9 results on '"Karen Chiang"'
Search Results
2. Systematic review of oral cryotherapy for the management of oral mucositis in cancer patients and clinical practice guidelines
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C.M.J. Potting, Abhishek Kandwal, M. Elvira P. Correa, Tanya Rouleau, Charles L. Loprinzi, Vinisha Ranna, Karis Kin Fong Cheng, Paolo Bossi, Karen Chiang, Anusha Vaddi, Juan J. Toro, Douglas E. Peterson, Sharon Elad, Takehiko Mori, and Rajesh V. Lalla
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Male ,Mucositis ,Melphalan ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Cryotherapy ,Guidelines ,Medical Oncology ,Oral mucositis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bolus (medicine) ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Cancer ,Stomatitis ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Evidence-based medicine ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Triage ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To update the 2013 Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society of Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO) clinical practice guidelines on oral cryotherapy for the management of oral mucositis (OM) caused by cancer therapies. A systematic review was conducted by the Mucositis Study Group of MASCC/ISOO. The evidence for each intervention for specific cancer treatment modalities was assigned a level of evidence (LoE). The findings were added to the database used to develop the 2013 MASCC/ISOO clinical practice guidelines. Based on the LoE, the guidelines were set as: recommendation, suggestion, or no guideline possible. A total of 114 papers were identified: 44 from PubMed and 70 from Web of Science. After abstract triage and merging with the 2013 database, 36 papers were reviewed. The LoE for prevention of OM with oral cryotherapy in patients undergoing autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant using high-dose melphalan conditioning protocols was upgraded, and the guideline changed to recommendation. Additionally, the recommendation for prevention of OM with oral cryotherapy in patients receiving bolus 5-fluorouracil for the treatment of solid tumors was confirmed. No guidelines were possible for other clinical settings. The evidence supports recommendations for the use of oral cryotherapy for the prevention of OM for either (i) patients undergoing autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant with high-dose melphalan conditioning protocols or (ii) patients receiving bolus 5-fluorouracil chemotherapy.
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- 2019
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3. Systematic review of anti-inflammatory agents for the management of oral mucositis in cancer patients and clinical practice guidelines
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Abdul Rahman Al-Azri, Vinisha Ranna, Isoo, Dimitra Galiti, Anura Ariyawardana, Anusha Vaddi, Ourania Nicolatou-Galitis, Karen Chiang, Sharon Elad, Vanessa Tilly, Rajesh V. Lalla, Abhishek Kandwal, Karis Kin Fong Cheng, and Paolo Bossi
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Mucositis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Psychological intervention ,MEDLINE ,Intervention ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Guidelines ,Benzydamine ,Oral mucositis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Anti-inflammatory agents ,Cancer ,Chemotherapy ,Management ,Radiotherapy ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Humans ,Stomatitis ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,Nursing research ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business - Abstract
The aim of this systematic review was to update the clinical practice guidelines for the use of anti-inflammatory agents in the prevention and/or treatment of oral mucositis. A systematic review was conducted by the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer/ International Society of Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO) subcommittee on mucositis guideline update. The body of evidence for each intervention, in each cancer treatment setting, was assigned an evidence level. The findings were added to the database used to develop the clinical practice guidelines published in 2014. Based on the evidence level, one of the following three guideline determinations was possible: recommendation, suggestion, and no guidelines. A total of 11 new papers across five interventions were examined. The recommendation for the use of benzydamine mouthwash for the prevention of radiotherapy-induced mucositis remained unchanged. New suggestion for the use of the same for prevention of mucositis associated with chemoradiotherapy was made. No guideline was possible for any other anti-inflammatory agents due to inadequate and/or conflicting evidence. Of the anti-inflammatory agents studied for oral mucositis, the evidence supports the use of benzydamine mouthwash in the specific populations listed above. Additional well-designed research is needed on other (class of agents) interventions and in other cancer treatment settings.
