therapy was zidovudine/lamivudine/tenofovir, followed by lamivudine/tenofovir, and then abacavir/didanosine. Conclusion:When clinical and CD4 cell count criteria are used to monitor first-line ART failure, extensive nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor resistance emerges, with most patients having resistance profiles that markedly compromise the activity of second-line ART.


AIDS | 2000

Potent antiretroviral treatment of HIV-infection results in suppression of the seminal shedding of HIV

Pietro Vernazza; Luigi Troiani; Markus Flepp; Richard W. Cone; Jody Schock; Felix Roth; Katia Boggian; Myron S. Cohen; Susan A. Fiscus; Joseph J. Eron

ObjectiveThe amount of HIV in semen likely influences infectiousness. Antiretroviral therapy decreases HIV-RNA in semen, but data on HIV concentrations in semen in a large cohort of men with suppressed HIV-RNA in blood is unavailable. MethodsMale patients with a treatment-induced reduction of HIV-RNA load in plasma below 400 copies/ml were asked to donate a semen and blood sample. Blood and seminal plasma were tested for the presence of HIV-RNA by the NucliSens method (detection limit 400 copies/ml). Seminal cell samples from 67 patients were further analysed for the presence of HIV-DNA using a nested DNA-polymerase chain reaction. Results of RNA and DNA testing in semen were compared with 55 HIV-positive antiretroviral therapy-naive men. ResultsA total of 114 patients participated in the study. Seminal plasma HIV-RNA was detectable in only two patients [1.8%, 95% confidence ratio (CI), 0–4.2%] compared with a detection frequency of 67% in untreated controls [Odds ratio (OR), 0.01; 95% CI, 0–0.03]. Detection of cell-associated HIV-DNA in semen was significantly less frequent (16 versus 38%) in patients receiving suppressive therapy compared with untreated controls (OR, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.12–0.80). ConclusionIn patients with treatment-induced suppression of blood viral load the likelihood of having detectable HIV in semen is very low (< 4%). In addition, seminal shedding of cell-free and cell-associated HIV is significantly lower than in an untreated population of HIV-infected asymptomatic men. On a population basis, this effect of therapy may help to reduce sexual transmission of HIV. However, individual patients may still be infected as evidenced by continued shedding of cells harbouring the HIV provirus.


AIDS | 2007

Amplified transmission of HIV-1: comparison of HIV-1 concentrations in semen and blood during acute and chronic infection

Christopher D. Pilcher; George Joaki; Irving Hoffman; Francis Martinson; Clement Mapanje; Paul W. Stewart; Kimberly A. Powers; Shannon Galvin; David Chilongozi; Syze Gama; Matthew Price; Susan A. Fiscus; Myron S. Cohen

Objectives:This study was conducted to compare viral dynamics in blood and semen between subjects with antibody negative, acute HIV-1 infection and other subjects with later stages of infection. Design:A prospective cohort study was embedded within a cross-sectional study of HIV screening in a Lilongwe, Malawi STD clinic. Methods:Blood samples from HIV antibody negative or indeterminate volunteers were used to detect HIV RNA in plasma using a pooling strategy. Blood and seminal plasma HIV-1 RNA concentrations were measured over 16 weeks. Results:Sixteen men with acute HIV infection and 25 men with chronic HIV infection were studied. Blood viral load in subjects with acute HIV infection was highest about 17 days after infection (mean ± SE, 6.9 ± 0.5 log10 copies/ml), while semen viral load peaked about 30 days after infection (4.5 ± 0.4 log10 copies/ml). Semen viral load declined by 1.7 log10 to a nadir by week 10 of HIV infection. Semen and blood viral loads were more stable in chronically infected subjects over 16 weeks. Higher semen levels of HIV RNA were noted in subjects with low CD4 cell counts. Conclusions:These results provide a biological explanation for reported increases in HIV transmission during the very early (acute) and late stages of infection. Recognizing temporal differences in HIV shedding in the genital tract is important in the development of effective HIV prevention strategies.


AIDS | 1999

The effect of Plasmodium falciparum malaria on HIV-1 RNA blood plasma concentration

Irving Hoffman; Charles S. Jere; Terrie E. Taylor; Peter Munthali; John R. Dyer; Jack J. Wirima; Stephen J. Rogerson; Newton Kumwenda; J. J. Eron; Susan A. Fiscus; Hrishitesh Chakraborty; Taha E. Taha; Myron S. Cohen; Malcolm E. Molyneux

OBJECTIVES This study was undertaken to determine the relative effect of malaria infection on HIV concentration in blood plasma, and prospectively to monitor viral concentrations after antimalarial therapy. DESIGN A prospective, double cohort study was designed to compare the blood HIV-1 RNA concentrations of HIV-positive individuals with and without acute malaria illness. Subjects were followed for 4 weeks after successful malaria therapy, or for 4 weeks from enrollment (controls). METHODS Malawian adults with symptomatic Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia (malaria group) and asymptomatic, aparasitemic blood donors (control group) were tested for HIV-1 antibodies to identify appropriate study groups. The malaria group received antimalarial chemotherapy only and were followed with sequential blood films. In both groups, blood plasma HIV-1 RNA viral concentrations were determined at enrollment and again at 1, 2 and 4 weeks. RESULTS Forty-seven malaria patients and 42 blood donors were enrolled. At enrollment blood plasma HIV-1 RNA concentrations were approximately sevenfold higher in patients with malaria than in blood donors (medians 15.1 x 10(4) and 2.24 x 10(4) copies/ml, respectively, P = 0.0001). No significant changes in median HIV-1 concentrations occurred in the 21 blood donors followed to week 4 (P = 0.68). In the 27 subjects successfully treated for malaria who were followed to week 4, a reduction in plasma HIV-1 RNA was observed from a median of 19.1 x 10(4) RNA copies/ml at enrollment, to 12.0 x 10(4) copies/ml at week 4, (P = 0.02). Plasma HIV-1 concentrations remained higher in malaria patients than controls (median 12.0 x 10(4) compared with 4.17 x 10(4) copies/ml, P = 0.086). CONCLUSIONS HIV-1 blood viral burden is higher in patients with P. falciparum malaria than in controls and this viral burden can, in some patients, be partly reduced with antimalarial therapy.


