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Zika Forum Addresses Research, Clinical Care, Public Health Challenges

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Zika Forum Addresses Research, Clinical Care, Public Health Challenges


By Richard Westlund
Special to UM News

zikaUniversity of Miami President Julio Frenk called on Congress to approve emergency federal funding for Zika research, treatment, and monitoring at a Zika forum hosted by UM Thursday. “We need to weigh the cost of inaction with the modest price tag of this proposal,” Frenk said, referring to a deadlock in Washington over allocating $1.1 billion to $1.9 billion to address this immediate public health threat.

“The cost of caring for children born with serious health challenges, as well as the failure to develop new treatments and the loss of our collective sense of security from government inaction, is many times higher than the dollars being discussed in Congress,” Frenk said at the panel discussion presented by the Miller School of Medicine and UHealth – the University of Miami Health System at the Lois Pope LIFE Center.

Laurence B. Gardner, interim dean of the Miller School, welcomed faculty, staff, students, public officials and many members of the media to the Zika forum, which included presentations by Miller School experts on the front lines of research, infectious disease, obstetrics and pediatric care, prevention, and the spread of vector-borne disease.

Questions from attendees ranged from the University’s leading-edge laboratory research on potential Zika vaccines, treatments, and diagnostic tools to the latest clinical advice for pregnant women and the importance of aerial spraying in Miami Beach to control the Aedes aegypti mosquito that spreads the virus.

‘’We take this threat very seriously,” Frenk said, noting growth of the University of Miami Zika Global Network, which focuses on research, discovery, education, and care. “We are collaborating locally, nationally, and internationally to deal with this global threat.”

Research priorities

From a research perspective, the most pressing priority is development of a simple, inexpensive diagnostic tool for the Zika virus, followed by development of a vaccine and treatment both pre- and post-infection, said David Watkins, vice chair of research in the Department of Pathology. “There is a DNA-based vaccine that has protected monkeys against Zika that should be going into human trials in November,” he said. “Other vaccines are also being developed, and there is great hope on this front.”

Mario Stevenson, professor of medicine, chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases, and director of the Institute of AIDS and Emerging Infectious Diseases, said the Miller School’s longstanding collaboration with infectious disease researchers in Brazil provided a “heads up” on the serious nature of Zika. “That has helped us respond more quickly to this threat and leverage the research infrastructure in place here,” he said.

Frenk also emphasized that point, noting the importance of being ready for the next pandemic. “From AIDS to Zika, we face an entire alphabet of viruses,” he said. “Investing in our capacity for fundamental scientific research lets us retool our capabilities to meet new threats.”

Clinical care

Currently there are 80 pregnant women in Florida with confirmed exposure to the Zika virus, said Christine L. Curry, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology, who consults with the state Department of Health. “While Gov. Rick Scott has said all pregnant women have the right to be tested, the lack of resources has affected our ability to conduct tests and provide timely results,” she said.

As a clinician, Curry says her patients have a long series of questions about Zika, including the risks of microcephaly, a birth defect in which the infant’s head is smaller than normal, as well as vision, hearing and potential developmental delays. “It is very difficult to quantify those risks, because new data keeps emerging,” she said. “As we learn more about Zika, we are finding that some infants may look normal at birth, but fail to meet developmental milestones in their first year.”

Later in the forum, when asked about exposure to insecticides to repel or kill mosquitoes, Curry came down firmly on the side of protection.  Staying indoors, wearing long sleeved tops and pants and using repellents are important steps in reducing the risk of mosquito bites, she said.

In pediatrics, one of the clinical challenges is early diagnosis of children carrying the Zika virus, according to Ivan A. Gonzalez, assistant professor of clinical pediatrics and specialist in pediatric infectious diseases. “Knowing an infant or child has been exposed to Zika could help physicians develop clinical protocols,” he said. “We also need to monitor these children closely to learn more about the long-term outcomes.”

The public health challenge

As Florida faces the Zika threat, there is much that can be learned from other countries where tropical diseases are endemic, said several panelists.  Mosquito control has been shown to be effective in many regions, and should be a priority for Wynwood, Miami Beach and all of Miami-Dade County, said John Beier, professor of public health sciences and chief of the Division of Environment and Public Health.

“We are all at risk in South Florida, especially with so many visitors moving through our neighborhoods,” Beier said. “We need to invest in mosquito control, because it’s essential to our quality of life here.”

Paola N. Lichtenberger, assistant professor of clinical medicine and director of the Tropical Disease Program, noted that there are significant differences between Zika and dengue, Ebola, and yellow fever. “This is the first time we have seen a tropical virus associated with microcephaly, and the first time we have seen sexual transmission of the virus,” she said. “In some ways, we are starting from zero. But we need to know how this virus behaves in order to develop vaccines and treatments.”

