50 results on '"West N"'
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2. Establishing a Machine Learning and Internet of Things Learning Infrastructure by Operating Transnational Cyber-Physical Brewing Labs
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Deuse, J, Wöstmann, R, Syberg, M, West, N, Wagstyl, D, Moreno, VH, Deuse, J, Wöstmann, R, Syberg, M, West, N, Wagstyl, D, and Moreno, VH
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The convergence of information technology with production technology, coupled with the escalating intricacy of production processes and products, is leading to new demands on the education of future engineers in mechanical engineering and related disciplines. New job profiles are arising and require interdisciplinary cooperation in the fields of information technology and the Internet of Things, machine learning and domain knowledge in order to enable data-based decisions for monitoring and improving products and processes in industrial production. The core of competence building has a strong focus on applying theoretical knowledge and information in order to make it tangible and thus enable people to learn. The contribution shows the conception and implementation of transnationally connected cyber-physical brewing labs, which were set up as learning factories for students and industry partners at TU Dortmund University and the University of Technology Sydney. The focus is on Industry 4.0 technologies, such as shared data space, condition monitoring of machines and assets in the Internet of Things, and the application of machine learning for product and process optimization. This article discusses the derivation of competence profiles, roles and the development of targeted theoretical and practical learning modules. It provides an overview of the use in various formats at both sites. The evolution of the brewing labs in existing research activities is also discussed. Finally, an outlook on future activities is given.
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- 2024
3. (264) Prioritizing Sexual and Reproductive Health Research and Care for People with Cystic Fibrosis: A 2023 Workshop Report From the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Sexual Health, Reproduction, and Gender Research (SHARING) Working Group
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Leitner, D, primary, Moy, C, additional, Jain, R, additional, Jessica, H, additional, Wright, B, additional, Poranski, M, additional, Sjoberg, J, additional, Taylor-Cousar, J, additional, Georgeopoulis, A, additional, Ladores, S, additional, Trimble, A, additional, Tangpricha, V, additional, Naz-Khan, F, additional, Ramasamy, R, additional, West, N, additional, Delos Santos, R, additional, Stansky, O, additional, Wilson, A, additional, Keller, A, additional, and Kazmerski, T, additional
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- 2024
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4. SF‐CORNER (splenic flexure colorectal cancer): an international survey of operative approaches and outcomes for cancers of the splenic flexure.
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Sekhar, H., Dyer, M., Khan, M., Mitchell, P. J., West, N. P., Moug, S., Vimalachandran, D., Tidjane, A., Dudi‐Venkata, N., Mohan, H., Sammour, T., Samadov, E., Van Ramshorst, G., Gomes, G.M., Laporte, G.A., Slavchev, M., O'Reilly, D., Sallam, I., Shalaby, M., and Duchalais, E.
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COLORECTAL cancer ,CANCER prognosis ,RIGHT hemicolectomy ,HEMICOLECTOMY ,COLECTOMY - Abstract
Aim: The optimum surgical approach to splenic flexure cancers (SFCs) remains uncertain. The aim of this survey was to explore the opinions of an international surgical community on the management and outcomes of SFC. Method: A questionnaire was constructed comprising five sections (information about respondents; definition and prognosis of SFC; operative approach; approach in specific scenarios; outcomes) and circulated through an international dissemination committee and social media. Results: The survey received 576 responses over 4 weeks across 50 countries. There was no consensus regarding the definition of the splenic flexure, whilst the proportion of respondents who did and did not think that patients with SFC had a worse outcome was equal. The overall preferred operative approach was left hemicolectomy [203 (35.2%)], followed by segmental resection [167 (29%)], extended right hemicolectomy [126 (21.9%)] and subtotal colectomy [7 (12%)]. The stated pedicles for ligation varied between resection types and also within the same resection. One hundred and sixty‐six (28.8%) respondents thought a segmental resection was associated with the worst survival and 190 (33%) thought it was associated with the best quality of life. Conclusion: This survey confirms a lack of consensus across all aspects SFC treatment. The differing approaches described are likely to represent different beliefs around the variable anatomy of this region and the associated lymphatic drainage. Future studies are required to address such inconsistencies and identify the optimum surgical strategy, whilst also incorporating quality‐of‐life metrics and patient‐reported outcomes. A one‐size‐fits‐all approach is probably not appropriate with SFC, and a more bespoke approach is required. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. 552P Baseline imaging biomarkers to predict outcomes in locally advanced colon cancer (LACC): Data from the FOxTROT international randomised-controlled trial
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Platt, J.R., Elliott, F., Quirke, P., West, N., Seymour, M.T., Magill, L., Handley, K., Morton, D., Tolan, D., and Seligmann, J.
