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Uriel Katz

ukatz@netvision.net.il

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Uriel Katz, Yehuda Shoenfeld (2008)  Pulmonary eosinophilia.   Clin Rev Allergy Immunol 34: 3. 367-371 Jun  
Abstract: Eosinophils may infiltrate the lung tissue, thus impairing gas exchange and causing several symptoms as dyspnea, fever, and cough. This process may be secondary to several factors, including drugs or parasite migration, or primary (idiopathic). Acute eosinophilic pneumonia is life-threatening and presents frequently in young smokers as an acute hypoxemic respiratory failure of generally less than a week with bilateral lung infiltrates, frequently misdiagnosed as severe community-acquired pneumonia. This patients present without peripheral eosinophilia but usually have more than 25% eosinophils on bronchoalveolar fluid. Chronic eosinophilic pneumonia is a protracted disease of usually more than a month before presentation, with a predilection for middle aged asthmatic patients. Hypoxemia is mild-moderate, and there are usually more than 1,000 eosinophils/mm3 of peripheral blood. Bronchoalveolar fluid has high eosinophil levels (usually more than 25%). Migratory peripheral infiltrates are seen in the chest x-ray film. Both acute and chronic eosinophilic pneumonia are treated by glucocorticoids and respiratory support as well as avoidance of any recognized trigger.
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DOI   
PMID 
Shoenfeld, Twig, Katz, Sherer (2008)  Autoantibody explosion in antiphospholipid syndrome.   J Autoimmun 30: 1-2. 74-83 February  
Abstract: Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is characterized by thrombosis and pregnancy loss in the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL), mainly anticardiolipin, anti-beta2-glycoprotein I and lupus anticoagulant. However, similar to systemic lupus erythematosus, APS is also characterized by multiple other autoantibodies including 'non-classical' aPL, as well as other antibodies. Herein we describe the autoantigen properties, prevalence and clinical importance of 30 different antibodies in APS. Among the other antibodies characterizing APS are autoantibodies directed to platelets, glycoproteins, various coagulation factors, lamins, mitochondrial antigens and cell surface markers. Few of these autoantibodies are correlated with the presence of other antibodies, and some may have an additive role in the pro-thrombotic tendency of the syndrome. This autoantibody explosion might be important in early identification of the syndrome and its manifestations.
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DOI   
PMID 
Katz, Gilburd, Shoenfeld (2008)  Animal Models of Vasculitides.   Clin Rev Allergy Immunol Jan  
Abstract: The vasculitides are a group of diseases in which the common denominator is the immune attack to components of the vascular wall. Vasculitides may attack large vessels like the aorta, medium-sized vessels like the coronary arteries or small vessels like the glomeruli. We review in this paper the animal models that have been developed to study these diseases.
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2007
 
