Last data update: Aug 15, 2025. (Total: 49733 publications since 2009)
| Records 1-30 (of 1258 Records) |
| Query Trace: Jones J[original query] |
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| Safety monitoring of Pfizer's Respiratory Syncytial Virus Vaccine in pregnant women in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), 2023-2024, United States
Moro PL , Getahun A , Romanson B , Marquez P , Tepper NK , Olson CK , Jones JM , Nair N , Broder KR . Vaccine 2025 62 127497 BACKGROUND: In September 2023, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended Pfizer's Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) vaccine for pregnant women at 32-36 weeks' gestation using seasonal administration to prevent RSV-associated lower respiratory tract disease (LRTD) in infants aged <6 months. In clinical trials among pregnant women at 24-36 weeks' gestation, more preterm births and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy were noted among Pfizer's RSV vaccine recipients compared with placebo, but the differences were not statistically significant. Post-licensure safety monitoring of the Pfizer RSV vaccine in pregnant women is important to help inform immunization policies. OBJECTIVE: We assessed reports after Pfizer's RSV Vaccine in pregnant women submitted in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), a passive surveillance system. METHODS: We searched VAERS for U.S. reports of adverse events (AEs) or vaccination errors in pregnant women vaccinated with the Pfizer RSV vaccine. We analyzed reports received from August 20, 2023 through June 3, 2024. Clinicians reviewed reports and available medical records. RESULTS: VAERS received 121 reports of pregnant women who received the Pfizer RSV vaccines. Injection site and systemic reactions were described in 44 (36 %) reports. The most commonly reported pregnancy-specific outcomes were preterm birth in 37 (31 %) and hypertensive disorders of pregnancy in 9 (7 %). CONCLUSIONS: During the first U.S. RSV season in which the Pfizer RSV vaccine was approved and recommended for use during pregnancy, the types of AEs reported were consistent with prelicensure studies. Preterm birth was described commonly in the reports. Studies assessing potential association between Pfizer's maternal RSV vaccine and preterm birth are ongoing. CDC and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will continue to monitor the safety of this vaccine in future seasons. |
| Serum concentrations of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and risk of ovarian cancer
Jones RR , Madrigal JM , Medgyesi DN , Fisher JA , Calafat AM , Botelho JC , Kato K , Albert PS , Silverman DT , Hofmann JN , Trabert B . J Natl Cancer Inst 2025
BACKGROUND: Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are persistent, widespread environmental contaminants and some are endocrine-disrupting. Studies of gynecologic cancers are limited; we evaluated ovarian cancer, a rare, often fatal malignancy. METHODS: This nested case-control study included 318 ovarian cancer cases and 472 individually matched female controls in the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial, which recruited participants aged 55-74 years from 10 U.S. study centers (1993-2001). We ascertained cases through 2016 and quantitated eight PFAS in prediagnostic serum samples. We estimated ORs and 95% CIs for continuous (log2-transformed) and categorized PFAS concentrations via conditional logistic regression models implicitly adjusting for matching factors (age, center, randomization year, year of blood draw, race and ethnicity) and adjusted for smoking, body mass index, family history of cancer, menopausal hormone therapy and oral contraceptive use, parity, and number of freeze-thaws. RESULTS: We found a positive association with ovarian cancer for a doubling in 2-(N-methyl-perfluorooctane sulfonamido) acetic acid (MeFOSAA) concentrations (ORperlog2=1.24, CI = 1.03-1.49) and 62% greater risk among those in the highest quartile (ORQ4vsQ1=1.62, CI = 1.03-2.54; p-trend = 0.02). Perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) was associated with increased risk (ORperlog2=1.47, CI = 1.05-2.06) with no quartile trend (p-trend = 0.79). Associations with perfluorononanoic (ORperlog2=1.36, CI = 0.95-1.95) and perfluorodecanoic acid (ORperlog2=1.35, CI = 0.94-1.95) were suggested, with non-monotonic quartile trends (p-trend = 0.12-0.21). MeFOSAA associations were strongest in women aged 55-59 (ORperlog2=1.60, CI = 1.13-2.27), more moderate in those 60-64 (ORperlog2=1.31, CI = 0.90-1.90) and null among women 65 + (ORperlog2=1.02, CI = 0.73-1.43; p-heterogeneity = 0.22). Associations persisted in cases diagnosed ≥8 years after blood collection. CONCLUSIONS: These findings offer novel evidence for PFAS as ovarian cancer risk factors, particularly PFOS and MeFOSAA, a PFOS precursor. |
| Overdose Data to Action: A qualitative analysis of funded activities tailored for women
Cremer LJ , Miles AL , Gali ME , Ali N , Roberts M , Reed M , Williams DF , Rooks-Peck CR . J Subst Use Addict Treat 2025 178 209768 BACKGROUND: According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there was a 480 % increase in overdose deaths among all women from 1999 to 2021 (Jones et al., 2024). Women are uniquely impacted by substance use and overdose due to biological and cultural differences compared to men. CDC launched the Overdose Data to Action (OD2A) cooperative agreement in 2019 with the goal of helping to mitigate the opioid overdose crisis across the United States by supporting state and local health departments. METHODS: This study focused on a review of programmatic data submitted by OD2A jurisdictions that detail their prevention activities to identify how jurisdictions implemented activities to address the unique needs of women. The team conducted systematic content analysis using multiple rounds of coding. RESULTS: Most activities were tailored for pregnant women or women who had recently given birth and focused on expanding capacity to meet their needs. The most common activities were capacity-building activities to enhance efforts to address overdose needs for women (specifically pregnant women), resource development/sharing, and implementation/evaluation of best or promising practices for women. CONCLUSION: While it is important that activities tailored for pregnant women continue, our study showed a gap in activities tailored to other populations of women where the problem may be the greatest, such as women who are incarcerated, women who engage in sex work, and other female sub-populations. To address overdose rates in women, future efforts would benefit from continuing activities for pregnant women but also attempting to reach other at-risk female populations. |