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- 2024
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6. In Response to the Correspondence to the Editor Regarding ʻExtra-mandibular Osteoradionecrosis After the Treatment of Head and Neck Cancer’
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Kovarik, P.D.E., Patil, R., Jackson, M., Kelly, C., West, N., and Iqbal, M.S.
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- 2024
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7. 526 Non-surgical management of urinary incontinence in women with cystic fibrosis.
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Berg, K. von, Kazmerski, T., West, N., Goodman, N., Arnold, N., Patterson, D., Bradley, M., and Patel, S.
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URINARY incontinence in women , *CYSTIC fibrosis - Published
- 2024
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8. 838 Antibiotic selection for the STOP360-AG randomized controlled trial.
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Cogen, J., Kloster, M., VanDevanter, D., Heltshe, S., West, N., Somayaji, R., Sanders, D., Buckingham, R., Goss, C., and Flume, P.
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ANTIBIOTICS - Published
- 2024
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9. 703 Venous thromboembolism in people with cystic fibrosis using hormonal contraceptives.
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Mody, S., Ruben, M., Magaret, A., Hsu, C., Roe, A., Taylor-Cousar, J., Kazmerski, T., Uluer, A., West, N., Jain, R., Bray, L., Walker, P., and Godfrey, E.
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THROMBOEMBOLISM , *CYSTIC fibrosis , *CONTRACEPTIVES - Published
- 2024
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10. 666 Contraceptive use and pregnancy trends in the era of highly effective modulator therapy.
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Godfrey, E., Magaret, A., Hsu, C., Walker, P., Langfelder-Schwind, E., Roe, A., Uluer, A., West, N., Bray, L., Mody, S., Taylor-Cousar, J., Kazmerski, T., Jain, R., and Aitken, M.
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CONTRACEPTION , *PREGNANCY - Published
- 2024
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11. 428 Fertility counseling and family-building experiences and care use of men with cystic fibrosis.
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Stransky, O., Wright, C., Prangley, K., Jathal, I., Sawicki, G., Ladores, S., Hughan, K., West, N., Jain, R., Taylor-Cousar, J., Tangpricha, V., and Kazmerski, T.
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CYSTIC fibrosis , *HUMAN fertility , *COUNSELING - Published
- 2024
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12. 136 Impact of the STOP2 trial on pulmonary exacerbation treatment duration at cuystic fibrosis centers across the United States.
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Mingora, C., Flume, P., Odem-Davis, K., Goss, C., Sanders, D., West, N., VanDevanter, D., and Heltshe, S.
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TREATMENT duration , *FIBROSIS , *DISEASE exacerbation - Published
- 2024
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13. 712 Incidence of Clostridioides difficile infection in the STOP2 randomized controlled trial.
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Gill, E., Heltshe, S., Flume, P., VanDevanter, D., Sanders, D., West, N., and Goss, C.
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CLOSTRIDIOIDES difficile , *INFECTION - Published
- 2024
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14. 701 Parenthood among people with cystic fibrosis.
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Kazmerski, T., Stransky, O., Lee, M., Georgiopoulos, A., Jain, R., Billings, J., Dellon, E., Prangley, K., Ramos, K., West, N., and Taylor-Cousar, J.
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CYSTIC fibrosis , *PARENTHOOD - Published
- 2024
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15. 153 Early change in forced vital capacity as a determinant of outcome in pulmonary exacerbations of cystic fibrosis.
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McElvaney, O., Heltshe, S., Milinic, T., Burdis, N., Fogarty, B., Sanders, D., West, N., VanDevanter, D., Flume, P., and Goss, C.
