11 results on '"Sugerman DE"'
Search Results
2. Congenital cytomegalovirus diagnosis: healthcare claims data of linked pregnant people-infant pairs, United States, 2018-2023.
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Rincón-Guevara O, Leung J, Sugerman DE, and Lanzieri TM
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, United States epidemiology, Infant, Newborn, Adult, Infant, Cytomegalovirus isolation & purification, Young Adult, Male, Cytomegalovirus Infections diagnosis, Cytomegalovirus Infections congenital, Cytomegalovirus Infections epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: To describe maternal demographics and compare clinical characteristics of infants with congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) identified through diagnostic codes and laboratory data in the United States during 2018-2023., Methods: We used a CDC-licensed subset of HealthVerity data, which contained linked pregnant people-infant claims data from publicly and privately insured individuals during 2018-2023 (2023 Quarter 3 HealthVerity Maternal Outcomes Masterset data). We identified infants with cCMV using diagnostic codes or positive laboratory test results within 45 days of birth., Results: Among 744 (4.6 per 10,000 live births) infants with cCMV during 2018-2023, 599 (81%) were identified by a diagnostic code only. Among 732 linked pregnant people, 91 (12%) had a diagnosis of CMV infection during pregnancy, with a similar distribution by age group and insurance type, but a lower proportion were Black as compared to those without CMV infection during pregnancy (14% vs. 29%, respectively). Overall, 452 (61%) infants had ≥1 cCMV-related clinical sign at birth and 185 (25%) had valganciclovir prescriptions. Eighty-eight (68%) infants identified by a positive laboratory test only had no cCMV-related signs and none had valganciclovir prescriptions., Conclusions: Using healthcare claims data, we found a minimal overlap of cCMV identified by diagnostic codes and laboratory test results. A minority of linked pregnant people with infants with cCMV had a CMV diagnosis during pregnancy. cCMV surveillance will help better understand the validity of ICD codes to identify infants with cCMV, describe the spectrum of disease, and monitor the use of antivirals.
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- 2024
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3. The Effects of Vaccination Status and Age on Clinical Characteristics and Severity of Measles Cases in the United States in the Post-Elimination Era, 2001-2022.
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Leung J, Munir NA, Mathis AD, Filardo TD, Rota PA, Sugerman DE, Sowers SB, Mercader S, Crooke SN, and Gastañaduy PA
- Abstract
Background: Despite high vaccine-effectiveness, wild-type measles can occur in previously vaccinated persons. We compared the clinical presentation and disease severity of measles by vaccination status and age in the post-elimination era in the United States., Methods: We included U.S. measles cases reported from 2001-2022. Breakthrough measles was defined as cases with ≥1 documented dose of measles-containing vaccine, classic measles as the presence of rash, fever, and ≥1 symptoms (cough, coryza, or conjunctivitis), and severe disease as the presence of pneumonia, encephalitis, hospitalization, or death. Vaccinated cases with low and high avidity IgG were classified as primary (PVF) and secondary (SVF) vaccine failures, respectively., Results: Among 4,056 confirmed measles cases, 2,799 (69%) were unvaccinated, 475 (12%) were breakthrough infections, and 782 (19%) had unknown vaccination; 1,526 (38%), 1,174 (29%), and 1,355 (33%) were aged <5, 5-19, and ≥20 years, respectively. We observed a general decline in classic presentation and severe disease with an increase in the number of doses, and less complications among children aged 5-19 years compared to other age-groups. Among 93 breakthrough cases with avidity results, 11 (12%) and 76 (82%) were classified as PVF and SVF, respectively, with a higher proportion of PVFs having a classic measles presentation and severe disease than SVFs., Discussion: Breakthrough measles cases tended to have milder disease with less complications. A small proportion of breakthrough infections were due to PVF than SVF. It is critical to maintain high MMR vaccination coverage in the United States to prevent serious measles illnesses., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America 2024.)
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- 2024
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4. Appropriateness of Immunoglobulin M Testing for Measles, Mumps, and Rubella.