Alina Hudak, deputy mayor of Miami-Dade County, also addressed the Zika public health challenge facing the region. “We need to educate the community about the importance of taking individual precautions, controlling mosquitoes, and breaking the cycle of transmission,” she said. “Our efforts in Wynwood have dramatically reduced mosquito counts, and we are hopeful that aerial and truck spraying in Miami Beach will have the same results.”

Concluding the session, Frenk and several panelists emphasized the importance of a collaborative approach to combating Zika. “It’s not just what the city, county, or state can do to fight mosquitoes,” Lichtenberger said. “It is everyone’s responsibility to prevent a generation of children growing up with birth defects from this virus. Learn about Zika, pay attention to what’s happening here, and take action to protect our community.”

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Search Begins for Medical School Dean

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Search Begins for Medical School Dean


School of Communication Dean Gregory J. Shepherd is charing the search committee.

School of Communication Dean Gregory J. Shepherd is chairing the search committee.

Gregory J. Shepherd, dean of the School of Communication, has been appointed chair of the committee that will conduct the University of Miami’s historic search for a new dean of the Miller School of Medicine. As Shepherd noted in a recent message to the medical school community, “Recruiting a new dean is not just about the Miller School of Medicine and UHealth — it is critically important to the wider University of Miami community and indeed to all of South Florida.”

In his message, Shepherd committed to conducting a fair, open, and appropriately transparent national and international search “to find a deep and diverse pool of candidates.”

President Julio Frenk has charged the search committee with forwarding top candidates to Steven M. Altschuler, M.D., senior vice president for health affairs and CEO of UHealth – the University of Miami Health System, and UM Provost Thomas J. LeBlanc.

The other members of the search committee are:

  • Lilian M. Abbo, M.D., associate professor of clinical medicine and chief of Jackson Health System Infection Prevention and Antimicrobial Stewardship
  • Eduardo C. Alfonso, M.D., chair, Department of Ophthalmology and director, Bascom Palmer Eye Institute
  • Marie-Denise Gervais, M.D., assistant dean for admissions and diversity
  • Noor Joudi, Student Government executive president
  • Mahendra Kumar, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences
  • Karl L. Magleby, Ph.D., chair, Department of Physiology and Biophysics
  • JoNell Potter, ARNP, Ph.D., professor and director of research and special projects, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Matthias Salathe, M.D., professor of medicine and chief of Pulmonary Critical Care
  • Judith L. Schaechter, M.D., M.B.A., chair, Department of Pediatrics
  • Carl Schulman, M.D., Ph.D., M.S.P.H., professor of surgery and director of the William Lehman Injury Research Center
  • Omaida C. Velazquez, M.D., chair, Department of Surgery
  • Stephan Züchner, M.D., Ph.D., chair, Dr. John T. Macdonald Foundation Department of Human Genetics

This distinguished group will be working with Phillips DiPisa, an executive search firm serving health care and life sciences organizations.

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Campeche and UM Join Hands to Improve Public Health

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Campeche and UM Join Hands to Improve Public Health


NDESALUDThe agreement establishes collaboration in training, clinical and research initiatives

By Bárbara Gutiérrez
UM News

Campeche

From left are Campeche officials Gerardo Montero Pérez and Álvaro Emilio Arceo Ortiz, and UM’s President Julio Frenk and Executive Vice President and Provost Thomas J. LeBlanc.

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (September 2, 2016) – The University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche and INDESALUD (the Instituto de Servicios Descentralizados de Salud Publica del Estado de Campeche), to foster collaboration on education, training, clinical, and research initiatives, and to encourage the exchange of their respective faculty members and students.

UM President Julio Frenk signed the agreement last Friday, September 2, at the Newman Alumni Center with Dr. Álvaro Emilio Arceo Ortiz, secretary of health and general director of INDESALUD Campeche, and Gerardo Montero Pérez, provost of the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. UM Executive Vice President and Provost Thomas J. LeBlanc welcomed the delegation to the Coral Gables campus.

“UM believes that we become stronger through strategic alliances, and thanks to the memorandum of understanding that we are formalizing today our joint forces will be greater than the sum of our individual efforts,” LeBlanc said.

President Frenk said that the cooperation agreement with Campeche, a state in the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico, is aligned with the University of Miami’s aspiration to be the hemispheric university, an aspiration that would take full advantage of the University’s location at the gateway to the Americas.