DOI   
PMID 
Uriel Katz, Anat Achiron, Yaniv Sherer, Yehuda Shoenfeld (2007)  Safety of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) therapy.   Autoimmun Rev 6: 4. 257-259 Mar  
Abstract: Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) is administered both for the treatment of immunodeficiencies and for an expanding list of autoimmune diseases. Most adverse effects are mild and transient including headaches, flushing, fever, chills, fatigue, nausea, diarrhea, blood pressure changes and tachycardia. IgA deficiency-related anaphylactic reactions are largely preventable. Late adverse events are rare and include acute renal failure and thromboembolic events. Acute renal failure, usually oliguric and transient, occurs generally in insufficiently hydrated patients and with sucrose-stabilized products due to osmotic injury. Thromboembolic complications occur due to hyperviscosity especially in patients having risk factors including advanced age, previous thromboembolic events, immobilization, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia or those receiving high-dose IVIg in a rapid infusion rate or excessive dose. Slow infusion rate and good hydration may prevent renal failure, thromboembolic events and aseptic meningitis. In our experience in more than 200 patients receiving IVIg for different autoimmune diseases and near 10000 infusions for relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis patients, the occurrence of adverse effects was 24-36% after high dose IVIg, most were headaches and all were mild adverse events. We conclude that IVIg is a safe therapy when given in a slow infusion rate in well-hydrated patients, better avoiding patients with known risk factors.
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PMID 
Uriel Katz, Yair Molad, Jacob Ablin, Debby Ben-David, Daphna Paran, Mordechai Gutman, Pnina Langevitz (2007)  Chronic idiopathic granulomatous mastitis.   Ann N Y Acad Sci 1108: 603-608 Jun  
Abstract: We describe four women with idiopathic granulomatous mastitis, a rare benign disease. Age range was 32-40 years. Disease duration was less than 1 year in three patients and long term in the fourth. The diagnosis was based on histological findings, after extensive workup ruled out malignancy and known causes of granulomatous mastitis. Treatment with prednisone with gradual tapering yielded a good response. Clinicians should consider the possibility of idiopathic granulomatous mastitis in young women with inflammatory breast processes and negative findings on relevant biopsy, laboratory, and imaging studies. Glucocorticoids are the treatment of choice; surgery is not recommended. Some patients require a glucocorticoid-sparing drug.
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DOI   
PMID 
Jacob Schachter, Uriel Katz, Arie Mahrer, Dov Barak, Liat Ziegel Ben David, Jacob Nusbacher, Yehuda Shoenfeld (2007)  Efficacy and safety of intravenous immunoglobulin in patients with metastatic melanoma.   Ann N Y Acad Sci 1110: 305-314 Sep  
Abstract: We have previously reported studies performed both in vitro and in laboratory animals, as well as a case study in humans, suggesting that intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) may be beneficial in the treatment of malignancies, including metastatic melanoma. As part of a phase II open label trial, we have administered IVIG to nine patients with metastatic melanoma who had been heavily treated. In two of nine (22%) patients treated every 3 weeks with IVIG (1 g/kg body weight), the disease stabilized. One patient had stable disease for 8 months; the other for 3 months. No serious adverse events (AEs) attributable to IVIG were observed. We conclude that IVIG therapy may be useful for the treatment of metastatic melanoma. Furthermore, we suggest that the effects of IVIG therapy might be enhanced by its use as an adjuvant in patients without evidence of disease following surgery.
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2006
 
DOI   
PMID 
Uriel Katz, Irena Kishner, David Magalashvili, Yehuda Shoenfeld, Anat Achiron (2006)  Long term safety of IVIg therapy in multiple sclerosis: 10 years experience.   Autoimmunity 39: 6. 513-517 Sep  
Abstract: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic demyelinating disease of the central nervous system. The majority of MS patients have a relapsing-remitting course with progressive neurological disability that accumulates over the years. Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIg) has demonstrated benefit in the treatment of some patients with relapsing-remitting MS. Concerns about adverse events of IVIg, mainly acute renal failure and thromboembolic events have been raised in the medical literature. We examined the adverse events profile of IVIg treatment in a large cohort of 293 relapsing-remitting MS patients treated with an initial loading dose of IVIg (0.4 g/Kg body weight/day, for 5 consecutive days) and additional booster dose infusions (0.4 g/Kg body weight/booster dose, every 6 weeks) as a maintenance treatment. A total of 9281 IVIg infusions were administered within a mean treatment period of 3.8 +/- 3.5 years (3 months-10 years). The main adverse event during the loading dose period was headache, occurring in 12.6% of the patients. The annual rate of any adverse event during the IVIg maintenance period was 4.4% during the first year and had a trend to decrease with every passing year of treatment. Adverse events during the loading dose did not predict adverse events during the maintenance phase. No severe adverse events were recorded. We conclude that IVIg is a safe therapy in MS either for short or for long-term periods.
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2005
 
