Last data update: Jan 13, 2025. (Total: 48570 publications since 2009)
Records 1-30 (of 1288 Records) |
Query Trace: Chen Y[original query] |
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Anti-neuraminidase and anti-hemagglutinin stalk responses to different influenza a(H7N9) vaccine regimens
El Sahly HM , Anderson EJ , Jackson LA , Neuzil KM , Atmar RL , Bernstein DI , Chen WH , Creech CB , Frey SE , Goepfert P , Meier J , Phadke V , Rouphael N , Rupp R , Stapleton JT , Spearman P , Walter EB , Winokur PL , Yildirim I , Williams TL , Oshinsky J , Coughlan L , Nijhuis H , Pasetti MF , Krammer F , Stadlbauer D , Nachbagauer R , Tsong R , Wegel A , Roberts PC . Vaccine 2025 47 126689 INTRODUCTION: Pandemic influenza vaccine development focuses on the hemagglutinin (HA) antigen for potency and immunogenicity. Antibody responses targeting the neuraminidase (NA) antigen, or the HA stalk domain have been implicated in protection against influenza. Responses to the NA and HA-stalk domain following pandemic inactivated influenza are not well characterized in humans. MATERIAL AND METHODS: In a series of clinical trials, we determine the vaccines' NA content and demonstrate that NA inhibition (NAI) antibody responses increase in a dose-dependent manner following a 2-dose priming series with AS03-adjuvanted influenza A(H7N9) inactivated vaccine (A(H7N9) IIV). NAI antibody responses also increase with interval extension of the 2-dose priming series or following a 5-year delayed boost with a heterologous adjuvanted A(H7N9) IIV. Neither concomitant seasonal influenza vaccination given simultaneously or sequentially, nor use of heterologous A(H7N9) IIVs in the 2-dose priming series had an appreciable effect on NAI antibody responses. Anti-HA stalk antibody responses were minimal and not durable. CONCLUSIONS: We provide evidence for strategies to improve anti-neuraminidase responses which can be further standardized for pandemic preparedness. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRY NUMBERS: NCT03312231, NCT03318315, NCT03589807, NCT03738241. |
Predictors of Cryptococcus gattii clinical presentation and outcome: An international study
Galanis E , MacDougall L , Rose C , Chen SC , Oltean HN , Cieslak PR , DeBess E , Chong M , Sorrell TC , Baddley JW , Hoang L , Lockhart SR , Pappas PG , Phillips P . Clin Infect Dis 2025 BACKGROUND: Infection by Cryptococcus gattii can lead to pulmonary or central nervous system (CNS) disease, or both. Whether site of infection and disease severity are associated with C. gattii species and lineages or with certain underlying medical conditions, or both is unclear. We conducted a retrospective cohort study to identify factors associated with site of infection and mortality among C. gattii cases. METHODS: We extracted data on 258 C. gattii cases from Australia, Canada and the United States reported from 1999 to 2011. We conducted unadjusted and multivariable logistic regression analyses to evaluate factors associated with site of infection and C. gattii mortality among hospitalized cases (N=218). RESULTS: Hospitalized C. gattii cases with CNS and other extrapulmonary disease were younger, more likely to reside in Australia and be infected with VGI lineage but less likely to have comorbidities and die as compared to pulmonary cases. The odds of having CNS and/or other extrapulmonary disease were 9 times higher in cases with VGI infection (aOR=9.21, 95%CI=3.28-25.89). Age >70 years (aOR=6.69, 95%CI=2.44-18.30), chronic lung disease (aOR=2.62, 95%CI=1.05-6.51) and an immunocompromised status (aOR=2.08, 95%CI=1.05-6.51) were associated with higher odds of C. gattii mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Among hospitalized cases, C. gattii species and lineage are associated with site of infection but not with the risk of death, whereas older age and comorbidities increase the risk of death. |
Biodynamic modeling and analysis of human-exoskeleton interactions in simulated patient handling tasks
Chen Y , Yin W , Zheng L , Mehta R , Zhang X . Hum Factors 2025 187208241311271 OBJECTIVE: To investigate the biodynamics of human-exoskeleton interactions during patient handling tasks using a subject-specific modeling approach. BACKGROUND: Exoskeleton technology holds promise for mitigating musculoskeletal disorders caused by manual handling and most alarmingly by patient handling jobs. A deeper, more unified understanding of the biomechanical effects of exoskeleton use calls for advanced subject-specific models of complex, dynamic human-exoskeleton interactions. METHODS: Twelve sex-balanced healthy participants performed three simulated patient handling tasks along with a reference load-lifting task, with and without wearing the exoskeleton, while their full-body motion and ground reaction forces were measured. Subject-specific models were constructed using motion and force data. Biodynamic response variables derived from the models were analyzed to examine the effects of the exoskeleton. Model validation used load-lifting trials with known hand forces. RESULTS: The use of exoskeleton significantly reduced (19.7%-27.2%) the peak lumbar flexion moment but increased (26.4%-47.8%) the peak lumbar flexion motion, with greater moment percent reduction in more symmetric handling tasks; similarly affected the shoulder joint moments and motions but only during two more symmetric handling tasks; and significantly reduced the peak motions for the rest of the body joints. CONCLUSION: Subject-specific biodynamic models simulating exoskeleton-assisted patient handling were constructed and validated, demonstrating that the exoskeleton effectively lessened the peak loading to the lumbar and shoulder joints as prime movers while redistributing more motions to these joints and less to the remaining joints. APPLICATION: The findings offer new insights into biodynamic responses during exoskeleton-assisted patient handling, benefiting the development of more effective, possibly task- and individual-customized, exoskeletons. |
Evaluating the ingress of total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) specifically naphthalene through firefighter hoods and base layers
