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Dive into the research topics where Sylvia Kaswabuli is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylvia Kaswabuli.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Impact of Xpert MTB/RIF testing on tuberculosis management and outcomes in hospitalized patients in Uganda.

Christina Yoon; Adithya Cattamanchi; J. Lucian Davis; William Worodria; Saskia den Boon; Nelson Kalema; Winceslaus Katagira; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Cecily Miller; Alfred Andama; Heidi Albert; Pamela Nabeta; Christen Gray; Irene Ayakaka; Laurence Huang

Rationale The clinical impact of Xpert MTB/RIF for tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis in high HIV-prevalence settings is unknown. Objective To determine the diagnostic accuracy and impact of Xpert MTB/RIF among high-risk TB suspects. Methods We prospectively enrolled consecutive, hospitalized, Ugandan TB suspects in two phases: baseline phase in which Xpert MTB/RIF results were not reported to clinicians and an implementation phase in which results were reported. We determined the diagnostic accuracy of Xpert MTB/RIF in reference to culture (solid and liquid) and compared patient outcomes by study phase. Results 477 patients were included (baseline phase 287, implementation phase 190). Xpert MTB/RIF had high sensitivity (187/237, 79%, 95% CI: 73–84%) and specificity (190/199, 96%, 95% CI: 92–98%) for culture-positive TB overall, but sensitivity was lower (34/81, 42%, 95% CI: 31–54%) among smear-negative TB cases. Xpert MTB/RIF reduced median days-to-TB detection for all TB cases (1 [IQR 0–26] vs. 0 [IQR 0–1], p<0.001), and for smear-negative TB (35 [IQR 22–55] vs. 22 [IQR 0–33], p = 0.001). However, median days-to-TB treatment was similar for all TB cases (1 [IQR 0–5] vs. 0 [IQR 0–2], p = 0.06) and for smear-negative TB (7 [IQR 3–53] vs. 6 [IQR 1–61], p = 0.78). Two-month mortality was also similar between study phases among 252 TB cases (17% vs. 14%, difference +3%, 95% CI: −21% to +27%, p = 0.80), and among 87 smear-negative TB cases (28% vs. 22%, difference +6%, 95% CI: −34 to +46%, p = 0.77). Conclusions Xpert MTB/RIF facilitated more accurate and earlier TB diagnosis, leading to a higher proportion of TB suspects with a confirmed TB diagnosis prior to hospital discharge in a high HIV/low MDR TB prevalence setting. However, our study did not detect a decrease in two-month mortality following implementation of Xpert MTB/RIF possibly because of insufficient powering, differences in empiric TB treatment rates, and disease severity between study phases.


PLOS ONE | 2014

The lung microbiome of Ugandan HIV-infected pneumonia patients is compositionally and functionally distinct from that of San Franciscan patients.

Shoko Iwai; Delphine Huang; Serena Fong; Leah G. Jarlsberg; William Worodria; Samuel D. Yoo; Adithya Cattamanchi; J. L. Davis; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Mark R. Segal; Laurence Huang; Susan V. Lynch

Sub-Saharan Africa represents 69% of the total number of individuals living with HIV infection worldwide and 72% of AIDS deaths globally. Pulmonary infection is a common and frequently fatal complication, though little is known regarding the lower airway microbiome composition of this population. Our objectives were to characterize the lower airway microbiome of Ugandan HIV-infected patients with pneumonia, to determine relationships with demographic, clinical, immunological, and microbiological variables and to compare the composition and predicted metagenome of these communities to a comparable cohort of patients in the US (San Francisco). Bronchoalveolar lavage samples from a cohort of 60 Ugandan HIV-infected patients with acute pneumonia were collected. Amplified 16S ribosomal RNA was profiled and aforementioned relationships examined. Ugandan airway microbiome composition and predicted metagenomic function were compared to US HIV-infected pneumonia patients. Among the most common bacterial pulmonary pathogens, Pseudomonas aeruginosa was most prevalent in the Ugandan cohort. Patients with a richer and more diverse airway microbiome exhibited lower bacterial burden, enrichment of members of the Lachnospiraceae and sulfur-reducing bacteria and reduced expression of TNF-alpha and matrix metalloproteinase-9. Compared to San Franciscan patients, Ugandan airway microbiome was significantly richer, and compositionally distinct with predicted metagenomes that encoded a multitude of distinct pathogenic pathways e.g secretion systems. Ugandan pneumonia-associated airway microbiome is compositionally and functionally distinct from those detected in comparable patients in developed countries, a feature which may contribute to adverse outcomes in this population.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2017