AIDS | 1999

Sexual transmission of HIV: infectiousness and prevention.

Pietro Vernazza; Joseph J. Eron; Susan A. Fiscus; Myron S. Cohen

HIV can be transmitted through contaminated blood and blood products; from a mother to her offspring during pregnancy childbirth or breast feeding; or through sexual contact. Sexual transmission remains by far the predominant mode of transmission. Vertical and blood borne transmission of HIV are highly predictable and very efficient modes. The recipient of a unit of contaminated blood nearly always becomes infected whereas only about 0.3% of people pierced with large bore needles seroconvert. This difference in efficiency most probably reflects the dissimilar concentrations of viruses inoculated. Vertical transmission leads to infection in about 25% of newborns. Sexual transmission of HIV however appears to be considerably less efficient and highly variable. To develop effective prevention strategies a better understanding of the factors affecting transmission of HIV is required. (excerpt)


AIDS | 1997

Quantification of HIV in semen: correlation with antiviral treatment and immune status

Pietro Vernazza; Bruce L. Gilliam; John R. Dyer; Susan A. Fiscus; Joseph J. Eron; Andreas C. Frank; Myron S. Cohen

Objective: This study examined the concentration of HIV in semen and the effects of biological factors on HIV excretion. Methods: Semen samples from 101 men at different stages of the disease were evaluated by quantitative HIV culture and HIV RNA detection. Blood plasma samples were available from 56 patients. The effects of CD4 and CD8 count, blood plasma RNA levels, treatment status and clinical staging on the shedding of HIV were evaluated. Results: HIV RNA levels in semen correlated with quantitative HIV culture of seminal cells and a strong association of positive seminal cell culture with high RNA levels was observed. CD4 count and antiviral treatment were inversely correlated with the concentration of HIV in semen. Blood plasma HIV RNA values were correlated with HIV RNA levels in semen, although some patients had highly discrepant results. Conclusions: The strong correlation between seminal cell culture and concentration of HIV RNA in seminal plasma suggested that HIV detected in seminal plasma was released by productively infected cells in the male genital tract. The study showed that the concentration of HIV in semen, which was likely to be correlated with HIV infectivity, was a function of the immune status of the HIV‐infected individual. The results suggested that antiviral therapy may have reduced the concentration of HIV in semen.


AIDS | 1998

Resistance of Hiv-1 to antiretroviral agents in blood and seminal plasma: implications for transmission

Joseph J. Eron; Pietro Vernazza; David M. Johnston; Françoise Seillier-Moiseiwitsch; Timothy M. Alcorn; Susan A. Fiscus; Myron S. Cohen

Objectives:To evaluate blood and genital secretions from HIV-infected men for HIV-1 resistant to antiretroviral agents. Design:A longitudinal study of 11 men with HIV infection and persistent detectable HIV RNA levels in blood and semen on antiretroviral therapy. Methods:HIV-1 from the blood and seminal plasma, obtained before the initiation of a new therapeutic regimen and on therapy, were evaluated by population-based sequencing of reverse transcriptase (RT) and protease RNA for the development of resistance to antiretroviral therapy. The genetic relatedness of sequences over time was compared. Results:RT genotypic resistance markers were present in seminal plasma at baseline in three out of six individuals with previous RT inhibitor experience. Eight out of 10 men, from whom the viral sequence was available on new therapy, demonstrated the evolution of new resistance mutations in the blood or seminal plasma, or both. The evolution of resistance mutations in blood and semen were frequently discordant, although over time similar patterns were seen. In two individuals, protease inhibitor resistance mutations evolved in the blood but not in the major variant in seminal plasma. Comparisons of the viral sequences between blood and seminal plasma from six men revealed two patterns. Three men showed a clustering of sequences from blood and semen. Three had sequences that appeared to evolve separately in the two compartments. Conclusions:HIV-1 variants with genotypic resistance markers are present in the male genital tract and evolve over time on incompletely suppressive antiretroviral therapy. The absence of genotypic changes consistent with protease inhibitor resistance in the semen, despite their presence in blood plasma, suggests the possibility of limited penetration of these agents into the male genital tract. Sexual transmission of resistant variants may have a negative impact on treatment outcome in newly infected individuals and on the spread of the diseases within a population. Therapeutic strategies that fully suppress HIV-1 in the genital tract should be a public health priority.

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Joseph J. Eron

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Myron S. Cohen

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Irving Hoffman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Taha E. Taha

Johns Hopkins University

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Julie A. E. Nelson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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