Kander MC , Wilkinson AF , Chen IC , Bertke S , Kesler RM , Smith DL , Horn GP , Fent KW . J Occup Environ Hyg 2025 1-9 Structural firefighters are exposed to an array of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) as a result of incomplete combustion of both synthetic and natural materials. PAHs are found in both the particulate and vapor phases in the firefighting environment and are significantly associated with acute and chronic diseases, including cancer. Using a fireground exposure simulator (FES) and standing mannequins dressed in four different firefighter personal protective equipment (PPE) conditions, each with varying levels of protective hood interface and particulate-blocking features, the efficacy of the hoods was assessed against the ingress of PAHs (specifically, naphthalene). The authors also explored the effectiveness of a 100% cotton turtleneck at further attenuating the amount of naphthalene reaching the surface of the mannequin's neck. Air samples were collected at the breathing zone, abdomen, and thigh heights from the 6 ft-2 in mannequins used in this study. Naphthalene was the most abundant PAH (55% of the total PAH concentrations) in the FES and existed primarily in the vapor phase (92% vapor in the breathing zone). Additionally, bulk base layer and under the base layer polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) filter samples (used as skin surrogates) were collected from the neck region of the mannequins and analyzed for PAHs. A larger percentage of naphthalene was collected on the filter under the traditional knit hoods than on the cotton base layer, suggesting a small protective effect of the base layer against solid-phase naphthalene. Previous studies investigating naphthalene by employing air sampling under PPE have found a larger protective effect of base layers against the ingress of naphthalene vapor. PAHs that exist primarily as particulate in the fire environment were largely not detected on the base layers or PTFE filters under the gear. Further research is needed that involves more sensitive methods and non-static human subjects. |
Indicator-based tuberculosis infection control assessments with knowledge, attitudes, and practices evaluations among health facilities in China, 2017-2019
Zhang C , O'Connor S , Chen H , Rodriguez DF , Hao L , Wang Y , Li Y , Xu J , Chen Y , Xia L , Yang X , Zhao Y , Cheng J . Am J Infect Control 2024 BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) Building and Strengthening Infection Control Strategies (TB BASICS) aimed to achieve improvements in TB infection prevention and control (IPC) through structured training and mentorship. METHODS: TB BASICS was implemented in six Chinese provinces from 2017-2019. Standardized, facility-based risk assessments tailored to inpatient, laboratory, and outpatient departments were conducted quarterly for 18 months. Knowledge, attitudes, and practices surveys were administered to healthcare workers (HCW) at nine participating facilities during the first and last assessments. Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test assessed score differences between departments (alpha = 0.05). RESULTS: Fifty-seven departments received risk assessments. IPC policies and practices improved substantially during follow up. Facility-based assessment scores were significantly lower in outpatient departments than other departments (p <0.05). All indicators achieved at least partial implementation by the final assessment. Low scores persisted for implementing isolation protocols, while personal protective equipment use among staff was consistent among all departments. Overall, we observed minimal change in IPC knowledge among HCW. In general, HCW had favorable views of their own IPC capabilities, but reported limited agency to improve institutional IPC. CONCLUSIONS: TB BASICS demonstrated improvements in TB IPC implementation. Structured training and mentorship engaged HCW to maintain confidence and competency for TB prevention. |
A retrospective evaluation of pandemic policy impact on university campus: An agent-based modeling approach for mobility, disease propagation, and testing during COVID-19
Chen Y , Islam MT , Jain S , Barua Chowdhury BD , Son YJ . Expert Sys Appl 2025 266 In the fight against the spread of infectious disease, university campuses present a unique set of obstacles because of the prevalence of communal living arrangements and the difficulties of restricting sociability and group gatherings. In the last few years, the dynamics of the pandemic have evolved, and so too have the challenges university campuses face in ensuring their communities’ health and safety. This study introduces a complex and adaptable hybrid model, which was developed, applied, and validated using data from the peak incidents of SARS-CoV-2 during 2020–2021. It combines an agent-based model (ABM) with a modified SEIR system dynamics approach. Recognizing the shifting landscape of the pandemic, this model has been designed to function as both a historical case study of COVID-19 dynamics on a university campus and a framework for addressing future pandemic threats. By simulating disease propagation considering contact distance (i.e., 0–3 feet, 3–6 feet), contact duration (e.g., indoor layout, capacity, ventilation), and individual behaviors (e.g., partying, gathering, sporting, off-campus activities), the model serves as a comprehensive analysis tool. It incorporates GIS-based campus data, real-time Wi-Fi occupancy data, student schedule-based behavioral patterns to closely emulate campus life. The testing frequency (e.g., mandatory, voluntary), methods (e.g., PCR, antigen, antibody, saline gargle, saliva), and different containment policies (e.g., mask-wearing, vaccination) enhance the model's predictive capabilities. The model's flexible structure allows stakeholders to adapt it to current and emerging scenarios. Retrospective analyses indicate that strategies like indoor mask mandates, frequent testing, and high vaccination rates were pivotal in managing spread of disease. The model's predictive accuracy, as evidenced by high accurate rate (i.e., 85.1% accuracy with an average deviation of 4.42 cases per day) when comparing the model output to actual campus data, underscores its value as a decision-making aid for university administrators in the ongoing efforts to foster a resilient and healthy campus environment. © 2024 Elsevier Ltd |
Notes from the Field: Geo-temporal trends in fentanyl administration routes among adults reporting use of illegally manufactured fentanyl when assessed for substance-use treatment - 14 U.S. States, 2017-2023
Chen Y , Jiang X , Gladden RM , Nataraj N , Guy GP Jr , Dowell D . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2024 73 (50) 1147-1149 |
Molecular epidemiology of rubella during the pre- and post-elimination eras in the Americas
Chen MH , Beard RS , Hiebert J , Rey-Benito G . Rev Panam Salud Publica 2024 48 e104 Since the last case of indigenous rubella virus (RuV) was detected in 2009 in the Region of the Americas, sporadic rubella and congenital rubella cases have been confirmed, and subsequently, a low number of associated sequences have been reported. Fifty-one sequences of wild-type RuV, representing four genotypes (1E, 1G, 1J, and 2B), were reported from five countries, with confirmed sources of exposure for 46 cases. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the diversity of these viruses, showing no associations with sustained endemic transmission from previously endemic strains. Notably, 13 sequences were associated with travel from countries where no genetic information of wild-type viruses was available. In addition to sequences from postnatal and congenital infections, 23 sequences were collected from patients with diseases associated with RuV persistent infection. These findings highlight the Region's success in maintaining rubella elimination, emphasize its valuable contribution to global RuV molecular epidemiology, and address potential challenges in progressing toward the goal of rubella eradication. |
New dosing interval and schedule for the Bexsero MenB-4C vaccine: Updated recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices - United States, October 2024