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- 2019
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4. Aβ-induced synaptic injury is mediated by presynaptic expression of amyloid precursor protein (APP) in hippocampal neurons
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Katherine DeLoach, Eric A. Bushong, Silvia Viana da Silva, Karen Chiang, Stefan Leutgeb, Liqun Luo, Kensaku Kasuga, Edward H. Koo, Sheue-Houy Tyan, Elena Vicario-Orri, Mark H. Ellisman, and I-Fang Ling
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Genetically modified mouse ,biology ,Chemistry ,Compartment (ship) ,Long-term potentiation ,Hippocampal formation ,Cell biology ,FYN ,nervous system ,Postsynaptic potential ,mental disorders ,Synaptic plasticity ,Amyloid precursor protein ,biology.protein - Abstract
The patterns of Aβ-induced synaptic injury were examined after targeting of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) preferentially to either CA1 or CA3 neurons using Cre-lox technology combined with tetracycline-regulated expression. Both CA1- and CA3-APP-expressing transgenic mouse lines exhibited reduction in long-term potentiation (LTP) only when APP was expressed in neurons presynaptic to the recording site, whereas LTP remained comparable to wild-type mice when APP was expressed in postsynaptic neurons. As quantified by both light and electron microscopy, this orientation-specific impairment in synaptic plasticity was mirrored by synaptic loss in regions receiving axonal inputs from neurons expressing APP. Furthermore, A(plaque deposition also occurred only in the postsynaptic axonal fields of APP-expressing neurons. These deficits were reversed not only with doxycycline to inhibit APP expression but also with γ-secretase and Fyn kinase inhibitors, supporting the interpretation that the observed synaptic injury was mediated by Aβ. Taken together, these results demonstrate that APP/Aβ-induced synaptic toxicity is preferentially initiated by signaling of presynaptically expressed APP to the postsynaptic compartment.
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- 2020
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5. Systematic review of antimicrobials, mucosal coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics for the management of oral mucositis in cancer patients and clinical practice guidelines
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Tomoko Kataoka, Norman Brito-Dellan, Noam Yarom, Karen Chiang, Paolo Bossi, Jamie K. Joy, Anusha Vaddi, Vinisha Ranna, Marianne D. van de Wetering, Rajesh V. Lalla, Kıvanç Bektaş Kayhan, Tanya Rouleau, Sharon Elad, Karis Kin Fong Cheng, Joel B. Epstein, Abhishek Kandwal, Deborah P. Saunders, and Academic Medical Center
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Adult ,Male ,Mucositis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pain medicine ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Guidelines as Topic ,Fentanyl ,Oral mucositis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Anesthetics ,Analgesics ,Stomatitis ,business.industry ,Antimicrobials ,Nursing research ,Cancer ,Guideline ,Antimicrobial ,Doxepin ,medicine.disease ,Mucosal coating agents ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose: To update the clinical practice guidelines for the use of antimicrobials, mucosal coating agents, anesthetics, and analgesics for the prevention and/or treatment of oral mucositis (OM). Methods: A systematic review was conducted by the Mucositis Study Group of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society of Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO). The body of evidence for each intervention, in each cancer treatment setting, was assigned an evidence level. The findings were added to the database used to develop the 2014 MASCC/ISOO clinical practice guidelines. Based on the evidence level, the following guidelines were determined: Recommendation, Suggestion, and No Guideline Possible. Results: A total of 9 new papers were identified within the scope of this section, adding to the 62 papers reviewed in this section previously. A new Suggestion was made for topical 0.2% morphine for the treatment of OM-associated pain in head and neck (H&N) cancer patients treated with RT-CT (modification of previous guideline). A previous Recommendation against the use of sucralfate-combined systemic and topical formulation in the prevention of OM in solid cancer treatment with CT was changed from Recommendation Against to No Guideline Possible. Suggestion for doxepin and fentanyl for the treatment of mucositis-associated pain in H&N cancer patients was changed to No Guideline Possible. Conclusions: Of the agents studied for the management of OM in this paper, the evidence supports a Suggestion in favor of topical morphine 0.2% in H&N cancer patients treated with RT-CT for the treatment of OM-associated pain.
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- 2019
6. PERK-mediated induction of microRNA-483 disrupts cellular ATP homeostasis during the unfolded protein response
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Karen Chiang, Jeffrey J. Rodvold, Jonathan H. Lin, Maurizio Zanetti, Nobuhiko Hiramatsu, Ji-Min Lee, Edward H. Koo, Leon Chea, Jaeseok Han, and Cathrine Aivati
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0301 basic medicine ,Programmed cell death ,endocrine system ,Apoptosis ,Activating Transcription Factor 4 ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,eIF-2 Kinase ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Creatine Kinase, BB Form ,Gene silencing ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Transcription factor ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Kinase ,Chemistry ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,ATF4 ,Molecular Bases of Disease ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,MicroRNAs ,030104 developmental biology ,HEK293 Cells ,Unfolded protein response ,Unfolded Protein Response ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress activates the unfolded protein response (UPR), which reduces levels of misfolded proteins. However, if ER homeostasis is not restored and the UPR remains chronically activated, cells undergo apoptosis. The UPR regulator, PKR-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK), plays an important role in promoting cell death when persistently activated; however, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we profiled the microRNA (miRNA) transcriptome in human cells exposed to ER stress and identified miRNAs that are selectively induced by PERK signaling. We found that expression of a PERK-induced miRNA, miR-483, promotes apoptosis in human cells. miR-483 induction was mediated by a transcription factor downstream of PERK, activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4), but not by the CHOP transcription factor. We identified the creatine kinase brain-type (CKB) gene, encoding an enzyme that maintains cellular ATP reserves through phosphocreatine production, as being repressed during the UPR and targeted by miR-483. We found that ER stress, selective PERK activation, and CKB knockdown all decrease cellular ATP levels, leading to increased vulnerability to ER stress-induced cell death. Our findings identify miR-483 as a downstream target of the PERK branch of the UPR. We propose that disruption of cellular ATP homeostasis through miR-483-mediated CKB silencing promotes ER stress-induced apoptosis.