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VITAL capacity (Respiration) , *CYSTIC fibrosis , *DISEASE exacerbation - Published
- 2024
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16. EPS2.03 Sexual and reproductive health experiences and care utilization of males with cystic fibrosis compared to the general United States population.
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Kazmerski, T., Stransky, O., Wright, C., Prangley, K., Ladores, S., Hughan, K., West, N., Jain, R., Taylor-Cousar, J., Tangpricha, V., and Sawicki, G.
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CYSTIC fibrosis , *REPRODUCTIVE health , *MALES - Published
- 2024
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17. Assessment of Facility Readiness for Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care Utilizing a 2-Phase Survey Conducted in Six Hospitals in Uganda and Cameroon: A Quality Improvement Study.
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Hwang B, Trawin J, Dzelamunyuy S, Wiens MO, Tagoola A, Businge S, Jabornisky R, Nwankwor O, Karlovich G, Oguonu T, Talla E, Novakowski SK, Fung JST, West N, Ansermino JM, and Kissoon N
- Abstract
Objectives: Each year, 5.3 million children under 5 years of age die in low-resource settings, often due to delayed recognition of disease severity, inadequate treatment, or a lack of supplies. We describe the use of a comprehensive digital facility-readiness survey tool, recently developed by the Pediatric Sepsis Data CoLaboratory, which aims to identify target areas for quality improvement related to pediatric emergency and critical care., Methods: Facility-readiness surveys were conducted at six sub-Saharan African hospitals providing pediatric emergency and critical care in Uganda (n = 4) and Cameroon (n = 2). The tool is a 2-phase survey to assess readiness to provide pediatric essential emergency and critical care: (1) an "environmental scan," focusing on infrastructure, availability, and functionality of resources, and (2) an "observational scan" assessing the quality and safety of care through direct observation of patients receiving treatment for common diseases. Data were captured in a mobile application and the findings analyzed descriptively., Results: Varying levels of facility readiness to provide pediatric emergency care were observed. Only 1 of 6 facilities had a qualified staff member to assess children for danger signs upon arrival, and only 2 of 6 had staff with skills to manage emergency conditions. Only 21% of essential medicines required for pediatric emergency and critical care were available at all six facilities. Most facilities had clean running water and soap or disinfectants, but most also experienced interruptions to their electricity supply. Less than half of patients received an appropriate discharge note and fewer received counseling on postdischarge care; follow-up was arranged in less than a quarter of cases., Conclusions: These pilot findings indicate that facilities are partially equipped and ready to provide pediatric emergency and critical care. This facility-readiness tool can be utilized in low-resource settings to assist hospital administrators and policymakers to determine priority areas to improve quality of care for the critically ill child., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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18. Implementation of a Mobile Health Approach to a Long-Lasting Insecticidal Net Uptake Intervention for Malaria Prevention Among Pregnant Women in Tanzania: Process Evaluation of the Hati Salama (HASA) Randomized Controlled Trial Study.