Schillie S , Loehr J , Chen WH , Moser CA , Cooper G , Isenhour C , McNamara LA . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2024 73 (49) 1124-1128 Two meningococcal serogroup B vaccines are licensed for use in the United States. In August 2024, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) changed the label for the meningococcal serogroup B MenB-4C vaccine (Bexsero) from a 2-dose schedule (intervals of 0 and ≥1 month) to a 2-dose schedule (0 and 6 months) and added a 3-dose schedule (0, 1-2, and 6 months), based on new immunogenicity data. On October 24, 2024, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) voted to update its recommendations for the MenB-4C dosing interval and schedule to align with the new FDA label. ACIP recommends extending the interval for the 2-dose series of MenB-4C from 0 and ≥1 month to 0 and 6 months for healthy adolescents and young adults aged 16-23 years based on shared clinical decision-making and has added a recommendation for a 3-dose series with doses administered at 0, 1-2, and 6 months for persons aged ≥10 years at increased risk. The updated ACIP recommendations for MenB-4C align with existing ACIP recommendations for the other FDA-licensed meningococcal serogroup B vaccine, MenB-FHbp (Trumenba). |
Trends in firearm injuries treated in emergency departments by individual- and county-level characteristics, 2019 to 2023
Zwald ML , Holland KM , Sumner SA , Sheppard M , Chen Y , Wallace A , Friar NW , Simon TR . Ann Emerg Med 2024 STUDY OBJECTIVE: To understand trends in nonfatal firearm injuries by examining rates of firearm injury emergency department (ED) visits stratified by individual- and county-level characteristics. METHODS: Data from participating EDs within 10 jurisdictions in the United States funded through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Firearm Injury Surveillance Through Emergency Rooms program, including the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Utah, Virginia, Washington, and West Virginia, were analyzed. We examined trends in firearm injury ED visits by sex, age group, jurisdiction, county-level urbanicity, and county-level social vulnerability from January 2019 to August 2023. Mean weekly rates of firearm injury ED visits and visit ratios (or the proportion of firearm injury-related ED visits of all visits during the surveillance periods with the same period in 2019) were calculated. RESULTS: Compared with 2019, the proportion of ED visits for firearm injury was elevated each year during 2020 to 2023 overall, with the largest observed increase in 2020 (visit ratio=1.59). All 10 Firearm Injury Surveillance Through Emergency Rooms jurisdictions experienced an increase in the proportion of firearm injury ED visits in 2020 (visit ratios ranging from 1.26 in West Virginia and 2.31 in Washington, DC) when compared with 2019. By county-level social vulnerability, the mean weekly rate of firearm injury ED visits was highest in counties with the highest social vulnerability over the entire study period. CONCLUSION: Results highlight the continued burden of firearm injuries in communities with higher social vulnerability. Timely ED data by community social vulnerability can inform public health interventions and resource allocation at local, state, and national levels. |
Application of the Tier 3 NIOSH occupational exposure banding process for the graphene family of nanomaterials: A case study
Niang M , Barcellos N , Edmondson M , Chen L , McCormick S , Dahm MM . J Occup Environ Hyg 2024 1-16 Graphene is a class of two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials composed of single or multiple layers of carbon atoms. To date, there are limited clinical data and no epidemiological research available to assess graphene toxicity in humans. Despite the growing amount of animal toxicity data, there are currently no occupational exposure limits (OELs) for any type of graphene nanomaterial published by international authoritative organizations to ensure their safe handling within workplaces. In the absence of consensus OELs for graphene, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) occupational exposure banding process was used to assign an occupational exposure band (OEB). The NIOSH banding process is organized into a three-tiered system and is a resource for occupational safety and health (OSH) professionals to guide risk management and exposure control decisions when OELs are not available. To the authors' knowledge, there are no Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS) H-codes/statements available for graphene to conduct a Tier 1 analysis. Even though data were available from authoritative sources for three of nine health endpoints, the data were insufficient to support banding in a Tier 2 assessment. Therefore, a Tier 3 assessment using the NIOSH banding process was applied to the graphene family of nanomaterials (GFN) as a case study based on the specific physicochemical and toxicological properties with uncertainty factor adjustments. The band assignment was replicated by three individuals with advanced toxicology and industrial hygiene knowledge to ensure a consistent outcome. The results found that three of the six endpoints banded were "E," representing an air concentration ≤0.01 mg/m(3), while the other three ranged from "A" to "C." This indicates that the graphene materials evaluated may have potential effects at low exposure concentrations (≤0.01 mg/m(3)). These findings suggest an OEB may be a suitable option for OSH professionals attempting to mitigate risk for GFN in the absence of an OEL and may provide a reasonable initial estimate for recommended workplace exposure and control measures. |
Seroepidemiology of trachoma in a low prevalence region receiving annual mass azithromycin distribution in Maradi, Niger
Amza A , Kadri B , Nassirou B , Arzika A , Gebreegziabher E , Hu H , Zhong L , Chen C , Yu D , Abraham T , Liu Y , Wickens K , Doan T , Martin D , Arnold BF , Lietman TM , Oldenburg CE . PLoS Negl Trop Dis 2024 18 (12) e0012727 BACKGROUND: Trachoma programs use the indicator trachomatous inflammation--follicular (TF) to monitor indication for and response to treatment for trachoma at the district level. Alternative indicators, including serologic markers, are increasingly being evaluated for trachoma surveillance. We evaluated seroprevalence of IgG antibodies to the Pgp3 antigen in two districts in Maradi, Niger thought to have low TF prevalence. METHODS: Data were collected as part of the baseline assessment of the Azithromycin Reduction to Reach Elimination of Trachoma (ARRET) trial in September 2021. A random sample of 80 communities was selected from Mayahi and Guidan Roumdji districts, both of which had TF prevalence <20% at their most recent trachoma impact survey in 2018. A random sample of 50 children per community was sampled. We collected field grades, conjunctival swabs for processing PCR for ocular Chlamydia trachomatis, and dried blood spots for serologic assessment. RESULTS: Of 3,994 children sampled in 80 communities, 49% were female and median age was 4 years. Overall TF prevalence was 4.6% (95% CI 3.5 to 5.8%) and trachomatous inflammation-intense (TI) prevalence was 0.6% (95% 0.3 to 0.9%). The prevalence of ocular chlamydia was 0.03% (95% CI 0.08%). Seroprevalence for Pgp3 antibodies was 6.3% (95% CI 5.5 to 7.1%) in 1-9-year-olds and 3.7% (95% CI 2.9 to 4.4%) in 1-5-year-olds. TF and Pgp3 seroprevalence were better correlated in 1-5-year-olds (correlation coefficient 0.29) compared to 1-9-year-olds (correlation coefficient 0.09). CONCLUSIONS: In this low trachoma prevalence setting in Niger, seroprevalence of antibodies to Pgp3 were consistent with little ongoing transmission of C. trachomatis. |
