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Dive into the research topics where Teodora Wi is active.

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Featured researches published by Teodora Wi.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2017

Ebola RNA Persistence in Semen of Ebola Virus Disease Survivors — Final Report

Gibrilla F. Deen; Barbara Knust; Nathalie Broutet; Foday Sesay; Pierre Formenty; Christine Ross; Anna Thorson; Thomas Massaquoi; Jaclyn E. Marrinan; Elizabeth Ervin; Amara Jambai; Suzanna L. R. McDonald; Kyle T. Bernstein; Alie Wurie; Marion S. Dumbuya; Neetu Abad; Baimba Idriss; Teodora Wi; Sarah D. Bennett; Tina Davies; Faiqa K. Ebrahim; Elissa Meites; Dhamari Naidoo; Samuel Smith; Anshu Banerjee; Bobbie R. Erickson; Aaron C. Brault; Kara N. Durski; Jorn Winter; Tara K. Sealy

BACKGROUND Ebola virus has been detected in the semen of men after their recovery from Ebola virus disease (EVD). We report the presence of Ebola virus RNA in semen in a cohort of survivors of EVD in Sierra Leone. METHODS We enrolled a convenience sample of 220 adult male survivors of EVD in Sierra Leone, at various times after discharge from an Ebola treatment unit (ETU), in two phases (100 participants were in phase 1, and 120 in phase 2). Semen specimens obtained at baseline were tested by means of a quantitative reverse‐transcriptase–polymerase‐chain‐reaction (RT‐PCR) assay with the use of the target sequences of NP and VP40 (in phase 1) or NP and GP (in phase 2). This study did not evaluate directly the risk of sexual transmission of EVD. RESULTS Of 210 participants who provided an initial semen specimen for analysis, 57 (27%) had positive results on quantitative RT‐PCR. Ebola virus RNA was detected in the semen of all 7 men with a specimen obtained within 3 months after ETU discharge, in 26 of 42 (62%) with a specimen obtained at 4 to 6 months, in 15 of 60 (25%) with a specimen obtained at 7 to 9 months, in 4 of 26 (15%) with a specimen obtained at 10 to 12 months, in 4 of 38 (11%) with a specimen obtained at 13 to 15 months, in 1 of 25 (4%) with a specimen obtained at 16 to 18 months, and in no men with a specimen obtained at 19 months or later. Among the 46 participants with a positive result in phase 1, the median baseline cycle‐threshold values (higher values indicate lower RNA values) for the NP and VP40 targets were lower within 3 months after ETU discharge (32.4 and 31.3, respectively; in 7 men) than at 4 to 6 months (34.3 and 33.1; in 25), at 7 to 9 months (37.4 and 36.6; in 13), and at 10 to 12 months (37.7 and 36.9; in 1). In phase 2, a total of 11 participants had positive results for NP and GP targets (samples obtained at 4.1 to 15.7 months after ETU discharge); cycle‐threshold values ranged from 32.7 to 38.0 for NP and from 31.1 to 37.7 for GP. CONCLUSIONS These data showed the long‐term presence of Ebola virus RNA in semen and declining persistence with increasing time after ETU discharge. (Funded by the World Health Organization and others.)


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2009

Control of sexually transmitted infections and prevention of HIV transmission: mending a fractured paradigm

Richard Steen; Teodora Wi; Anatoli Kamali; Francis Ndowa

Control of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) is feasible, leads to improved sexual and reproductive health and contributes to preventing HIV transmission. The most advanced HIV epidemics have developed under conditions of poor STI control, particularly where ulcerative STIs were prevalent. Several countries that have successfully controlled STIs have documented stabilization or reversal of their HIV epidemics. STI control is a public health outcome measured by reduced incidence and prevalence. The means to achieve this include: (i) targeting and outreach to populations at greatest risk; (ii) promoting and providing condoms and other means of prevention; (iii) effective clinical interventions; (iv) an enabling environment; and (v) reliable data. Clinical services include STI case management, screening and management of STIs in sex partners. Syndromic case management is effective for most symptomatic curable STIs and screening strategies exist to detect some asymptomatic infections. Presumptive epidemiologic treatment of sex partners and sex workers complement efforts to interrupt transmission and reduce prevalence. Clinical services alone are insufficient for control since many people with STIs do not attend clinics. Outreach and peer education have been effectively used to reach such populations. STI control requires effective interventions with core populations whose rates of partner change are high enough to sustain transmission. Effective, appropriate targeting is thus necessary and often sufficient to reduce prevalence in the general population. Such efforts are most effective when combined with structural interventions to ensure an enabling environment for prevention. Reliable surveillance and related data are critical for designing and evaluating interventions and for assessing control efforts.