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- 2019
7. Systematic review of agents for the management of cancer treatment-related gastrointestinal mucositis and clinical practice guidelines
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Rajesh V. Lalla, Bronwen J. Mayo, Vinisha Ranna, Rachel J. Gibson, Emma Bateman, Paolo Bossi, Nicole M. A. Blijlevens, Wim J. E. Tissing, Noor Al-Dasooqi, Sharon Elad, Dorothy M. K. Keefe, Karen Chiang, Anusha Vaddi, Janet K. Coller, Hannah R. Wardill, Joanne M. Bowen, Ysabella Z.A. Van Sebille, Andrea M. Stringer, Charlotte E. M. de Mooij, Karis Kin Fong Cheng, Bowen, Joanne M, Gibson, Rachel J., Coller, Janet K., Blijlevens, Nicole, Bossi, Paolo, Al-Dasooqi, Noor, Bateman, Emma H, Chiang, Karen, de Mooij, Charlotte, Mayo, Bronwen, Stringer, Andrea M, Tissing, Wim, Wardill, Hannah R, van Sebille, Ysabella ZA, Ranna, Vinisha, Vaddi, Anusha, Keefe, Dorothy MK, Lalla, Rajesh V, Cheng, Karis Kin Fong, and Elad, Sharon
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Mucositis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gastrointestinal ,CHEMOTHERAPY-INDUCED DIARRHEA ,Fibroblast Growth Factor 7 ,FRUCTO-OLIGOSACCHARIDE ,Glutamine ,Psychological intervention ,Guidelines ,COLORECTAL-CANCER ,03 medical and health sciences ,DOUBLE-BLIND ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,QUALITY-OF-LIFE ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,clinical management ,Humans ,Proctitis ,030212 general & internal medicine ,COLONIC IRRIGATION ,guidelines ,Intensive care medicine ,MUCOSAL INJURY ,HYPERBARIC-OXYGEN ,Hyperbaric Oxygenation ,Stomatitis ,Clinical management ,Butyric Acid ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,business.industry ,Nursing research ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,gastrointestinal ,PATIENTS RECEIVING RADIOTHERAPY ,Oncology ,Palifermin ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,business ,medicine.drug ,Rare cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 9] ,ACUTE RADIATION ENTERITIS - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 208383.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to update the clinical practice guidelines for the use of agents for the prevention and/or treatment of gastrointestinal mucositis (GIM). METHODS: A systematic review was conducted by the Mucositis Study Group of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer/International Society for Oral Oncology (MASCC/ISOO). The body of evidence for each intervention, in each cancer treatment setting, was assigned an evidence level. Based on the evidence level, one of the following three guideline determinations was possible: Recommendation, Suggestion, and No Guideline Possible. RESULTS: A total of 78 papers across 13 interventions were examined of which 25 were included in the final review. No new guidelines were possible for any agent due to inadequate and/or conflicting evidence. Existing guidelines for probiotics and hyperbaric oxygen were unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: Of the agents studied for the prevention and treatment of GIM, the evidence continues to support use of probiotics containing Lactobacillus spp. for prevention of chemoradiotherapy and radiotherapy-induced diarrhea in patients with pelvic malignancy, and hyperbaric oxygen therapy to treat radiation-induced proctitis. Additional well-designed research is encouraged to enable a decision regarding palifermin, glutamine, sodium butyrate, and dietary interventions, for the prevention or treatment of GIM.