| A template tool for the evaluation of vaccines for emerging pathogens to be used for pregnant and breast-feeding women
Munoz FM , Kampmann B , Stergachis A , Chaudhary M , Cutland CL , Khalil A , Gentile A , Jones CE , Marshall H , Sevene E , Darko DM , Swamy G , Hyde TB , Voss G , Muelen AS . Vaccine 2025 62 127513 Vaccination during pregnancy provides effective protection against pathogens that increase the risk of maternal and infant morbidity and mortality for mothers and their infants. The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic demonstrated the need for the inclusion of pregnant and breast-feeding women in research and development of vaccines for emerging pathogens, such as Ebola, Zika, Lassa fever, Chikungunya, and influenza virus of pandemic potential. The COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) Maternal Immunization Working Group (MIWG), in collaboration with the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovation and the Safety Platform for Emergency Vaccines (CEPI-SPEAC) developed a standardized template with key considerations to guide the assessment of vaccines against emerging pathogens in pregnant and breast-feeding women. The aim of this tool is to enable key stakeholders to perform an early structured assessment of the overall potential benefit and risk for maternal immunization against an emerging pathogen. It can also be used to support risk management and pharmacovigilance planning, communication strategies, policy development, and acceptance of vaccination during pregnancy in future pandemics. |
| Prevalence and Correlates of Healthy Behaviors Among Children Age 3-5 Years
Donney JF , Hirai AH , Ghandour RM , Hamner HC , Dooyema CA , Dahl KL , Jones JR . Am J Prev Med 2025 107619 INTRODUCTION: This study examined the prevalence and correlates of 6 healthy behaviors among preschool-age children in the United States. METHODS: Data from the 2021 and 2022 National Survey of Children's Health were used to examine daily fruit consumption, daily vegetable consumption, no sugary beverage consumption in the past week, frequent outdoor play (≥2 hours/day), limited screen time (≤1 hour/weekday), and adequate sleep (≥10 hours/day) among children ages 3-5 years (N=23,123). Relationships between healthy behaviorss and child, family, community characteristics, and state of residence were examined using logistic regression modeling, accounting for the complex survey design. Analyses were conducted in 2024 using SAS-callable SUDAAN. RESULTS: Prevalence of healthy behaviors varied from 32.4% having no sugary drinks in the past week to 65.3% eating fruit daily. Only 20% engaged in all or nearly all (5-6) healthy behaviors. After adjustment, children engaging in 5-6 HBs were more likely to be younger, non-Hispanic White, have parents with higher education and income, excellent/very good parental mental health, frequent family meals, household food sufficiency, and live in safe neighborhoods, yet prevalence rose to only 30% across any characteristic. The proportion of children engaging in 5-6 healthy behaviors ranged from 6.5% in Mississippi to 46.4% in Vermont, with child, family, and community factors accounting for 43% of the variance between states. CONCLUSIONS: There is a need to increase healthy behaviors among preschool-age children and address disparities. Family and community factors associated with healthy behaviors can inform pediatric care, public policy, programmatic investments, and additional research to foster improvement. |
| Associations Between Screen Time Use and Health Outcomes Among US Teenagers
Zablotsky B , Ng AE , Black LI , Haile G , Bose J , Jones JR , Blumberg SJ . Prev Chronic Dis 2025 22 E38 INTRODUCTION: Associations between screen time and health outcomes among teenagers are well established. However, most studies use parent-reported information, which may misrepresent the magnitude or nature of these associations. In addition, timely nationally representative estimates are needed to correspond with evolving screen use. This study aimed to address these gaps by using data from a nationally representative survey of teenagers. METHODS: Data came from the 2021-2023 National Health Interview Survey-Teen (NHIS-Teen), a follow-back web-based survey designed to collect health information directly from teenagers aged 12 to 17 years. NHIS-Teen provides a unique opportunity to assess teenagers' self-reported health in conjunction with a rich set of parent-reported covariates, including family income, from the National Health Interview Survey. This study examines associations between high daily non-schoolwork screen time, defined as 4 or more hours of daily screen time, and adverse health outcomes across the domains of physical activity, sleep, weight, mental health, and perceived support. RESULTS: Teenagers with higher non-schoolwork screen use were more likely to experience a series of adverse health outcomes, including infrequent physical activity, infrequent strength training, being infrequently well-rested, having an irregular sleep routine, weight concerns, depression symptoms, anxiety symptoms, infrequent social and emotional support, and insufficient peer support. CONCLUSION: Results of this study include associations between high screen time and poor health among teenagers using self-reported data. Future work may further investigate these associations and their underlying mechanisms, including the content viewed on screens and the interactions taking place across screens. |
