101 results on '"Uno, H."'
Search Results
2. Ecological Heterogeneity of Oxbow and Floodplain Lakes Along the Kapuas Riverine System.
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Subehi, L, Uno, H, Imroatushshoolikhah, Sulastri, Yustiawati, Toruan, R L, Ajie, G S, Jasalesmana, T, Dianto, A, Afandi, A Y, Sulawesty, F, Julzarika, A, Ramadhan, Y, Triwati, and Nakano, S
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. Moving beyond the conventional stratified analysis to estimate an overall treatment efficacy with the data from a comparative randomized clinical study
- Author
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Tian, L., Jiang, F., Hasegawa, T., Uno, H., Pfeffer, M., and Wei, LJ.
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Random Allocation ,Models, Statistical ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Bias ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Humans ,Article ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
For a two-group comparative study, a stratified inference procedure is routinely used to estimate an overall group contrast to increase the precision of the simple two-sample estimator. Unfortunately, most commonly used methods including the Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel statistic for a binary outcome and the stratified Cox procedure for the event time endpoint do not serve this purpose well. In fact, these procedures may be worse than their two-sample counterparts even when the observed treatment allocations are imbalanced across strata. Various procedures beyond the conventional stratified methods have been proposed to increase the precision of estimation when the naive estimator is consistent. In this paper, we are interested in the case when the treatment allocation proportions vary markedly across strata. We study the stochastic properties of the two-sample naive estimator conditional on the ancillary statistics, the observed treatment allocation proportions and/or the stratum sizes, and present a biased-adjusted estimator. This adjusted estimator is asymptotically equivalent to the augmentation estimators proposed under the unconditional setting. Moreover, this consistent estimation procedure is also equivalent to a rather simple procedure, which estimates the mean response of each treatment group first via a stratum-size weighted average and then constructs the group contrast estimate. This simple procedure is flexible and readily applicable to any target patient population by choosing appropriate stratum weights. All the proposals are illustrated with the data from a cardiovascular clinical trial, whose treatment allocations are imbalanced.
- Published
- 2018
4. Bamboo biochar does not affect paddy soil N2O emissions or source following slurry or mineral fertilizer amendment—a 15N tracer study
- Author
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Case, S.D.C., Uno, H., Nakajima, Y., Stoumann Jensen, L., Akiyama, H., Case, S.D.C., Uno, H., Nakajima, Y., Stoumann Jensen, L., and Akiyama, H.
- Published
- 2018
5. Adding a new analytical procedure with clinical interpretation in the tool box of survival analysis
- Author
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Uno, H., primary, Claggett, B., additional, Tian, L., additional, Fu, H., additional, Huang, B., additional, Kim, D.H., additional, and Wei, L.J., additional
- Published
- 2018
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6. 450 Etretinate as a therapeutic option for pseudolymphoma
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Iwahashi, Y., primary, Kasa, Y., additional, Saruta, Y., additional, Uno, H., additional, and Nakada, T., additional
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- 2017
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7. Abstract P1-07-07: The incidence of and survival after breast cancer recurrence
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Hassett, MJ, primary, Cronin, AM, additional, Carroll, NM, additional, Uno, H, additional, Hornbrook, MC, additional, and Ritzwoller, D, additional
- Published
- 2016
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8. The androgen receptor in mesenchymal progenitors regulates skeletal muscle mass via Igf1 expression in male mice.
- Author
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Sakai H, Uno H, Yamakawa H, Tanaka K, Ikedo A, Uezumi A, Ohkawa Y, and Imai Y
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- Animals, Male, Mice, Muscular Atrophy metabolism, Muscular Atrophy pathology, Receptors, Androgen metabolism, Receptors, Androgen genetics, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I metabolism, Insulin-Like Growth Factor I genetics, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Mesenchymal Stem Cells metabolism, Mesenchymal Stem Cells cytology
- Abstract
Androgens exert their effects primarily by binding to the androgen receptor (AR), a ligand-dependent nuclear receptor. While androgens have anabolic effects on skeletal muscle, previous studies reported that AR functions in myofibers to regulate skeletal muscle quality, rather than skeletal muscle mass. Therefore, the anabolic effects of androgens are exerted via nonmyofiber cells. In this context, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of AR in mesenchymal progenitors, which play a crucial role in maintaining skeletal muscle homeostasis, remain largely unknown. In this study, we demonstrated expression of AR in mesenchymal progenitors and found that targeted AR ablation in mesenchymal progenitors reduced limb muscle mass in mature adult, but not young or aged, male mice, although fatty infiltration of muscle was not affected. The absence of AR in mesenchymal progenitors led to remarkable perineal muscle hypotrophy, regardless of age, due to abnormal regulation of transcripts associated with cell death and extracellular matrix organization. Additionally, we revealed that AR in mesenchymal progenitors regulates the expression of insulin-like growth factor 1 (Igf1) and that IGF1 administration prevents perineal muscle atrophy in a paracrine manner. These findings indicate that the anabolic effects of androgens regulate skeletal muscle mass via, at least in part, AR signaling in mesenchymal progenitors., Competing Interests: Competing interests statement:The authors declare no competing interest.
- Published
- 2024
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9. Belt electrode tetanus muscle stimulation reduces denervation-induced atrophy of rat multiple skeletal muscle groups.
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Uno H, Kamiya S, Akimoto R, Hosoki K, Tadano S, Isemura M, Kouzaki K, Tamura Y, Kotani T, and Nakazato K
- Subjects
- Rats, Animals, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Muscular Atrophy etiology, Muscular Atrophy prevention & control, Electric Stimulation, Denervation, Electrodes, Tetanus
- Abstract
Belt electrode-skeletal muscle electrical stimulation (B-SES) involves the use of belt-shaped electrodes to contract multiple muscle groups simultaneously. Twitch contractions have been demonstrated to protect against denervation-induced muscle atrophy in rats, possibly through mitochondrial biosynthesis. This study examined whether inducing tetanus contractions with B-SES suppresses muscle atrophy and identified the underlying molecular mechanisms. We evaluated the effects of acute (60 Hz, 5 min) and chronic (60 Hz, 5 min, every alternate day for one week) B-SES on the tibialis anterior (TA) and gastrocnemius (GAS) muscles in Sprague-Dawley rats using belt electrodes attached to both ankle joints. After acute stimulation, a significant decrease in the glycogen content was observed in the left and right TA and GAS, suggesting that B-SES causes simultaneous contractions in multiple muscle groups. B-SES enhanced p70S6K phosphorylation, an indicator of the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 activity. During chronic stimulations, rats were divided into control (CONT), denervation-induced atrophy (DEN), and DEN + electrically stimulated with B-SES (DEN + ES) groups. After seven days of treatment, the wet weight (n = 8-11 for each group) and muscle fiber cross-sectional area (CSA, n = 6 for each group) of the TA and GAS muscles were reduced in the DEN and DEN + ES groups compared with that in the CON group. The DEN + ES group showed significantly higher muscle weight and CSA than those in the DEN group. Although RNA-seq and pathway analysis suggested that mitochondrial biogenesis is a critical event in this phenomenon, mitochondrial content showed no difference. In contrast, ribosomal RNA 28S and 18S (n = 6) levels in the DEN + ES group were higher than those in the DEN group, even though RNA-seq showed that the ribosome biogenesis pathway was reduced by electrical stimulation. The mRNA levels of the muscle proteolytic molecules atrogin-1 and MuRF1 were significantly higher in DEN than those in CONT. However, they were more suppressed in DEN + ES than those in DEN. In conclusion, tetanic electrical stimulation of both ankles using belt electrodes effectively reduced denervation-induced atrophy in multiple muscle groups. Furthermore, ribosomal biosynthesis plays a vital role in this phenomenon., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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10. Cell cycle dependence of cell survival following exposure to X-rays in synchronous HeLa cells expressing fluorescent ubiquitination-based cell cycle indicators.
- Author
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Seino R, Uno H, Prise KM, and Fukunaga H
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- Humans, X-Rays, Cell Survival, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Cell Cycle, Ubiquitination, HeLa Cells
- Abstract
The cell cycle dependence of radiosensitivity has yet to be fully determined, as it is technically difficult to achieve a high degree of cell cycle synchronization in cultured cell systems and accurately detect the cell cycle phase of individual cells simultaneously. We used human cervical carcinoma HeLa cells expressing fluorescent ubiquitination-based cell cycle indicators (FUCCI), and employed the mitotic harvesting method that is one of the cell cycle synchronization methods. The imaging analysis confirmed that the cell cycle is highly synchronized after mitotic cell harvesting until 18-20 h of the doubling time has elapsed. Also, flow cytometry analysis revealed that the S and G2 phases peak at approximately 12 and 14-16 h, respectively, after mitotic harvesting. In addition, the clonogenic assay showed the changes in surviving fractions following exposure to X-rays according to the progress through the cell cycle. These results indicate that HeLa-FUCCI cells become radioresistant in the G1 phase, become radiosensitive in the early S phase, rapidly become radioresistant in the late S phase, and become radiosensitive again in the G2 phase. Our findings may contribute to the further development of combinations of radiation and cell cycle-specific anticancer agents.
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- 2024
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11. Sociodemographic associations with uptake of novel therapies for acute myeloid leukemia.
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Hantel A, Cernik C, Uno H, Walsh TP, Calip GS, DeAngelo DJ, Lathan CS, and Abel GA
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- Humans, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic, Sulfonamides therapeutic use, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute drug therapy, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute epidemiology
- Abstract
Inequitable uptake of novel therapies (NT) in non-cancer settings are known for patients with lower socioeconomic status (SES), People of Color (POC), and older adults. NT uptake equity in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is not well known. We performed a retrospective cohort study (1/2014-8/2022) of the United States nationwide Flatiron Health
TM electronic health record-derived, de-identified database. We estimated sociodemographic associations with AML NT receipt using incidence rate ratios (IRR). Odds ratios (OR) assessed differences in venetoclax (the most common NT) receipt at community sites and between site characteristics and NT adoption. Of 8081 patients (139 sites), 3102 (38%) received a NT. NT use increased annually (IRR 1.14, 95% confidence interval [1.07, 1.22]). NT receipt was similar between Non-Hispanic-Whites and POC (IRR 1.03, [0.91, 1.17]) and as age increased (IRR 1.02 [0.97, 1.07]). At community sites, Non-Hispanic-Whites were less likely to receive venetoclax (OR 0.77 [0.66, 0.91]); older age (OR 1.05 [1.04, 1.05]) and higher area-level SES were associated with venetoclax receipt (OR 1.23 [1.05, 1.43]). Early NT adopting sites had more prescribing physicians (OR 1.25 [1.13, 1.43]) and higher SES strata patients (OR 2.81 [1.08, 7.66]). Inequities in AML NT uptake were seen by SES; for venetoclax, differential uptake reflects its label indication for older adults and those with comorbidities., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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12. Pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic analysis of cefmetazole against extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae in dogs using Monte Carlo Simulation.