Immune Response and Mortality Risk Relate to Distinct Lung Microbiomes in Patients with HIV and Pneumonia

Meera K. Shenoy; Shoko Iwai; Din L. Lin; William Worodria; Irene Ayakaka; Patrick Byanyima; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Serena Fong; Stephen Stone; Emily Chang; J. Lucian Davis; Ali A. Faruqi; Mark R. Segal; Laurence Huang; Susan V. Lynch

Rationale: The potential role of the airway microbiota in dictating immune responses and infection outcomes in HIV‐associated pneumonia is largely unknown. Objectives: To investigate whether microbiologically and immunologically distinct subsets of patients with HIV and pneumonia exist and are related to mortality. Methods: Bronchoalveolar lavage samples from Ugandan patients with HIV and pneumonia (n = 182) were obtained at study enrollment (following antibiotic treatment); patient demographics including 8‐ and 70‐day mortality were collected. Lower airway bacterial community composition was assessed via amplification and sequencing of the V4 region of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Host immune response gene expression profiles were generated by quantitative polymerase chain reaction using RNA extracted from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Liquid and gas chromatography mass spectrometry was used to profile serum metabolites. Measurements and Main Results: Based on airway microbiome composition, most patients segregated into three distinct groups, each of which were predicted to encode metagenomes capable of producing metabolites characteristically enriched in paired serum samples from these patients. These three groups also exhibited differences in mortality; those with the highest rate had increased ceftriaxone administration and culturable Aspergillus, and demonstrated significantly increased induction of airway T‐helper cell type 2 responses. The group with the lowest mortality was characterized by increased expression of T‐cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain 3, which down‐regulates T‐helper cell type 1 proinflammatory responses and is associated with chronic viral infection. Conclusions: These data provide evidence that compositionally and structurally distinct lower airway microbiomes are associated with discrete local host immune responses, peripheral metabolic reprogramming, and different rates of mortality.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Low Prevalence of Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) but High Prevalence of Pneumocystis dihydropteroate synthase (dhps) Gene Mutations in HIV-Infected Persons in Uganda

Steve M. Taylor; Steven R. Meshnick; William Worodria; Alfred Andama; Adithya Cattamanchi; J. Lucian Davis; Samuel D. Yoo; Patrick Byanyima; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Carol D. Goodman; Laurence Huang

Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PCP) is an important opportunistic infection in patients infected with HIV, but its burden is incompletely characterized in those areas of sub-Saharan Africa where HIV is prevalent. We explored the prevalence of both PCP in HIV-infected adults admitted with pneumonia to a tertiary-care hospital in Uganda and of putative P. jirovecii drug resistance by mutations in fungal dihydropteroate synthase (dhps) and dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr). In 129 consecutive patients with sputum smears negative for mycobacteria, 5 (3.9%) were diagnosed with PCP by microscopic examination of Giemsa-stained bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Concordance was 100% between Giemsa stain and PCR (dhps and dhfr). PCP was more prevalent in patients newly-diagnosed with HIV (11.4%) than in patients with known HIV (1.1%; p = 0.007). Mortality at 2 months after discharge was 29% overall: 28% among PCP-negative patients, and 60% (3 of 5) among PCP-positive patients. In these 5 fungal isolates and an additional 8 from consecutive cases of PCP, all strains harbored mutant dhps haplotypes; all 13 isolates harbored the P57S mutation in dhps, and 3 (23%) also harbored the T55A mutation. No non-synonymous dhfr mutations were detected. PCP is an important cause of pneumonia in patients newly-diagnosed with HIV in Uganda, is associated with high mortality, and putative molecular evidence of drug resistance is prevalent. Given the reliability of field diagnosis in our cohort, future studies in sub-Saharan Africa can investigate the clinical impact of these genotypes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Oral Antimicrobial Rinse to Reduce Mycobacterial Culture Contamination among Tuberculosis Suspects in Uganda: A Prospective Study

Nelson Kalema; Saskia den Boon; Adithya Cattamanchi; J. Lucian Davis; Alfred Andama; Winceslaus Katagira; Charles K. Everett; Nicholas D. Walter; Patrick Byanyima; Sylvia Kaswabuli; William Worodria; Laurence Huang