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Vey T, Kinnicutt E, West N, Sleeth J, Nchimbi KB, and Yeates K
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- Humans, Female, Tanzania, Pregnancy, Adult, Young Adult, Pregnancy Complications, Parasitic prevention & control, Malaria prevention & control, Telemedicine, Insecticide-Treated Bednets statistics & numerical data
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Background: Malaria infection is associated with many adverse outcomes for pregnant women and neonates, yet pregnant women in East and Southern Africa remain frequently exposed to malaria. Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) can help prevent malarial infections and the associated adverse events. The Hati Salama (HASA) study was a cluster-randomized controlled trial implemented in 100 antenatal health facilities in urban and rural settings of Tanzania that provided pregnant women in both intervention and control groups with e-vouchers to redeem for LLINs for malaria prevention. The intervention group received behavior change communication mobile messages across a 14-day period while the e-voucher was active, and no significant difference between the rates of e-voucher redemption was found across the two groups., Objective: This study was a process evaluation of the HASA randomized controlled trial to determine barriers and facilitators to e-voucher reception and LLIN acquisition for pregnant women enrolled in the trial, as well as challenges and lessons learned by nurses who worked at the antenatal health facilities supporting the trial., Methods: Following the e-voucher's expiration at 14 days, voluntary phone follow-up surveys were conducted for nurses who supported the trial, as well as participants in both intervention and control groups of the trial who did not redeem their e-vouchers. Survey questions asked nurses about workflow, training sessions, network connectivity, proxy phone use, and more. Surveys asked participants about reasons for not redeeming e-vouchers. Both surveys provided lists of preset answers to questions, as well as the option to provide open-ended responses. Nurses and trial participants were contacted between January and June 2016 on up to three occasions., Results: While nurses who supported the HASA trial seemed to recognize the value of the program in their communities, some barriers identified by nurses included network connectivity, workload increase, inadequate training and on-the-ground support, and difficulty following the workflow. Several barriers identified by trial participants included personal obligations preventing them from redeeming the e-voucher on time, network connectivity issues, losing the e-voucher number, no stock of LLINs at retailers when attended, inadequate explanation of where or how to redeem the e-voucher, or not receiving an SMS text message with the e-voucher number promptly or at all., Conclusions: Large-scale e-voucher platforms for health-related commodity interventions, such as LLIN distribution in sub-Saharan Africa, are feasible, but challenges, including network connectivity, must be addressed. Nurses identified issues to be considered in a future scale-up, such that the number of nurses trained should be increased and the e-voucher issuance workflow should be simplified. To address some of the key barriers impacting e-voucher redemption for trial participants, the network of retailers could be expanded and the e-voucher expiration period should be extended., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02561624; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02561624., (©Trinity Vey, Eleonora Kinnicutt, Nicola West, Jessica Sleeth, Kenneth Bernard Nchimbi, Karen Yeates. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 05.11.2024.)
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- 2024
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19. Best-Practice Biomarker Testing of Oesophago-Gastric Cancer in the UK: Expert Consensus Recommendations Developed Using a Modified Delphi.
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West NP, Mansoor W, Taniere P, Smyth E, Rodriguez-Justo M, Oniscu A, and Carter P
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- Humans, United Kingdom, Surveys and Questionnaires, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Delphi Technique, Stomach Neoplasms diagnosis, Esophageal Neoplasms diagnosis, Esophageal Neoplasms therapy, Biomarkers, Tumor, Consensus
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Aims: Oesophago-gastric cancers (OGCs) are amongst the most commonly diagnosed malignancies worldwide and are associated with high disease-related mortality. Predictive biomarkers are molecules that can be objectively measured and used to indicate a likely response to therapeutic intervention, thus facilitating individualised cancer therapy. However, there remains variation in uptake and implementation of biomarker testing across the UK., Materials and Methods: We conducted a modified Delphi study to formulate consensus recommendations for best-practice biomarker testing of OGC in the UK. We employed two rounds of online questionnaires followed by a virtual consensus meeting. Biomarkers for discussion included HER2, MSI/MMR, and PD-L1. Topics comprised the overall biomarker pathway, pre-analytical, analytical, and post-analytical considerations, including challenges in current practice., Results: Twenty-six and eighteen participants completed the first and second round Delphi questionnaire, respectively, with an even split of pathologists and oncologists from across the UK. There was consensus (>80% agreement) across several topics, including the requirements for standardisation of the pathway, which must include coordination throughout the tissue journey, requirements for a quality-assured process to ensure accuracy and validity of testing, plus the need for clear, detailed information on the pathology report to support treatment decisions. There was consensus amongst oncologists regarding reflex testing of all biomarkers depending on histology; however, concerns over capacity in relation to workload and availability of pathologists were evident among the pathologists. Overall, participants were in the opinion that reflex testing improves the speed of treatment decisions and improves patient care., Conclusion: The recommendations reflect best-practices and should be implemented to support rapid multidisciplinary team decision-making within oesophago-gastric cancer. Results reflect the need for standardisation and demonstrate the challenges faced in clinical practice by those requesting and testing biomarkers for oesophago-gastric cancer, suggesting significant concerns relating to pathologist capacity., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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20. Consistency in reirradiation scenarios: Terminology, tissue recovery in calculations, units and reporting.