- Author
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Kusumoto M, Motegi T, Uno H, Yokono M, and Harada K
- Abstract
Introduction: The spread of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (ESBL-E) is a serious concern in companion animal medicine owing to their ability to develop multidrug resistance. Cefmetazole (CMZ) is a candidate drug for treating ESBL-E infections; however, its regimen in dogs has not been established. In this study, we investigated the pharmacokinetic (PK) indices of CMZ in dogs and performed PK-pharmacodynamic (PD) analyses using Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS)., Methods: In total, six healthy dogs received an intravenous bolus dose of CMZ (40 mg/kg body weight). Serum CMZ concentrations were evaluated using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, and PK indices were determined based on non-compartmental analysis. The PK-PD cut-off (COPD) values were calculated as the highest minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) that achieved ≥90% probability of target attainment for a target value of unbounded drug concentration exceeding 40% of the dosing interval. The cumulative fraction of response (CFR) was calculated based on the MIC distribution of wild-type ESBL-E from companion animals., Results: The area under the concentration-time curve and elimination half-time were 103.36 ± 7.49 mg·h/L and 0.84 ± 0.07 h, respectively. MCS analysis revealed that COPD values for regimens of 40 mg/kg q12, q8h, and q6h were ≤ 0.5, ≤2, and ≤ 4 μg/mL, respectively. A regimen of 40 mg/kg q6h was estimated to achieve a CFR of 80-90% for Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae . By contrast, all regimens exhibited a CFR of ≤70% for Proteus mirabilis and Enterobacter cloacae., Discussion: We conclude that CMZ at 40 mg/kg q6h could be a viable treatment regimen for dogs infected with ESBL-producing Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae ., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (Copyright © 2023 Kusumoto, Motegi, Uno, Yokono and Harada.)
- Published
- 2023
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13. A Case Report of Syphilis That Was Difficult to Distinguish From Penile Carcinoma.
- Author
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Tomioka M, Uno H, Seike K, Iinuma K, and Tatsuhiko M
- Abstract
A 43-year-old man presented with penile induration and lymphadenopathy. Computed tomography revealed multiple enlarged lymph nodes (LNs). Penile cancer was suspected, and a LN biopsy was performed. Histopathological examination revealed inflammation and fibrosis, with no findings indicating malignancy. Serological examination confirmed syphilis and treatment with amoxicillin was initiated. Thereafter, swelling in the LNs improved quickly. Penile cancer is usually suspected in the presence of penile induration. However, syphilis can also present with similar symptoms. To distinguish between syphilis and penile cancer, the patient's history, results of physical examination, and presence of tumor and infectious markers should be considered., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2023, Tomioka et al.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. Perilesional Targeted Biopsy Combined with MRI-TRUS Image Fusion-Guided Targeted Prostate Biopsy: An Analysis According to PI-RADS Scores.
- Author
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Tomioka M, Seike K, Uno H, Asano N, Watanabe H, Tomioka-Inagawa R, Kawase M, Kato D, Takai M, Iinuma K, Tobisawa Y, Nakane K, Tsuchiya K, Ito T, and Koie T
- Abstract
A prostate-targeted biopsy (TB) core is usually collected from a site where magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) indicates possible cancer. However, the extent of the lesion is difficult to accurately predict using MRI or TB alone. Therefore, we performed several biopsies around the TB site (perilesional [p] TB) and analyzed the association between the positive cores obtained using TB and pTB and the Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) scores. This retrospective study included patients who underwent prostate biopsies. The extent of pTB was defined as the area within 10 mm of a TB site. A total of 162 eligible patients were enrolled. Prostate cancer (PCa) was diagnosed in 75.2% of patients undergoing TB, with a positivity rate of 50.7% for a PI-RADS score of 3, 95.8% for a PI-RADS score of 4, and 100% for a PI-RADS score of 5. Patients diagnosed with PCa according to both TB and pTB had significantly higher positivity rates for PI-RADS scores of 4 and 5 than for a PI-RADS score of 3 ( p < 0.0001 and p = 0.0009, respectively). Additional pTB may be performed in patients with PI-RADS ≥ 4 regions of interest for assessing PCa malignancy.
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- 2023
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15. Pyrrole-Fused Azacoronene Analog with Sulfur Embedded in the Outer Periphery.
- Author
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Takase M, Sagawa A, Mori S, Okujima T, and Uno H
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- Molecular Structure, Crystallography, X-Ray, Oxidation-Reduction, Pyrroles, Sulfur
- Abstract
The synthesis of sulfur-embedded hexapyrrolohexaazacoronene (HPHAC) analog 2 and its corresponding desulfurized and rearranged compounds was achieved from tetrafluoroisothianaphthene. Structures of all the new π-skeletons were determined by X-ray crystallography. Comparison of the electronic spectrum of 2 with those of its derivatives revealed less involvement of the sulfur atom in π-conjugation. Similar to the reference HPHAC ( 1 ), compound 2 and its derivatives exhibited reversible oxidation behavior. The aromaticity of both neutral and dication states has been investigated through DFT calculations.
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- 2023
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16. Substituent effects on paratropicity and diatropicity in π-extended hexapyrrolohexaazacoronene.
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Takase M, Takata T, Oki K, Mori S, and Uno H
- Abstract
Research into the application of antiaromatic compounds as molecular materials is an attractive strategy in the development of electronic materials. Antiaromatic compounds have traditionally been considered to be unstable, and thus, the creation of stable antiaromatic compounds has been sought in the field of organic chemistry. Recently, some studies have been reported on the synthesis, isolation, and elucidation of the physical properties of compounds with stability and definitive antiaromatic properties. In general, antiaromatic compounds are considered to be more susceptible to substituents due to their inherently narrow HOMO-LUMO gap compared to aromatic compounds. However, there have been no studies examining substituent effects in antiaromatic compounds. In this study, we have developed a synthetic method to introduce various substituents into π-extended hexapyrrolohexaazacoronene (homoHPHAC
+ ), one of the stable and clearly antiaromatic compounds, and investigated the substituent effects on the optical, redox, and geometrical properties and paratropicity of a series of compounds. In addition, the properties of the two-electron oxidized form, homoHPHAC3+ , were investigated. Control of electronic properties by introducing substituents into antiaromatic compounds provides a new design guideline for molecular materials., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)- Published
- 2023
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17. Obesity Risk of Pediatric Central Nervous System Tumor Survivors: A Cross-Sectional Study.
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Wilson RL, Soja J, Yunker AG, Uno H, Gordon E, Cooney T, and Dieli-Conwright CM
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- Child, Young Adult, Humans, Male, Female, Overweight complications, Cross-Sectional Studies, Obesity complications, Obesity epidemiology, Body Mass Index, Survivors, Central Nervous System Neoplasms epidemiology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms complications, Pituitary Neoplasms complications, Pediatric Obesity complications
- Abstract
Adult survivors of pediatric central nervous system (CNS) tumors are at the highest risk for morbidity and late mortality among all childhood cancers due to a high burden of chronic conditions, and environmental and lifestyle factors. This study aims to epidemiologically characterize young adult survivors of pediatric CNS tumors using body mass index (BMI) to assess risk factors for obesity. Using a cross-sectional design, young adults (18-39 years) previously treated for pediatric CNS tumors and followed in a survivorship clinic during 2016-2021 were examined. Demographic, BMI, and diagnosis information were extracted from medical records of the most recent clinic visit. Data were assessed using a two-sample t-test, Fisher's exact test, and multivariable logistical regression. 198 survivors (53% female, 84.3% White) with a BMI status of underweight (4.0%), healthy weight (40.9%), overweight (26.8%), obesity (20.2%), and severe obesity (8.1%) were examined. Male sex (OR, 2.414; 95% CI, 1.321 to 4.414), older age at follow-up (OR, 1.103; 95% CI, 1.037 to 1.173), and craniopharyngioma diagnosis (OR, 5.764; 95% CI, 1.197 to 27.751) were identified as significant ( p < 0.05) obesity-related (≥25.0 kg/m
2 ) risk factors. The majority of patients were overweight or obese. As such, universal screening efforts with more precise determinants of body composition than BMI, risk stratification, and targeted lifestyle interventions are warranted during survivorship care.- Published
- 2023
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18. Improving Cognitive Function Through High-Intensity Interval Training in Breast Cancer Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Wilson R, Kang DW, Tahbaz M, Norris M, Uno H, Ligibel J, Guenette J, Christopher C, and Dieli-Conwright C
- Abstract
Background: More than 75% of patients with breast cancer treated with chemotherapy experience cognitive impairments (eg, memory and attention problems), commonly known as chemo-brain. Exercise, especially aerobic high-intensity interval training (HIIT), is associated with better cognitive function in healthy populations. However, clinical trials testing the impact of exercise interventions on chemotherapy-induced cognitive decline in patients with cancer are lacking, and the mechanisms through which exercise could improve cognitive function are unclear., Objective: The objective of the Improving Cognitive Function Through High-Intensity Interval Training in Breast Cancer Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy trial is to examine the effects of HIIT on cognitive function in patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy., Methods: This 2-arm, single-center, pilot randomized controlled trial will randomize 50 patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy to HIIT or attention control. The HIIT group will perform a supervised 16-week, thrice-weekly intervention, with each session including a 5-minute warm-up at 10% maximal power output (POmax), 10 sets of alternating 1-minute high-intensity (90% POmax) and 1-minute recovery (10% POmax) intervals, and a 5-minute cooldown (10% POmax). The attention control group will receive a stretching program with no exercise components and be asked to maintain their exercise levels for 16 weeks. The primary outcomes of the study are executive function and memory measured using the National Institutes of Health toolbox and resting-state connectivity and diffusion tensor imaging microstructure evaluated using magnetic resonance imaging. The secondary and tertiary outcomes include cardiorespiratory fitness, body composition, physical fitness, and psychosocial health. The study has been approved by the institutional review board of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (20-222)., Results: The trial was funded in January 2019, with recruitment started in June 2021. As of May 2022, a total of 4 patients have consented and been randomized (n=2, 50% to exercise; n=1, 25% to control; and n=1, 25% nonrandomized). Trial completion is expected in January 2024., Conclusions: This first-of-its-kind study incorporates a novel exercise intervention (ie, HIIT) and comprehensive cognitive measures. If positive, our findings will establish the pilot efficacy of HIIT on chemotherapy-induced cognitive function in patients with breast cancer, providing the foundation for future larger phase-II and phase-III trials to confirm the findings and potentially establish HIIT as a standard of care for women undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04724499; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04724499., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/39740., (©Rebekah Wilson, Dong-Woo Kang, Meghan Tahbaz, Mary Norris, Hajime Uno, Jennifer Ligibel, Jeffrey Guenette, Cameron Christopher, Christina Dieli-Conwright. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 07.04.2023.)