PMID 
U Katz, Y Shoenfeld (2005)  Review: intravenous immunoglobulin therapy and thromboembolic complications.   Lupus 14: 10. 802-808  
Abstract: Intravenous immunglobulin (IVIg) is used to treat a number of immune-deficiences and autoimmune diseases. Safety concerns related to a number of reported thromboembolic complications prompted us to review the literature. These complications happened mainly in individuals that had risk factors for thromboembolism, like advanced age, previous thromboembolic diseases, bed-ridden, and in individuals in which high doses or high infusion rates of IVIg were administered. The mechanism responsible for these events seems to be a rise in plasma viscosity that can trigger a thromboembolic event, especially in cases in which there is an underlying circulation impairment. Complications can be minimized by using IVIg only in clear-cut indications, weighting risk versus benefit in patients who are at high risk for thromboembolism and by sticking to carefully monitored slow infusion rates. IVIg for the treatment of autoimmune disorders should be administered as a five-day course of 2 g/kg of body weight. Each daily dose of 400 mg/kg should be given in not less than eight hours.
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DOI   
PMID 
Yehuda Shoenfeld, Uriel Katz (2005)  IVIg therapy in autoimmunity and related disorders: our experience with a large cohort of patients.   Autoimmunity 38: 2. 123-137 Mar  
Abstract: Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) is used to treat a number of immune-deficiencies and autoimmune diseases. It has been shown that IVIg contains anti-idiotypic antibodies, which explains its immunomodulatory action.In murine models, recent investigations have demonstrated that IVIg can prevent and reduce the affliction by systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and scleroderma. Relevant disease-specific fractions of IVIg were able to reproduce and even enhance the therapeutic effect in a murine model.IVIg treatment before tumor resection in rodents inoculated with melanoma and sarcoma cells dramatically improved the cure rate (50%) in comparison to the control group (0%).In patients affected by SLE, several clinical manifestations responded to IVIg treatment including serositis, hematological manifestations, treatment-resistant nephritis and central nervous system involvement. Similarly, in women with recurrent fetal loss due to APS, IVIg was able to diminish the abortion rate. Vasculitides such as Churg-Strauss' and Wegener's and skin fibrosis in patients affected by scleroderma improved after IVIg treatment. In agreement with in vitro investigations, prolonged survival has been noted in cancer patients treated with IVIg.We suggest that in the presence of a steroid and immunosuppressive-resistant autoimmune disease, IVIg is a rational and safe choice.
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DOI   
PMID 
Hedi Orbach, Uriel Katz, Yaniv Sherer, Yehuda Shoenfeld (2005)  Intravenous immunoglobulin: adverse effects and safe administration.   Clin Rev Allergy Immunol 29: 3. 173-184 Dec  
Abstract: Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) is administered for various indications and generally considered a safe therapy. Most of the adverse effects (AEs) associated with IVIg administration are mild and transient. The immediate AEs include headache, flushing, malaise, chest tightness, fever, chills, myalgia, fatigue, dyspnea, back pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, blood pressure changes, tachycardia, and anaphylactic reactions, especially in IgA-deficient patients. Late AEs are rare and include acute renal failure, thromboembolic events, aseptic meningitis, neutropenia, and autoimmune hemolytic anemia, skin reactions, and rare events of arthritis. Pseudohyponatremia following IVIg is important to be recognized. Renal failure, usually oliguric and transient, occurs mostly on using sucrose-containing products owing to osmotic injury. Among high-risk patients who have a previous renal disease, dehydration, diabetes mellitus, advanced age, hypertension, hyperviscosity, or are treated by other nephrotoxic medications, administration of a non-sucrose-containing IVIg product after accomplishing hydration, in a low concentration and a slow infusion rate while supervising urine output and kidney function, is recommended. Thromboembolic complications occur because of hyperviscosity especially in patients having risk factors including advanced age, previous thromboembolic diseases, being bedridden, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, dyslipidemia, or those receiving high-dose IVIg in a rapid infusion rate. Immediate AEs can be treated by the slowing or temporary discontinuation of the infusion and symptomatic therapy with analgesics, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antihistamines, and glucocorticoids in more severe reactions. Slow infusion rate of low concentration of IVIg products and hydration, especially in high-risk patients, may prevent renal failure, thromboembolic events, and aseptic meningitis.
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2004
2003
 
