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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne Kennedy is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne Kennedy.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

Development of cockroach immunotherapy by the Inner-City Asthma Consortium

Robert A. Wood; Alkis Togias; Jeremy Wildfire; Cynthia M. Visness; Elizabeth C. Matsui; Rebecca S. Gruchalla; Gurjit K. Khurana Hershey; Andrew H. Liu; George T. O'Connor; Jacqueline A. Pongracic; Edward M. Zoratti; Frédéric F. Little; Mark Granada; Suzanne Kennedy; Stephen R. Durham; Mohamed H. Shamji; William W. Busse

BACKGROUND Cockroach allergy is a key contributor to asthma morbidity in children living in urban environments. OBJECTIVE We sought to document immune responses to cockroach allergen and provide direction for the development of immunotherapy for cockroach allergy. METHODS Four pilot studies were conducted: (1) an open-label study to assess the safety of cockroach sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT) in adults and children; (2) a randomized, double-blind biomarker study of cockroach SLIT versus placebo in adults; (3) a randomized, double-blind biomarker study of 2 doses of cockroach SLIT versus placebo in children; and (4) an open-label safety and biomarker study of cockroach subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) in adults. RESULTS The adult SLIT trial (n = 54; age, 18-54 years) found a significantly greater increase in cockroach-specific IgE levels between the active and placebo groups (geometric mean ratio, 1.92; P < .0001) and a trend toward increased cockroach-specific IgG4 levels in actively treated subjects (P = .09) but no evidence of functional blocking antibody response. The pediatric SLIT trial (n = 99; age, 5-17 years) found significant differences in IgE, IgG, and IgG4 responses between both active groups and the placebo group but no consistent differences between the high- and low-dose groups. In the SCIT study the treatment resulted in significant changes from baseline in cockroach IgE, IgG4, and blocking antibody levels. The safety profile of cockroach immunotherapy was reassuring in all studies. CONCLUSIONS The administration of cockroach allergen by means of SCIT is immunologically more active than SLIT, especially with regard to IgG4 levels and blocking antibody responses. No safety concerns were raised in any age group. These pilot studies suggest that immunotherapy with cockroach allergen is more likely to be effective with SCIT.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

NIAID, NIEHS, NHLBI, and MCAN Workshop Report: The indoor environment and childhood asthma—implications for home environmental intervention in asthma prevention and management

Diane R. Gold; Gary Adamkiewicz; Syed Hasan Arshad; Juan C. Celedón; Martin D. Chapman; Ginger L. Chew; Donald N. Cook; Adnan Custovic; Ulrike Gehring; James E. Gern; Christine Cole Johnson; Suzanne Kennedy; Petros Koutrakis; Brian P. Leaderer; Herman Mitchell; Augusto A. Litonjua; Geoffrey A. Mueller; George T. O'Connor; Dennis R. Ownby; Wanda Phipatanakul; Victoria Persky; Matthew S. Perzanowski; Clare D. Ramsey; Päivi M. Salo; Julie M. Schwaninger; Joanne E. Sordillo; Avrum Spira; Shakira F. Suglia; Alkis Togias; Darryl C. Zeldin

&NA; Environmental exposures have been recognized as critical in the initiation and exacerbation of asthma, one of the most common chronic childhood diseases. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; and Merck Childhood Asthma Network sponsored a joint workshop to discuss the current state of science with respect to the indoor environment and its effects on the development and morbidity of childhood asthma. The workshop included US and international experts with backgrounds in allergy/allergens, immunology, asthma, environmental health, environmental exposures and pollutants, epidemiology, public health, and bioinformatics. Workshop participants provided new insights into the biologic properties of indoor exposures, indoor exposure assessment, and exposure reduction techniques. This informed a primary focus of the workshop: to critically review trials and research relevant to the prevention or control of asthma through environmental intervention. The participants identified important limitations and gaps in scientific methodologies and knowledge and proposed and prioritized areas for future research. The group reviewed socioeconomic and structural challenges to changing environmental exposure and offered recommendations for creative study design to overcome these challenges in trials to improve asthma management. The recommendations of this workshop can serve as guidance for future research in the study of the indoor environment and on environmental interventions as they pertain to the prevention and management of asthma and airway allergies.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2012

Implementation of evidence-based asthma interventions in post-Katrina New Orleans: the Head-off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana (HEAL) study.