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- 2023
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19. Elucidating Analytic Bias Due to Informative Cohort Entry in Cancer Clinico-genomic Datasets.
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Kehl KL, Uno H, Gusev A, Groha S, Brown S, Lavery JA, Schrag D, and Panageas KS
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- Humans, Bias, Causality, Genomics, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: Oncologists often order genomic testing to inform treatment for worsening cancer. The resulting correlation between genomic testing timing and prognosis, or "informative entry," can bias observational clinico-genomic research. The efficacy of existing approaches to this problem in clinico-genomic cohorts is poorly understood., Methods: We simulated clinico-genomic cohorts followed from an index date to death. Subgroups in each cohort who underwent genomic testing before death were "observed." We varied data generation parameters under four scenarios: (i) independent testing and survival times; (ii) correlated testing and survival times for all patients; (iii) correlated testing and survival times for a subset of patients; and (iv) testing and mortality exclusively following progression events. We examined the behavior of conditional Kendall tau (Tc) statistics, Cox entry time coefficients, and biases in overall survival (OS) estimation and biomarker inference across scenarios., Results: Scenario #1 yielded null Tc and Cox entry time coefficients and unbiased OS inference. Scenario #2 yielded positive Tc, negative Cox entry time coefficients, underestimated OS, and biomarker associations biased toward the null. Scenario #3 yielded negative Tc, positive Cox entry time coefficients, and underestimated OS, but biomarker estimates were less biased. Scenario #4 yielded null Tc and Cox entry time coefficients, underestimated OS, and biased biomarker estimates. Transformation and copula modeling did not provide unbiased results., Conclusions: Approaches to informative clinico-genomic cohort entry, including Tc and Cox entry time statistics, are sensitive to heterogeneity in genotyping and survival time distributions., Impact: Novel methods are needed for unbiased inference using observational clinico-genomic data., (©2023 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2023
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20. Combining Breast Cancer Risk Prediction Models.
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Guan Z, Huang T, McCarthy AM, Hughes K, Semine A, Uno H, Trippa L, Parmigiani G, and Braun D
- Abstract
Accurate risk stratification is key to reducing cancer morbidity through targeted screening and preventative interventions. Multiple breast cancer risk prediction models are used in clinical practice, and often provide a range of different predictions for the same patient. Integrating information from different models may improve the accuracy of predictions, which would be valuable for both clinicians and patients. BRCAPRO is a widely used model that predicts breast cancer risk based on detailed family history information. A major limitation of this model is that it does not consider non-genetic risk factors. To address this limitation, we expand BRCAPRO by combining it with another popular existing model, BCRAT (i.e., Gail), which uses a largely complementary set of risk factors, most of them non-genetic. We consider two approaches for combining BRCAPRO and BCRAT: (1) modifying the penetrance (age-specific probability of developing cancer given genotype) functions in BRCAPRO using relative hazard estimates from BCRAT, and (2) training an ensemble model that takes BRCAPRO and BCRAT predictions as input. Using both simulated data and data from Newton-Wellesley Hospital and the Cancer Genetics Network, we show that the combination models are able to achieve performance gains over both BRCAPRO and BCRAT. In the Cancer Genetics Network cohort, we show that the proposed BRCAPRO + BCRAT penetrance modification model performs comparably to IBIS, an existing model that combines detailed family history with non-genetic risk factors.
- Published
- 2023
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21. Validation of mitotic harvesting method with human cervical carcinoma HeLa cells expressing fluorescent ubiquitination-based cell cycle indicators for radiation research.
- Author
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Seino R, Uno H, and Fukunaga H
- Subjects
- Humans, HeLa Cells, Fluorescence, Cell Cycle, Ubiquitination, Carcinoma
- Abstract
The cell cycle is a series of events in the process of one cell giving rise to two daughter cells. The mitotic harvesting method, established by Terasima and Tolmach in the 1960s, causes minimal physiological stress on the cells and achieves a high degree of cell cycle synchrony by collecting only mitotic cells from a cultured cell system. The purpose of the present study is to validate the versatility of the mitotic harvesting method using human cervical cell line HeLa cells expressing Fluorescent Ubiquitination-based Cell Cycle Indicators (FUCCI) and to estimate the cell cycle-dependent changes in radiosensitivity in HeLa-FUCCI cells. The image analysis showed that cell cycle synchrony was maintained for at least 24 hours after mitotic cell collection. Also, the clonogenic assay demonstrated changes in radiosensitivity that were cell cycle dependent. These results indicate that the mitotic harvesting method using FUCCI-expressing cells has high versatility in the field of radiation cell biology.
- Published
- 2023
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22. Low-frequency electrical stimulation of bilateral hind legs by belt electrodes is effective for preventing denervation-induced atrophies in multiple skeletal muscle groups in rats.
- Author
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Uno H, Kamiya S, Akimoto R, Hosoki K, Tadano S, Kouzaki K, Tamura Y, Kotani T, Isemura M, and Nakazato K
- Subjects
- Animals, Rats, Electric Stimulation, Muscular Atrophy prevention & control, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Muscle, Skeletal
- Abstract
Belt electrode skeletal muscle electrical stimulation (B-SES) can simultaneously contract multiple muscle groups. Although the beneficial effects of B-SES in clinical situations have been elucidated, its molecular mechanism remains unknown. In this study, we developed a novel rodent B-SES ankle stimulation system to test whether low-frequency stimulation prevents denervation-induced muscle atrophy. Electrical stimulations (7‒8 Hz, 30 min) with ankle belt electrodes were applied to Sprague-Dawley rats daily for one week. All animals were assigned to the control (CONT), denervation-induced atrophy (DEN), and DEN + electrical stimulation (ES) groups. The tibialis anterior (TA) and gastrocnemius (GAS) muscles were used to examine the effect of ES treatment. After seven daily sessions of continuous stimulation, muscle wet weight (n = 8-11), and muscle fiber cross-sectional area (CSA, n = 4-6) of TA and GAS muscles were lower in DEN and DEN + ES than in CON. However, it was significantly higher in DEN than DEN + ES, showing that ES partially prevented muscle atrophy. PGC-1α, COX-IV, and citrate synthase activities (n = 6) were significantly higher in DEN + ES than in DEN. The mRNA levels of muscle proteolytic molecules, Atrogin-1 and Murf1, were significantly higher in DEN than in CONT, while B-SES significantly suppressed their expression (p < 0.05). In conclusion, low-frequency electrical stimulation of the bilateral ankles using belt electrodes (but not the pad electrodes) is effective in preventing denervation-induced atrophy in multiple muscles, which has not been observed with pad electrodes. Maintaining the mitochondrial quantity and enzyme activity by low-frequency electrical stimulation is key to suppressing muscle protein degradation., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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23. A validation of models for prediction of pathogenic variants in mismatch repair genes.
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Shyr C, Blackford AL, Huang T, Ke J, Ouardaoui N, Trippa L, Syngal S, Ukaegbu C, Uno H, Nafa K, Stadler ZK, Offit K, Amos CI, Lynch PM, Chen S, Giardiello FM, Buchanan DD, Hopper JL, Jenkins MA, Southey MC, Win AK, Figueiredo JC, Braun D, and Parmigiani G
- Subjects
- Germ-Line Mutation genetics, Heterozygote, Humans, Mismatch Repair Endonuclease PMS2 genetics, MutL Protein Homolog 1 genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis diagnosis, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis genetics, DNA Mismatch Repair genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Models used to predict the probability of an individual having a pathogenic homozygous or heterozygous variant in a mismatch repair gene, such as MMRpro, are widely used. Recently, MMRpro was updated with new colorectal cancer penetrance estimates. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the predictive performance of MMRpro and other models for individuals with a family history of colorectal cancer., Methods: We performed a validation study of 4 models, Leiden, MMRpredict, PREMM
5 , and MMRpro, using 784 members of clinic-based families from the United States. Predicted probabilities were compared with germline testing results and evaluated for discrimination, calibration, and predictive accuracy. We analyzed several strategies to combine models and improve predictive performance., Results: MMRpro with additional tumor information (MMRpro+) and PREMM5 outperformed the other models in discrimination and predictive accuracy. MMRpro+ was the best calibrated with an observed to expected ratio of 0.98 (95% CI = 0.89-1.08). The combination models showed improvement over PREMM5 and performed similar to MMRpro+., Conclusion: MMRpro+ and PREMM5 performed well in predicting the probability of having a pathogenic homozygous or heterozygous variant in a mismatch repair gene. They serve as useful clinical decision tools for identifying individuals who would benefit greatly from screening and prevention strategies., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest G.P. is a cofounder and equity holder in Phaeno Inc., a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of Konica Minolta Precision Medicine, Inc (which includes Ambry Genetics and Invicro), and a consultant for Delfi Diagnostics and Foundation Medicine, Inc. D.B. and G.P. colead the BayesMendel lab, which develops and maintains the BayesMendel software package. This includes a variety of risk assessment tools including BRCAPRO, PancPRO, MelaPRO, MMRpro, and PanelPRO and is licensed for commercial use. All licensing revenues are used for software maintenance and upgrades. Neither BayesMendel lab leaders nor members derive personal income from BayesMendel licenses. D.B. and G.P. are coinventor of the Ask2me tool, which is commercially licensed. D.B.’s conflicts of interest are managed by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. S.S. has been a consultant for Myriad Genetics, Inc and has rights to the inventor portion of licensing revenues for the PREMM model. Z.K.S.’s immediate family member serves as a consultant in Ophthalmology for Alcon, Adverum Biotechnologies, Gyroscope Therapeutics Limited, Neurogene Inc, and REGENXBIO Inc, outside the submitted work. All other authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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24. Estimation of breeding population size using DNA-based pedigree reconstruction in brown bears.