Trends in the incidence of young-adult-onset diabetes by diabetes type: a multi-national population-based study from an international diabetes consortium
Magliano DJ , Chen L , Morton JI , Salim A , Carstensen B , Gregg EW , Pavkov ME , Arffman M , Colhoun HM , Ha KH , Imamura T , Jermendy G , Kim DJ , Kiss Z , Mauricio D , McGurnaghan SJ , Nishioka Y , Wild SH , Winell K , Shaw JE . Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol 2024 12 (12) 915-923 BACKGROUND: Population-based incidence data on young-adult-onset type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes are limited. We aimed to examine secular trends in the incidence of diagnosed type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes with an age of onset between 15 and 39 years. METHODS: In this multicountry aggregate data analysis, we assembled eight administrative datasets from high-income jurisdictions and countries (Australia, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Japan, Scotland, South Korea, and Spain [Catalonia]) that had appropriate data available from an international diabetes consortium (GLOBODIAB) describing incidence by diabetes type among people aged 15-39 years from 2000 to 2020. We modelled type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes incidence rates using Poisson regression including age and calendar time by sex. FINDINGS: During the years 2000-20, there were 349 591 incident diabetes (both types) cases from 346 million person-years of follow-up among people aged 15-39 years. Over time, there was no statistically significant change in the incidence of type 1 diabetes in Hungary and Japan. The incidence of type 1 diabetes significantly increased in Australia, Denmark, Finland, Scotland, South Korea, and Spain, with annual changes ranging from 0·5% to 6·0%. The incidence of type 2 diabetes significantly increased in four of eight jurisdictions (Denmark, Finland, Japan, and South Korea), with annual increases from 2·0% to 8·5%. The magnitude of increase in incidence of type 2 diabetes was greater in Asian than non-Asian jurisdictions. There was no statistically significant change in type 2 diabetes incidence in Australia and Hungary. The incidence of type 2 diabetes significantly decreased in Scotland and Spain, with annual changes of -0·7% and -1·5%, respectively. INTERPRETATION: There is variability in the trajectory of the incidence of young-adult-onset type 2 diabetes among high-income countries or jurisdictions, with a greater evidence of increase in Asian than non-Asian countries. Evolving trends in the incidence of type 1 and type 2 diabetes in young adults call for the ongoing surveillance of diabetes incidence and a greater research focus on this population. FUNDING: US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Diabetes Australia Research Programme, and Victoria State Government Operational Infrastructure Support Programme. |
primerForge: a Python program for identifying primer pairs capable of distinguishing groups of genomes from each other
Wirth JS , Katz LS , Williams GM , Chen JC . J Open Source Softw 2024 9 (101) In both molecular epidemiology and microbial ecology, it is useful to be able to categorize specific strains of microorganisms in either an ingroup or an outgroup in a given population, e.g. to distinguish a pathogenic strain of interest from its non-virulent relatives. An "ingroup" refers to a group of microbes that are the primary focus of study or interest. Conversely, an "outgroup" consists of microbes that are closely-related to, but have evolved separately from, the ingroup. While whole genome sequencing and downstream phylogenetic analyses can be employed to do this, these techniques are often slow and can be resource intensive. Additionally, the laboratory would have to sequence the whole genome to use these tools to determine whether or not a new sample is part of the ingroup or outgroup. Alternatively, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) can be used to amplify regions of genetic material that are specific to the strain(s) of interest. PCR is faster, less expensive, and more accessible than whole genome sequencing, so having a PCR-based approach can accelerate the detection of specific strain(s) of microbes and facilitate diagnoses and/or population studies. |
Endurance exercise training alters lipidomic profiles of plasma and eight tissues in rats: a MoTrPAC study
Ortlund E , Hou Z , Chen CY , Gaul D , Zhang T , Moore S , Liu X , Ivanova A , Maner-Smith K , Newgard C , Bodine S , Savage E , Bennett A , Fernandez F . Res Sq 2024 Endurance exercise training (ExT) induces metabolic, structural, and functional adaptations via lipidomic modifications, yet the systematic elucidation of lipidome alterations in response to ExT remains incomplete. As a part of the Molecular Transducers of Physical Activity Consortium (MoTrPAC), we leveraged non-targeted and targeted lipidomics for the systematic discovery of lipid alterations in the brown adipose tissue, heart, hippocampus, kidney, liver, lung, skeletal muscle gastrocnemius, subcutaneous white adipose tissue, and plasma in response to 1, 2, 4 or 8 weeks of ExT in 6-month-old male and female Fischer-344 rats. This study demonstrates that these tissues, each with distinct lipidomic features, underwent dynamic, sexually dimorphic lipid remodeling. Exercise trained animals showed reduced whole-body adiposity and improved cardiorespiratory fitness, along with enhanced utilization of lipid stores and dynamic triacylglycerol remodeling compared to sedentary controls in all tissues except hippocampus. They also showed modifications in phospholipids, lysophospholipids, oxylipins, and ceramides in several tissues. Coordinated changes across tissues reflect systemic tissue communication, with liver-plasma-heart connection potentially playing a key role in systemic lipid metabolism during ExT. These data will improve our understanding of lipid-associated biological processes underlying the health-promoting benefits of ExT. |
Embracing complexity: Developing a framework for evaluating a multi-faceted training and technical assistance system