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- 2019
8. A slipped-CAG DNA-binding small molecule induces trinucleotide-repeat contractions in vivo
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Takahiro Otabe, Terence Gall-Duncan, Stella Lanni, Scott Davidson, John Huddleston, Christopher E. Pearson, Hana Tanaka, Jinxing Li, Lisa-Monique Edward, Marc S. Wold, Jean-Yves Masson, Adam Shlien, Masanori P. Takahashi, Kazuhiko Nakatani, Evan E. Eichler, Marietta Y.W.T. Lee, Marie-Christine Caron, Karen Chiang, Jennifer Luo, Xiaoxiao Wang, Hideki Hayakawa, Niraj Joshi, Mehdi Layeghifard, Gagan B. Panigrahi, Mauro Santibanez-Koref, Hideki Mochizuki, Akihiro Sakata, Katherine M. Munson, Richard Gallon, Asako Murata, Masayuki Nakamori, and Tanya Prasolava
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DNA Replication ,Male ,Transcription, Genetic ,Mutant ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,Protein aggregation ,Quinolones ,Medium spiny neuron ,DNA Mismatch Repair ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ribonucleases ,Transcription (biology) ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Allele ,Naphthyridines ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Huntingtin Protein ,DNA replication ,DNA ,TATA-Box Binding Protein ,Corpus Striatum ,Cell biology ,Disease Models, Animal ,Huntington Disease ,chemistry ,Mutation ,Microsatellite Instability ,Trinucleotide repeat expansion ,Trinucleotide Repeat Expansion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
In many repeat diseases, such as Huntington's disease (HD), ongoing repeat expansions in affected tissues contribute to disease onset, progression and severity. Inducing contractions of expanded repeats by exogenous agents is not yet possible. Traditional approaches would target proteins driving repeat mutations. Here we report a compound, naphthyridine-azaquinolone (NA), that specifically binds slipped-CAG DNA intermediates of expansion mutations, a previously unsuspected target. NA efficiently induces repeat contractions in HD patient cells as well as en masse contractions in medium spiny neurons of HD mouse striatum. Contractions are specific for the expanded allele, independently of DNA replication, require transcription across the coding CTG strand and arise by blocking repair of CAG slip-outs. NA-induced contractions depend on active expansions driven by MutSβ. NA injections in HD mouse striatum reduce mutant HTT protein aggregates, a biomarker of HD pathogenesis and severity. Repeat-structure-specific DNA ligands are a novel avenue to contract expanded repeats.
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- 2018
9. Tauopathy-Associated PERK Alleles are Functional Hypomorphs that Increase Neuronal Vulnerability to ER Stress
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Nobuhiko Hiramatsu, David Lenh, Priscilla Chan, Jonathan H. Lin, Xuehan Victoria Sun, Aimee W. Kao, Karen Chiang, Irene Litvan, Edward H. Koo, Qing Liu, and Shauna H. Yuan
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0301 basic medicine ,endocrine system ,Tau protein ,Mutation, Missense ,Apoptosis ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Osteochondrodysplasias ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Mice ,eIF-2 Kinase ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,EIF2AK3 ,Protein kinase A ,Molecular Biology ,Alleles ,Genetics (clinical) ,Neurons ,biology ,Neurodegeneration ,Cell Differentiation ,General Medicine ,Fibroblasts ,Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Intracellular signal transduction ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,030104 developmental biology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Tauopathies ,Nerve Degeneration ,Proteolysis ,Unfolded Protein Response ,biology.protein ,Unfolded protein response ,General Article ,Signal transduction ,Neuron death ,Epiphyses ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Tauopathies are neurodegenerative diseases characterized by tau protein pathology in the nervous system. EIF2AK3 (eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 alpha kinase 3), also known as PERK (protein kinase R-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase), was identified by genome-wide association study as a genetic risk factor in several tauopathies. PERK is a key regulator of the Unfolded Protein Response (UPR), an intracellular signal transduction mechanism that protects cells from endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. PERK variants had previously been identified in Wolcott–Rallison Syndrome, a rare autosomal recessive metabolic disorder, and these variants completely abrogated the function of PERK’s kinase domain or prevented PERK expression. In contrast, the PERK tauopathy risk variants were distinct from the Wolcott–Rallison variants and introduced missense alterations throughout the PERK protein. The function of PERK tauopathy variants and their effects on neurodegeneration are unknown. Here, we discovered that tauopathy-associated PERK alleles showed reduced signaling activity and increased PERK protein turnover compared to protective PERK alleles. We found that iPSC-derived neurons carrying PERK risk alleles were highly vulnerable to ER stress-induced injury with increased tau pathology. We found that chemical inhibition of PERK in human iPSC-derived neurons also increased neuronal cell death in response to ER stress. Our results indicate that tauopathy-associated PERK alleles are functional hypomorphs during the UPR. We propose that reduced PERK function leads to neurodegeneration by increasing neuronal vulnerability to ER stress-associated damage. In this view, therapies to enhance PERK signaling would benefit at-risk carriers of hypomorphic alleles.
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- 2018
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