Papers by Terese Katzenstein
Journal of Medical Virology, Nov 1, 2001
HIV positive individuals heterozygous for a 32 basepair deletion in the CCR5 encoding gene (CCR5 ... more HIV positive individuals heterozygous for a 32 basepair deletion in the CCR5 encoding gene (CCR5 Delta32) have a reduced number of CCR5 receptors on the cell surface and a slower progression towards AIDS and death. Other human polymorphisms, such as the CCR2 64I and the CCR5 promoter -2459 A/G transition that has been discovered recently, have also been shown to influence HIV progression. Since genetic linkages make these polymorphisms interdependent variables, the aim of the present study was to isolate and evaluate the effect on HIV disease progression for each of these mutations independently. Genotypes were determined in 119 individuals enrolled in the Copenhagen AIDS Cohort. When including the concurrent effects of the CCR5 Delta32 and CCR2 64I mutations, homozygous carriers of the CCR5 promoter -2459A allele had a significantly faster progression towards death than heterozygous A/G individuals (P = 0.03), whereas this adverse effect was not significant when comparing A/A and G/G individuals. However, independent analysis revealed a significant adverse effect of the CCR5 promoter -2459A allele. Homozygous carriers of the -2459A allele that lack the protective effects of the CCR5 Delta32 and CCR2 64I mutations were found to have a median survival of 6.0 years, whereas carriers of the -2459G allele had a median survival of 9.4 years (P < 0.01).
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Ugeskrift for …, 2009
Bites from the adder, Vipera Berus, can have serious clinical consequences due to systemic effect... more Bites from the adder, Vipera Berus, can have serious clinical consequences due to systemic effects. Meanwhile, the local swelling calls for attention as well. Two cases of seven-and eleven-year-old boys are reported. The first patient was bitten in the 5th toe, the second in ...
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Ugeskrift for laeger
The principals of four methods for measurements of viral load (HIV endpoint dilution, NASBA, bDNA... more The principals of four methods for measurements of viral load (HIV endpoint dilution, NASBA, bDNA and Amplicor PCR) are outlined. HIV quantification has increased our knowledge about the natural history of the HIV infection and the influences of exogenous factors on HIV replication. Furthermore measurements of HIV RNA early in the course of the infection have proven to be prognostic for the clinical outcome of the infection. Last but not least, HIV quantification has been shown to be a good marker for the efficacy of antiretroviral treatment and will hence be a valuable tool for the monitoring and management of anti-retroviral treatment.
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Infectious Diseases, 2015
The risk of occupational exposures to blood cannot be eliminated completely and access to post-ex... more The risk of occupational exposures to blood cannot be eliminated completely and access to post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) to prevent HIV transmission is important. However, PEP administration has been associated with frequent adverse effects, low compliance and difficulties to ensure a proper risk assessment. This nationwide study describes 14 years of experience with the use of PEP following blood exposure in Denmark. A descriptive study of all PEP cases following non-sexual exposure to HIV in Denmark from 1999-2012. A total of 411 cases of PEP were described. There was a mean of 29.4 cases/year, increasing from 23 cases in 1999 to 49 cases in 2005 and then decreasing to 16 cases in 2012. Overall 67.2% of source patients were known to be HIV-positive at the time of PEP initiation, with no significant change over time. The median time to initiation of PEP was 2.5 h (0.15-28.5) following occupational exposure. Adverse effects were reported by 50.9% with no significant difference according to PEP regimen. In 85.1% of cases with available data, either a full course of PEP was completed or PEP was stopped because the source was tested HIV-negative. Only 6.6% stopped PEP early due to adverse effects. PEP in Denmark is generally prescribed according to the guidelines and the annual number of cases has declined since 2005. Adverse effects were common regardless of PEP regimens used and new drug regimens should be considered.
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JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
ABSTRACT
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AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses
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Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes and Human Retrovirology
The relations among serum HIV RNA levels, CD4 cell counts, presence of the mutant CCR5-allele in ... more The relations among serum HIV RNA levels, CD4 cell counts, presence of the mutant CCR5-allele in heterozygous form, and clinical outcome was analyzed in 96 patients from the Copenhagen AIDS Cohort. In the early years of the infection, patients with the CCR5 delta32/CCR5 genotype had significantly lower HIV RNA levels (p = 0.005) and higher CD4 cell counts (p < 0.005) than did patients homozygous for the normal allele. The long-term clinical benefit of being heterozygous is small and cannot solely explain the large interpatient variation in progression rates. The beneficial effect of being heterozygous seems to be mediated by events in the early stages of the HIV infection.