Rationale Contamination by bacterial or fungal organisms reduces the effectiveness of mycobacterial culture for diagnosis of pulmonary tuberculosis (TB). We evaluated the effect of an anti-microbial and an anti-fungal oral rinse prior to expectoration on culture-contamination rates. Methods We enrolled a consecutive random sample of adults with cough for ≥2 weeks and suspected TB admitted to Mulago Hospital (Kampala, Uganda) between October 2008 and June 2009. We randomly assigned patients to oral rinse (60 seconds with chlorhexidine followed by 60 seconds with nystatin) vs. no oral rinse prior to initial sputum collection. Uganda National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory technicians blinded to the method of sputum collection (with or without oral rinse) processed all sputum specimens for smear microscopy (direct Ziehl-Neelsen) and mycobacterial culture (Lowenstein-Jensen media). Results Of 220 patients enrolled, 177 (80%) were HIV-seropositive (median CD4-count 37 cells/uL, IQR 13–171 cells/uL). Baseline characteristics were similar between patients in the oral-rinse (N = 110) and no oral-rinse (N = 110) groups. The proportion of contaminated cultures was significantly lower in the oral-rinse group compared to the no oral-rinse group (4% vs. 15%, risk difference −11%, 95% CI −18 to −3%, p = 0.005). Oral rinse significantly reduced the proportion of contaminated cultures among HIV-infected patients (3% vs. 18%, risk difference −14%, 95% CI −23 to −6%, p = 0.002) but not HIV-uninfected (6% vs. 4%, risk difference 2%, 95% CI −12 to +15%, p = 0.81) patients. However, the proportion of smear-positive specimens (25% vs. 35%, p = 0.10) and culture-positive specimens (48% vs. 56%, p = 0.24) were lower in the oral-rinse compared to the no oral-rinse group, although the differences were not statistically significant. Conclusions Oral rinse prior to sputum expectoration is a promising strategy to reduce mycobacterial culture contamination in areas with high HIV prevalence, if strategies can be devised to reduce the adverse impact of oral rinse on smear- and culture-positivity.


Journal of epidemiology and global health | 2017

Investigation of OMNIgene·SPUTUM performance in delayed tuberculosis testing by smear, culture, and Xpert MTB/RIF assays in Uganda

C.D. Kelly-Cirino; Emmanuel Musisi; Patrick Byanyima; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Alfred Andama; A. Sessolo; Ingvar Sanyu; J. Zawedde; P.S. Curry; Laurence Huang

OMNIgene·SPUTUM (OM-S) is a sample transport reagent designed to work with all tuberculosis diagnostics while eliminating the need for cold chain. OM-S-treated sputum samples were assayed in several tests after multiday holds. Raw sputa from 100 patients underwent direct smear microscopy, were manually split and assigned to the OM-S group [OM-S added at collection (no other processing required) and tested after 0- to 5-day holds at room temperature] or standard-of-care (SOC) group (NaOH/N-acetyl l-cysteine decontamination, all tested on day of collection). Concentrated smear microscopy, Lowenstein Jensen (LJ) culture, and mycobacteria growth indicator tube (MGIT) culture were performed. For patients with negative direct smear, a second sample was split, with SOC (raw sputum) and OM-S portions (sediment) tested in the Xpert MTB/RIF (Xpert) assay. OM-S group and SOC group results were strongly concordant on all four tests [range, 89% (MGIT)–97% (Xpert)]. OM-S MGIT, LJ, and Xpert tests were in statistical agreement with SOC MGIT as reference. OM-S specimens had lower culture contamination rates (3% vs. 10% LJ; 2% vs. 5% MGIT) but required, on average, 5.6 additional days to become MGIT-positive. The findings suggest that samples held/transported in OM-S are compatible with smear microscopy, LJ or MGIT culture, and Xpert, and perform comparably to fresh sputum samples. Larger feasibility studies are warranted.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Diagnostic performance of blood inflammatory markers for tuberculosis screening in people living with HIV

Katherine Farr; Resmi Ravindran; Luke Strnad; Emily Chang; Lelia H. Chaisson; Christina Yoon; William Worodria; Alfred Andama; Irene Ayakaka; Priscilla Bbosa Nalwanga; Patrick Byanyima; Nelson Kalema; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Winceslaus Katagira; Kyomugisha Denise Aman; Emmanuel Musisi; Nuwagaba Wallen Tumwine; Ingvar Sanyu; Robert Ssebunya; J. Lucian Davis; Laurence Huang; Imran H. Khan; Adithya Cattamanchi