Stanley AR , Jamison C , Chen A , Barranco L , Welsh D , Jones K . Eval Health Prof 2024 47 (4) 437-445 The benefits of training and technical assistance (TTA) have been well documented. There is limited literature that explores how complex systems of TTA are implemented and evaluated particularly in the violence prevention field. The Violence Prevention Practice and Translation Branch (VPPTB) within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Division of Violence Prevention funds multiple technical assistance providers who are tasked with building the capacity of program recipients to implement comprehensive approaches to prevent multiple forms of violence. VPPTB designed the Violence Prevention Technical Assistance Center (VPTAC) with the goal of implementing and evaluating comprehensive TTA efforts that integrates the work of multiple TTA providers to build the capacity of recipients to plan, implement, and evaluate violence prevention efforts. The VPTAC evaluation incorporates data from program recipients, TTA providers, and TTA modalities enabling the VPPTB staff to show improvement in technical knowledge, gather examples of enhanced implementation, and facilitate proactive TTA planning. An important step in the process of evaluating VPTAC from a system-level perspective required an expansion beyond evaluating a single TTA event, provider, or engagement. This is essential to understand how a diverse set of TTA activities and partners work together in their efforts to build capacity. |
Notes from the field: Trends in emergency department visits for firearm injuries - United States, January 2018-December 2023
Holland KM , Chen Y , Zwald ML , Sumner SA , Fowler KA , Sheppard M , Simon TR . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2024 73 (46) 1064-1066 |
Cognitive assessment in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS): a cognitive substudy of the multi-site clinical assessment of ME/CFS (MCAM)
Lange G , Lin JS , Chen Y , Fall EA , Peterson DL , Bateman L , Lapp C , Podell RN , Natelson BH , Kogelnik AM , Klimas NG , Unger ER . Front Neurosci 2024 18 1460157 INTRODUCTION: Patients with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) experience cognitive problems with attention, information processing speed, working memory, learning efficiency, and executive function. Commonly, patients report worsening of cognitive symptoms over time after physical and/or cognitive challenges. To determine, monitor, and manage longitudinal decrements in cognitive function after such exposures, it is important to be able to screen for cognitive dysfunction and changes over time in clinic and also remotely at home. The primary objectives of this paper were: (1) to determine whether a brief computerized cognitive screening battery will detect differences in cognitive function between ME/CFS and Healthy Controls (HC), (2) to monitor the impact of a full-day study visit on cognitive function over time, and (3) to evaluate the impact of exercise testing on cognitive dysfunction. METHODS: This cognitive sub-study was conducted between 2013 and 2019 across seven U.S. ME/CFS clinics as part of the Multi-Site Clinical Assessment of ME/CFS (MCAM) study. The analysis included 426 participants (261 ME/CFS and 165 HC), who completed cognitive assessments including a computerized CogState Brief Screening Battery (CBSB) administered across five timepoints (T0-T4) at the start of and following a full day in-clinic visit that included exercise testing for a subset of participants (182 ME/CFS and 160 HC). Exercise testing consisted of ramped cycle ergometry to volitional exhaustion. The primary outcomes are performance accuracy and latency (performance speed) on the computerized CBSB administered online in clinic (T0 and T1) and at home (T2-T4). RESULTS: No difference was found in performance accuracy between ME/CFS and HCs whereas information processing speed was significantly slower for ME/CFS at most timepoints with Cohen's d effect sizes ranging from 0.3-0.5 (p < 0.01). The cognitive decline over time on all CBSB tasks was similar for patients with ME/CFS independent of whether exercise testing was included in the clinic visit. CONCLUSION: The challenges of a clinic visit (including cognitive testing) can lead to further cognitive deficits. A single short session of intense exercise does not further reduce speed of performance on any CBSB tasks. |
Analysis of panel physician inquiries to U.S. TB Centers of Excellence, 2018-2022
Leithead Eth , Subramanian S , Pimenta K , Goswami ND , Patrawalla A , Lardizabal A , Haley C , Chen L , Armitige L , Seaworth B , Sylvester B , Bhavaraju R . IJTLD Open 2024 1 (11) 490-494 BACKGROUND: Applicants seeking entry into the United States are examined overseas for TB by panel physicians and international immigration clinicians guided by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) TB Technical Instructions. To support this effort, CDC-funded TB Centers of Excellence (COEs) provide web-based expert consultation, with documentation stored in a medical consultation database (MCD). MCD analysis can reveal inquiry trends among panel physicians worldwide. METHODS: TB-related queries in the COE MCD from January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2022, were analyzed using a descriptive coding scheme developed through inductive analysis, allowing multiple themes per entry. RESULTS: A total of 215 queries from 126 patients in 28 countries were analyzed. Major themes included evaluating diagnostic criteria, tailoring treatment, and managing comorbidities or adverse reactions. Diagnostic questions (n = 104, 48.4%) included mycobacterial culture, smear, and radiology interpretation. Treatment tailoring inquiries involved optimizing the initial regimen (n = 89, 41.4%) or modifying existing regimens (n = 26, 12.1%). Additionally, 50 consultations (23.2%) mentioned comorbidities, while 47 (21.9%) described adverse reactions. CONCLUSION: The MCD analysis identified topics where TB expertise was provided in overseas medical evaluation. These topics highlight opportunities for targeted panel physician education to improve the health of individual applicants and advance U.S. TB elimination efforts. |
Nomenclature for human and animal fungal pathogens and diseases: a proposal for standardized terminology
de Hoog S , Walsh TJ , Ahmed SA , Alastruey-Izquierdo A , Arendrup MC , Borman A , Chen S , Chowdhary A , Colgrove RC , Cornely OA , Denning DW , Dufresne PJ , Filkins L , Gangneux JP , Gené J , Groll AH , Guillot J , Haase G , Halliday C , Hawksworth DL , Hay R , Hoenigl M , Hubka V , Jagielski T , Kandemir H , Kidd SE , Kus JV , Kwon-Chung J , Lockhart SR , Meis JF , Mendoza L , Meyer W , Nguyen MH , Song Y , Sorrell TC , Stielow JB , Vilela R , Vitale RG , Wengenack NL , White PL , Ostrosky-Zeichner L , Zhang SX . J Clin Microbiol 2024 e0093724 Medically important pathogenic fungi invade vertebrate tissue and are considered primary when part of their nature life cycle is associated with an animal host and are usually able to infect immunocompetent hosts. Opportunistic fungal pathogens complete their life cycle in environmental habitats or occur as commensals within or on the vertebrate body, but under certain conditions can thrive upon infecting humans. The extent of host damage in opportunistic infections largely depends on the portal and modality of entry as well as on the host's immune and metabolic status. Diseases caused by primary pathogens and common opportunists, causing the top approximately 80% of fungal diseases [D. W. Denning, Lancet Infect Dis, 24:e428-e438, 2024, https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(23)00692-8], tend to follow a predictive pattern, while those by occasional opportunists are more variable. For this reason, it is recommended that diseases caused by primary pathogens and the common opportunists are named after the etiologic agent, for example, histoplasmosis and aspergillosis, while this should not be done for occasional opportunists that should be named as [causative fungus] [clinical syndrome], for example, Alternaria alternata cutaneous infection. The addition of a descriptor that identifies the location or clinical type of infection is required, as the general name alone may cover widely different clinical syndromes, for example, "rhinocerebral mucormycosis." A list of major recommended human and animal disease entities (nomenclature) is provided in alignment with their causative agents. Fungal disease names may encompass several genera of etiologic agents, consequently being less susceptible to taxonomic changes of the causative species, for example, mucormycosis covers numerous mucormycetous molds. |