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Antiviral therapy
The aim of this study was to analyse the interplay between the treatment responses, as assessed b... more The aim of this study was to analyse the interplay between the treatment responses, as assessed by serum HIV-1 RNA levels and CD4 cell counts, virological phenotype and the development of phenotypic and genotypic resistance. A total of 47 late-stage, HIV-1-infected, antiretroviral-naive patients treated with reverse transcriptase inhibitors (zidovudine or didanosine monotherapy or alternating zidovudine and didanosine) as part of a randomized study and remaining on treatment for a minimum of 1 year were included in the study. Baseline serum HIV-1 RNA levels did not differ between the patients harbouring syncytium-inducing (SI) virus and those harbouring non-syncytium-inducing (NSI) virus (P = 0.66), despite the fact that the group of patients with SI virus had a significantly lower median CD4 cell count (P < 0.00005) and a higher proportion of patients diagnosed with AIDS at study entry (11/19 versus 6/25) than did the group with NSI virus. The patients harbouring SI virus had significantly faster clinical progression than that of the patients harbouring NSI virus (P < 0.001). The patients wit
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AIDS
It has been suggested that the plasma HIV RNA level is a better predictor of AIDS and death than ... more It has been suggested that the plasma HIV RNA level is a better predictor of AIDS and death than the CD4 lymphocyte count. We assessed whether the prognostic value of plasma virus levels was different according to the CD4 count. Prospective cohort study of HIV-infected patients followed for a median of 2.91 years (range, 0.02-4.54). Department of Infectious Diseases at Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark. A group of 255 HIV-infected individuals with an initial measurement of CD4 lymphocyte count and plasma HIV RNA. Survival time. The plasma HIV RNA (median 101410 copies/ml; range (range 200-7200000) and the CD4 lymphocyte count (median 250 cells x 10(6)/l; range 1-1247) were negatively correlated (Pearson r = -0.53; P < 0.00001). Of the 255 patients, 110 died during follow-up. Overall, a higher HIV RNA level was associated with increased risk of death, but the association was smaller in patients with lower CD4 lymphocyte counts (test for interaction P < 0.0001). In patients with CD4 count below 50 cells x 10(6)/l the association between HIV RNA and risk of death was not statistically significant (relative hazard per 10-fold higher HIV RNA level was 1.53; P = 0.11; adjusted for age and CD4 count) while that between the CD4 count and risk of death was highly significant (relative hazard per 50% lower CD4 count 1.38; P = 0.005; adjusted for age and HIV RNA level). Patients were relatively lightly treated with antiretroviral drugs both before and during this study. In this situation, it appears that the HIV RNA level has a relatively weak association with risk of death in patients with advanced HIV infection and that the CD4 lymphocyte count is probably more useful in assessing prognosis.
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Infectious Diseases
The interrelationships between the CD4 lymphocyte count, plasma viral load [human immunodeficienc... more The interrelationships between the CD4 lymphocyte count, plasma viral load [human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) RNA], beta-2-microglobulin (beta2-M) and immunoglobulin A (IgA) and the mortality risk was explored in 234 HIV-infected individuals (median CD4 count 230 cells/mm3, range 1-1,247). Product-moment correlation analysis was used to study the association between beta2-M, IgA and HIV RNA. A proportional hazards Cox model was used to estimate the relative hazard (RH) of death. Both beta2-M (r = 0.49, p < 0.0001) and IgA (r = 0.42, p < 0.0001) were positively correlated with HIV RNA. High beta2-M levels were associated with an increased risk of death in both univariate Cox analysis and after adjustment for HIV RNA, CD4 lymphocyte count and age [RH = 1.16 per 100 nmol/l higher beta2-M, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.05-1.27]. Raised IgA levels were associated with shorter survival in individuals with a CD4 count above 50 cells/mm3 in univariate analysis as well as after adjusting for age and CD4 lymphocyte count (RH = 1.19 per 10 micromol/l higher IgA, 95% CI 1.01-1.39). However, this association was no longer significant after further adjusting for HIV RNA. In conclusion, beta2-M levels provided additional prognostic information for survival to the information obtained by CD4 count and HIV RNA levels, whereas serum IgA only was a weak prognostic marker in this fairly progressed cohort.
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Antiviral therapy
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Annals of internal medicine
Patient D-1 developed fever and a follicular confluent rash. No exposure to HIV could be identifi... more Patient D-1 developed fever and a follicular confluent rash. No exposure to HIV could be identified; the patient had had no extramarital contacts or intravenous drug use. He had, however, been involved in a bloody altercation at a gay bar 25 days earlier. During the ...
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Antiviral therapy
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Antiviral therapy
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Ugeskrift for laeger
In the case reported here, transfusion or HIV RNA-positive HIV seronegative blood did not lead to... more In the case reported here, transfusion or HIV RNA-positive HIV seronegative blood did not lead to infection of the recipient, probably because potent postexposure antiretroviral therapy was initiated promptly.