PMID 
Shay Bujanover, Uriel Katz, Rivka Bracha, David Mirelman (2003)  A virulence attenuated amoebapore-less mutant of Entamoeba histolytica and its interaction with host cells.   Int J Parasitol 33: 14. 1655-1663 Dec  
Abstract: Entamoeba histolytica, the protozoan parasite which causes amoebiasis, is an exclusively human pathogen so developing a vaccine could effectively impact the spread of the disease. Recently we developed a genetically modified avirulent strain, termed G3, from the virulent E. histolytica strain HM-1:IMSS. The new strain lacks the important virulence factor, the amoebapore-A. The objective of our current study was to investigate the avirulence of the attenuated strain as well as to examine the antigenic and immunogenic responses of these trophozoites as potential candidates for a live vaccine. Functional assays were conducted to characterise the virulent behaviour of the G3 strain. This behaviour was compared to the virulent strain HM-1:IMSS and the non-virulent strain Rahman. Western blots were conducted to confirm the lack of amoebapore-A in the E. histolytica G3 strain and to demonstrate that it had no influence on the presence of other virulence factors. Results of these two sets of tests proved the G3 strain to be phenotypically similar to the avirulent Rahman strain while antigenically identical to the virulent HM-1:IMSS, apart from the lack of the amoebapore-A protein. Intraperitoneal immunisation of hamsters with G3 trophozoites compared to sham immunised hamsters resulted in IgG anti-HM-1:IMSS antibodies. The level of humoral response was variable and further testing has to take place before introducing this new strain as a vaccine.
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PMID 
Giselle Soto, Christian T Bautista, Daniel E Roth, Robert H Gilman, Billie Velapatiño, Masako Ogura, Giedrius Dailide, Manuel Razuri, Rina Meza, Uriel Katz, Thomas P Monath, Douglas E Berg, David N Taylor (2003)  Helicobacter pylori reinfection is common in Peruvian adults after antibiotic eradication therapy.   J Infect Dis 188: 9. 1263-1275 Nov  
Abstract: To characterize posttreatment recurrence of Helicobacter pylori in Peru, 192 adults with H. pylori-positive gastric biopsy specimens were monitored by (14)C-Urea breath test, after eradication of H. pylori by use of amoxicillin, clarithromycin, and omeprazole. The cumulative risk of recurrence at 18 months was 30.3% (95% confidence interval, 21.4%-39.3%). Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA patterns and DNA sequence data established that, among 28 pairs of H. pylori isolates from pretreatment and recurrent infections, 6 (21%) were genetically similar, suggesting recrudescence of the previous infection, and 22 (79%) were different, suggesting reinfection with a new strain that differed from that involved in the initial infection. Eating mainly outside of the home was a risk factor for infection with a new strain (adjusted relative risk [RR], 5.07), whereas older age was a protective factor (adjusted RR, 0.20). Although an increase in the anti-H. pylori IgG antibody titer corresponded to recurrence, pretreatment and recurrent infections were similar with respect to quantitative culture colony counts and histologic characteristics, suggesting that neither prior eradication nor the memory immune response measurably alters the risk or burden of recurrent infection. Although eradication with antibiotics was successful, the high rate of reinfection suggests that treatment is unlikely to have a lasting public health effect in this setting.
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2002
 
DOI   
PMID 
Uriel Katz, Serge Ankri, Tamara Stolarsky, Yael Nuchamowitz, David Mirelman (2002)  Entamoeba histolytica expressing a dominant negative N-truncated light subunit of its gal-lectin are less virulent.   Mol Biol Cell 13: 12. 4256-4265 Dec  
Abstract: The 260-kDa heterodimeric Gal/GalNAc-specific Lectin (Gal-lectin) of Entamoeba histolytica dissociates under reducing conditions into a heavy (hgl, 170 kDa) and a light subunit (lgl, 35 kDa). We have previously shown that inhibition of expression of the 35-kDa subunit by antisense RNA causes a decrease in virulence. To further understand the role of the light subunit of the Gal-lectin in pathogenesis, amoebae were transfected with plasmids encoding intact, mutated, and truncated forms of the light subunit lgl1 gene. A transfectant in which the 55 N-terminal amino acids of the lgl were removed, overproduced an N-truncated lgl protein (32 kDa), which replaced most of the native 35-kDa lgl in the formation of the Gal-lectin heterodimeric complex and exerted a dominant negative effect. Amoebae transfected with this construct showed a significant decrease in their ability to adhere to and kill mammalian cells as well as in their capacity to form rosettes with and to phagocytose erythrocytes. In addition, immunofluorescence confocal microscopy of this transfectant with anti-Gal-lectin antibodies showed an impaired ability to cap. These results indicate that the light subunit has a role in enabling the clustering of Gal-lectin complexes and that its N-truncation affects this function, which is required for virulence.
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2001
 