PLOS Medicine | 2017

Antimicrobial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae: Global surveillance and a call for international collaborative action

Teodora Wi; Monica M. Lahra; Francis Ndowa; Manju Bala; Jo-Anne R. Dillon; Pilar Ramon-Pardo; Sergey Eremin; Gail Bolan; Magnus Unemo

In a Policy Forum, Teodora Wi and colleagues discuss the challenges of antimicrobial resistance in gonococci.


BMC Public Health | 2011

Large-scale STI services in Avahan improve utilization and treatment seeking behaviour amongst high-risk groups in India: an analysis of clinical records from six states.

A Gurung; P Narayanan; Parimi Prabhakar; A Das; Virupax Ranebennur; Saroj Tucker; Laxmi Narayana; Radha R; K Prakash; J Touthang; Collins Z Sono; Teodora Wi; Guy Morineau; Graham Neilsen

BackgroundAvahan, the India AIDS Initiative, implemented a large HIV prevention programme across six high HIV prevalence states amongst high risk groups consisting of female sex workers, high risk men who have sex with men, transgenders and injecting drug users in India. Utilization of the clinical services, health seeking behaviour and trends in syndromic diagnosis of sexually transmitted infections amongst these populations were measured using the individual tracking data.MethodsThe Avahan clinical monitoring system included individual tracking data pertaining to clinical services amongst high risk groups. All clinic visits were recorded in the routine clinical monitoring system using unique identification numbers at the NGO-level. Visits by individual clinic attendees were tracked from January 2005 to December 2009. An analysis examining the limited variables over time, stratified by risk group, was performed.ResultsA total of 431,434 individuals including 331,533 female sex workers, 10,280 injecting drug users, 82,293 men who have sex with men, and 7,328 transgenders visited the clinics with a total of 2,700,192 visits. Individuals made an average of 6.2 visits to the clinics during the study period. The number of visits per person increased annually from 1.2 in 2005 to 8.3 in 2009. The proportion of attendees visiting clinics more than four times a year increased from 4% in 2005 to 26% in 2009 (p<0.001). The proportion of STI syndromes diagnosed amongst female sex workers decreased from 39% in 2005 to 11% in 2009 (p<0.001) while the proportion of STI syndromes diagnosed amongst high risk men who have sex with men decreased from 12% to 3 % (p<0.001). The proportion of attendees seeking regular STI check-ups increased from 12% to 48% (p<0.001). The proportion of high risk groups accessing clinics within two days of onset of STI-related symptoms and acceptability of speculum and proctoscope examination increased significantly during the programme implementation period.ConclusionsThe programme demonstrated that acceptable and accessible services with marginalised and often difficult–to-reach populations can be brought to a very large scale using standardized approaches. Utilization of these services can dramatically improve health seeking behaviour and reduce STI prevalence.