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West N, Covington E, Vasquez Osorio E, Stroom J, Duchateau M, Day M, Hardcastle N, Ayadi M, Jackson A, Rønde HS, Mayo C, and Appelt A
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Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Elizabeth Covingham is chair of AAPM Task Group TG-263U1. Michael Duchateau is an employee of MIM Software Inc. Nicholas Hardcastle receives research grant funding from Varian Medical Systems and Reflexion Medical and consultancy fees from SeeTreat Medical. All remaining authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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21. Modelling of silicone breast implants for radiotherapy treatment planning.
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Kirby J and West N
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There has been no published work characterizing the attenuation of silicone breast implants in MV energy photon beams. As a result of systematic out of tolerance in-vivo dosimetry results, this report investigates whether the CT Hounsfield Units to electron density curve provides an accurate estimate of attenuation in silicone implants. A CT scan of a silicone breast implant centered on top of WT1 blocks was acquired with simple 6 MV and 10 MV plans created. Dose was calculated using the CT and a collapsed cone algorithm. The predicted dose was compared to doses measured with ionization chamber at 2 points downstream of the implant. Predicted dose from the treatment planning system was 0.9-1.7% lower than measured. The use of a density override on the implant of water (1 g/cm
3 ) improved agreement to less than 1% for all energies and measurement depths. We conclude that the use of CT Hounsfield Units for silicone breast implants leads to an under-estimation of dose in MV photon fields. Dose accuracy has been shown to be improved in the treatment planning system when silicone breast implants have a density override of water., (Copyright © 2024 American Association of Medical Dosimetrists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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22. Intravenous lidocaine infusion therapy and intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring in adolescents undergoing idiopathic scoliosis correction: A retrospective study.
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Bates R, Cave F, West N, Bone JN, Hofmann B, Miyanji F, and Lauder GR
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Background: Posterior spinal instrumentation and fusion is an established surgical procedure for the correction of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring is standard practice for this procedure. Anesthetic agents can have different, but significant, effects on neurophysiological monitoring outcomes., Aim: To determine if intravenous lidocaine infusion therapy has an impact on the intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring during posterior spinal instrumentation and fusion for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis., Methods: Following ethical approval, we conducted a retrospective review of charts and the archived intraoperative neurophysiological data of adolescents undergoing posterior spinal instrumentation and fusion for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring data included the amplitude of motor evoked potentials and the amplitude and latency of somatosensory evoked potentials. A cohort who received intraoperative lidocaine infusion were compared to those who did not., Results: Eighty-one patients were included in this analysis, who had surgery between February 4, 2016 and April 22, 2021: 39 had intraoperative intravenous lidocaine infusion and 42 did not. Based on hourly snapshot data, there was no evidence that lidocaine infusion had a detrimental effect on the measured change from baseline for MEP amplitudes in either lower (mean difference 41.9; 95% confidence interval -304.5 to 388.3; p = .182) or upper limbs (MD -279.0; 95% CI -562.5 to 4.4; p = .054). There was also no evidence of any effect on the measured change from baseline for SSEP amplitudes in either lower (MD 16.4; 95% CI -17.7 to 50.5; p = .345) or upper limbs (MD -2.4; 95% CI -14.5 to 9.8; p = .701). Finally, there was no evidence of a difference in time to first reportable neurophysiological event (hazard ratio 1.13; 95% CI 0.61 to 2.09; p = .680)., Conclusions: Data from these two cohorts provide preliminary evidence that intravenous lidocaine infusion has no negative impact on intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring during PSIF for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis., (© 2024 The Author(s). Pediatric Anesthesia published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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23. Interleukin-5 as a pleiotropic cytokine orchestrating airway type 2 inflammation: Effects on and beyond eosinophils.
