C
Christine C. Ginocchio
Researcher at BioMérieux
Publications - 102
Citations - 4766
Christine C. Ginocchio is an academic researcher from BioMérieux. The author has contributed to research in topics: NASBA & Nucleic acid amplification technique. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 101 publications receiving 4200 citations. Previous affiliations of Christine C. Ginocchio include North Shore-LIJ Health System & The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Better tests, better care: improved diagnostics for infectious diseases.
Angela M. Caliendo,David N. Gilbert,David N. Gilbert,Christine C. Ginocchio,Kimberly E. Hanson,Larissa S May,Thomas C. Quinn,Thomas C. Quinn,Fred C. Tenover,David Alland,Anne J. Blaschke,Robert A. Bonomo,Karen C. Carroll,Mary Jane Ferraro,Lisa R. Hirschhorn,W. Patrick Joseph,Tobi Karchmer,Ann T MacIntyre,L. Barth Reller,Audrey F. Jackson +19 more
TL;DR: The current diagnostic landscape, including unmet needs and emerging technologies, and the challenges to the development and clinical integration of improved tests are reviewed, and recommendations that address a host of identified barriers are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI
Role of Cell Culture for Virus Detection in the Age of Technology
TL;DR: A review of cell culture-based viral diagnostic products and techniques, including the use of newer cell culture formats, cryopreserved cell cultures, centrifugation-enhanced inoculation, precytopathogenic effect detection, cocultivated cell cultures and transgenic cell lines, can be found in this paper.
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Evaluation of multiple test methods for the detection of the novel 2009 influenza A (H1N1) during the New York City outbreak.
Christine C. Ginocchio,Frank Zhang,Ryhana Manji,Suman Arora,Mark Bornfreund,Leon Falk,Madhavi Lotlikar,Margaret Kowerska,George Becker,Diamanto D. Korologos,Marcella De Geronimo,James M. Crawford +11 more
TL;DR: The RVP test provided the best diagnostic option as RVP demonstrated superior sensitivity for the detection of all influenza strains, including the novel H1N1, provided accurate influenza A subtyping and identified a significant number of additional respiratory pathogens.
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"Eczema coxsackium" and unusual cutaneous findings in an enterovirus outbreak.
Erin F. Mathes,Vikash S. Oza,Ilona J. Frieden,Kelly M. Cordoro,Shigeo Yagi,Renee Howard,Leonard Kristal,Christine C. Ginocchio,Julie V. Schaffer,Sheilagh Maguiness,Susan J. Bayliss,Irene Lara-Corrales,María Teresa García-Romero,Daniel P. Kelly,Maria Salas,M. Steven Oberste,W. Allan Nix,Carol A. Glaser,Richard J. Antaya +18 more
TL;DR: The CVA6-associated enterovirus outbreak was responsible for an exanthem potentially more widespread, severe, and varied than classic HFMD that could be confused with bullous impetigo, eczema herpeticum, vasculitis, and primary immunobullous disease.
Journal ArticleDOI
Genotype Prevalence and Risk Factors for Severe Clinical Adenovirus Infection, United States 2004–2006
Gregory C. Gray,Troy A. McCarthy,Mark G. Lebeck,David P. Schnurr,Kevin L. Russell,Adriana E. Kajon,Marie L. Landry,Diane S. Leland,Gregory A. Storch,Christine C. Ginocchio,Christine C. Robinson,Gail J. Demmler,Michael A. Saubolle,Sue C. Kehl,Rangaraj Selvarangan,Melissa B. Miller,James D. Chappell,Danielle M. Zerr,Deanna L. Kiska,Diane C. Halstead,Ana W. Capuano,Sharon F. Setterquist,Margaret L. Chorazy,Jeffrey D. Dawson,Dean D. Erdman +24 more
TL;DR: A new molecular adenovirus typing technique was adopted to study clinical adenvirus isolates collected from 22 medical facilities over a 25-month period during 2004-2006, and observed a statistically significant increasing trend of adanovirus type 21 detection over time.