Dust resuspension from the splash of a falling powder: a numerical aerodynamic simulation of a pellet falling onto a powder monolayer
Turkevich LA , Chen H , Jog MA . Aerosol Sci Technol 2025 [Epub ahead of print] A falling powder can generate a dust cloud from its interaction with the ambient air and from its splash onto a substrate. This article reports the results of a numerical simulation study, which attempts to model this second process. We argue that the dust cloud arises from the aerodynamic resuspension of previously deposited small particles. The agglomerated falling powder is modeled as a falling pellet disk impacting a surface covered with a monolayer of previously deposited particles. The Reynolds number of the air flow in the vicinity of the impacting pellet is Re approximately 1860, so the air flow is modeled as laminar and incompressible. The dust particles are incorporated via a Lagrangian multiphase treatment. The sudden deceleration of the disk sheds an aerodynamic vortex, which suspends particles from the monolayer. Characteristics of the dust cloud (average and maximum height and radius) are tracked; these are conveniently summarized by following the trajectory of the dust cloud centroid. The probability of aerosolization decreases with distance from the impacted pellet. The centroid trajectory is studied as a function of dust particle size. The model is relatively insensitive to disk radius and thickness. More realistic modeling of dust clouds generated by the splash of falling powders will require a statistical analysis of aggregate size and location, as well as the inclusion of interparticle and particle-surface interactions. |
Factors associated with transmission across three waves of SARS-CoV-2 in a prospective community-based study of households with school-aged children-Dane County, Wisconsin, 2020-2022
Sethi AK , Bell C , Norton D , Goss MD , Barlow S , Chen G , Uzicanin A , Temte JL . Influenza Other Respir Viruses 2024 18 (11) e70031 BACKGROUND: Household transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is a driver of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Understanding factors that contribute to secondary infection risks (SIRs) can define changing trends and inform public health policies. METHODS: The ORegon CHild Absenteeism due to Respiratory Disease Study (ORCHARDS) prospectively monitors respiratory viruses within the Oregon School District (OSD) in southcentral Wisconsin. Households with students who had ≥ 2 respiratory symptoms were eligible and opted to participate in ORCHARDS. Between October 28, 2020, and May 16, 2022, all household members provided self-collected nasal specimens on days 0, 7, and 14 for SARS-CoV-2 detection using real-time reverse-transcription-polymerase chain reaction. We used logistic regression to investigate individual- and household-level characteristics associated with SARS-CoV-2 transmission. RESULTS: Overall, 127 households comprising 572 individuals (48% female; 52% male; 0.4% nonbinary; 77% ≥ 18 years) had at least one detection of SARS-CoV-2. The overall SIR was 47% and decreased over time (pre-Delta = 72% [95% CI: 58%-83%]; Delta = 51% [40%-63%]; and Omicron = 41% [36%-47%]). Odds of household transmission were 63% lower during the Omicron period compared with the pre-Delta period (OR = 0.36 [95% CI: 0.13-0.94] p = 0.037). Greater household density (members/bedroom) was significantly associated with household transmission during the Omicron period (OR = 6.8, [2.19-21.37] p = 0.001). Index case age, illness severity, and individual symptoms were not significantly associated with odds of household transmission. CONCLUSIONS: Greater household density was associated with a higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 transmission, but the risk declined over time with subsequent variants. Interplay between variants, prior infection, and individual/household factors may identify modifiable factors (e.g., behavior and vaccination) to reduce future transmission risk. |
Laboratory-confirmed influenza hospitalizations during pregnancy or the early postpartum period - Suzhou City, Jiangsu Province, China, 2018-2023
Sun J , Zhang Y , Zhou S , Song Y , Zhang S , Zhu J , Zhu Z , Wang R , Chen H , Chen L , Yang H , Zhang J , Azziz-Baumgartner E , Schluter WW . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2024 73 (43) 958-964 Pregnancy is associated with increased risk for severe illness and complications associated with influenza infection. Insufficient knowledge about the risk for influenza among pregnant women and their health care providers in China is an important barrier to increasing influenza vaccination coverage and treating influenza and its complications among pregnant women. Improved influenza incidence estimates might promote wider vaccine acceptance and higher vaccination coverage. In Suzhou, active population-based surveillance during October 2018-September 2023 estimated that the annual rate of hospitalization for acute respiratory or febrile illness (ARFI) among women who were pregnant or <2 weeks postpartum was 11.1 per 1,000 live births; the annual rate of laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated ARFI (influenza ARFI) hospitalization in this group was 2.1 per 1,000 live births. A majority of hospitalized pregnant or early postpartum patients with ARFI (82.6%; 2,588 of 3,133) or influenza ARFI (85.5%; 423 of 495) were admitted to obstetrics wards rather than respiratory medicine wards. Only one (0.03%) pregnant or postpartum ARFI patient had received influenza vaccination, and 31.3% of pregnant or postpartum women hospitalized for influenza ARFI received antiviral treatment; the lowest percentage of hospitalized women with influenza ARFI who received antiviral treatment was among women admitted to obstetrics and gynecology wards (29.6% and 23.1%, respectively), compared with 54.1% of those admitted to a respiratory medicine ward. These findings highlight the risk for influenza and its associated complications among pregnant and postpartum women, the low rates of influenza vaccination among pregnant women, and of antiviral treatment of women with ARFI admitted to obstetrics and gynecology wards. Increasing awareness of the prevalence of influenza ARFI among pregnant women, the use of empiric antiviral treatment for ARFI, and the infection control in obstetrics wards during influenza seasons might help reduce influenza-associated morbidity among pregnant and postpartum women. |