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Buchheit KM, Shaw D, Chupp G, Lehtimaki L, Heffler E, Finney-Hayward T, Zangrilli J, Kwiatek J, Siddiqui S, Roufosse F, Thamboo A, West N, Vichiendilokkul A, Hellings PW, Peters A, and Howarth PH
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- Humans, Animals, Cytokines metabolism, Interleukin-5 metabolism, Eosinophils immunology, Eosinophils metabolism, Inflammation immunology, Inflammation metabolism
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Interleukin (IL)-5 is the key cytokine in the maturation, activation, proliferation, migration and survival of eosinophils, which are key effector cells in many upper and lower airway diseases. Through its effects on eosinophils, IL-5 indirectly contributes to various pathophysiological processes including tissue damage, repair and remodelling. Understanding the importance of IL-5 in eosinophil-associated diseases led to the development of anti-IL-5 therapies, which provide clinical benefits across a range of conditions. However, recent evidence suggests that eosinophil-depletion alone may not account for all of the therapeutic effects of anti-IL-5 therapy and that IL-5 may also contribute to disease independently of its effects on eosinophils. Indeed, evidence from ex vivo studies and targeted therapy in vivo demonstrates that IL-5 and its inhibition affects a much broader range of cells beyond eosinophils, including epithelial cells, plasma cells, mast cells, basophils, neutrophils, type 2 innate lymphoid cells, T regulatory cells and fibroblasts. This review will provide an update on the evidence supporting the breadth of IL-5 biology relevant to disease pathogenesis beyond eosinophil-associated inflammation, where there is a need for additional insight, and the clinical implications of a more central role of IL-5 in type 2 inflammation., (© 2024 GSK and The Author(s). Allergy published by European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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24. BSP Implementation of prevention and treatment of peri-implant diseases - The EFP S3 level clinical practice guideline.
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West N, Chapple I, Culshaw S, Donos N, Needleman I, Suvan J, Nibali L, Patel A, Preshaw PM, and Kebschull M
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- Humans, Consensus, Evidence-Based Dentistry methods, Evidence-Based Dentistry standards, Societies, Dental standards, United Kingdom, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Dental Implants adverse effects, Peri-Implantitis prevention & control, Peri-Implantitis therapy, Periodontics methods, Periodontics standards
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Objectives: to adapt the supranational European Federation of Periodontology (EFP) Prevention and Treatment of Peri-implant Diseases - The EFP S3 Level Clinical Practice Guideline for UK healthcare environment, taking into account a broad range of views from stakeholders and patients., Sources: This UK version, based on the supranational EFP guideline [1] published in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology, was developed using S3-level methodology, combining assessment of formal evidence from 13 systematic reviews with a moderated consensus process of a representative group of stakeholders, and accounts for health equality, environmental factors and clinical effectiveness. It encompasses 55 clinical recommendations for the Prevention and Treatment of Peri-implant Diseases, based on the classification for periodontal and peri‑implant diseases and conditions [2]., Methodology: The UK version was developed from the source guideline using a formal process called the GRADE ADOLOPMENT framework. This framework allows for adoption (unmodified acceptance), adaptation (acceptance with modifications) and the de novo development of clinical recommendations. Using this framework, following the S3-process, the underlying evidence was updated and a representative guideline group of 111 delegates from 26 stakeholder organisations was assembled into four working groups. Following the formal S3-process, all clinical recommendations were formally assessed for their applicability to the UK and adoloped accordingly., Results and Conclusion: Using the ADOLOPMENT protocol, a UK version of the EFP S3-level clinical practice guideline for the Prevention and Treatment of Peri-implant Diseases was developed. This guideline delivers evidence- and consensus-based clinical recommendations of direct relevance to the UK healthcare community including the public., Clinical Significance: The S3-level-guidelines combine evaluation of formal evidence, grading of recommendations and synthesis with clinical expertise of a broad range of stakeholders. The international S3-level-guideline was implemented for direct clinical applicability in the UK healthcare system, facilitating a consistent, interdisciplinary, evidence-based approach with public involvement for the prevention and treatment of peri‑implant diseases., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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25. Timing of development of osteoradionecrosis post head and neck radiotherapy: does a safe time interval exist for dental extraction?