| N95(®) filtering facepiece respirator contamination with SARS-CoV-2 following reuse and extended use
Ford JS , Wang RC , Stephenson B , Degesys NF , Fahimi J , Fisher EM , Harnish D , Jones CMC , Peterson S , Rosenthal E , Rothmann R , Shah MN , Tolia V , Yaffee AQ , Yoon KN , Raven MC . Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2025 1-6 OBJECTIVE: During the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provided strategies, such as extended use and reuse, to preserve N95 filtering facepiece respirators (FFR). We aimed to assess the prevalence of N95 FFR contamination with SARS-CoV-2 among healthcare personnel (HCP) in the Emergency Department (ED). DESIGN: Real-world, prospective, multicenter cohort study. N95 FFR contamination (primary outcome) was measured by real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Multiple logistic regression was used to assess factors associated with contamination. SETTING: Six academic medical centers. PARTICIPANTS: ED HCP who practiced N95 FFR reuse and extended use during the COVID-19 pandemic between April 2021 and July 2022. PRIMARY EXPOSURE: Total number of COVID-19-positive patients treated. RESULTS: Two-hundred forty-five N95 FFRs were tested. Forty-four N95 FFRs (18.0%, 95% CI 13.4, 23.3) were contaminated with SARS-CoV-2 RNA. The number of patients seen with COVID-19 was associated with N95 FFR contamination (adjusted odds ratio, 2.3 [95% CI 1.5, 3.6]). Wearing either surgical masks or face shields over FFRs was not associated with FFR contamination, and FFR contamination prevalence was high when using these adjuncts [face shields: 25% (16/64), surgical masks: 22% (23/107)]. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to patients with known COVID-19 was independently associated with N95 FFR contamination. Face shields and overlying surgical masks were not associated with N95 FFR contamination. N95 FFR reuse and extended use should be avoided due to the increased risk of contact exposure from contaminated FFRs. |
| Medical Mistrust and Willingness to Use Long-Acting PrEP Among Black and Hispanic/Latino MSM
Raiford JL , MacGowan RJ , Stephenson R , Dana R , Hightow-Weidman L , Wall KM , Jones J , Sullivan PS . AIDS Behav 2025 Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) are disproportionately affected by HIV infection in the United States, especially Black MSM (BMSM) and Hispanic/Latino MSM (HLMSM). Long-acting preexposure prophylaxis (LA PrEP) is effective in preventing HIV; however, medical mistrust may contribute to barriers in uptake among BMSM and HLMSM. We assessed the role of medical mistrust in BMSM and HLMSM's unwillingness to use LA PrEP. BMSM and HLMSM aged ≥18 years without a previous HIV diagnosis or current PrEP use were recruited through dating and general interest websites/apps. Using Poisson regression with robust standard errors, we conducted multivariate analyses to assess the association between medical mistrust and willingness to use LA PrEP (i.e., injection or rod implanted in the arm) separately for each racial/ethnic group. Over 90% of the 1,126 BMSM and 924 HLMSM in this study were willing to use some form of PrEP; however, only 74% of BMSM and 81% of HLMSM were willing to use PrEP injections, and significantly fewer BMSM (30%) were willing to receive a PrEP implant compared with 44% of HLMSM. After controlling for sociodemographic, behavioral, and clinical covariates, medical mistrust was associated with lower willingness to use LA PrEP for BMSM, but not for HLMSM. Addressing and reducing medical mistrust among BMSM is important to increase the use of LA PrEP as an effective HIV prevention strategy. Addressing structural barriers and building trust within healthcare systems are crucial steps in reducing disparities in HIV infection among BMSM and HLMSM. |
| Epigenetic study of the long-term effects of gulf War illness
Jones BC , O'Callaghan JP , Ashbrook DG , Lu L , Prins P , Zhao W , Mozhui K . Front Genet 2025 16 1553410
INTRODUCTION: Gulf War Illness is a chronic multisymptomatic disorder that affects as many as 25-35% of the military personnel who were sent to the Persian Gulf war in 1991. The illness has many debilitating symptoms, including cognitive problems, gastrointestinal symptoms, and musculoskeletal pain. Those so afflicted have been sick for more than 30 years and, therefore, it has become imperative to understand the etiology of Gulf War Illness and then produce treatments to ease the symptoms. We hypothesized that the length of the disease was reflected in epigenetic modification of possibly several genes related to the symptoms. METHODS: We subjected male and female mice from 11 BXD strains to combined corticosterone and the sarin surrogate, diisopropylfluorophosphate, to emulate the physiological stress of war and the potential exposures to organophosphate pesticides and nerve agent in theater. Three hundred days after treatment, we used Methyl-CpG-binding domain sequencing (MBD-seq) to assay genome-wide methylation. RESULTS: The analysis revealed 20 methylated genes, notably Eif2b5, that regulates myelin production. DISCUSSION: Loss of myelin with accompanying musculoskeletal pain is a major symptom of Gulf War Illness. Our work demonstrates multiple genes were methylated by exposure to organophosphates and glucocorticoids. These genes point to biochemical mechanisms that may be targets for therapeutic intervention. |
| A multimodal analysis of resource allocation across U.S. cancer registries