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Shimozuru M, Jimbo M, Adachi K, Kawamura K, Shirane Y, Umemura Y, Ishinazaka T, Nakanishi M, Kiyonari M, Yamanaka M, Amagai Y, Ijuin A, Sakiyama T, Kasai S, Nose T, Shirayanagi M, Tsuruga H, Mano T, Tsubota T, Fukasawa K, and Uno H
- Abstract
Robust estimates of demographic parameters are critical for effective wildlife conservation and management but are difficult to obtain for elusive species. We estimated the breeding and adult population sizes, as well as the minimum population size, in a high-density brown bear population on the Shiretoko Peninsula, in Hokkaido, Japan, using DNA-based pedigree reconstruction. A total of 1288 individuals, collected in and around the Shiretoko Peninsula between 1998 and 2020, were genotyped at 21 microsatellite loci. Among them, 499 individuals were identified by intensive genetic sampling conducted in two consecutive years (2019 and 2020) mainly by noninvasive methods (e.g., hair and fecal DNA). Among them, both parents were assigned for 330 bears, and either maternity or paternity was assigned to 47 and 76 individuals, respectively. The subsequent pedigree reconstruction indicated a range of breeding and adult (≥4 years old) population sizes: 128-173 for female breeders and 66-91 male breeders, and 155-200 for female adults and 84-109 male adults. The minimum population size was estimated to be 449 (252 females and 197 males) in 2019. Long-term continuous genetic sampling prior to a short-term intensive survey would enable parentage to be identified in a population with a high probability, thus enabling reliable estimates of breeding population size for elusive species., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2022 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2022
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25. Change in the Parent-Clinician Relationship Throughout the First Year of Treatment in Pediatric Oncology.
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Mack JW, Jaung T, Uno H, and Brackett J
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- Child, Communication, Female, Hospitals, Pediatric, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, Neoplasms therapy, Parents
- Abstract
Importance: Challenges in the therapeutic relationship between clinicians and parents of children with cancer have been shown to emerge immediately after diagnosis, but little is known about whether such relationships improve over time., Objective: To better understand the potential evolution of parent-clinician relationships over the first year after diagnosis of pediatric cancer., Design, Setting, and Participants: This survey study was conducted from November 2015 to September 2020 at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Hospital and Texas Children's Hospital. Participants were oncology clinicians (attending physicians and fellows or nurse practitioners) and parents of children (aged <18 years) with a cancer diagnosis. Surveys were completed at study enrollment (soon after diagnosis [baseline]) and at the 3-month and 12-month follow-up., Exposures: Children had to have had at least 3 previous clinical visits with a primary oncology clinician., Main Outcomes and Measures: Survey instruments included the parent and clinician versions of the Relationship Challenges Scale, and factors associated with changes in relationships, including parental, clinician, and health care system attributes, were measured., Results: Survey participants included 150 parents (118 women [78.7%]; 98 with White race and ethnicity [65.3%]) and 49 clinicians (39 [79.6%] women; 39 with White race and ethnicity [79.6%]). Parents reported on 175 relationships with clinicians, and clinicians reported on 98 relationships with parents at all 3 time points (baseline, 3-month follow-up, and 12-month follow-up). Of the 175 relationships, 33 (18.9%) were considered to be challenging by parents at baseline, 27 (15.4%) were considered to be challenging at the 3-month follow-up, and 32 (18.3%) were considered to be challenging at the 12-month follow-up. Of the 33 challenging relationships at baseline, 20 (60.6%) resolved at the 12-month follow-up, whereas 13 (39.4%) had persistent challenges. However, 19 relationships that were not challenging at baseline had new challenges at the 12-month follow-up, corresponding to 59.4% of all challenges at the 12-month follow-up. No clinician behaviors were associated with improvement. Strategies used frequently (≥50%) by clinicians in their relationships that were associated with improvement included holding family meetings, apologizing, adapting to the parent's communication style, and devoting extra time and attention., Conclusions and Relevance: Results of this study showed that some parents experienced challenging relationships with their child's oncology clinicians beginning at diagnosis and throughout the first year after diagnosis. Although many such relationships improved, others worsened, reflecting the vulnerable and stressful nature of parent-clinician relationships.
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- 2022
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26. Association of Oncologist Participation in Medicare's Oncology Care Model With Patient Receipt of Novel Cancer Therapies.
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Manz CR, Tramontano AC, Uno H, Parikh RB, Bekelman JE, and Schrag D
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- Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Medical Oncology, Medicare, United States, Neoplasms therapy, Oncologists
- Abstract
Importance: Medicare's Oncology Care Model (OCM) was an alternative payment model that tied performance-based payments to cost and quality goals for participating oncology practices. A major concern about the OCM regarded inclusion of high-cost cancer therapies, which could potentially disincentivize oncologists from prescribing novel therapies., Objective: To examine whether oncologist participation in the OCM changed the likelihood that patients received novel therapies vs alternative treatments., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study of Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program data and Medicare claims compared patient receipt of novel therapies for patients treated by oncologists participating vs not participating in the OCM in the period before (January 2015-June 2016) and after (July 2016-December 2018) OCM initiation. Participants included Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries in SEER registries who were eligible to receive 1 of 10 novel cancer therapies that received US Food and Drug Administration approval in the 18 months before implementation of the OCM. The study excluded the Hawaii registry because complete data were not available at the time of the data request. Patients in the OCM vs non-OCM groups were matched on novel therapy cohort, outcome time period, and oncologist specialist status. Analysis was conducted between July 2021 and April 2022., Exposures: Oncologist participation in the OCM., Main Outcomes and Measures: Preplanned analyses evaluated patient receipt of 1 of 10 novel therapies vs alternative therapies specific to the patient's cancer for the overall study sample and for racial subgroups., Results: The study included 2839 matched patients (760 in the OCM group and 2079 in the non-OCM group; median [IQR] age, 72.7 [68.3-77.6] years; 1591 women [56.0%]). Among patients in the non-OCM group, 33.2% received novel therapies before and 40.1% received novel therapies after the start of the OCM vs 39.9% and 50.3% of patients in the OCM group (adjusted difference-in-differences, 3.5 percentage points; 95% CI, -3.7 to 10.7 percentage points; P = .34). In subgroup analyses, second-line immunotherapy use in lung cancer was greater among patients in the OCM group vs non-OCM group (adjusted difference-in-differences, 17.4 percentage points; 95% CI, 4.8-30.0 percentage points; P = .007), but no differences were seen in other subgroups. Over the entire study period, patients with oncologists participating in the OCM were more likely to receive novel therapies than those with oncologists who were not participating (odds ratio, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.09-1.97; P = .01)., Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that participation in the OCM was not associated with oncologists' prescribing novel therapies to Medicare beneficiaries with cancer. These findings suggest that OCM financial incentives did not decrease patient access to novel therapies.
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- 2022
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27. Diel and monthly activity pattern of brown bears and sika deer in the Shiretoko Peninsula, Hokkaido, Japan.
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Kawamura K, Jimbo M, Adachi K, Shirane Y, Nakanishi M, Umemura Y, Ishinazaka T, Uno H, Sashika M, Tsubota T, and Shimozuru M
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- Animals, Animals, Wild, Female, Humans, Japan, Seasons, Deer, Ursidae
- Abstract
Mammals exhibit several types of diel activity pattern, including nocturnal, diurnal, crepuscular, and cathemeral. These patterns vary inter- and intra-specifically and are affected by environmental factors, individual status, and interactions with other individuals or species. Determining the factors that shape diel activity patterns is challenging but essential for understanding the behavioral ecology of animal species, and for wildlife conservation and management. Using camera-trap surveys, we investigated the species distributions and activity patterns of terrestrial mammals on the Shiretoko Peninsula, Hokkaido, Japan, with particular focus on brown bears and sika deer. From June to October 2019, a total of 7,530 observations were recorded by 65 camera-traps for eight species, including two alien species. The diel activity pattern of brown bears was diurnal/crepuscular, similar to that of bears in North America, but different from European populations. Bear observations were more frequent during the autumnal hyperphagia period, and adult females and sub-adults were more diurnal than adult males. In addition, bears inside the protected area were more diurnal than those outside it. These findings suggest that appetite motivation, competitive interactions between conspecifics, and human activities potentially affect bear activity patterns. Similar to other sika deer populations and other deer species, the diel activity patterns of sika deer were crepuscular. Deer showed less variation in activity patterns among months and sex-age classes, while adult males were observed more frequently during the autumn copulation period, suggesting that reproductive motivation affects their activity patterns.
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- 2022
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28. Regional Disparities in the Use and Delivery of Adjuvant Radiation Therapy after Lumpectomy for Breast Cancer in the Medicare Population.
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Lui G, Hassett MJ, Tramontano AC, Uno H, and Punglia RS
- Abstract
Purpose: We examined radiation therapy (RT) use among patients with early-stage breast cancer and analyzed the contribution of patient, cancer, and regional factors to the likelihood of RT receipt across Health Service Areas., Methods and Materials: We identified 13,176 patients aged 66 to 79 years in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program-Medicare database who were diagnosed with lymph node-negative breast cancer in 2007 to 2011 and were treated with breast-conserving surgery. Patients were stratified as being at high risk or low risk for recurrence based on National Comprehensive Cancer Network Guidelines. Receipt of RT was studied with 5 modeling approaches to determine whether RT use and regional variation in its use changed based on the risk level of the cohort. Multivariable mixed-effects logistic regression was performed for each outcome. Choropleth maps were used to describe patterns of RT use., Results: Among high-risk patients, 70.1% received RT, compared with 72.6% of low-risk patients ( P = .002). Among patients receiving RT, 60.9% were classified as high-risk, compared with 63.0% of patients who did not receive RT ( P = .002). In multivariable analyses, patients in all rural areas had lower odds of receiving RT compared with the entire cohort (odds ratio [OR], 0.73; P < .001) and had lower odds of being high-risk and receiving RT (OR, 0.69; P < .001). Black patients (OR, 0.73; P = .001) and Asian patients (OR, 0.74; P = .004) had decreased likelihood of receiving RT compared with the entire cohort. The regional interclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for the model predicting receipt of RT among all patients was 0.05 and among low-risk patients was 0.06. The regional ICC dropped to 0.02 for the model predicting being both high-risk and receiving RT among all patients., Conclusions: We observed regional and racial and ethnic disparities in RT receipt among our cohort. Reassuringly, less regional variability was observed for RT receipt among those at high risk for recurrence. Future work is needed to understand the causes of these regional disparities to better serve patients who may benefit from treatment., (© 2022 The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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29. Targeting Adiposity and Inflammation With Movement to Improve Prognosis in Breast Cancer Survivors (The AIM Trial): Rationale, Design, and Methods.