Gestational organophosphate esters (OPEs) and executive function in adolescence: The HOME Study
Vuong AM , Percy Z , Yang W , Godbole AM , Ospina M , Calafat AM , Cecil KM , Lanphear BP , Braun JM , Yolton K , Chen A . Environ Res 2024 120239 BACKGROUND: Evidence from toxicological studies indicate organophosphate esters (OPEs) are neurotoxic, but few epidemiological studies investigated associations between gestational OPEs and executive function. OBJECTIVE: To examine the associations between gestational concentrations of OPE urinary metabolites and executive function at 12 years METHODS: We used data from 223 mother-adolescent dyads from the Health Outcomes of Measures of the Environment (HOME) Study. Women provided spot urine samples at 16 weeks gestation, 26 weeks gestation, and at delivery for quantification of bis(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate, bis-2-chloroethyl phosphate (BCEP), diphenyl phosphate (DPHP), and di-n-butyl phosphate (DNBP). Executive function was assessed at age 12 years using the parent- and self-report Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF2). Covariate-adjusted associations between specific gravity-corrected OPEs and BRIEF2 scores were estimated using multiple informant models. Bayesian Kernel Machine Regression (BKMR) was used to assess the impact of all OPEs simultaneously. RESULTS: Parent- and self-report BRIEF2 indices and composite scores were weakly to moderately correlated (r(s)=0.32-0.41). A natural-log unit increase in BCEP at 26 weeks was associated with approximately a 1-point increase on the self-report Cognitive Regulation Index [CRI] (95% CI 0.4, 2.3), the Emotion Regulation Index [ERI] (95% CI 0.3, 2.2), and the Global Executive Composite [GEC] (95% CI 0.4, 2.2), indicating poorer performance. Higher DPHP at 16 weeks was associated with lower parent-report GEC score (β=-1.1, 95% CI -2.3, -0.003). BKMR identified BCEP and DNBP at 26 weeks as important contributors to CRI and ERI, respectively. CONCLUSION: OPE metabolites during gestational development, particularly BCEP, may influence adolescent executive function. However, since the FDR p-values failed to reach statistical significance, additional studies would benefit from using larger cohorts. |
Chronic overlapping pain conditions in people with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS): a sample from the Multi-site Clinical Assessment of ME/CFS (MCAM) study
Fall EA , Chen Y , Lin JS , Issa A , Brimmer DJ , Bateman L , Lapp CW , Podell RN , Natelson BH , Kogelnik AM , Klimas NG , Peterson DL , Unger ER . BMC Neurol 2024 24 (1) 399 BACKGROUND: Chronic overlapping pain conditions (COPCs), pain-related conditions that frequently occur together, may occur in patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and could impact illness severity. This study aimed to identify comorbid COPCs in patients with ME/CFS and evaluate their impact on illness severity. METHODS: We used data from 923 participants in the Multi-Site Clinical Assessment of ME/CFS study, conducted in seven U.S. specialty clinics between 2012 and 2020, who completed the baseline assessment (595 ME/CFS and 328 healthy controls (HC)). COPCs included chronic low back pain (cLBP), chronic migraine/headache (cMHA), fibromyalgia (FM), interstitial cystitis/irritable bladder (IC/IB), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), temporomandibular disorder (TMD). Illness severity was assessed through questionnaires measuring symptoms and functioning. Multivariate analysis of variance and analysis of covariance models were used for analyses. Log-binomial regression analyses were used to compute prevalence of COPCs and prevalence ratios (PR) between groups with 95% confidence intervals. Both unadjusted and adjusted results with age and sex are presented. RESULTS: 76% of participants with ME/CFS had at least one COPCs compared to 17.4% of HC. Among ME/CFS participants, cMHA was most prevalent (48.1%), followed by FM (45.0%), cLBP (33.1%), and IBS (31.6%). All individual COPCs, except TMD, were significantly more frequent in females than males. The unadjusted PR (ME/CFS compared to HC) was highest for FM [147.74 (95% confidence interval (CI) = 20.83-1047.75], followed by cLBP [39.45 (12.73-122.27)], and IC/IB [13.78 (1.88-101.24)]. The significance and order did not change after age and sex adjustment. The COPC comorbidities of cLBP and FM each had a significant impact on most health measures, particularly in pain attributes (Cohen's d effect size 0.8 or larger). While the impact of COPC comorbidities on non-pain attributes and quality of life measures was less pronounced than that on pain, statistically significant differences between ME/CFS participants with and without COPCs were still evident. CONCLUSIONS: More than 75% of ME/CFS participants had one or more COPCs. Multiple COPCs further exacerbated illness severity, especially among females with ME/CFS. Assessment and management of COPCs may help improve the health and quality of life for patients with ME/CFS. |
Rates of fall injuries across three claims databases, 2019
Miller GF , Dunphy C , Haddad YK , Chen J , Alic A , Thomas K , Wolkin AF . Inj Prev 2024 INTRODUCTION: In 2021, among all age groups, falls ranked as the third leading cause of unintentional injury death in the USA. Unlike fatal data, which rely on death certificates as the gold standard, there is not a gold standard for non-fatal data. Non-fatal falls data are often based on insurance claims or administrative billing data. The purpose of our study is to compare three claims databases to estimate rates of unintentional fall-related hospitalisations in 2019, the most recent year of available data across the three sources. METHODS: Three databases were used to produce incidence rates of fall-related hospitalisations for the year 2019: (1) Merative MarketScan research databases, (2) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) data and (3) Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) National Inpatient Sample. Inpatient falls were identified using International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision, Clinical Modification codes. Incidence rates per 100 000 people were then produced across all three datasets by payer type. Unadjusted incidence rate ratios were estimated with corresponding 95% CIs. RESULTS: There were wide disparities among fall rates between the three datasets by payer type. HCUP had the highest rate of falls among Medicare (1087.6 per 100 000) and commercial enrollees (74.7 per 100 000), while CMS had the highest rates of falls among Medicaid enrollees (148.0 per 100 000). CONCLUSIONS: This study shows wide variation in fall hospitalisation rates based on the claims data used to estimate rates. This study suggests that database selection is an important consideration when determining incidence of non-fatal falls. |
Physical activity behaviors and negative safety and violence experiences among high school students - Youth Risk Behavior Survey, United States, 2023