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Filardo TD, Masters NB, Leung J, Baca S, Egwuogu H, Guevara OR, Raykin J, and Sugerman DE
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Introduction: Testing for immunity to measles, mumps, and rubella should include only immunoglobulin G (IgG); immunoglobulin M (IgM) testing is appropriate only if acute illness is suspected. The appropriateness of measles, mumps, and rubella IgM testing was evaluated in a national administrative dataset., Methods: Laboratory testing for measles, mumps, and rubella during 2019-2022 was analyzed in 2024 using HealthVerity administrative claims and laboratory data. IgG, IgM, and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing are described by year, demographics, and region. IgM testing was examined for appropriateness, defined as an IgM test combined with diagnostic codes indicative of acute illness., Results: During 2019-2022, IgM testing represented a small proportion of serologic testing (measles: 3.3%, mumps: 2.4%, rubella: 2.1%) but appeared to be appropriately performed in only 15.4% of cases for measles, 32.8% of cases for mumps, and 10.2% of cases for rubella. IgM testing was more commonly performed for female patients, with the largest discrepancy seen for rubella (90.5% female vs 9.5% male). IgM for measles and mumps was more often performed appropriately for persons aged 0-19 years (37.6% and 60.1%) compared with persons aged 20-49 years (11.8% and 22.0%) and 50+ years (16.5% and 33.8%)., Conclusions: The majority of IgM testing for measles, mumps, and rubella during this period appeared inappropriate. Clinicians and health systems could ensure that IgG testing alone is performed when evaluating for immunity through modifications to electronic medical records and commercial laboratories could ensure that providers are able to test for IgG alone when evaluating immunity., (Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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5. Measles and Rubella Diagnostic and Classification Challenges in Near- and Post-Elimination Countries.
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Filardo TD, Crooke SN, Bankamp B, Raines K, Mathis AD, Lanzieri TM, Beard RS, Perelygina L, Sugerman DE, and Rota PA
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Measles and rubella are vaccine-preventable viral diseases and can be prevented by safe, highly effective vaccination with measles- and rubella-containing vaccines. Given the myriad causes of febrile exanthems, laboratory surveillance for both measles and rubella is important to document the incidence of these diseases and to track the progress and maintenance of elimination in near- and post-elimination settings. Diagnostic challenges can hinder effective surveillance and classification challenges can hinder efforts to demonstrate achievement or maintenance of elimination. In this report, we review diagnostic and classification challenges for measles and rubella in near- and post-elimination settings.
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- 2024
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6. Real-Time Use of a Dynamic Model To Measure the Impact of Public Health Interventions on Measles Outbreak Size and Duration - Chicago, Illinois, 2024.
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Masters NB, Holmdahl I, Miller PB, Kumar CK, Herzog CM, DeJonge PM, Gretsch S, Oliver SE, Patel M, Sugerman DE, Bruce BB, Borah BF, and Olesen SW
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- Humans, Chicago epidemiology, Epidemiological Models, Public Health, Time Factors, Forecasting, Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Mass Vaccination, Adult, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Measles epidemiology, Measles prevention & control
- Abstract
Measles is a highly infectious, vaccine-preventable disease that can cause severe illness, hospitalization, and death. A measles outbreak associated with a migrant shelter in Chicago occurred during February-April 2024, in which a total of 57 confirmed cases were identified, including 52 among shelter residents, three among staff members, and two among community members with a known link to the shelter. CDC simulated a measles outbreak among shelter residents using a dynamic disease model, updated in real time as additional cases were identified, to produce outbreak forecasts and assess the impact of public health interventions. As of April 8, the model forecasted a median final outbreak size of 58 cases (IQR = 56-60 cases); model fit and prediction range improved as more case data became available. Counterfactual analysis of different intervention scenarios demonstrated the importance of early deployment of public health interventions in Chicago, with a 69% chance of an outbreak of 100 or more cases had there been no mass vaccination or active case-finding compared with only a 1% chance when those interventions were deployed. This analysis highlights the value of using real-time, dynamic models to aid public health response, set expectations about outbreak size and duration, and quantify the impact of interventions. The model shows that prompt mass vaccination and active case-finding likely substantially reduced the chance of a large (100 or more cases) outbreak in Chicago., Competing Interests: All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.
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- 2024
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7. Sociodemographic Trends and Correlation between Parental Hesitancy towards Pediatric COVID-19 Vaccines and Routine Childhood Immunizations in the United States: 2021-2022 National Immunization Survey-Child COVID Module.