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Kang DW, Wilson RL, Gonzalo-Encabo P, Norris MK, Hans M, Tahbaz M, Dawson J, Nguyen D, Normann AJ, Yunker AG, Sami N, Uno H, Ligibel JA, Mittelman SD, and Dieli-Conwright CM
- Abstract
Background: Obesity is a significant contributor to breast cancer recurrence and mortality. A central mechanism by which obesity stimulates cancer progression is through chronic, low-grade inflammation in adipose tissue. Exercise interventions to target chronic inflammation has a potential to improve obesity- and breast cancer-related outcomes; however, no studies have investigated the roles of exercise in modulating adipose tissue inflammation in breast cancer survivors. Also, it is unclear which exercise prescription would be optimal to maximize the outcomes. Therefore, we designed a randomized controlled trial (Taking AIM at Breast Cancer: Targeting Adiposity and Inflammation with Movement to Improve Prognosis in Breast Cancer Survivors [AIM] Trial) to examine the mechanisms by which different modalities of exercise impact chronic inflammation as a biomarker of breast cancer prognosis., Methods: The AIM trial is a prospective, three-armed, phase II randomized controlled trial investigating the effects of a 16-week supervised circuit aerobic and resistance exercise (CARE) program versus a traditional aerobic and resistance exercise (TARE) program and attention control (AC) on adipose tissue inflammation in breast cancer survivors. 276 patients who are diagnosed with stage 0-III breast cancer, post-treatment, sedentary, and centrally obese are randomized to one of the three groups. The CARE and TARE groups participate in thrice-weekly supervised exercise sessions for 16 weeks. The AC group are offered the CARE program after the intervention period. The primary endpoint is adipose tissue inflammation assessed by core biopsy and blood draw. The secondary and tertiary endpoints are sarcopenic obesity, physical fitness and function, and patient reported outcomes. The exploratory outcomes are long-term breast cancer outcomes., Discussion: This is the first randomized controlled trial examining the effects of exercise on adipose tissue inflammation in obese, breast cancer survivors. Our findings are anticipated to contribute to a better understanding of exercise modalities and mechanisms on adipose tissue inflammation that can potentially improve breast cancer prognosis., Clinical Trial Registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03091842 identifier [NCT#03091842]., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Kang, Wilson, Gonzalo-Encabo, Norris, Hans, Tahbaz, Dawson, Nguyen, Normann, Yunker, Sami, Uno, Ligibel, Mittelman and Dieli-Conwright.)
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- 2022
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30. Implementation of patient-reported outcomes for symptom management in oncology practice through the SIMPRO research consortium: a protocol for a pragmatic type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation multi-center cluster-randomized stepped wedge trial.
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Hassett MJ, Wong S, Osarogiagbon RU, Bian J, Dizon DS, Jenkins HH, Uno H, Cronin C, and Schrag D
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- Humans, Medical Oncology, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Palliative Care, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Surveys and Questionnaires, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms therapy, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Many cancer patients experience high symptom burden. Healthcare in the USA is reactive, not proactive, and doctor-patient communication is often suboptimal. As a result, symptomatic patients may suffer between clinic visits. In research settings, systematic assessment of electronic patient-reported outcomes (ePROs), coupled with clinical responses to severe symptoms, has eased this symptom burden, improved health-related quality of life, reduced acute care needs, and extended survival. Implementing ePRO-based symptom management programs in routine care is challenging. To study methods to overcome the implementation gap and improve symptom control for cancer patients, the National Cancer Institute created the Cancer-Moonshot funded Improving the Management of symPtoms during And following Cancer Treatment (IMPACT) Consortium., Methods: Symptom Management IMplementation of Patient Reported Outcomes in Oncology (SIMPRO) is one of three research centers that make up the IMPACT Consortium. SIMPRO, a multi-disciplinary team of investigators from six US health systems, seeks to develop, test, and integrate an electronic symptom management program (eSyM) for medical oncology and surgery patients into the Epic electronic health record (EHR) system and associated patient portal. eSyM supports real-time symptom tracking for patients, automated clinician alerts for severe symptoms, and specialized reports to facilitate population management. To rigorously evaluate its impact, eSyM is deployed through a pragmatic stepped wedge cluster-randomized trial. The primary study outcome is the occurrence of an emergency department treat-and-release event within 30 days of starting chemotherapy or being discharged following surgery. Secondary outcomes include hospitalization rates, chemotherapy use (time to initiation and duration of therapy), and patient quality of life and satisfaction. As a type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation study, facilitators and barriers to implementation are assessed throughout the project., Discussion: Creating and deploying eSyM requires collaboration between dozens of staff across diverse health systems, dedicated engagement of patient advocates, and robust support from Epic. This trial will evaluate eSyM in routine care settings across academic and community-based healthcare systems serving patients in rural and metropolitan locations. This trial's pragmatic design will promote generalizable results about the uptake, acceptability, and impact of an EHR-integrated, ePRO-based symptom management program., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03850912 . Registered on February 22, 2019. Last updated on November 9, 2021., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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31. Reducing Metabolic Dysregulation in Obese Latina and/or Hispanic Breast Cancer Survivors Using Physical Activity (ROSA) Trial: A Study Protocol.
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Gonzalo-Encabo P, Wilson RL, Kang DW, Norris MK, Uno H, Christopher CN, Chow C, Sami N, Fox FS, Ligibel JA, and Dieli-Conwright CM
- Abstract
Background: Latina and Hispanic breast cancer survivors (LHBCS) are at increased risk for long-term complications and poorer metabolic health, including metabolic dysregulation (MetD) before and following breast cancer diagnosis. MetD can increase risk of cancer recurrence, death, and comorbid conditions by increasing inflammation and cancer cell proliferation. While exercise improves physical fitness and metabolic outcomes in breast cancer survivors, there is a lack of studies including underrepresented and disadvantaged minority groups such as LHBCS., Methods: Our 12-month randomized (exercise or attention control) controlled trial (the ROSA trial) aims to utilize a progressive combined aerobic and resistance exercise program to improve MetD, insulin resistance, and visceral adiposity among obese LHBCS. We aim to recruit 160 women with Stage I-III breast cancer who are sedentary, centrally obese, and have completed treatment (e.g., surgery, radiation, chemotherapy) prior to enrollment. Participants randomized to the exercise group receive 16-weeks of virtually supervised aerobic and resistance training, followed by 16-weeks of unsupervised home-based aerobic and resistance exercise, and 16-weeks of follow-up. The attention control group receive a 12-month home-based stretching program. Primary and secondary outcomes are measured every 4-weeks during study visits., Discussion: The ROSA trial is the first exercise oncology trial targeting high-risk sedentary, obese LHBCS to improve MetD-related outcomes. Results of this trial will help illuminate how exercise impacts health-related outcomes, survivorship, and recurrence, and inform future exercise oncology guidelines to reduce health disparities among minority cancer survivors., Competing Interests: Author FF was employed by the company Gerson Lehrman Group, LLC. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Gonzalo-Encabo, Wilson, Kang, Norris, Uno, Christopher, Chow, Sami, Fox, Ligibel and Dieli-Conwright.)
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- 2022
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32. Randomized controlled trial of geriatric consultation versus standard care in older adults with hematologic malignancies.
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DuMontier C, Uno H, Hshieh T, Zhou G, Chen R, Magnavita ES, Mozessohn L, Javedan H, Stone RM, Soiffer RJ, Driver JA, and Abel GA
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Hospitalization, Humans, Referral and Consultation, Geriatric Assessment, Hematologic Neoplasms epidemiology, Hematologic Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
We conducted a randomized controlled trial in older adults with hematologic malignancies to determine the impact of geriatrician consultation embedded in our oncology clinic alongside standard care. From February 2015 to May 2018, transplant-ineligible patients aged ≥75 years who presented for initial consultation for lymphoma, leukemia, or multiple myeloma at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Boston, MA, USA) were eligible. Pre-frail and frail patients, classified based on phenotypic and deficit-accumulation approaches, were randomized to receive either standard oncologic care with or without consultation with a geriatrician. The primary outcome was 1-year overall survival. Secondary outcomes included unplanned care utilization within 6 months of follow-up and documented end-of-life (EOL) goals-of-care discussions. Clinicians were surveyed as to their impressions of geriatric consultation. One hundred sixty patients were randomized to either geriatric consultation plus standard care (n=60) or standard care alone (n=100). The median age of the patients was 80.4 years (standard deviation = 4.2). Of those randomized to geriatric consultation, 48 (80%) completed at least one visit with a geriatrician. Consultation did not improve survival at 1 year compared to standard care (difference: 2.9%, 95% confidence interval: -9.5% to 15.2%, P=0.65), and did not significantly reduce the incidence of emergency department visits, hospital admissions, or days in hospital. Consultation did improve the odds of having EOL goals-of-care discussions (odds ratio = 3.12, 95% confidence interval: 1.03 to 9.41) and was valued by surveyed hematologic-oncology clinicians, with 62.9%-88.2% of them rating consultation as useful in the management of several geriatric domains.
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- 2022
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33. Response of an Indicator Species, Dryopteris crassirhizoma , to Temporal and Spatial Variations in Sika Deer Density.
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Inatomi Y, Uno H, Ueno M, Takafumi H, and Osa Y
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Identifying appropriate indicator species for the impact of deer on forest vegetation is crucial for forest management in deer habitats and is required to be sensitive to temporal and spatial variations in deer density. Dryopteris crassirhizoma was selected as a new indicator to evaluate the response to these variations. We examined the population-level characteristics, morphological characteristics at the individual level, and grazing intensity of D. crassirhizoma at temporally different deer density sites in Hokkaido, Japan. The response of D. crassirhizoma to spatial variation in deer density was also examined within and between two regions in Hokkaido, Japan. Although the population-level characteristics and morphological characteristics did not significantly respond to short-term decreases in deer density, grazing intensity significantly decreased with decreasing deer density. The grazing intensity was also positively related to the spatial variation of deer density within both regions, but the estimated coefficient of the grazing intensity differed between regions. We concluded that D. crassirhizoma can be a useful indicator species of the impact of deer on forest vegetation. The grazing intensity of the indicator species was sensitive to temporal and spatial variations in deer density within the region.
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- 2022
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34. Signaling probe design for amplification-free detection of bacterial genes using DNA microarray.