Herman Mitchell; Richard D. Cohn; Jeremy Wildfire; Eleanor Thornton; Suzanne Kennedy; J.M. El-Dahr; Patricia C. Chulada; Mosanda M. Mvula; L. Faye Grimsley; Maureen Y. Lichtveld; LuAnn E. White; Yvonne Sterling; Kevin U. Stephens; William J. Martin

Background: Childhood asthma morbidity and mortality in New Orleans, Louisiana, is among the highest in the nation. In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina created an environmental disaster that led to high levels of mold and other allergens and disrupted health care for children with asthma. Objectives: We implemented a unique hybrid asthma counselor and environmental intervention based on successful National Institutes of Health asthma interventions from the National Cooperative Inner City Asthma (NCICAS) and Inner-City Asthma (ICAS) Studies with the goal of reducing asthma symptoms in New Orleans children after Hurricane Katrina. Methods: Children (4–12 years old) with moderate-to-severe asthma (n = 182) received asthma counseling and environmental intervention for approximately 1 year. HEAL was evaluated employing several analytical approaches including a pre–post evaluation of symptom changes over the entire year, an analysis of symptoms according to the timing of asthma counselor contact, and a comparison to previous evidence-based interventions. Results: Asthma symptoms during the previous 2 weeks decreased from 6.5 days at enrollment to 3.6 days at the 12-month symptom assessment (a 45% reduction, p < 0.001), consistent with changes observed after NCICAS and ICAS interventions (35% and 62% reductions in symptom days, respectively). Children whose families had contact with a HEAL asthma counselor by 6 months showed a 4.09-day decrease [95% confidence interval (CI): 3.25 to 4.94-day decrease] in symptom days, compared with a 1.79-day decrease (95% CI: 0.90, 2.67) among those who had not yet seen an asthma counselor (p < 0.001). Conclusions: The novel combination of evidence-based asthma interventions was associated with improved asthma symptoms among children in post-Katrina New Orleans. Post-intervention changes in symptoms were consistent with previous randomized trials of NCICAS and ICAS interventions.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2012

Indoor environmental exposures for children with asthma enrolled in the HEAL study, post-Katrina New Orleans.

L. Faye Grimsley; Patricia C. Chulada; Suzanne Kennedy; LuAnn E. White; Jeremy Wildfire; Richard D. Cohn; Herman Mitchell; Eleanor Thornton; J.M. El-Dahr; Mosanda M. Mvula; Yvonne Sterling; William J. Martin; Kevin U. Stephens; Maureen Y. Lichtveld

Background: Rain and flooding from Hurricane Katrina resulted in widespread growth of mold and bacteria and production of allergens in New Orleans, Louisiana, which may have led to increased exposures and morbidity in children with asthma. Objectives: The goal of the Head-off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana (HEAL) study was to characterize post-Katrina exposures to mold and allergens in children with asthma. Methods: The homes of 182 children with asthma in New Orleans and surrounding parishes were evaluated by visual inspection, temperature and moisture measurements, and air and dust sampling. Air was collected using vacuum-pump spore traps and analyzed for > 30 mold taxa using bright field microscopy. Dust was collected from the children’s beds and bedroom floors and analyzed for mouse (Mus m 1), dust mite (Der p 1), cockroach (Bla g 1), and mold (Alternaria mix) allergens using ELISA. Results: More than half (62%) of the children were living in homes that had been damaged by rain, flooding, or both. Geometric mean indoor and outdoor airborne mold levels were 501 and 3,958 spores/m3, respectively. Alternaria antigen was detected in dust from 98% of homes, with 58% having concentrations > 10 µg/g. Mus m 1, Der p 1, and Bla g 1 were detected in 60%, 35%, and 20% of homes, respectively, at low mean concentrations. Conclusions: Except for Alternaria antigen in dust, concentrations of airborne mold (ratio of indoor to outdoor mold) and dust allergens in the homes of HEAL children were lower than measurements found in other studies, possibly because of extensive post-Katrina mold remediation and renovations, or because children moved into cleaner homes upon returning to New Orleans.