Background Approaches to screening for active tuberculosis (TB) among people living with HIV are inadequate, leading to missed diagnoses and poor implementation of preventive therapy. Methods Consecutive HIV-infected adults hospitalized at Mulago Hospital (Kampala, Uganda) between June 2011 and July 2013 with a cough ≥ 2 weeks were enrolled. Patients underwent extensive evaluation for pulmonary TB. Concentrations of 43 cytokines/chemokines were measured at the same time point as C-reactive protein (CRP) in banked plasma samples using commercially-available multiplex kits. Advanced classification algorithms were used to rank cytokines/chemokines for their ability to identify TB, and to model the specificity of the top-ranked cytokines/chemokines individually and in combination with sensitivity constrained to ≥ 90% as recommended for TB screening. Results The median plasma level of 5 biomarkers (IL-6, INF-γ, MIG, CRP, IL-18) was significantly different between patients with and without TB. With sensitivity constrained to 90%, all had low specificity with IL-6 showing the highest specificity (44%; 95% CI 37.4–49.5). Biomarker panels were found to be more valuable than any biomarker alone. A panel combining IFN-γ and IL-6 had the highest specificity (50%; 95% CI 46.7–53.3). Sensitivity remained high (>85%) for all panels among sputum smear-negative TB patients. Conclusions Direct measurement of unstimulated plasma cytokines/chemokines in peripheral blood is a promising approach to TB screening. Cytokine/chemokine panels retained high sensitivity for smear-negative TB and achieved improved specificity compared to individual cytokines/chemokines. These markers should be further evaluated in outpatient settings where most TB screening occurs and where other illnesses associated with systematic inflammation are less common.


African Health Sciences | 2018

Effect of anti-retroviral therapy on oxidative stress in hospitalized HIV-infected adults with and without TB

Emmanuel Musisi; Denis Kasozi Matovu; Andrew Bukenya; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Josephine Zawedde; Alfred Andama; Patrick Byanyima; Ingvar Sanyu; Abdul Sessolo; Emmanuel Seremba; J. Lucian Davis; William Worodria; Laurence Huang; Nicholas D. Walter; Harriet Mayanja-Kizza

Background HIV infection and opportunistic infections cause oxidative stress (OS), which is associated with tissue damage. Anti-retroviral therapy (ART) is used to treat HIV and decrease the risk of opportunistic infections, but it is unclear whether ART reduces OS. Association of ART with OS was investigated. Methods We stratified a convenience sample of frozen serum or plasma from HIV-infected, ART-naïve (n=21); HIV-infected, ART-treated (n=14); HIV and PTB co-infected, ART-naïve (n=21); HIV and PTB co-infected, ART-treated (n=25) patients. Controls (n=21) were HIV-negative adults without TB symptoms. Concentration of OS markers namely: transaminases (ALT and AST), gamma glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), albumin, total protein, malondialdehyde (MDA), vitamin C, and total anti-oxidant status (TAS) were determined. Results AST (p<0.001), GGT (p<0.001), total protein (p=0.001) and MDA (p<0.001) were higher in HIV patients compared to controls. Vitamin C (P<0.0001) and albumin (p<0.01) were lower in HIV-patients relative to controls. ART was only associated with higher albumin (p=0.001), higher GGT (p=0.02) and lower vitamin C (p=0.009). HIV and PTB co-infection was only significantly associated with higher GGT (p=0.01) and AST (p=0.03). Conclusion We identified severe OS among HIV-patients. ART was associated with both increased and reduced markers of OS hence suggesting that ART may not attenuate OS.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2018

Predictors of Mortality among Hospitalized Patients with Lower Respiratory Tract Infections in a High HIV Burden Setting

William Worodria; Chang Emily; Alfred Andama; Ingvar Sanyu; Patrick Byanyima; Bblt Emmanuel Musisi; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Josephine Zawedde; Irene Ayakaka; Abdul Sessolo; Rejani Lalitha; J. L. Davis; Laurence Huang


PLOS ONE | 2014

Gross features of lower airway microbiome are related to host TNF-alpha and MMP-9 expression.

Shoko Iwai; Delphine Huang; Serena Fong; Leah G. Jarlsberg; William Worodria; Samuel Yoo; Adithya Cattamanchi; J. Lucian Davis; Sylvia Kaswabuli; Mark R. Segal; Laurence Huang; Susan V. Lynch

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Laurence Huang

University of California

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Ingvar Sanyu

University of California

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J. L. Davis

University of California

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Mark R. Segal

University of California

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