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Kovarik PD, Cvek J, Patil R, Macdougall C, Kelly C, Jackson M, McKenzie L, West N, Willis N, Kovarik JP, Anwar MN, Ellabban I, and Shahid Iqbal M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Head and Neck Neoplasms surgery, Mandibular Osteotomy, Osteoradionecrosis etiology, Tooth Extraction
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Introduction: Risk factors for developing osteoradionecrosis (ORN) are well known, but less is known about factors influencing the interval between radiotherapy and the onset of ORN. Also, it is unknown whether there is any specific period post-radiotherapy with a reduced probability of ORN when irradiated teeth require extraction., Purpose: The primary aim of this study was to identify factors influencing the interval in developing ORN in the following subgroups of patients: (1) patients who spontaneously developed ORN, (2) surgical-intervention-related ORN with a particular focus on patients after mandibulectomy. The secondary aim was to attempt to identify a possible time for safer dental intervention after primary treatment., Materials and Methods: The authors retrospectively analysed 1608 head and neck cancer (HNC) patients treated in a single centre. Time intervals were measured from the end of radiotherapy to the development of ORN and further analysed in the subgroups listed above., Results: In all, 141 patients (8.8%) developed intra-oral ORN. Median time from radiotherapy to ORN development in the whole cohort was 9 months. Median interval for spontaneous ORN was 8 months, 6.5 months for intervention-related ORN, and 15 months for patients post-mandibulectomy. In patients who required dental extraction preradiotherapy, median interval of ORN onset was 5 months., Conclusion: In our study, a slightly higher proportion of patients with intervention developed ORN earlier in comparison with spontaneous ORN. The period from 12-18 months after radiotherapy was identified as having the highest probability of developing ORN in patients after mandibulectomy. A time for safer dental intervention after primary treatment was not identified., (© 2024. Crown.)
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- 2024
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26. Mind the gap-What is the appropriate time interval between sequential dentine stimuli to elicit a dentine hypersensitivity pain response in clinical studies?
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Pollard A, Wright M, West N, Newcombe R, Davies M, and West NX
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Time Factors, Young Adult, Physical Stimulation, Cold Temperature, Touch physiology, Middle Aged, Dentin Sensitivity, Pain Measurement
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Objectives: To determine the time interval required for a tooth diagnosed with DH to recover from a stimulus (cold air-blast/tactile) and respond with a similar elicited pain response to a repeat stimulus., Methods: A single-centre, non-randomised, clinical study in healthy adult volunteers. Eligible participants with ≥1 tooth with either a qualifying Schiff score ≥2 following cold air-blast or tactile Yeaple score of ≤20 g were allocated to tactile or air-blast group. Following primary stimulation, the designated tooth was restimulated 10, 5, 2 min and immediately after initial pain cessation. Pain was recorded with participant VAS and investigator Schiff for air-blast., Results: 40 participants completed the study per group. There was a significant difference in VAS scores for tactile 4 delay intervals (p < 0.001) but not air-blast stimulus, and a significant difference in mean change in VAS score from immediate to two-minute delay between stimuli (8.0 tactile vs 0.8 air-blast, p = 0.011). VAS scores in response to either stimulus showed very wide variation between participants, but changes over delay intervals within participants were relatively slight. There was a significant progressive decrease in mean Schiff score with shortening delay intervals from 10 min (2.38) to stimulation immediately after pain cessation (2.15), p = 0.018., Conclusions: The findings suggest healthy teeth recover after DH stimulation more quickly following an air-blast than tactile stimulus, with around 2 min allowing recovery from both. Many factors including habituation and pain measurement subjectivity need to be considered. It would be prudent for future studies to use of ≥3 min delays., Clinical Significance: No clinical study has attempted to determine the appropriate interval between successive stimuli in DH patients. The results will impact directly on the conduct of DH trials. These findings suggest the interval could be reduced to around 2-min, but the current standard of 5-min is sufficiently long to give valid results., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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27. Technical Development and In Silico Implementation of SyntheticMR in Head and Neck Adaptive Radiation Therapy: A Prospective R-IDEAL Stage 0/1 Technology Development Report.