“This is a great opportunity to develop a platform for both innovation and education, and from there to the entire hemisphere,” Frenk said. “So today we are taking a first step in new ways of collaboration to advance science, educational human resources and different ways to apply results in health care and other areas.”

Secretary Arceo, speaking on behalf of the Governor of Campeche, Alejandro Moreno Cárdenas, said that health issues are a priority in Campeche, thanks in large measure to President Frenk’s leadership as minister of health in Mexico from 2000 to 2006. Just hours before the signing, the Mexican government recognized the state of Campeche as one of the nation’s public health leaders, Arceo said.

“This memorandum reflects that our human resources will be addressed in a strategic manner, and it will respond to the people of Campeche’s main requirement: social protection in health,” Arceo said.

The delegation from Campeche also visited the medical campus, where members met with Steven M. Altschuler, senior vice president for health affairs and CEO of UHealth – University of Miami Health System, and Thinh H. Tran, chief clinical officer and chief operating officer of UHealth. During that meeting, they discussed sharing expertise in health care education, with a focus on public health and how it can assist the economy of Campeche.

The delegation also met with representatives from the Miller School’s International Medicine Institute, led by Eduardo J. DeMarchena, associate dean for international medicine. There is a longstanding relationship between the Miller School and the Universidad Autónoma de Campeche, whereby medical students and physicians have come to Miami for training. Friday’s discussion centered on expanding the program to include clinical research and continuing education programs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Study Finds Shark Fins and Meat Contain Neurotoxins Linked to Alzheimer’s

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Study Finds Shark Fins and Meat Contain Neurotoxins Linked to Alzheimer’s


UM research team says restricting shark consumption protects human health and shark populations

Researchers detected cyanobacterial neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) and mercury in sharks from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

Researchers detected cyanobacterial neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) and mercury in sharks from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

MIAMI—In a new study, University of Miami scientists found high concentrations of toxins linked to neurodegenerative diseases in the fins and muscles of 10 species of sharks. The research team suggests that restricting consumption of sharks can have positive health benefits for consumers and for shark conservation, since several of the sharks analyzed in the study are threatened with extinction due to overfishing.

Fins and muscle tissue samples were collected from 10 shark species found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans for concentrations of two toxins—mercury and β-N-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA). “Recent studies have linked BMAA to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS),” said Deborah Mash, professor of neurology at the Miller School of Medicine and senior author of the study.

Researchers at the  Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science and the Miller School detected concentrations of mercury and BMAA in the fins and muscles of all shark species at levels that may pose a threat to human health. While both mercury and BMAA by themselves pose a health risk, together they may also have synergistic toxic impacts.

“Since sharks are predators, living higher up in the food web, their tissues tend to accumulate and concentrate toxins, which may not only pose a threat to shark health, but also put human consumers of shark parts at a health risk,” said the study’s lead author Neil Hammerschlag, research assistant professor at the Rosenstiel School and Abess Center for Ecosystem Science and Policy.

Shark products, including shark fins, cartilage, and meat, are widely consumed in Asia and in Asian communities globally as a delicacy and as a source of traditional Chinese medicine. In addition, dietary supplements containing shark cartilage are consumed globally.

Recently scientists found BMAA in shark fins and shark cartilage supplements. The neurotoxic methyl mercury has been known to bioaccumulate in sharks over their long lifespans.

About 16 percent of the world’s shark species are threatened with extinction. The shark species sampled in this study range in threat status from least concern (bonnethead shark) to endangered (great hammerhead) by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

“Our results suggest that humans who consume shark parts may be at a risk for developing neurological diseases,” Mash said.

“People should be aware and consider restricting consumption of shark parts,” Hammerschlag said.   “Limiting the consumption of shark parts will have positive health benefits for consumers and positive conservation outcomes for sharks, many of which are threatened with extinction due in part to the growing high demand for shark fin soup and, to a lesser extent, for shark meat and cartilage products.”

The study, titled “Cyanobacterial Neurotoxin BMAA and Mercury in Sharks,” was published August  16 in the journal Toxins. IN addition to Mash and Hammerschlag, the study coauthors include David A. Davis, Kiyo Mondo, and Matthew S. Seely, from the Miller School’s Department of Neurology; Susan J. Murch and William Broc Glover from the University of British Columbia; and Timothy Divoll and David C. Evers from the Biodiversity Research Institute in Maine. The Herbert W. Hoover Foundation provided the funding for this study.

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UM Focuses Medical Might on Zika

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UM Focuses Medical Might on Zika


By Robert S. Benchley
Special to UM News

Mario Stevenson

Mario Stevenson

Mosquito-borne transmission of the Zika virus appeared in South Florida just recently, but at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, forward-thinking researchers and clinicians began preparing for its arrival a year ago.