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Uno H, Takeuchi H, Yoshino T, Tadenuma T, Hirakawa Y, Maeda Y, Taguchi T, Matsunaga T, and Tanaka T
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- DNA Probes, DNA, Bacterial, Escherichia coli genetics, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer, Genes, Bacterial
- Abstract
DNA microarrays are useful to detect microorganisms for various purposes including clinical testing and food safety. However, conventional DNA microarrays need complicated operations such as amplification, fluorescence labeling, and washing steps. To address this issue, we previously developed the signaling probe-based DNA microarray system that can eliminate these steps, and demonstrated a direct detection of bacterial genes. Nonetheless, this system requires well-designed probe sets due to the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based mode of action. Up to date, the probe design was highly dependent on the trial-and-error processes. In this study, we propose a strategy to rationally design the sequences of signaling probes based on the thermodynamic analysis. This analysis aided to improve the probe performance approximately 2.8 times, without experiments, by suppressing the secondary structure formation of the probes. We successfully demonstrated the specific and amplification-free detection of 5S rRNA from total RNA extracted from Escherichia coli within 30 min., (Copyright © 2021 The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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35. Patterns of Medical Care Cost by Service Type for Patients With Recurrent and De Novo Advanced Cancer.
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Banegas MP, Hassett MJ, Keast EM, Carroll NM, O'Keeffe-Rosetti M, Fishman PA, Uno H, Hornbrook MC, and Ritzwoller DP
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- Adult, Aged, Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Colorectal Neoplasms epidemiology, Female, Humans, Lung Neoplasms epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Neoplasm Staging economics, Registries, Retrospective Studies, United States, Breast Neoplasms economics, Colorectal Neoplasms economics, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Lung Neoplasms economics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local economics
- Abstract
Objectives: There is limited knowledge about the cost patterns of patients who receive a diagnosis of de novo and recurrent advanced cancers in the United States., Methods: Data on patients who received a diagnosis of de novo stage IV or recurrent breast, colorectal, or lung cancer between 2000 and 2012 from 3 integrated health systems were used to estimate average annual costs for total, ambulatory, inpatient, medication, and other services during (1) 12 months preceding de novo or recurrent diagnosis (preindex) and (2) diagnosis month through 11 months after (postindex), from the payer perspective. Generalized linear regression models estimated costs adjusting for patient and clinical factors., Results: Patients who developed a recurrence <1 year after their initial cancer diagnosis had significantly higher total costs in the preindex period than those with recurrence ≥1 year after initial diagnosis and those with de novo stage IV disease across all cancers (all P < .05). Patients with de novo stage IV breast and colorectal cancer had significantly higher total costs in the postindex period than patients with cancer recurrent in <1 year and ≥1 year (all P < .05), respectively. Patients in de novo stage IV and those with recurrence in ≥1 year experienced significantly higher postindex costs than the preindex period (all P < .001)., Conclusions: Our findings reveal distinct cost patterns between patients with de novo stage IV, recurrent <1-year, and recurrent ≥1-year cancer, suggesting unique care trajectories that may influence resource use and planning. Future cost studies among patients with advanced cancer should account for de novo versus recurrent diagnoses and timing of recurrence to obtain estimates that accurately reflect these care pattern complexities., (Copyright © 2021 International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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36. Classification of Skin Injury Risk Caused by Extravasation of Electrolyte Solutions or Infusions in a Rat Model.
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Taogoshi T, Shibata Y, Uno H, Yokooji T, Tanaka M, Hide M, and Matsuo H
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- Animals, Calcium Chloride, Electrolytes, Erythema, Infusions, Intravenous, Irritants, Potassium Chloride, Rats, Sodium Chloride, Calcium Gluconate, Magnesium Sulfate adverse effects
- Abstract
Cytotoxic agents are classified according to the severity of skin injury after extravasation. However, injuries caused by extravasation of noncytotoxic agents have not been sufficiently investigated, although the risk of extravasation is mentioned in medical safety information published by the Japan Council for Quality Health Care. Therefore, in this study, we focused on noncytotoxic electrolyte solutions and infusions and evaluated skin injuries during leakage using extravasation model rats. Rats were anesthetized and intradermally injected with 100 µL of an electrolyte solution or infusion. Injection lesions were macroscopically and histopathologically evaluated for extravasation injuries. Each electrolyte solution and infusion were classified into three categories (vesicants, irritants, and non-tissue-damaging agents) depending on the degree of skin injury. Similar to saline, 0.3% potassium chloride and 0.6% magnesium sulfate showed almost no injury, and 3% sodium chloride and BFLUID
® caused erythema and induration. Erythema, induration, and ulceration were observed with the following: 10% sodium chloride, 2% calcium chloride, 8.5% calcium gluconate, 12.3% magnesium sulfate, MAGSENT® , FESIN® , and Intralipos® . The duration of damage with these agents was markedly prolonged. Electrolyte solutions and infusions can be classified into vesicants (10% sodium chloride, 2% calcium chloride, 8.5% calcium gluconate, 12.3% magnesium sulfate, MAGSENT® , FESIN® , and Intralipos® ), irritants (3% sodium chloride and BFLUID® ), and non-tissue-damaging agents (0.3% potassium chloride and 0.6% magnesium sulfate) according to their composition. The characteristic symptoms and severity of each drug extravasation revealed in this study will provide basic information for preparation of guidelines for treatment of extravasation.- Published
- 2022
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37. Predictors of Transition to Frailty in Middle-Aged and Older People With HIV: A Prospective Cohort Study.
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Lorenz DR, Mukerji SS, Misra V, Uno H, Gelman BB, Moore DJ, Singer EJ, Morgello S, and Gabuzda D
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- Aged, Aging, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Comorbidity, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Female, Frailty epidemiology, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections epidemiology, Humans, Liver Diseases epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Frail Elderly, Frailty diagnosis, HIV Infections complications
- Abstract
Background: People with HIV (PWH) have increased frailty risk at younger ages compared with the general population. Multimorbidity is associated with frailty, yet effects of specific comorbidities on transition to frailty in PWH are unknown., Setting: Prospective study of 219 PWH age 45 years or older in the National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium., Methods: Frailty status was categorized using Fried frailty phenotype criteria. Comorbidities [bone disease, cardiovascular disease, cerebrovascular disease, liver disease, renal disease, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), hypertension, obesity, cancers, neuropsychiatric conditions] were assessed from longitudinal data. Associations between baseline comorbidities and transition to frailty within 30 months were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression models. Grip strength was assessed using mixed-effects models., Results: At baseline, the median age was 61 years, 73% were male 98% were on antiretroviral therapy, 29% had ≥3 comorbidities, 27% were robust, and 73% were pre-frail. Cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, and COPD were independent predictors of transition to frailty within 30 months in models adjusted for age, sex, and multimorbidity (≥3 additional comorbidities) [hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) 2.52 (1.29 to 4.93), 2.31 (1.12 to 4.76), and 1.82 (0.95 to 3.48), respectively]. Furthermore, cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, COPD, or liver disease co-occurring with multimorbidity was associated with substantially increased frailty hazards compared with multimorbidity alone (hazard ratios 4.75-7.46). Cerebrovascular disease was associated with decreased baseline grip strength (P = 0.0001), whereas multimorbidity, diabetes, and COPD were associated with declining grip strength (P < 0.10)., Conclusions: In older PWH, cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, COPD, or liver disease co-occurring with multimorbidity is associated with substantially increased risk of becoming frail within 30 months. Interventions targeting these comorbidities may ameliorate frailty and age-related functional decline in PWH., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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38. Multimorbidity networks associated with frailty among middle-aged and older people with HIV.
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Lorenz DR, Mukerji SS, Misra V, Uno H, Gelman BB, Moore DJ, Singer EJ, Morgello S, and Gabuzda D
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- Adult, Aged, Aging, Cohort Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multimorbidity, Frailty epidemiology, HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: People with HIV (PWH) have increased prevalence of multimorbidity and frailty at younger ages compared with the general population. This study investigated individual and combinatorial effects of neuropsychiatric and medical comorbidities as predictors of frailty in PWH., Design: Analysis of data from the National NeuroAIDS Tissue Consortium, a longitudinal observational cohort., Methods: Five hundred and twenty-four PWH over age 40 years were classified using Fried's Frailty criteria. Twelve comorbidities were documented from longitudinal data and associations between individual and co-occurring comorbidities with frailty were assessed using weighted network and logistic regression analyses., Results: At frailty assessment between 2015 and 2020, median age was 61 years, 76% were men, 94% were on antiretroviral therapy (ART), 73% had two or more comorbidities, 24% were frail, and 52% were prefrail. Among individual comorbidities, highest odds of frailty were in participants with depressive symptoms [adjusted odds ratio (aOR), 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.48 (2.22-5.46)], followed by bone disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) [2.47 (1.28-4.72) and 2.13 (1.36-3.34), respectively]. Among co-occurring comorbidities, highest odds of frailty were in participants having depressive symptoms with diabetes, hypertension, or obesity [aORs (95% CIs) 5.29 (2.32-12.08), 5.21 (2.65-10.40), 4.85 (2.39-9.95), respectively], cognitive impairment with diabetes or renal disease [2.81 (1.38-5.68) and 2.53 (1.26-5.03), respectively], renal disease with cardiovascular disease [2.81 (1.32-6.01)], and diabetes with obesity [2.76 (1.39-5.45)]., Conclusion: Co-occurrence of depressive symptoms, cognitive impairment, diabetes, or renal disease with other medical conditions substantially increases odds of frailty in older PWH. Identifying and treating these comorbidities may help to reduce functional decline with aging in PWH., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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39. Parent and Clinician Perspectives on Challenging Parent-Clinician Relationships in Pediatric Oncology.