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Olusanya OA, Masters NB, Zhang F, Sugerman DE, Carter RJ, Weiss D, and Singleton JA
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Multiple factors may influence parental vaccine hesitancy towards pediatric COVID-19 vaccines and routine childhood immunizations (RCIs). Using the United States National Immunization Survey-Child COVID Module data collected from parents/guardians of children aged 5-11 years, this cross-sectional study (1) identified the trends and prevalence estimates of parental hesitancy towards pediatric COVID-19 vaccines and RCIs, (2) examined the relationship between hesitancy towards pediatric COVID-19 vaccines and RCIs, and (3) assessed trends in parental hesitancy towards RCIs by sociodemographic characteristics and behavioral and social drivers of COVID-19 vaccination. From November 2021 to July 2022, 54,329 parents or guardians were interviewed. During this 9-month period, the proportion of parents hesitant about pediatric COVID-19 vaccines increased by 15.8 percentage points (24.8% to 40.6%). Additionally, the proportion of parents who reported RCIs hesitancy increased by 4.7 percentage points from November 2021 to May 2022 but returned to baseline by July 2022. Over nine months, parents' concerns about pediatric COVID-19 infections declined; however, parents were increasingly worried about pediatric COVID-19 vaccine safety and overall importance. Furthermore, pediatric COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was more prevalent among parents of children who were White (43.2%) versus Black (29.3%) or Hispanic (26.9%) and those residing in rural (51.3%) compared to urban (28.9%) areas. In contrast, RCIs hesitancy was higher among parents of children who were Black (32.0%) versus Hispanic (24.5%) or White (23.6%). Pediatric COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was 2-6 times as prevalent among parents who were RCIs hesitant compared to those who were RCIs non-hesitant. This positive correlation between parental hesitancy towards pediatric COVID-19 vaccines and RCIs was observed for all demographic and psychosocial factors for unadjusted and adjusted prevalence ratios. Parent-provider interactions should increase vaccine confidence, shape social norms, and facilitate behavior change to promote pediatric vaccination rates.
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- 2024
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8. Modeling Poliovirus Transmission and Responses in New York State.
- Author
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Thompson KM, Kalkowska DA, Routh JA, Brenner IR, Rosenberg ES, Zucker JR, Langdon-Embry M, Sugerman DE, Burns CC, and Badizadegan K
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- Humans, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, New York epidemiology, Poliovirus Vaccine, Inactivated, Poliovirus Vaccine, Oral, Wastewater-Based Epidemiological Monitoring, Poliomyelitis epidemiology, Poliomyelitis prevention & control, Poliovirus genetics
- Abstract
Background: In July 2022, New York State (NYS) reported a case of paralytic polio in an unvaccinated young adult, and subsequent wastewater surveillance confirmed sustained local transmission of type 2 vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV2) in NYS with genetic linkage to the paralyzed patient., Methods: We adapted an established poliovirus transmission and oral poliovirus vaccine evolution model to characterize dynamics of poliovirus transmission in NYS, including consideration of the immunization activities performed as part of the declared state of emergency., Results: Despite sustained transmission of imported VDPV2 in NYS involving potentially thousands of individuals (depending on seasonality, population structure, and mixing assumptions) in 2022, the expected number of additional paralytic cases in years 2023 and beyond is small (less than 0.5). However, continued transmission and/or reintroduction of poliovirus into NYS and other populations remains a possible risk in communities that do not achieve and maintain high immunization coverage., Conclusions: In countries such as the United States that use only inactivated poliovirus vaccine, even with high average immunization coverage, imported polioviruses may circulate and pose a small but nonzero risk of causing paralysis in nonimmune individuals., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: no reported conflicts. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America 2023.)
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- 2024
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9. Measles - United States, January 1, 2020-March 28, 2024.