That’s when David Watkins, Ph.D., Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Pathology, who researches diseases in Latin America where the infections were reaching epidemic proportions, first sounded the alarm about the potential consequences in South Florida.

He was correct to be concerned. There are now 42 confirmed locally acquired infections, including the first case just documented in Pinellas County, on Florida’s west coast.

Watkins’ colleagues heeded his call months before the World Health Organization declared Zika an international public health emergency, and before experts confirmed the virus was responsible for the surging number of newborns with abnormally small heads. They stopped thinking of Zika as a potential travel risk and began preparing to battle a possible outbreak here at home.

As a result, UHealth physicians are already busy counseling prospective parents and treating pregnant women, and UM scientists are working overtime to bring diagnostic and therapeutic responses from the laboratory to the clinic — some possibly by the end of this year.

Testing for the threat
One of them is Mario Stevenson, Ph.D., professor of medicine, Chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases and Director of the Institute of AIDS and Emerging Infectious Diseases, whose laboratory has developed a diagnostic blood test for Zika that costs a fraction of current tests, delivers results quickly, and can be performed on the spot in any hospital or outpatient clinic.

Right now the seven currently approved tests cost $100 to $150, have to be evaluated in a commercial laboratory, and require a wait of several days before a patient receives the results.

“That’s far too expensive for a couple in a developing country who want to have children — especially if they require multiple testing — and far too long for them to wait to learn if one of them is carrying the virus, which experts now know can be transmitted through sex,” said Stevenson. “Even here in Florida, where the Department of Health is offering free testing, the growing demand is putting a real time strain on the few laboratories that do the work.”

Zika was first isolated in 1947 and long considered benign and confined to Africa; its name comes from the Zika Forest in Uganda, where it was discovered.

Stevenson’s extremely sensitive test, which can detect the DNA of the Zika virus at the earliest stage of infection, would cost about one-tenth of current tests, with results ready in an hour. An investor is already waiting to market the test, and the only remaining hurdle is the application for FDA approval.

A video of Stevenson talking about Zika virus research is available here.

Watkins and two researchers from the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology — Sylvia Daunert, Pharm.D., M.S., Ph.D., professor and holder of the Lucille P. Markey Chair, and Sapna Deo, Ph.D., M.S., associate professor, and their team — have developed an even simpler, cheaper test. Potentially priced as low as $2, it requires no processing from a lab. Using a paper strip containing selective antibodies from the Watkins lab that bind to the virus obtained from Zika-infected patients, it delivers a simple “yes” or “no” verdict as to whether the virus is present, or whether the patient has ever been exposed to it.

“It’s completely simple,” said Daunert. “It can be used either in a physician’s office or by health care workers in remote rural locations where there are no hospitals or clinics. But in the process we are also developing a platform that can be customized for different viruses — it’s not just for Zika — because different ones are going to keep popping up.”

After completing the test development, which is still several months away, Watkins and Daunert will apply for a patent and begin seeking investors to bring it to market.

Preventing a pandemic
Watkins, working with Miller School colleague Ronald C. Desrosiers, Ph.D., professor of pathology, and investigators at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, and the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif., is also taking a preventive approach using antibodies from Zika patients.

“We could inject the antibodies into a woman prior to pregnancy to protect both the mother and the fetus,” he said, “or it could be done after infection, when it would bind to the virus and reduce replication.”

Still, he said, “therapeutic antibodies need to go through Phase I and Phase II trials, which will take one or two years. It’s not a quick fix.”

Another Miller School researcher is taking a classic vaccine approach, with a novel twist.

“Rather than using an attenuated live virus for vaccinations — an approach used for decades with other diseases, but which carries some risk — a Zika vaccine would incorporate only certain components of the virus, specifically the envelope portion, for patient safety,” said Glen N. Barber, Ph.D., chair of the Department of Cell Biology. “We are also looking at the mechanisms of how Zika overcomes the immune system to infect the host.”

Barber, however, believes developing the vaccine won’t be the hardest part of the task.

“I think it will be relatively easy to develop a vaccine,” he said, “and the animal studies will be completed this year. What will be more difficult will be determining how to scale up for vaccinating the population at large.”

Physicians on the front lines
In UM’s clinics, where UHealth physicians are on the front lines in the fight against Zika, obstetricians and gynecologists have been caring for pregnant women who were infected with Zika both abroad and at home. Now they are gearing up to expand their services.

“We are beginning a wrap-around neonatal and pediatric care clinic for women who have been infected with Zika during their pregnancies to ensure that during pregnancy and after delivery mothers and infants receive the care that they need,” said Christine L. Curry, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology, who over the months has had many conversations “with men, pregnant women and non-pregnant women about mosquito-bite prevention and prevention of sexual transmission.