PLOS Medicine | 2017

Multidrug-resistant gonorrhea: A research and development roadmap to discover new medicines

Emilie Alirol; Teodora Wi; Manju Bala; Maria Luiza Bazzo; Xiang-Sheng Chen; Carolyn Deal; Jo-Anne R. Dillon; Ranmini Kularatne; Jutta Heim; Rob Hooft van Huijsduijnen; Edward W. Hook; Monica M. Lahra; David A. Lewis; Francis Ndowa; William M. Shafer; Liz Tayler; Kimberly A. Workowski; Magnus Unemo; Manica Balasegaram

Emilie Alirol and colleagues discuss the development of new treatments for gonorrhea.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2018

Cooperative Recognition of Internationally Disseminated Ceftriaxone-Resistant Neisseriagonorrhoeae Strain

Monica M. Lahra; Irene Martin; Walter Demczuk; Amy V. Jennison; Ken-ichi Lee; Shu-ichi Nakayama; Brigitte Lefebvre; Jean Longtin; Alison Ward; Michael R. Mulvey; Teodora Wi; Makoto Ohnishi; David M. Whiley

Ceftriaxone remains a first-line treatment for patients infected by Neisseria gonorrhoeae in most settings. We investigated the possible spread of a ceftriaxone-resistant FC428 N. gonorrhoeae clone in Japan after recent isolation of similar strains in Denmark (GK124) and Canada (47707). We report 2 instances of the FC428 clone in Australia in heterosexual men traveling from Asia. Our bioinformatic analyses included core single-nucleotide variation phylogeny and in silico molecular typing; phylogenetic analysis showed close genetic relatedness among all 5 isolates. Results showed multilocus sequence type 1903; N. gonorrhoeae sequence typing for antimicrobial resistance (NG-STAR) 233; and harboring of mosaic penA allele encoding alterations A311V and T483S (penA-60.001), associated with ceftriaxone resistance. Our results provide further evidence of international transmission of ceftriaxone-resistant N. gonorrhoeae. We recommend increasing awareness of international spread of this drug-resistant strain, strengthening surveillance to include identifying treatment failures and contacts, and strengthening international sharing of data.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2015

The cost-effectiveness of 10 antenatal syphilis screening and treatment approaches in Peru, Tanzania, and Zambia.

Fern Terris-Prestholt; Peter Vickerman; Sergio Torres-Rueda; Nancy Santesso; Sedona Sweeney; Patricia Mallma; Katharine D. Shelley; Patricia Garcia; Rachel N. Bronzan; Michelle M. Gill; Nathalie Broutet; Teodora Wi; Charlotte Watts; David Mabey; Rosanna W. Peeling; Lori M. Newman

Rapid plasma reagin (RPR) is frequently used to test women for maternal syphilis. Rapid syphilis immunochromatographic strip tests detecting only Treponema pallidum antibodies (single RSTs) or both treponemal and non‐treponemal antibodies (dual RSTs) are now available. This study assessed the cost‐effectiveness of algorithms using these tests to screen pregnant women.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2017

A systematic review and meta-analysis of studies evaluating the performance and operational characteristics of dual point-of-care tests for HIV and syphilis

Harriet Gliddon; Rosanna W. Peeling; Mary L. Kamb; Igor Toskin; Teodora Wi; Melanie M. Taylor

Background Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of syphilis and HIV continue to be important yet preventable causes of perinatal and infant morbidity and mortality. Objectives To systematically review, critically appraise and perform a meta-analysis to evaluate the operational characteristics of dual rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for HIV/syphilis and evaluate whether they are cost effective, acceptable and easy to use. Design Systematic review and meta-analysis. Data sources We searched seven electronic bibliographic databases from 2012 to December 2016 with no language restrictions. Search keywords included HIV, syphilis and diagnosis. Review methods We included studies that evaluated the operational characteristics of dual HIV/syphilis RDTs. Outcomes included diagnostic test accuracy, cost effectiveness, ease of use and interpretation and acceptability. All studies were assessed against quality criteria and assessed for risk of bias. Results Of 1914 identified papers, 18 were included for the meta-analysis of diagnostic accuracy for HIV and syphilis. All diagnostic accuracy evaluation studies showed a very high sensitivity and specificity for HIV and a lower, yet adequate, sensitivity and specificity for syphilis, with some variation among types of test. Dual screening for HIV and syphilis was more cost effective than single rapid tests for HIV and syphilis and prevented more adverse pregnancy outcomes. Qualitative data suggested dual RDTs were highly acceptable to clients, who cited time to result, cost and the requirement of a single finger prick as important characteristics of dual RDTs. Conclusion The results of this systematic review and meta-analysis can be used by policy-makers and national programme managers who are considering implementing dual RDTs for HIV and syphilis. Trial registration number PROSPERO 2016:CRD42016049168.