Environmental Health Perspectives | 2012

The Head-off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana (HEAL) Study—Methods and Study Population

Patricia C. Chulada; Suzanne Kennedy; Mosanda M. Mvula; Katy Jaffee; Jeremy Wildfire; Eleanor Thornton; Richard D. Cohn; L. Faye Grimsley; Herman Mitchell; J.M. El-Dahr; Yvonne Sterling; William J. Martin; LuAnn E. White; Kevin U. Stephens; Maureen Y. Lichtveld

Background: In the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, and surrounding parishes (NOLA), children with asthma were perilously impacted by Hurricane Katrina as a result of disrupted health care, high home mold and allergen levels, and high stress. Objectives: The Head-off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana (HEAL) study was conducted to examine relationships between the post-Katrina environment and childhood asthma in NOLA and assess a novel asthma counselor intervention that provided case management and guidance for reducing home mold and allergen levels. Methods: Children (4–12 years old) with moderate-to-severe asthma were recruited from NOLA schools. Over 1 year, they received two clinical evaluations, three home environmental evaluations, and the asthma intervention. Quarterly end points included symptom days, medication use, and unscheduled emergency department or clinic visits. A community advisory group was assembled and informed HEAL at all phases. Results: Of the children (n = 182) enrolled in HEAL, 67% were African American, and 25% came from households with annual incomes <


The Open Respiratory Medicine Journal | 2013

Decreased Pulmonary Function Measured in Children Exposed to High Environmental Relative Moldiness Index Homes

Stephen Vesper; Larry Wymer; Suzanne Kennedy; L. Faye Grimsley

15,000. HEAL children were symptomatic, averaging 6.6 symptom days in the 2 weeks before baseline, and had frequent unscheduled visits to clinics or emergency departments (76% had at least one unscheduled visit in the preceding 3 months). In this report, we describe study design and baseline characteristics of HEAL children. Conclusions: Despite numerous challenges faced by investigators, study staff, and participants, including destroyed infrastructure, disrupted lives, and lost jobs, HEAL was successful in terms of recruitment and retention, the high quality of data collected that will provide insight into asthma-allergen relationships, and the asthma intervention. This success was attributable to using an adaptive approach and refining processes as needed.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2012

Development of a standardized approach for environmental microbiota investigations related to asthma development in children

Kei E. Fujimura; Marcus Rauch; Elizabeth C. Matsui; Shoko Iwai; Agustin Calatroni; Henry Lynn; Herman Mitchell; Christine Cole Johnson; James E. Gern; Alkis Togias; Homer A. Boushey; Suzanne Kennedy; Susan V. Lynch

Background: Exposures to water-damaged homes/buildings has been linked to deficits in respiratory health. However, accurately quantifying this linkage has been difficult because of the methods used to assess water damage and respiratory health. Purpose: The goal of this analysis was to determine the correlation between the water-damage, as defined by the Environmental Relative Moldiness Index (ERMI) value in an asthmatic child’s home, and the child’s pulmonary function measured by spirometry, “forced expiratory volume in one second, percent predicted” or FEV1%. Methods: This analysis utilized data obtained from the “Heads-off Environmental Asthma in Louisiana” (HEAL) study. The children (n= 109), 6 to 12 years of age, who had completed at least one spirometry evaluation and a dust sample collected for ERMI analysis from the home at approximately the same time as the spirometry testing, were included in the analysis. Statistical evaluation of the correlation between ERMI values and FEV1% was performed using the Spearman’s Rank Correlation analysis. The relationship between ERMI values and FEV1% was performed using B-spline regression. Results: The average ERMI value in the HEAL study homes was 7.3. For homes with ERMI values between 2.5 and 15, there was a significant inverse correlation with the child’s lung function or FEV1% measurement (Spearman’s rho -0.23; p= 0.03), i.e. as the ERMI value increased, the FEV1% value decreased. Conclusions: Measures of water-damage (the ERMI) and clinical assessments of lung function (FEV1%) provided a quantitative assessment of the impact of water-damaged home exposures on children’s respiratory health.