Cole-Beebe M , Tangka FKL , Beizer J , Bernacet A , Brown S , Pordell P , Wilson R , Jones S , Subramanian S . Eval Program Plann 2025 112 102639 This study assessed resource allocation among registry activities, which may provide insight for efficient collection of high-quality cancer incidence data. We used a multimodal approach and purposively sampled 21 participating population-based cancer registries in the United States to ensure variation across several registries. The registries reported prospective staffing data and retrospective costing data, completing data collection from October 2021 to September 2022, reporting retrospective costing data for July 1, 2020, through June 30, 2021. From lessons learned from prior studies, we engaged participating registries early and throughout the study, ensuring the collection of meaningful, accurate quantitative data, as well as insights not captured quantitatively. Case volume is a major driver of registry costs. (On average, high-volume registries outspend low-volume registries by nearly 3x, annually). Upon examination of registry activities by case volume, we found that the two most resource-intensive registry activities are data acquisition and data processing, which may be addressed by innovations, such as electronic reporting and automation. Innovative data transfer and processing approaches could increase timeliness of data collection and reduce the labor resources required to process manually collected data. Registries adopting these innovations might achieve cost savings, which could make resources available to support other registry activities. |
| Estimated US trends in SARS-CoV-2 spike antibody concentrations and correlation to risk of first-time infections based on blood donations, 2022
Jones JM , Grebe E , Lartey I , Stone M , Spencer BR , Akinseye A , Molina Manrique I , Fink RV , Green V , Saa P , Biggerstaff BJ , Coughlin MM , Briggs-Hagen M , Lanteri MC , Opsomer J , Wright DJ , Busch MP . J Infect Dis 2025 INTRODUCTION: By the end of 2021, U.S. spike (S) antibody seroprevalence from COVID-19 vaccination, infection, or both (hybrid immunity) reached over 90%. With high seroprevalence, quantitative antibody concentrations are needed to characterize population immunity. We measured quantitative S antibody concentrations in a national blood donor cohort and evaluated their correlation with protection against infection. METHODS: One blood specimen per quarter in 2022 was tested for quantitative S IgG and infection-induced (nucleocapsid [N]) total Ig antibodies from a national blood donor sub-cohort of 106,969 people. Median S antibody concentrations were calculated by quarter and by history of vaccination and infection. Among vaccinated donors without N antibodies, protection (measured as 1 minus hazard ratios compared with unvaccinated donors) against N antibody seroconversion was estimated by S antibody concentration. Median S antibody levels were compared using the Kruskal-Wallis tests. RESULTS: Median S antibody concentrations increase from 1380 binding antibody units (BAU)/mL in quarter (Q) 1 2022 to 1720 BAU/mL in Q4 2022. In Q4, S antibody levels were lowest in the infection-only group (median: 75 BAU/mL) and higher in the vaccine-only (median: 1950 BAU/mL) and hybrid immunity group (median: 2550 BAU/mL). Protection against first-time infection increased with higher antibody concentrations; 5010 BAU/mL (95% CI 4120-6550) was associated with 50% protection. DISCUSSION: During 2022, this nationwide study showed mildly increased S IgG concentrations over time among blood donors. Vaccination and hybrid immunity resulted in higher antibody concentrations than infection alone. Higher antibody concentrations were associated with increased protection from infection. |
| Skilled nursing facility wastewater surveillance: a SARS-CoV-2 and antimicrobial resistance detection pilot study
Santiago AJ , Burgos Garay M , Campbell M , Cahela Y , Donlan R , Gable P , Ganim Kyros C , Franco L , Kartforosh L , Lenz S , Lyons AK , Moore J , Noble-Wang J , Sanders C , Abera B , Adler CH , Jones S , Medrzycki M , Walters MS , Cook P , Li Y , Tao Y , Zhang J , Malapati L , Retchless A , Tong S , Coulliette-Salmond AD . J Water Health 2025 23 (6) 727-742
The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of facility-level wastewater surveillance in the detection of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in skilled nursing facility (SNF) wastewater using three concentration methods, as well as a proof-of-concept for antimicrobial resistance (AR) genes/organisms detection. Wastewater effluent samples were collected from an SNF over an 8-week period. Wastewater was concentrated using electronegative membrane filtration (enMF), polyethylene glycol precipitation, and Nanotrap(®) magnetic virus particles (NP). Quantification of the genome copy concentration from SARS-CoV-2 and bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV), a SARS-CoV-2 surrogate spiked into all samples, was performed with droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR). Wastewater sample aliquots were also enriched in microbiological culture media and screened for organisms with AR phenotypes on selective and differential agars. Multiplex real-time PCR was used to detect a broad array of carbapenem resistance genes. SARS-CoV-2 was detected and quantified from a single enMF-concentrated wastewater sample. The highest concentration of BRSV came from enMF-concentrated samples. Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Citrobacter, and Escherichia coli exhibiting AR phenotypes were successfully detected using culture-dependent approaches. Culture-independent, multiplex PCR indicated that bla(KPC) was the main carbapenemase gene detected in wastewater samples. Facility-level wastewater surveillance could be a useful strategy for SNFs. |
| Prescriber-Level Changes in Buprenorphine Dispensing in the USA Before and After Federal Policy Changes Aimed at Increasing Prescribing
Guy GP Jr , Jones CM , Rikard SM , Zhang K , Olsen Y . J Gen Intern Med 2025 |
| Complete genome sequence of a novel Acinetobacter spp. linked to an outbreak of sepsis following apheresis platelet transfusion
Kent AG , Sula E , Breaker E , McAllister GA , Gable P , Chan-Riley MY , Leung VH , Peaper DR , Jones SA , Jones JM , Basavaraju S , Halpin AL . Microbiol Resour Announc 2025 e0136124
During an outbreak investigation of infections following apheresis platelet transfusion, a potentially novel species in the Acinetobacter calcoaceticus-baumannii complex was identified. Here, we report the hybrid Nanopore-Illumina assembly resulting in a complete circular genome sequence of a strain of this species isolated from apheresis platelet product collected during the investigation. |