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Mack JW, Jaung T, Uno H, and Brackett J
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- Boston, Cancer Care Facilities, Female, Humans, Male, Medical Oncology, Pediatrics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude of Health Personnel, Neoplasms psychology, Parents psychology, Physician-Patient Relations, Physicians psychology
- Abstract
Importance: Parents of children with cancer value strong therapeutic relationships with oncology clinicians, but not every relationship is positive., Objective: To identify the prevalence of challenging parent-clinician relationships in pediatric oncology and factors associated with these challenges from parent and clinician perspectives., Design, Setting, and Participants: This survey was conducted among parents and oncology clinicians of children with cancer within 3 months of diagnosis from November 2015 to July 2019 at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Hospital and Texas Children's Hospital. Participants were 400 parents of children with cancer and 80 clinicians (ie, oncology physicians and nurse practitioners). Parents completed surveys about relationships with 1 to 2 primary oncology clinicians; clinicians completed surveys about relationships with parents. Data were analyzed from July 2020 to August 2021., Exposures: At least 3 previous clinical visits between parent and clinician., Main Outcomes and Measures: The Relationship Challenges Scale Parent Version and Clinician Version were developed and used to measure threats to the therapeutic alliance. For the Relationship Challenges Scale-Parent version, relationships were considered challenging if a parent responded to any single question in the 2 lowest of 4 possible categories. For the Relationship Challenges Scale-Clinician version, challenges were considered to be present if a clinician reported responses in the 3 lowest of 6 possible response categories to any question., Results: Among 400 parents, there were 298 [74.5%] women, 25 Asian individuals (6.3%), 28 Black individuals (7.0%), 97 Hispanic individuals (24.3%), 223 White individuals (55.8%), and 10 individuals (2.4%) with other race or ethnicity; race and ethnicity data were missing for 17 (4.3%) individuals. Among 80 clinicians, there were 57 (71.3%) women, 38 attending physicians (47.5%), 32 fellows (40.0%), and 10 nurse practitioners (12.5%). Parents identified 676 unique relationships with clinicians, and clinician reports were available for 338 relationships. Among 338 relationships with paired parent and clinician surveys, 81 relationships (24.0%) were considered challenging by parents, 127 relationships (37.6%) were considered challenging by clinicians, and 33 relationships (9.8%) were considered challenging by parent and clinician. Parents with Asian or other race or ethnicity (odds ratio [OR] vs White parents, 3.62; 95% CI, 1.59-8.26) or who had lower educational attainment (OR for ≤high school vs >high school, 3.03; 95% CI, 1.56-5.90) were more likely to experience relationships as challenging. Clinicians used a variety of strategies more frequently in 127 relationships in which they perceived challenges vs 211 relationships in which they did not perceive challenges, such as holding regular family meetings (22 relationships [17.3%] vs 13 relationships [6.2%]; P = .009) and offering extra time and attention (66 relationships [52%] vs 60 relationships [28.4%]; P < .001). However, these strategies were not used with increased frequency when parents experienced relationships as challenging vs when parents did not experience this., Conclusions and Relevance: This survey study found that nearly one-quarter of parents of children with cancer reported challenges in the therapeutic relationship with their oncologist and that clinicians used strategies to improve relationships more frequently when they experienced the relationship as challenging. These findings suggest that new strategies are needed to improve experiences for parents and to help clinicians recognize and attend to parents whose experiences are suboptimal.
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- 2021
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40. Moving beyond conventional stratified analysis to assess the treatment effect in a comparative oncology study.
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Sun R, McCaw Z, Tian L, Uno H, Hong F, Kim DH, and Wei LJ
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- Humans, Clinical Trials as Topic methods, Immunotherapy methods, Medical Oncology methods
- Abstract
In a comparative oncology study with progression-free or overall survival as the endpoint, the primary or key secondary analysis is routinely stratified by patients' baseline characteristics when evaluating the treatment difference. The validity of a conventional strategy such as a stratified HR analysis depends on stringent model assumptions that are unlikely to be met in practice, especially in immunotherapy studies. Thus, the resulting summary is generally neither valid nor interpretable. This article discusses issues with conventional stratified analyses and presents alternatives using data from KEYNOTE-189, a recent immunotherapy trial for treating patients with metastatic, non-squamous, non-small-cell lung cancer., Competing Interests: Competing interests: There are no competing interests., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2021. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2021
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41. Novel Models of Genetic Education and Testing for Pancreatic Cancer Interception: Preliminary Results from the GENERATE Study.
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Furniss CS, Yurgelun MB, Ukaegbu C, Constantinou PE, Lafferty CC, Talcove-Berko ER, Schwartz AN, Stopfer JE, Underhill-Blazey M, Kenner B, Nelson SH, Okumura S, Law S, Zhou AY, Coffin TB, Rodriguez NJ, Uno H, Ocean AJ, McAllister F, Lowy AM, Lippman SM, Klein AP, Madlensky L, Petersen GM, Garber JE, Goggins MG, Maitra A, and Syngal S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal genetics, Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal pathology, Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Genetic, Pancreatic Neoplasms pathology, Pancreatic Neoplasms therapy, Patient Participation, Risk Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Telemedicine, Young Adult, BRCA1 Protein genetics, BRCA2 Protein genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Testing methods, Germ-Line Mutation, Pancreatic Neoplasms genetics, Risk Assessment methods
- Abstract
Up to 10% of patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) carry underlying germline pathogenic variants in cancer susceptibility genes. The GENetic Education Risk Assessment and TEsting (GENERATE) study aimed to evaluate novel methods of genetic education and testing in relatives of patients with PDAC. Eligible individuals had a family history of PDAC and a relative with a germline pathogenic variant in APC, ATM, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDKN2A, EPCAM, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PALB2, PMS2, STK11 , or TP53 genes. Participants were recruited at six academic cancer centers and through social media campaigns and patient advocacy efforts. Enrollment occurred via the study website (https://GENERATEstudy.org) and all participation, including collecting a saliva sample for genetic testing, could be done from home. Participants were randomized to one of two remote methods that delivered genetic education about the risks of inherited PDAC and strategies for surveillance. The primary outcome of the study was uptake of genetic testing. From 5/8/2019 to 5/6/2020, 49 participants were randomized to each of the intervention arms. Overall, 90 of 98 (92%) of randomized participants completed genetic testing. The most frequently detected pathogenic variants included those in BRCA2 ( N = 15, 17%), ATM ( N = 11, 12%), and CDKN2A ( N = 4, 4%). Participation in the study remained steady throughout the onset of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. Preliminary data from the GENERATE study indicate success of remote alternatives to traditional cascade testing, with genetic testing rates over 90% and a high rate of identification of germline pathogenic variant carriers who would be ideal candidates for PDAC interception approaches. PREVENTION RELEVANCE: Preliminary data from the GENERATE study indicate success of remote alternatives for pancreatic cancer genetic testing and education, with genetic testing uptake rates over 90% and a high rate of identification of germline pathogenic variant carriers who would be ideal candidates for pancreatic cancer interception., (©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2021
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42. Low Body Mass Index as a Predictive Factor for Postoperative Infectious Complications after Ureterorenoscopic Lithotripsy.
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Seike K, Ishida T, Taniguchi T, Fujimoto S, Kato D, Takai M, Iinuma K, Nakane K, Uno H, Tamaki M, Komeda H, and Koie T
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- Body Mass Index, Humans, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Ureteroscopy adverse effects, Lithotripsy adverse effects, Ureteral Calculi surgery, Urinary Calculi
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Background and Objectives : In this study, we aimed to evaluate predictive factors of postoperative fever (POF) after ureterorenoscopic lithotripsy (URSL). Materials and Methods: A total of 594 consecutive patients who underwent URSL for urinary stone disease at Gifu Municipal Hospital and Chuno Kosei Hospital between April 2016 and January 2021 were enrolled in this study. In all patients, antibiotics were routinely administered intraoperatively and the next day after surgery. We used rigid and/or flexible ureterorenoscopes depending on the stone location for URSL. Stones were fragmented using a holmium: YAG laser. The fragments of the stone were manually removed as much as possible using a stone basket catheter. A ureteral stent was placed at the end of the surgery in all cases. Results: The median age and body mass index (BMI) in all patients were 62 years and 23.8 kg/m
2 , respectively. The median operation duration was 52 min. The most common URSL-related complication was POF in 28 (4.7%) patients. In these patients, the rates of antibiotic administration and ureteral stent insertion before surgery were significantly higher than in those without POF. In multivariate analysis, BMI was associated with POF after URSL. There were no significant differences in predicting POF after surgery in patients who had bacteriuria or received antibiotics before surgery. Conclusions: A low BMI was significantly associated with POF after URS or URSL.- Published
- 2021
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43. Occurrence patterns of crop-foraging sika deer distribution in an agriculture-forest landscape revealed by nitrogen stable isotopes.
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Hata A, Nakashita R, Fukasawa K, Minami M, Fukue Y, Higuchi N, Uno H, Nakajima Y, Saeki M, Kozakai C, and Takada MB
- Abstract
Conflicts arising from the consumption of anthropogenic foods by wildlife are increasing worldwide. Conventional tools for evaluating the spatial distribution pattern of large terrestrial mammals that consume anthropogenic foods have various limitations, despite their importance in management to mitigate conflicts. In this study, we examined the spatial distribution pattern of crop-foraging sika deer by performing nitrogen stable isotope analyses of bone collagen. We evaluated whether crop-foraging deer lived closer to agricultural crop fields during the winter and spring, when crop production decreases. We found that female deer in proximity to agricultural crop fields during the winter and spring were more likely to be crop-foraging individuals. Furthermore, the likelihood of crop consumption by females decreased by half as the distance to agricultural crop fields increased to 5-10 km. We did not detect a significant trend in the spatial distribution of crop-foraging male deer. The findings of spatial distribution patterns of crop-foraging female deer will be useful for the establishment of management areas, such as zonation, for efficient removal of them., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (© 2021 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2021
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44. Focusing of Particles in a Microchannel with Laser Engraved Groove Arrays.
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Zhang T, Shen Y, Kiya R, Anggraini D, Tang T, Uno H, Okano K, Tanaka Y, Hosokawa Y, Li M, and Yalikun Y
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- Animals, Lasers, Mice, Microfluidics, Particle Size, Polystyrenes, Microfluidic Analytical Techniques
- Abstract
Continuous microfluidic focusing of particles, both synthetic and biological, is significant for a wide range of applications in industry, biology and biomedicine. In this study, we demonstrate the focusing of particles in a microchannel embedded with glass grooves engraved by femtosecond pulse (fs) laser. Results showed that the laser-engraved microstructures were capable of directing polystyrene particles and mouse myoblast cells (C2C12) towards the center of the microchannel at low Reynolds numbers (Re < 1). Numerical simulation revealed that localized side-to-center secondary flows induced by grooves at the channel bottom play an essential role in particle lateral displacement. Additionally, the focusing performance proved to be dependent on the angle of grooves and the middle open space between the grooves based on both experiments and simulation. Particle sedimentation rate was found to critically influence the focusing of particles of different sizes. Taking advantage of the size-dependent particle lateral displacement, selective focusing of micrometer particles was demonstrated. This study systematically investigated continuous particle focusing in a groove-embedded microchannel. We expect that this device will be used for further applications, such as cell sensing and nanoparticle separation in biological and biomedical areas.