Expert Review of Anti-infective Therapy | 2013

Halting and reversing HIV epidemics in Asia by interrupting transmission in sex work: Experience and outcomes from ten countries

Richard Steen; Pengfei Zhao; Teodora Wi; Neelamanie Punchihewa; Iyanthi Abeyewickreme; Ying-Ru Lo

HIV epidemics spread rapidly through Asian sex work networks two decades ago under conditions of high vulnerability, low condom use, intact male foreskins and ulcerative STIs. Experiences implementing interventions to prevent transmission in sex work in ten Asian countries were reviewed. All report increasing condom use trends in sex work. In the seven countries where condom use exceeds 80%, surveillance and other data indicate declining HIV trends or low and stable HIV prevalence with declining STI trends. All four countries with national-level HIV declines among sex workers have also documented significant HIV declines in the general population. While all interventions in sex work included outreach, condom programing and STI services, the largest declines were found in countries that implemented structural interventions on a large scale. Thailand and Cambodia, having controlled transmission early, are closest to providing universal access to HIV care, support and treatment and are exploring HIV elimination strategies.


BMC Health Services Research | 2015

HIV service delivery models towards ‘Zero AIDS-related Deaths’: a collaborative case study of 6 Asia and Pacific countries

Masami Fujita; Krishna C. Poudel; Kimberly Green; Teodora Wi; Iyanthi Abeyewickreme; Massimo Ghidinelli; Masaya Kato; Mean Chhi Vun; Seng Sopheap; Khin Ohnmar San; Phavady Bollen; Krishna Kumar Rai; Atul Dahal; Durga Bhandari; Peniel Boas; Jessica Yaipupu; Petchsri Sirinirund; Pairoj Saonuam; Bui Duc Duong; Do Thi Nhan; Nguyen Thi Minh Thu; Masamine Jimba

BackgroundIn the Asia-Pacific region, limited systematic assessment has been conducted on HIV service delivery models. Applying an analytical framework of the continuum of prevention and care, this study aimed to assess HIV service deliveries in six Asia and Pacific countries from the perspective of service availability, linking approaches and performance monitoring for maximizing HIV case detection and retention.MethodsEach country formed a review team that provided published and unpublished information from the national HIV program. Four types of continuum were examined: (i) service linkages between key population outreach and HIV diagnosis (vertical-community continuum); (ii) chronic care provision across HIV diagnosis and treatment (chronological continuum); (iii) linkages between HIV and other health services (horizontal continuum); and (iv) comprehensive care sites coordinating care provision (hub and heart of continuum).ResultsRegarding the vertical-community continuum, all districts had voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) in all countries except for Myanmar and Vietnam. In these two countries, limited VCT availability was a constraint for referring key populations reached. All countries monitored HIV testing coverage among key populations.Concerning the chronological continuum, the proportion of districts/townships having antiretroviral treatment (ART) was less than 70% except in Thailand, posing a barrier for accessing pre-ART/ART care. Mechanisms for providing chronic care and monitoring retention were less developed for VCT/pre-ART process compared to ART process in all countries.On the horizontal continuum, the availability of HIV testing for tuberculosis patients and pregnant women was limited and there were sub-optimal linkages between tuberculosis, antenatal care and HIV services except for Cambodia and Thailand. These two countries indicated higher HIV testing coverage than other countries.Regarding hub and heart of continuum, all countries had comprehensive care sites with different degrees of community involvement.ConclusionsThe analytical framework was useful to identify similarities and considerable variations in service availability and linking approaches across the countries. The study findings would help each country critically adapt and adopt global recommendations on HIV service decentralization, linkages and integration. Especially, the findings would inform cross-fertilization among the countries and national HIV program reviews to determine county-specific measures for maximizing HIV case detection and retention.

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Francis Ndowa

World Health Organization

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Monica M. Lahra

University of New South Wales

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Richard Steen

World Health Organization

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