| Lifeline: a musical about antimicrobial resistance that raises awareness and inspires action
Garcia-Iglesias J , Relph K , Hiley R , Conway J , Richardson G , Stahl M , Oxlade C , Murphy-Hoefer R , Jones C , Perry M . Nat Med 2025
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| Prevalence and severity of chronic kidney disease in a population with type 1 diabetes from a United States health system: a real-world cohort study
Tuttle KR , Reynolds CL , Kornowske LM , Jones CR , Alicic RZ , Daratha KB , Neumiller JJ , Greenbaum C , Pavkov ME , Xu F , Duru OK , Nicholas SB , Norris KC . Lancet Reg Health - Am 2025 47 Background: A contemporary description and estimates for rates of chronic kidney disease (CKD) in type 1 diabetes are needed to inform risk reduction strategies. The study aim was to assess prevalence and severity of CKD based on a population with type 1 diabetes receiving care at a large United States health system. Methods: Type 1 diabetes was identified through the Providence health system electronic health records during 2013–2022. Prevalent CKD was defined cross-sectionally by ≥ 90-day persistence of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2, urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio ≥30 mg/g, or urine protein-to-creatinine ratio ≥0.15 g/g. Multivariable logistic regression models analyzed variable associations with CKD and severe kidney disease (eGFR < 45 mL/min/1.73 m2, dialysis, or transplant). Findings: The study population (N = 23,589) was 48.6% female with a mean ± SD age of 38 ± 17 years. CKD prevalence was 27.1%. Higher odds of CKD were found for females (odds ratio: 1.36 [95% confidence interval]: 1.26–1.47); age 60–79 years (reference 12–17 years; 2.22 [1.83–2.69]); Asian (reference White; 1.71 [1.20–2.44]), Black or African American (1.76 [1.45–2.14]), and Other race (1.33 [1.04–1.71]) populations. CKD odds were higher with hypertension, heart failure, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Severe kidney disease was present in 10.8% with higher odds among Black or African American (2.08 [1.23–3.54]) and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander (2.62 [1.28–5.38]) populations. Interpretation: CKD was present in nearly one of three persons with type 1 diabetes with higher risks for females, older adults, racial and ethnic minorities, and those with cardiovascular diseases. Severe kidney disease was found in over one-tenth and more likely in Black or African American and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander populations. Focus on disproportionately affected groups who may benefit from monitoring and interventions to improve clinical outcomes will be important for public health and health system strategies to reduce risks of CKD and severe kidney disease in type 1 diabetes. Funding: This work was supported in part by CDC project numbers 75D301-21-P-12254 and 75D301-23-C-18264, and in part by Brigham Research Institute. © 2025 The Author(s) |
| Church Jetted Baptismal Font Linked to Legionellosis Outbreak-Tennessee, 2023
Thomas CM , Goonewardene D , Schuman J , Kmet J , Sentiff L , Woods Y , Roth E , Yackley J , Allgood A , Conway B , Jordan V , Sally B , Terrell E , Jones TF , Schaffner W , Fill MA , Dunn JR . J Environ Health 2025 87 (8) In May 2023, the Shelby County Health Department identified a legionellosis outbreak among attendees of the same church. Epidemiologic, environmental, and laboratory investigations were initiated. Laboratory-based surveillance identified persons with a positive Legionella test result. Church attendees were surveyed about attendance, symptoms of legionellosis, and water exposures. Environmental assessment of the church included asking about recent water management practices and collecting samples from water sources for culture. The health department identified 16 church attendees who had legionellosis symptoms. Of these, 9 (56%) had positive laboratory test results for Legionella pneumophila, 7 were hospitalized, and none died. Our investigation revealed that recent changes in water management practices at the church included renewed operation of a large, jetted baptismal font. In all, 17 environmental samples were collected; of these samples, 5 (including 4 from the baptismal font) had L. pneumophila serogroup 1 isolated by culture. Environmental sampling was crucial in identifying the baptismal font as the likely source of L. pneumophila. Education about water management and remediation recommendations were provided to staff at the church. |
| Coronavirus Disease 2019 Symptoms by Immunity Status and Predominant-Variant Period Among US Blood Donors
McCullough MD , Spencer BR , Shi J , Plumb ID , Haynes JM , Shah M , Briggs-Hagen M , Stramer SL , Jones JM , Midgley CM . Open Forum Infect Dis 2025 12 (5) ofaf185
BACKGROUND: Amid changing variant and immunity landscapes since early in the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, common COVID-19 symptoms need better understanding in relation to prior immunity or infecting variant. METHODS: American Red Cross blood donors were surveyed during February-April 2022 about prior COVID-19 vaccinations and symptomatic severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections. Donations were tested for anti-nucleocapsid antibodies to inform infection history. Restricting analysis to donors with survey-reported infections during the Omicron BA.1-predominant period (19 December 2021 through 19 March 2022), we used multivariable logistic regression to compare symptoms by existing immunity from prior infection or vaccination. Restricting analysis to those with no existing immunity, we compared symptoms by variant-predominant period of their first reported infection (BA.1 vs before). RESULTS: Among 9505 donors with a BA.1-predominant period infection, donors with prior infection (n = 1115), vaccination (n = 5888), or both (n = 1738) were less likely than those without prior immunity (n = 764) to report loss of taste or smell, lower respiratory tract, constitutional, or gastrointestinal symptoms and more likely to report upper respiratory tract symptoms. Stronger associations followed recent prior infection, vaccination, or more vaccine doses. Among 8539 donors without prior immunity, those with survey-reported infections during the BA.1-predominant period (n = 764) were less likely to report loss of taste or smell, or lower respiratory tract symptoms than those with infections before this period (n = 7775). CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that both prior immunity and Omicron predominance redistributed COVID-19 symptoms toward upper respiratory tract presentations and likely both contributed to a decrease in COVID-19 severity over time. These findings may better inform COVID-19 identification in high-immunity settings and demonstrate additional benefits of vaccination. |