Pediatrics | 2017

Effectiveness of Evidence-Based Asthma Interventions

Suzanne Kennedy; Ryan Bailey; Katy Jaffee; Anne Rossier Markus; Maya Tuchman Gerstein; David M. Stevens; Julie Kennedy Lesch; Floyd J. Malveaux; Herman Mitchell

Standardized studies examining environmental microbial exposure in populations at risk for asthma are necessary to improve our understanding of the role this factor plays in disease development. Here we describe studies aimed at developing guidelines for high-resolution culture-independent microbiome profiling, using a phylogenetic microarray (PhyloChip), of house dust samples in a cohort collected as part of the NIH-funded Inner City Asthma Consortium (ICAC). We demonstrate that though extracted DNA concentrations varied across dust samples, the majority produced sufficient 16S rRNA to be profiled by the array. Comparison of array and 454-pyrosequencing performed in parallel on a subset of samples, illustrated that increasingly deeper sequencing efforts validated greater numbers of array-detected taxa. Community composition agreement across samples exhibited a hierarchy in concordance, with the highest level of agreement in replicate array profiles followed by samples collected from adjacent 1×1 m(2) sites in the same room, adjacent sites with different sized sampling quadrants (1×1 and 2×2 m(2)), different sites within homes (living and bedroom) to lowest in living room samples collected from different homes. The guidelines for sample collection and processing in this pilot study extend beyond PhyloChip based studies of house-associated microbiota, and bear relevance for other microbiome profiling approaches such as next-generation sequencing.


Pediatrics | 2006

Enhancing the role of the emergency department in the identification and management of childhood asthma.

Gary S. Rachelefsky; Suzanne Kennedy; Amy Stone

This study assessed the effectiveness of translating evidence-based asthma interventions into community health centers. BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Researchers often struggle with the gap between efficacy and effectiveness in clinical research. To bridge this gap, the Community Healthcare for Asthma Management and Prevention of Symptoms (CHAMPS) study adapted an efficacious, randomized controlled trial that resulted in evidence-based asthma interventions in community health centers. METHODS: Children (aged 5–12 years; N = 590) with moderate to severe asthma were enrolled from 3 intervention and 3 geographically/capacity-matched control sites in high-risk, low-income communities located in Arizona, Michigan, and Puerto Rico. The asthma intervention was tailored to the participant’s allergen sensitivity and exposure, and it comprised 4 visits over the course of 1 year. Study visits were documented and monitored prospectively via electronic data capture. Asthma symptoms and health care utilization were evaluated at baseline, and at 6 and 12 months. RESULTS: A total of 314 intervention children and 276 control children were enrolled in the study. Allergen sensitivity testing (96%) and home environmental assessments (89%) were performed on the majority of intervention children. Overall study activity completion (eg, intervention visits, clinical assessments) was 70%. Overall and individual site participant symptom days in the previous 4 weeks were significantly reduced compared with control findings (control, change of −2.28; intervention, change of −3.27; difference, −0.99; P < .001), and this result was consistent with changes found in the rigorous evidence-based interventions. CONCLUSIONS: Evidence-based interventions can be successfully adapted into primary care settings that serve impoverished, high-risk populations, reducing the morbidity of asthma in these high-need populations.


American Journal of Public Health | 2016

From Design to Dissemination: Implementing Community-Based Participatory Research in Postdisaster Communities

Maureen Y. Lichtveld; Suzanne Kennedy; Rebecca Z. Krouse; Faye Grimsley; J.M. El-Dahr; Keith Bordelon; Yvonne Sterling; LuAnn White; Natasha Barlow; Shannon DeGruy; Dorothy Paul; Stacey Denham; Claire Hayes; Margaret Sanders; Mosanda M. Mvula; Eleanor Thornton; Patricia Chulada; Herman Mitchell; William Martin; Kevin U. Stephens; Richard D. Cohn

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Yvonne Sterling

Louisiana State University

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Patricia C. Chulada

National Institutes of Health

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William J. Martin

National Institutes of Health

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Alkis Togias

National Institutes of Health

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