“They’ve heard about it on the news and are asking what they can do to prevent Zika infection, either during pregnancy or before pregnancy,” she said. “If women are pregnant and living in Miami, we want them to avoid, if feasible, the areas where we know mosquito-borne Zika virus transmission is ongoing, so currently that’s Wynwood and parts of Miami Beach. In addition, no matter where they live or work in the city, we want them to wear mosquito repellant every time they leave the house, long pants and long sleeves, and do their best to remove all the standing water in their neighborhood. For both the partners and the patients, the exact same advice holds.”

Curry notes that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that women delay conception for two months from the time of a known or suspected Zika infection, and that men wait at least six months.

As such, she encourages women who are pregnant to be tested for Zika, and those who are planning a pregnancy to consult with their primary care provider. She recommends anyone who is experiencing Zika symptoms — fever, joint pain, muscle pain, red eyes or a rash — be evaluated by their primary care provider or at the emergency room.

A video of Curry talking about the Zika virus is available here.

Gearing up for the Zika virus on the clinical side has required many meetings and phone conferences within and among leaders of UHealth, Jackson Memorial Hospital and the VA Medical Center. Thomas M. Hooton, M.D., professor of clinical medicine and Medical Director of UHealth Infection Control, says dealing with all potentially large-scale public health threats ultimately comes down to two elements — education and communication.

“In the case of Zika virus, we must first educate our physicians and employees about how to keep themselves safe — personal protection and environmental issues — so they can be protected,” he said. “That includes our employees who work outdoors, and we have been providing special guidance to them.

“Then, on the clinical side, we also need to educate all clinicians and staff about how to identify, counsel and treat patients who may have Zika based on their symptoms or travel history. We also need to educate our patients to heighten their awareness about Zika and to encourage them to let their provider know of any concerns or questions they may have.”

Other concerns, which have received little media attention, he notes, include the blood supply, organ donation and in vitro fertilization.

“These are the issues that keep us talking to one another,” Hooton said. “Continued education and communication, until long-term solutions can emerge from the lab, are critical in keeping the Zika threat under control.”

Talking to the kids
Communication and education are also essential for parents and school officials who, in the face of the Zika threat, may be dealing with more than the normal back-to-school anxieties. Jill Ehrenreich-May, associate professor of psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences, says that even in the face of perceived danger, such as having a pregnant mom who needs to stay indoors, parents should reassure their children that the adults have everything covered.

“If a parent responds to the threat of Zika by hiding in the house and worrying about every puddle of water on the ground, the impact is probably going to feel bigger, more intense, and more problematic to both the parent and child,” she said. “If the threat isn’t acute to you or your family, it is important to be mindful that you as a parent are not accidentally reinforcing unnecessary avoidance behavior.”

The economic impact
Local and state officials are understandably jittery over the potential impact the locally transmitted outbreak could have on Miami-Dade County’s $36 billion tourism industry, and beyond.

Arun Sharma, Ph.D., professor of marketing at the UM School of Business Administration, expects it to be minimal since the greatest risk is to pregnant women, or those expecting to get pregnant. For now, the CDC is advising pregnant women and those planning a pregnancy to avoid Miami-Dade County altogether, so, Sharma said, “most tourists shrugged off the possible effects of Zika.”

But new concerns about Zika are being raised almost on a daily basis. CDC Director Tom Frieden noted that aerial spraying cannot be conducted amid high rises and sea breezes, so fighting Zika on Miami Beach will be more challenging than in Wynwood. A recent medical research report based on experiments on mice suggests that Zika may also affect adult brain cells critical to learning and memory.

And, if the outbreak grows, news about Zika on South Florida’s most popular tourist destination will continue to be broadcast across the country and around the world.

“So, what are the expectations for tourism and the local economy?” Sharma asked. “In the short-term it should be minimal. However, if the negative coverage of Zika in Miami increases and/or if countries start providing travel advisories suggesting that their citizens not visit Miami, the drop in tourism may be steep, negatively affecting the economy. The concern is not the young, who will continue coming. The concern is the middle-aged and older tourists who typically are more sensitive to health issues and may avoid Miami.”

But for Curry and other public health specialists, the Zika virus must be everybody’s concern and responsibility.

“While there is a focus on prevention of Zika in pregnancy, it’s the responsibility of every one of us to wear our bug spray, to wear our long sleeves and long pants, and to remove standing water because we cannot protect the pregnant women in our community if we are not all doing our part,” Curry said.

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