| Corrigendum to "Post-introduction evaluation (PIE) of the seasonal influenza vaccination program in Kyrgyzstan in 2023" Vaccine 55 (2025) 127052
Otorbaeva D , Akmatova R , Cooley KM , Iwamoto C , Jacques-Carroll LA , Jones CE , Matanock AM , Shen AK , Tupps C . Vaccine 2025 56 127123 |
| Detection of SARS-CoV-2 Reinfections Using Nucleocapsid Antibody Boosting
Grebe E , Chacreton D , Stone M , Spencer BR , Haynes J , Akinseye A , Lanteri MC , Green V , Sulaeman H , Bruhn R , Avelino-Silva VI , Contestable P , Biggerstaff BJ , Coughlin MM , Custer B , Jones JM , Wright D , Busch MP . Emerg Infect Dis 2025 31 (5) 958-966 More than 85% of US adults had been infected with SARS-CoV-2 by the end of 2023. Continued serosurveillance of transmission and assessments of correlates of protection require robust detection of reinfections. We developed a serologic method for identifying reinfections in longitudinal blood donor data by assessing nucleocapsid (N) antibody boosting using a total immunoglobulin assay. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis yielded an optimal ratio of >1.43 (sensitivity 87.1%, specificity 96.0%). When prioritizing specificity, a ratio of >2.33 was optimal (sensitivity 75.3%, specificity 99.3%). In donors with higher anti-N reactivity levels before reinfection, sensitivity was reduced. Sensitivity could be improved by expanding the dynamic range of the assay through dilutional testing, from 38.8% to 66.7% in the highest reactivity group (signal-to-cutoff ratio before reinfection >150). This study demonstrated that longitudinal testing for N antibodies can be used to identify reinfections and estimate total infection incidence in a blood donor cohort. |
| Proportions of US Blood Donors With Serological Evidence of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 Infections Who Reported Survey-Based Diagnosed Infections During July 2020-December 2022
Akinseye A , Wright DJ , Grebe E , Stone M , Hathaway CA , Fink RV , Spencer BR , Saa P , Lanteri MC , Busch M , Jones JM . Open Forum Infect Dis 2025 12 (5) ofaf210 The proportion of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infections diagnosed by coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) tests, including home antigen tests, is unknown. We detected infections among blood donors in the United States (US) by testing for nucleocapsid antibody (anti-N) seroconversion and administered a questionnaire to determine the proportion of those infections that were associated with a self-reported positive COVID-19 test. Among US blood donors with serologic evidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection who completed a survey, 47.7% reported an associated self-reported positive COVID-19 test. This proportion changed from July-December 2020 (44.9%) to July-December 2022 (54.8%). This study suggests many SARS-CoV-2 infections in adults are not diagnosed with a test. |
| Pre-diagnostic serum concentrations of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and risk of endometrial cancer in a US cohort
Madrigal JM , Trabert B , Medgyesi DN , Fisher JA , Calafat AM , Cook Botelho J , Kato K , Albert PS , Silverman DT , Hofmann JN , Jones RR . Environ Health Perspect 2025
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| Investigation of Two Outbreaks of Hepatitis A Virus Infections Linked to Fresh and Frozen Strawberries Imported from Mexico - 2022-2023
McClure M , Kirchner M , Greenlee T , Seelman S , Madad A , Nsubuga J , Sandoval AL , Jackson T , Tijerina M , Tung G , Nolte K , da Silva AJ , Read J , Noelte V , Woods J , Swinford A , Jones JL , LaGrossa M , McKenna C , Papafragkou E , Yu C , Ou O , Hofmeister MG , Samuel CR , Atkinson R , To M , Orr A , Cheng J , Borlang J , Lamba K , Adcock B , Bond C , Needham M , Adams S , Grilli G , Stewart LK , Martin T , Wagendorf J , Pinnick D , Smilanich E , Sorenson A , Manuzak A , Salter M , Crosby A , Viazis S . J Food Prot 2025 100505
Foodborne hepatitis A illnesses and outbreaks have been associated with consumption of ready-to-eat foods contaminated with the feces of person(s) shedding hepatitis A virus (HAV). Outbreaks have been linked to fresh and frozen produce imported from countries where HAV is endemic, hygiene and sanitation are inadequate, or food safety standards are lacking or unenforced. In 2022 and 2023, federal, state, and international partners investigated two multijurisdictional outbreaks of infections involving the same HAV genotype IA strain linked to fresh and frozen organic strawberries sourced from a single grower in Baja California, Mexico. These resulted in 39 reported cases in the U.S. and Canada, 21 hospitalizations, and no reported deaths. The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Canadian Food Inspection Agency, and U.S. state partners conducted traceback investigations for fresh strawberries in 2022, while FDA and U.S. state partners traced back frozen strawberries in 2023. Based on the traceback investigations, implicated strawberries were harvested during the 2022 growing season and sold to fresh and frozen berry markets. During a farm inspection in Mexico in 2023, gaps were observed in agricultural practices that could have contributed to contamination of strawberries with HAV. FDA did not detect HAV in the two frozen strawberry samples linked to the recalled lots or environmental water samples collected at the implicated grower in 2023; no samples were collected during the 2022 investigation. Indicator organisms associated with human fecal contamination (male-specific coliphage and crAssphge) were detected in environmental water. Challenges in these investigations included limited recall of food exposures, exposures associated with multiple purchase dates, commingling of strawberries within the frozen market supply chains, and complexities with communicating these outbreak investigations to the public. |