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Mathis AD, Raines K, Masters NB, Filardo TD, Kim G, Crooke SN, Bankamp B, Rota PA, and Sugerman DE
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- United States epidemiology, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Child, Preschool, Child, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Measles virus, Vaccination, Vaccination Coverage, Disease Outbreaks, New York City, Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine, Measles epidemiology, Measles prevention & control
- Abstract
Measles is a highly infectious febrile rash illness and was declared eliminated in the United States in 2000. However, measles importations continue to occur, and U.S. measles elimination status was threatened in 2019 as the result of two prolonged outbreaks among undervaccinated communities in New York and New York City. To assess U.S. measles elimination status after the 2019 outbreaks and to provide context to understand more recent increases in measles cases, CDC analyzed epidemiologic and laboratory surveillance data and the performance of the U.S. measles surveillance system after these outbreaks. During January 1, 2020-March 28, 2024, CDC was notified of 338 confirmed measles cases; 97 (29%) of these cases occurred during the first quarter of 2024, representing a more than seventeenfold increase over the mean number of cases reported during the first quarter of 2020-2023. Among the 338 reported cases, the median patient age was 3 years (range = 0-64 years); 309 (91%) patients were unvaccinated or had unknown vaccination status, and 336 case investigations included information on ≥80% of critical surveillance indicators. During 2020-2023, the longest transmission chain lasted 63 days. As of the end of 2023, because of the absence of sustained measles virus transmission for 12 consecutive months in the presence of a well-performing surveillance system, U.S. measles elimination status was maintained. Risk for widespread U.S. measles transmission remains low because of high population immunity. However, because of the increase in cases during the first quarter of 2024, additional activities are needed to increase U.S. routine measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination coverage, especially among close-knit and undervaccinated communities. These activities include encouraging vaccination before international travel and rapidly investigating suspected measles cases., Competing Interests: All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. Stephen N. Crooke reports institutional support from PATH. No other potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.
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- 2024
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10. Deaths Associated with Pediatric Hepatitis of Unknown Etiology, United States, October 2021-June 2023.
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Almendares O, Baker JM, Sugerman DE, Parashar UD, Reagan-Steiner S, Kirking HL, Gastañaduy PA, and Tate JE
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- Child, Humans, United States epidemiology, Acute Disease, Hepatitis, Hepatitis A epidemiology, Viruses
- Abstract
During October 2021-June 2023, a total of 392 cases of acute hepatitis of unknown etiology in children in the United States were reported to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as part of national surveillance. We describe demographic and clinical characteristics, including potential involvement of adenovirus in development of acute hepatitis, of 8 fatally ill children who met reporting criteria. The children had diverse courses of illness. Two children were immunocompromised when initially brought for care. Four children tested positive for adenovirus in multiple specimen types, including 2 for whom typing was completed. One adenovirus-positive child had no known underlying conditions, supporting a potential relationship between adenovirus and acute hepatitis in previously healthy children. Our findings emphasize the importance of continued investigation to determine the mechanism of liver injury and appropriate treatment. Testing for adenovirus in similar cases could elucidate the role of the virus.
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- 2024
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11. Long-term Neutralizing Antibody Levels Against Measles and Rubella Viruses Among Adults With 3 Doses of Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine.
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Alonge OD, Marin M, Hickman CJ, Sowers SB, Chen MH, Hao L, Mercader S, El-Badry E, McClure DL, Icenogle JP, Sugerman DE, Crooke SN, and Nguyen HQ
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Background: A third dose of measles-mumps-rubella vaccine (MMR) may be administered for various reasons, but data on long-term immunity are limited. We assessed neutralizing antibody levels against measles and rubella among adults up to 11 years after receipt of a third MMR dose., Methods: In this longitudinal study, healthy adults who received a third MMR dose as young adults (ages 18-28 years) were recalled around 5 years and 9-11 years after the third dose. Measles and rubella antibody levels were assessed by plaque-reduction and immunocolorimetric neutralization assays, respectively. Antibody concentrations <120 mIU/mL and <10 U/mL were considered potentially susceptible to measles and rubella, respectively. Geometric mean concentrations (GMCs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) over time were estimated from generalized estimating equation models., Results: Approximately 5 and 9-11 years after receipt of the third dose, 405 and 304 adults were assessed, respectively. Measles GMC was 428 mIU/mL (95% CI, 392-468 mIU/mL) 5 years postvaccination, declining to 381 mIU/mL (95% CI, 339-428 mIU/mL) 11 years postvaccination. At the last follow-up visit (9-11 years postvaccination), 10% of participants were potentially susceptible to measles infection. Rubella GMCs were stable throughout the follow-up period (63 U/mL to 65 U/mL); none of the participants was susceptible to rubella at the last follow-up visit., Conclusions: Eleven years after receiving a third MMR dose, measles and rubella neutralizing antibody levels remained high in adults. However, on the basis of waning antibody levels, some adults may become susceptible to measles infection over time despite receipt of 3 vaccine doses., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. O. D. A. and D. L. M. receive support unrelated to this work from GSK. H. Q. N. receives research support unrelated to this work from CSL Seqirus and GSK, and honorarium for participating in a consultancy group for Moderna outside the submitted work. All other authors declare no potential conflicts of interest., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.)
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- 2024
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