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Pediatric pulmonology. Supplement
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Clinical immunology (Orlando, Fla.), Jan 16, 2015
Factor I is an important regulator of the complement system. Lack of Factor I causes uncontrolled... more Factor I is an important regulator of the complement system. Lack of Factor I causes uncontrolled activation of the complement system leading to consumption of C3. Complete deficiency of Factor I is a rare condition and only around 40 cases has been reported in the literature. The clinical presentation of Factor I deficiency varies and includes severe recurrent bacterial infections, glomerulonephritis and autoimmune diseases. The patient, a 28-years old woman with consanguineous parents, presented with recurrent leukocytoclastic vasculitis in the lower extremities with no associated systemic involvement, and without increased infection tendency. Initial testing showed low C3 concentration and a detailed complement evaluation absence of complement Factor I. Sequencing revealed a homozygous missense mutation in exon 2 of the CFI gene (SCV000221312). Even though the clinical symptoms of CFI mutations vary among patients sole association with leukocytoclastic vasculitis redefines the cl...
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European Respiratory Journal, 2015
Early signs of pulmonary disease with Mycobacterium abscessus complex (MABSC) can be missed in pa... more Early signs of pulmonary disease with Mycobacterium abscessus complex (MABSC) can be missed in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). A serological method could help stratify patients according to risk. The objective of this study was to test the diagnostic accuracy of a novel method for investigating IgG activity against MABSC.A prospective study of all patients attending the Copenhagen CF Centre was conducted by culturing for MABSC during a 22-month period and then screening patients with an anti-MABSC IgG ELISA. Culture-positive patients had stored serum examined for antibody kinetics before and after culture conversion.307 patients had 3480 respiratory samples cultured and were then tested with the anti-MABSC IgG ELISA. Patients with MABSC pulmonary disease had median anti-MABSC IgG levels six-fold higher than patients with no history of infection (434 versus 64 ELISA units; p<0.001). The test sensitivity was 95% (95% CI 74-99%) and the specificity was 73% (95% CI 67-78%). A diagnostic algorithm was constructed to stratify patients according to risk.The test accurately identified patients with pulmonary disease caused by MABSC and was suited to be used as a complement to mycobacterial culture.
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Journal of the International AIDS Society, 2015
As the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive population ages, issues concerning sexuality a... more As the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive population ages, issues concerning sexuality and fertility, among others, are becoming relevant. HIV is still surrounded by stigma and taboos, and there have been few studies conducted in industrialized settings concerning these questions. We therefore wanted to investigate the perception of sexuality and fertility in women living with HIV (WLWH) in an industrialized setting, using a questionnaire. WLWH were recruited at their regular outpatient clinic visits, at the major Departments of Infectious Diseases in Denmark and Finland, from January 2012 to October 2013. A questionnaire was developed, study participants were informed of the nature of study and, if they agreed to participate and signed a consent form, they filled in the questionnaire. Demographic information on the participants was obtained from patient files (in Finland) or from a national HIV cohort (in Denmark). Statistical analysis was performed using STATA, version 11...
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PLOS ONE, 2015
Risk factors for breast milk transmission of HIV-1 from mother to child include high plasma and b... more Risk factors for breast milk transmission of HIV-1 from mother to child include high plasma and breast milk viral load, low maternal CD4 count and breast pathology such as mastitis. To determine the impact of nevirapine and subclinical mastitis on HIV-1 RNA in maternal plasma and breast milk after intrapartum single-dose nevirapine combined with either 1-week tail of Combivir (zidovudine/lamivudine) or single-dose Truvada (tenofovir/emtricitabine). Maternal plasma and bilateral breast milk samples were collected between April 2008 and April 2011 at 1, 4 and 6 weeks postpartum from HIV-infected Tanzanian women. Moreover, plasma samples were collected at delivery from mother and infant. HIV-1 RNA was quantified in 1,212 breast milk samples from 273 women. At delivery, 96% of the women and 99% of the infants had detectable nevirapine in plasma with a median (interquartile range, IQR) of 1.5 μg/mL (0.75-2.20 μg/mL) and 1.04 μg/mL (0.39-1.71 μg/mL), respectively (P < 0.001). At 1 week postpartum, 93% and 98% of the women had detectable nevirapine in plasma and breast milk, with a median (IQR) of 0.13 μg/mL (0.13-0.39 μg/mL) and 0.22 μg/mL (0.13-0.34 μg/mL), respectively. Maternal plasma and breast milk HIV-1 RNA correlated at all visits (R = 0.48, R = 0.7, R = 0.59; all P = 0.01). Subclinical mastitis was detected in 67% of the women at some time during 6 weeks, and in 38% of the breast milk samples. Breast milk samples with subclinical mastitis had significantly higher HIV-1 RNA at 1, 4 and 6 weeks (all P < 0.05). After short-course antiretroviral prophylaxis, nevirapine was detectable in most infant cord blood samples and the concentration in maternal plasma and breast milk was high through week 1 accompanied by suppressed HIV-1 RNA in plasma and breast milk.
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Papers by Terese Katzenstein