| Concurrent Norovirus Outbreaks Associated with Consumption of Oysters Harvested in Mexico - California, December 2023-January 2024
Zhu S , Grant C , Pan CY , Adcock B , Kao A , Stous S , Yee L , Springfield O , Poranski M , Kennar A , Beatty M , Shah S , Watson H , Buonomo H , Manlutac ALM , Lima H Jr , Mendez D , Clark B , Pulido M , Bakshi M , Contreras C , Green N , Burleson T , Forester J , Klish SW , Feaster M , Taylor EV , Balanji N , Kho V , Hatada A , Wright C , Morales C , Abbott M , Burditt FR , Elliot E , Jones JL , Kinsey M , Lombardi M , Phelps K , Woods JW , Kimura A , Lamba K . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2025 74 (13) 222-226
Norovirus is the most common cause of foodborne illness outbreaks in the United States. In January 2024, local health jurisdictions and the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) identified two concurrent norovirus outbreaks across eight Southern California local health jurisdictions. CDPH was notified in late December 2023 and early January 2024 of gastrointestinal illnesses in persons who consumed raw oysters from food service facilities in San Diego County (outbreak 1). Additional illness reports came from multiple jurisdictions that included Los Angeles County and other areas in Southern California (outbreak 2). In total, approximately 400 persons across eight local health jurisdictions reported gastrointestinal illness after raw oyster consumption. A multiagency investigation confirmed that outbreaks 1 and 2 were unrelated, and implicated oysters were traced to two separate, nonoverlapping harvest regions in Mexico. A total of 179 outbreak-associated cases, including 24 laboratory-confirmed norovirus cases, were identified. Patient samples from both outbreaks identified norovirus genogroups I and II; other enteric viruses (sapovirus, astrovirus, rotavirus, and adenovirus) were also identified from one or both outbreaks. Noroviruses were genetically related by genotype within each outbreak but dissimilar between outbreaks. In outbreak 2, oysters might have been contaminated at a location separate from the original growing area, also known as wet storage. Concurrent outbreaks with similar modes of transmission can be unrelated, and the source for each should be confirmed through traceback. Proper storage and handling of shellfish is essential to maintaining safety of food products to consumers. Cooking oysters to 145°F (62.8°C) is recommended before consumption. |
| Projecting maximum potential demand for nirsevimab to protect eligible US infants and young children against respiratory syncytial virus in the 2024/2025 season
Olesen SW , Holmdahl I , Ortega-Sanchez IR , Biggerstaff M , Jones JM , McMorrow ML , Fleming-Dutra KE . Vaccine 2025 53 127109 Nirsevimab is a long-acting monoclonal antibody that protects infants and young children against severe respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) disease. Children are eligible for one 50 mg dose, one 100 mg dose, or two 100 mg doses of nirsevimab based on age, weight, time of year, maternal vaccination, and risk of severe disease. In winter 2023/2024, we developed a model to project the number of nirsevimab doses needed to immunize all eligible U.S. children during the 2024/2025 season. We grouped all births from March 2023 through March 2025 into weekly cohorts, partitioned those cohorts based on eligibility criteria, and computed eligibility for each partition. In the absence of maternal RSV vaccination, we estimated U.S. children would be eligible to receive 4.3 million nirsevimab doses in 2024/2025, of which 48% would be 100 mg doses. Projections of total eligibility can be used to inform production goals and avoid shortages of nirsevimab. |
| Effectiveness of School Fluoride Delivery Programs: A Community Guide Systematic Review
Griffin SO , Lin M , Scherrer CR , Naavaal S , Hopkins DP , Jones AA , Alexander T , Black VA , Clark E , Cofano LK , Garcia RI , Goddard A , Grover J , Kansagra SM , Kottke TE , Lense EC , Zokaie T . Am J Prev Med 2025 INTRODUCTION: Although preventable, dental caries remains highly prevalent. Many children do not receive preventive dental services routinely in clinical settings. This review examined the effectiveness of school (preschool through high school) fluoride varnish delivery programs (SFVDP) in preventing caries. METHODS: Community Guide systematic review methods were followed. In 2024, databases were searched for studies published through December 2023 on SFVDP effectiveness in increasing fluoride varnish (FV) receipt and decreasing caries. Included studies had to be written in English, published in peer-reviewed journals, and conducted in upper-middle or high-income countries. Data synthesis conducted in 2024 used median RR and interquartile interval (IQI) to summarize findings across studies. RESULTS: Of 31 included studies with 60,780 students, 25 were randomized controlled trials-20 with good quality of execution. Most studies were conducted in low socioeconomic status (SES) areas among students at elevated caries risk. SFVDP reduced caries initiation by 32% (IQI: 21%, 37%) in permanent teeth (19 studies, 25,826 students) and by 25% (IQI: 4%, 37%) in primary teeth (12 studies, 4,304 students). Stratified assessments indicated findings were largely applicable to different settings, populations, and intervention characteristics. Two studies found SFVDP significantly increased the number of annual FV applications and two found that SFVDP effectiveness was inversely related to SES. DISCUSSION: About 30% of states report having no SFVDPs. Possible barriers to implementation include that Medicaid in some states only reimburses dental and medical professionals and does not reimburse non-dental providers for FV delivered to children older than 6 years. |