Cornett K , Michael SL , Sliwa S , Chen TJ , Kissler CJ , McKinnon II , Krause KH . MMWR Suppl 2024 73 (4) 94-103 Schools are in a unique position to offer opportunities for students to be physically active throughout the school day and promote health and well-being. However, experiences that threaten safety or perceptions of safety might affect students' physical activity behaviors. Using the 2023 national Youth Risk Behavior Survey, six physical activity behaviors and five negative safety and violence experiences were examined from a nationally representative sample of U.S. high school students. This report updates national estimates for physical activity behaviors overall and by sex, grade, race and ethnicity, and sexual identity. In addition, associations between negative experiences and physical activity behaviors were examined, stratified by sex, via unadjusted and adjusted prevalence ratios. Regardless of negative safety and violence experiences, male students had a higher prevalence of meeting aerobic, muscle-strengthening, and both aerobic and muscle-strengthening physical activity guidelines compared with female students. In adjusted models among female students, a positive association was observed between being threatened or injured with a weapon at school and meeting the aerobic guideline, meeting the muscle-strengthening guideline, and playing on ≥1 sports team. Among male students, positive associations were observed between witnessing neighborhood violence and meeting the aerobic guideline and the muscle-strengthening guideline. A negative association was observed between attending physical education classes on all 5 days and witnessing neighborhood violence among female students and being bullied electronically among male students. Physical activity might serve as a mechanism that students employ to cope with negative safety and violence experiences. Understanding current physical activity behaviors among students with these negative experiences will be useful for school leaders, teachers, and public health practitioners who influence physical activity infrastructure and programming in schools and work to support safe, supportive, and inclusive school environments for student health. Although future research is needed to further explore these associations, physical activity continues to be an important behavior to prioritize for adolescent health in the school setting. |
Decline in vaccination coverage by age 24 months and vaccination inequities among children born in 2020 and 2021 - National Immunization Survey-Child, United States, 2021-2023
Hill HA , Yankey D , Elam-Evans LD , Mu Y , Chen M , Peacock G , Singleton JA . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2024 73 (38) 844-853 Data from the National Immunization Survey-Child (NIS-Child) were analyzed to estimate coverage with childhood vaccines recommended by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices among U.S. children by age 24 months. Coverage with nearly all vaccines was lower among children born in 2020 and 2021 than it was among those born in 2018 and 2019, with declines ranging from 1.3 to 7.8 percentage points. Analyses of NIS-Child data for earlier birth cohorts have not revealed such widespread declines in routine childhood vaccination coverage. Coverage among children born during 2020-2021 varied by race and ethnicity, health insurance status, poverty status, urbanicity, and jurisdiction. Compared with non-Hispanic White children, coverage with four of the 17 vaccine measures was lower among non-Hispanic Black or African American children as well as Hispanic or Latino (Hispanic) and non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native children. Coverage was also generally lower among those covered by Medicaid or other nonprivate insurance, uninsured children, children living below the federal poverty level, and children living in rural areas. Coverage varied widely by jurisdiction, especially coverage with ≥2 doses of influenza vaccine. Children born during 2020-2021 were born during or after the period of major disruption of primary care from the COVID-19 pandemic. Providers should review children's histories and recommend needed vaccinations during every clinical encounter. Addressing financial barriers, access issues, vaccine hesitancy, and vaccine-related misinformation can also help to increase coverage, reduce disparities, and protect all children from vaccine-preventable diseases. Strategies that have been found effective include implementation of standing orders and reminder and recall systems, strong physician recommendations to vaccinate, and use of immunization information systems to identify areas of lower coverage that could benefit from targeted interventions to increase immunization rates. |
Beyond bacteria: the growing threat of antifungal resistance
van Rhijn N , Arikan-Akdagli S , Beardsley J , Bongomin F , Chakrabarti A , Chen SC , Chiller T , Lopes Colombo A , Govender NP , Alastruey-Izquierdo A , Kidd SE , Lackner M , Li R , Hagen F . Lancet 2024 404 (10457) 1017-1018 |
Use of haemophilus influenzae type B-containing vaccines among American Indian and Alaska Native infants: Updated recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices - United States, 2024
Collins JP , Loehr J , Chen WH , Clark M , Pinell-McNamara V , McNamara LA . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2024 73 (36) 799-802 Invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease is a serious bacterial infection that disproportionally affects American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations. Hib vaccination with a monovalent Hib conjugate vaccine consisting of Hib capsular polysaccharide (polyribosylribitol phosphate [PRP]) conjugated to outer membrane protein complex of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B, PRP-OMP (PedvaxHIB, Merck and Co., Inc.) has historically been preferred for AI/AN infants, who are at increased risk for invasive Hib disease, because it provides substantial protection after the first dose. On June 26, 2024, CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) recommended that a hexavalent, combined diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis (DTaP), inactivated poliovirus (IPV), Hib conjugate, and hepatitis B (HepB) vaccine, DTaP-IPV-Hib-HepB (Vaxelis, MSP Vaccine Company) should be included with monovalent PRP-OMP in the preferential recommendation for AI/AN infants because of the PRP-OMP Hib component. A primary Hib vaccination series consisting of either 1) monovalent PRP-OMP (2-dose series at ages 2 and 4 months) or 2) DTaP-IPV-Hib-HepB (3-dose series at ages 2, 4, and 6 months) is preferred for AI/AN infants. DTaP-IPV-Hib-HepB is only indicated for use in infants at ages 2, 4, and 6 months and should not be used for the booster doses of Hib, DTaP, or IPV vaccines. For the booster dose of Hib vaccine, no vaccine formulation is preferred for AI/AN children; any Hib vaccine (except DTaP-IPV-Hib-HepB) should be used. This report summarizes evidence considered for these recommendations and provides clinical guidance for the use of Hib-containing vaccines among AI/AN infants and children. |
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