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- 2021
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45. Familial Burden and Other Clinical Factors Associated With Various Types of Cancer in Individuals With Lynch Syndrome.
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Biller LH, Horiguchi M, Uno H, Ukaegbu C, Syngal S, and Yurgelun MB
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- Adult, Age Factors, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis diagnosis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Heredity, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pedigree, Phenotype, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Sex Factors, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis genetics, DNA Mismatch Repair, Germ-Line Mutation
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Lynch syndrome (LS) is associated with increased risks of various gastrointestinal, gynecologic, genitourinary, and other cancers. Many clinical practice guidelines recommend that LS carriers' screening strategies be devised based on their family history of various cancers, in addition to age-, sex-, and gene-specific considerations. The aim of this study was to examine the association between family history and other clinical factors with LS carriers' histories of various cancers., Methods: Two cohorts of LS carriers were analyzed: a laboratory-based cohort of consecutively ascertained individuals undergoing germline LS testing and a clinic-based cohort of LS carriers undergoing clinical care at an academic medical center. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to assess clinical factors associated with LS carriers' histories of various cancers/neoplasms. Familial burden was defined as LS carriers' aggregate number of first-/second-degree relatives with a history of a given malignancy., Results: Multivariable analysis of the laboratory-based cohort (3828 LS carriers) identified familial burden as being incrementally associated with LS carriers' personal history of endometrial (odds ratio [OR], 1.37 per affected first-/second-degree relative; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.21-1.56), urinary tract (OR, 2.72; 95% CI, 2.02-3.67), small bowel (OR, 3.17; 95% CI, 1.65-6.12), gastric (OR, 1.93; 95% CI, 1.24-3.02), and pancreaticobiliary cancers (OR, 2.10; 95% CI, 1.21-3.65) and sebaceous neoplasms (OR, 7.39; 95% CI, 2.71-20.15). Multivariable analysis of the clinic-based cohort (607 LS carriers) confirmed a significant association of familial burden of endometrial and urinary tract cancers., Conclusions: Familial burden - in addition to age, sex, and specific LS gene - should be used to assess LS carriers' risks of specific cancers and guide decision-making about organ-specific surveillance., (Copyright © 2021 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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46. The accuracy of prostate cancer diagnosis in biopsy-naive patients using combined magnetic resonance imaging and transrectal ultrasound fusion-targeted prostate biopsy.
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Uno H, Taniguchi T, Seike K, Kato D, Takai M, Iinuma K, Horie K, Nakane K, and Koie T
- Abstract
Background: This study aimed to estimate whether multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI)-transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) fusion biopsy (FUS-TB) increases the detection rates of clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa) compared with TRUS-guided systematic biopsy (TRUS-GB)., Methods: This retrospective study focused on patients who underwent mpMRI before prostate biopsy (PB) with Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System version 2 (PI-RADS v2) scores ≥3 and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level between 2.5 and 20 ng/mL. Before FUS-TB, the biopsy needle position was checked virtually using three-dimensional mapping. After confirming the position of the target within the prostate, biopsy needle was inserted and PB was performed. Suspicious lesions were generally targeted with 2 to 4 cores. Subsequently, 10-12 cores were biopsied for TRUS-GB. The primary endpoint was the PCa detection rate (PCDR) for patients with PCa who underwent combined FUS-TB and TRUS-GB., Results: According to PI-RADS v2, 76.7% of the patients with PI-RADS v2 score ≥3 were diagnosed with PCa. The PCDRs in patients with PI-RADS v2 score of 4 or 5 were significantly higher than those in patients with PI-RADS v2 score of 3 (3 vs . 4, P<0.001; 3 vs . 5, P<0.001; 4 vs . 5, P=0.073). According to PCDR, the detection rates of PCa and csPCa in the FUS-TB were significantly higher than that in the TRUS-GB., Conclusions: Following detection of suspicious tumor lesions on mpMRI, FUS-TB use detects a higher number of PCa cases compared with TRUS-GB., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tau-21-250). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (2021 Translational Andrology and Urology. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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47. Gastrointestinal endoscopic practice during COVID-19 pandemic: a multi-institutional survey.
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Maruyama H, Hosomi S, Nebiki H, Fukuda T, Nakagawa K, Okazaki H, Yamagami H, Hara J, Tanigawa T, Machida H, Aomatsu K, Watanabe Y, Sato H, Uno H, Takaishi O, Nomura T, Ochi M, Oshitani N, Adachi K, Higashimori A, Ominami M, Nadatani Y, Fukunaga S, Otani K, Tanaka F, Kamata N, Nagami Y, Taira K, Watanabe T, and Fujiwara Y
- Subjects
- Health Care Surveys, Humans, Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional prevention & control, Japan epidemiology, Personal Protective Equipment classification, Personal Protective Equipment standards, Personal Protective Equipment supply & distribution, SARS-CoV-2, Safety Management trends, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 transmission, Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal methods, Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal standards, Infection Control instrumentation, Infection Control methods, Infection Control organization & administration, Occupational Exposure prevention & control, Risk Assessment
- Abstract
Introduction. An on-going coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has become a challenge all over the world. Since an endoscopy unit and its staff are at potentially high risk for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, we conducted a survey for the management of the gastrointestinal endoscopic practice, personal protective equipment (PPE), and risk assessment for COVID-19 during the pandemic at multiple facilities. Methods. The 11-item survey questionnaire was sent to representative respondent of Department of Gastroenterology, Osaka City University Hospital, and its 19 related facilities. Results. A total of 18 facilities submitted valid responses and a total of 373 health care professionals (HCPs) participated. All facilities (18/18: 100%) were screening patients at risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection before endoscopy. During the pandemic, we found that the total volume of endoscopic procedures decreased by 44%. Eleven facilities (11/18: 61%) followed recommendations of the Japan Gastroenterological Endoscopy Society (JGES); consequently, about 35%-50% of esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy were canceled. Mask (surgical mask or N95 mask), face shield/goggle, gloves (one or two sets), and gown (with long or short sleeves) were being used by endoscopists, nurses, endoscopy technicians, and endoscope cleaning staff in all the facilities (18/18: 100%). SARS-CoV-2 infection risk assessment of HCPs was conducted daily in all the facilities (18/18: 100%), resulting in no subsequent SARS-CoV-2 infection in HCPs. Conclusion. COVID-19 has had a dramatic impact on the gastrointestinal endoscopic practice. The recommendations of the JGES were appropriate as preventive measures for the SARSCoV-2 infection in the endoscopy unit and its staff., (© 2021 Hirotsugu Maruyama et al., published by Sciendo.)
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- 2021
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48. Synthesis of Tetra-Substituted Trifluoromethyl-3,1-Benzoxazines by Transition-Metal-Catalyzed Decarboxylative Cyclization of N-Benzoyl Benzoxazinones.
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Uno H, Fujimoto D, Harada K, Tanaka C, and Shibata N
- Abstract
Efficient synthesis of N,O-heterocyclic tetra-substituted trifluoromethyl-3,1-benzoxazines via a transition-metal-catalyzed decarboxylative intramolecular cyclization was achieved. The decarboxylation of N-benzoyl trifluoromethyl-benzoxazinones generated the amide oxygen nucleophile, allowing a selective internal C
1 -attack on Pd- or Cu-coordinated zwitterions, affording medicinally attractive tetra-substituted vinyl- or ethynyl-trifluoromethyl-3,1-benzoxazines. This protocol can be applied to the synthesis of perfluoroalkyl- and non-fluorinated 3,1-benzoxazines., (© 2021 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2021
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49. Synthesis and Characterization of Peralkylated Pyrrole-Fused Azacoronene.
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Oki K, Takase M, Kobayashi N, and Uno H
- Abstract
A hexapyrrolohexaazacoronene (HPHAC) with 12 less-bulky peripheral ethyl groups than its aryl-containing HPHAC counterpart was synthesized to investigate the innate character of HPHAC. X-ray diffraction analysis revealed that HPHAC had a planar structure and close packing because of CH-π interactions between the alkyl groups and the HPHAC core. Compared to the previously reported HPHAC decorated with 12 peripheral aryl groups, this electron-rich π-system exhibited reversible multistep oxidations at low potentials and easily formed mono- and dicationic salts and charge-transfer (CT) complexes with 7,7,8,8-tetracyano- p -quinodimethane. These oxidized species exhibited clear changes in the bond-length alternation of the pyrrole units in the crystal state, indicating charge and spin delocalization. The distinct upfield shift of the central carbon signal of the dication in the
13 C NMR spectrum affirms the global aromaticity from the viewpoint of a magnetic criterion. In the UV-vis/NIR spectra, broad absorption in the NIR region was observed only for HPHAC2+ and not the structurally similar cyclo[6]pyrrole. Magnetic circular dichroism measurements and time-dependent density functional theory calculations revealed that the broad absorption was assigned to the CT transition from the central benzene ring to the outer pyrrole rings.- Published
- 2021
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50. Parent-Adolescent Agreement on Adolescents' Emotional and Behavioral Problems Assessed by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire.
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Kawabe K, Horiuchi F, Uno H, Nakachi K, Hosokawa R, Oka Y, and Ueno SI
- Abstract
Objective . The perception of emotion and behavior is different between adolescents and their parents. Parent-adolescent agreement on emotional and behavioral problems has not been well researched. The aim of this study was to explore and compare how well the information from themselves matches with the judgments by their parents in terms of emotional and behavioral problems. Methods . The cross-sectional study was conducted using the self-report and parent-report Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). A total of 1254 Japanese school adolescents aged 12 to 18 and their parents were assessed almost the same time. The results were analyzed using the paired t -test and 2-way analysis of variance for the discrepancies of parent-adolescent agreements in each age and gender groups. Results . Adolescents obtained higher total difficulty and all subscales scores of SDQ than their parents. The effect of grade on the self/parent discrepancy scores were significantly observed on the conduct problems ( P < .001), hyperactivity ( P = .009), and prosocial behavior ( P < .001). The effect of gender was shown significantly on the emotional problems ( P < .001), conduct problems ( P < .001), and peer problems ( P = .002). Conclusion . Adolescents reported more problems than their parents did. For comprehensive evaluation of adolescents' mental health, it is necessary to draw information from both the adolescents themselves and their parents, and pay attention to the gap between adolescents and their parents' perception., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© The Author(s) 2021.)
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- 2021
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