| Vaccine Effectiveness Against Influenza A(H1N1), A(H3N2), and B-Associated Hospitalizations-United States, September 1, 2023-May 31, 2024
Lewis NM , Harker EJ , Cleary S , Zhu Y , Grijalva CG , Chappell JD , Rhoads JP , Baughman A , Casey JD , Blair PW , Jones ID , Johnson CA , Halasa NB , Lauring AS , Martin ET , Gaglani M , Ghamande S , Columbus C , Steingrub JS , Duggal A , Felzer JR , Prekker ME , Peltan ID , Brown SM , Hager DN , Gong MN , Mohamed A , Exline MC , Khan A , Ferguson SAN , Mosier J , Qadir N , Chang SY , Ginde AA , Zepeski A , Mallow C , Harris ES , Johnson NJ , Gibbs KW , Kwon JH , Vaughn IA , Ramesh M , Safdar B , Surie D , Dawood FS , Ellington S , Self WH . J Infect Dis 2025 BACKGROUND: The 2023-2024 influenza season included sustained elevated activity from December 2023-February 2024 and continued activity through May 2024. Influenza A(H1N1), A(H3N2), and B viruses circulated during the season. METHODS: During September 1, 2023-May 31, 2024, a multistate sentinel surveillance network of 24 medical centers in 20 U.S. states enrolled adults aged ≥18 years hospitalized with acute respiratory illness (ARI). Consistent with a test-negative design, cases tested positive for influenza viruses by molecular or antigen test, and controls tested negative for influenza viruses and SARS-CoV-2. Vaccine effectiveness (VE) against influenza-associated hospitalization was calculated as (1 - adjusted odds ratio for vaccination) × 100%. RESULTS: Among 7690 patients, including 1170 influenza cases (33% vaccinated) and 6520 controls, VE was 40% (95% CI: 31%-48%) with varying estimates by age (18-49 years: 53% [34%-67%]; 50-64 years: 47% [31%-60%]; ≥65 years: 31% [16%-43%]). Protection was similar among immunocompetent patients (40% [30%-49%]) and immunocompromised patients (32% [7-50%]). VE was statistically significant against influenza B (67% [35%-84%]) and A(H1N1) (36% [21%-48%]) and crossed the null against A(H3N2) (19% [-8%-39%]). VE was higher for patients 14-60 days from vaccination (54% [40%-65%]) than >120 days (18% [-1%-33%]). CONCLUSIONS: During 2023-2024, influenza vaccination reduced the risk of influenza A(H1N1)- and influenza B-associated hospitalizations among adults; effectiveness was lower in patients vaccinated >120 days prior to illness onset compared with those vaccinated 14-60 days prior. |
| Individuals Dispensed Buprenorphine in the United States Before and After Federal Policy Changes Aimed at Increasing Access
Guy GP Jr , Jones CM , Rikard M , Strahan AE , Zhang K , Olsen Y . J Addict Med 2025 OBJECTIVES: Buprenorphine can decrease opioid use disorder and mortality risk but remains underutilized. This study evaluates changes in monthly buprenorphine dispensing associated with federal policy changes in the United States from 2018 to 2023. METHODS: This study used interrupted time series analysis comparing the monthly rate of patients dispensed buprenorphine after the implementation of telehealth flexibilities in March 2020, relaxation of training requirements in April 2021, and removal of waiver requirements in December 2022. Buprenorphine formulated for opioid use disorder was included from the IQVIA Total Patient Tracker. RESULTS: Before March 2020, the monthly rate of individuals dispensed buprenorphine was increasing. The rate of increase slowed after each policy change: -0.69 (95% CI=-1.00 to -0.39) after telehealth flexibilities were initiated, -0.60 (95% CI=-0.92 to -0.27) after relaxing training requirements, and -0.49 (95% CI=-0.73 to -0.24) after waiver elimination. After the elimination of the waiver, declines were observed across several specialty groups, including pain medicine, emergency medicine, and primary care, while the rate increased among addiction medicine specialists. CONCLUSIONS: After each policy change, the rate of individuals dispensed buprenorphine increased at a slower rate than before each policy change. These findings suggest that the removal of the waiver, while important, may not be sufficient on its own to meaningfully expand buprenorphine prescribing. Individual and systems-level strategies may be needed to fully optimize the impact of these policy changes focusing on reducing patient, clinician, and institutional stigma, addressing clinician barriers, implementing systems-level improvements, and strengthening payment policies that incentivize prescribing. |
| Incidence of chronic kidney disease among adults with prediabetes in the CURE-CKD registry, 2013-2020
Alicic RZ , Duru OK , Jones CR , Kornowske LM , Daratha KB , Reynolds CL , Pavkov ME , Koyama AK , Xu F , Nicholas SB , Neumiller JJ , Norris KC , Hennessey KA , Tuttle KR . Diabetes Obes Metab 2025 |
| Post-introduction evaluation (PIE) of the seasonal influenza vaccination program in Kyrgyzstan in 2023
Otorbaeva D , Akmatova R , Cooley KM , Iwamoto C , Jacques-Carroll LA , Jones CE , Matanock AM , Shen AK , Tupps C . Vaccine 2025 55 127052 Vaccination is an effective preventive strategy against influenza. Kyrgyzstan introduced a comprehensive influenza vaccination program in 2013 and has collaborated with the Task Force for Global Health since 2017 to expand vaccination coverage. In 2023, an influenza vaccine post-introduction evaluation was conducted to identify strengths and weaknesses in the influenza vaccination program and to identify measures for improvement. Site visits were conducted across six regions of the country and interviews were conducted with national, regional and district staff, health facility staff, and individuals from priority populations for influenza vaccination using standardized questionnaires. Two major challenges identified in this evaluation were the inadequate supply of influenza vaccine to cover the priority groups and the low acceptance and uptake of influenza vaccine among pregnant people. These findings are important as they can inform targeted strategies and policy updates to increase influenza vaccine implementation and uptake in Kyrgyzstan. |
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