DOI   
PMID 
D E Roth, D N Taylor, R H Gilman, R Meza, U Katz, C Bautista, L Cabrera, B Velapatiño, C Lebron, M Razúri, J Watanabe, T Monath (2001)  Posttreatment follow-up of Helicobacter pylori infection using a stool antigen immunoassay.   Clin Diagn Lab Immunol 8: 4. 718-723 Jul  
Abstract: The Helicobacter pylori stool antigen enzyme immunoassay (HpSA) was evaluated during posttreatment follow-up of patients in a country with a very high prevalence of H. pylori infection. From among 273 dyspeptic individuals (18 to 55 years) initially recruited from a shantytown in Lima, Peru, 238 participants who met the inclusion criteria and were suspected to be H. pylori positive based on (14)C urea breath test (UBT) results underwent endoscopy. Participants with endoscopy-proven infections received standard eradication therapy and were monitored by UBT and HpSA at 1 month following treatment and at 3-month intervals for 9 months posttreatment. A second endoscopy was performed if UBT results showed evidence of treatment failure or H. pylori recurrence. Biopsy results were considered the "gold standard" in all analyses. Among patients who underwent endoscopy, HpSA had a pretreatment sensitivity of 93%. Two-hundred thirty patients completed the treatment regimen, of whom 201 (93%) were considered to have had successful treatment outcomes based on a negative follow-up UBT. Thirty-two patients with UBT-defined treatment failures or H. pylori recurrences at any point during the 9-month follow-up underwent a second endoscopy. In the posttreatment setting, HpSA had an overall sensitivity of 73% and a specificity of 67%. Agreement between UBT and HpSA diminished throughout the follow-up. Among 14 participants in whom HpSA remained positive at 1 month following treatment despite UBT evidence of treatment success, 12 (86%) became HpSA negative within 3 months posttreatment. Although this study confirmed the validity of the HpSA in the initial assessment of dyspeptic patients, the test demonstrated a reduced overall accuracy in the detection of treatment failures and H. pylori recurrences during 9 months of posttreatment follow-up. Furthermore, in some patients it may take up to 3 months after successful eradication for antigen shedding to diminish to levels within the negative HpSA range.
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2000
1999
 
PMID 
S Ankri, F Padilla-Vaca, T Stolarsky, L Koole, U Katz, D Mirelman (1999)  Antisense inhibition of expression of the light subunit (35 kDa) of the Gal/GalNac lectin complex inhibits Entamoeba histolytica virulence.   Mol Microbiol 33: 2. 327-337 Jul  
Abstract: One of the under-represented genes identified by cDNA representational difference analysis (RDA) between avirulent Entamoeba histolytica strain Rahman and virulent strain HM-1:IMSS was the amoebic light (35 kDa) subunit of the Gal/GalNac lectin complex. This lectin complex, which mediates the adhesion of the parasite to the target cell, also contains a heavy (170 kDa) subunit, which has the carbohydrate-binding domain. Stable transfectants of the virulent strain in which the expression of the 35 kDa subunit was inhibited by antisense RNA were not significantly affected in their adhesion activity to mammalian or bacterial cells but were strongly inhibited in their cytopathic activity, cytotoxic activity and in their ability to induce the formation of liver lesions in hamsters. These findings suggest that the 35 kDa subunit may have a specific function in the pathogenic pathway and provides a new insight into the role of this component of the Gal/GalNac lectin complex in amoebic virulence.
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