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McCullum L, Mulder S, West N, Aghoghovbia R, Ali AMS, Scott H, Salzillo TC, Ding Y, Dresner A, Subashi E, Ma D, Stafford RJ, Hwang KP, and Fuller CD
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Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the technical feasibility of integrating the quantitative maps available from SyntheticMR into the head and neck adaptive radiation oncology workflow. While SyntheticMR has been investigated for diagnostic applications, no studies have investigated its feasibility and potential for MR-Simulation or MR-Linac workflow. Demonstrating the feasibility of using this technique will facilitate rapid quantitative biomarker extraction which can be leveraged to guide adaptive radiation therapy decision making., Approach: Two phantoms, two healthy volunteers, and one patient were scanned using SyntheticMR on the MR-Simulation and MR-Linac devices with scan times between four to six minutes. Images in phantoms and volunteers were conducted in a test/retest protocol. The correlation between measured and reference quantitative T1, T2, and PD values were determined across clinical ranges in the phantom. Distortion was also studied. Contours of head and neck organs-at-risk (OAR) were drawn and applied to extract T1, T2, and PD. These values were plotted against each other, clusters were computed, and their separability significance was determined to evaluate SyntheticMR for differentiating tumor and normal tissue., Main Results: The Lin's Concordance Correlation Coefficient between the measured and phantom reference values was above 0.98 for both the MR-Sim and MR-Linac. No significant levels of distortion were measured. The mean bias between the measured and phantom reference values across repeated scans was below 4% for T1, 7% for T2, and 4% for PD for both the MR-Sim and MR-Linac. For T1 vs. T2 and T1 vs. PD, the GTV contour exhibited perfect purity against neighboring OARs while being 0.7 for T2 vs. PD. All cluster significance levels between the GTV and the nearest OAR, the tongue, using the SigClust method was p < 0.001., Significance: The technical feasibility of SyntheticMR was confirmed. Application of this technique to the head and neck adaptive radiation therapy workflow can enrich the current quantitative biomarker landscape., Competing Interests: AD has received related research support from Elekta AB and unrelated royalties / licenses from Resoundant LLC. KH has received related investigational software / research support from SyntheticMR AB and unrelated research support from GE Healthcare. CDF has received related travel, speaker honoraria and/or registration fee waiver from: Elekta AB and unrelated travel, speaker honoraria and/or registration fee waiver from: The American Association for Physicists in Medicine; the University of Alabama-Birmingham; The American Society for Clinical Oncology; The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Radiologists; The American Society for Radiation Oncology; The Radiological Society of North America; and The European Society for Radiation Oncology. CDF has received related direct industry grant/in-kind support, honoraria, and travel funding from Elekta AB and has served in an unrelated consulting capacity for Varian/Siemens Healthineers. Philips Medical Systems, and Oncospace, Inc.
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- 2024
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28. A Qualitative Exploration of Women With Cystic Fibrosis and Urinary Incontinence.
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Vargas L, Kazmerski TM, von Berg K, Patterson D, West N, and Bradley M
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Importance: Women with cystic fibrosis (CF) historically experience a high prevalence of urinary incontinence (UI). However, this area is understudied, especially in the modern era of highly effective modulator therapy (HEMT)., Objective: This study aimed to explore the UI experiences, knowledge, care-seeking behavior, and treatment preferences of women with CF., Study Design: We recruited women aged ≥18 years through the CF Foundation's Community Voice national registry if they had a diagnosis of CF and reported UI. Participants underwent individual, semistructured interviews exploring their experiences, attitudes, and preferences toward UI that were audiorecorded and transcribed. Two coders performed thematic analysis using deductive and inductive coding approaches., Results: Twenty-six participants completed interviews (average age, 45.1 years; range, 24-61 years). Key themes included the following: (1) most women with CF and UI report low bother from symptoms likely related to stress UI, and HEMT has greatly improved UI symptoms and decreased bother; (2) most women with CF and UI had previously discussed UI symptoms with family and/or peers but had not sought care due to stigma or low priority; (3) women with CF and UI had minimal knowledge about UI in general and how it relates to CF; (4) most desired broad screening for UI from their CF team and improved multidisciplinary care; and (5) highly effective UI treatment options with low-time commitment and easily accessible resources are desired., Conclusions: Women with CF and UI report low knowledge and care-seeking behavior related to this condition and desire improved care provision. Importantly, HEMT may improve UI symptoms among people with CF., Competing Interests: Megan Bradley reports grant funding from Axonics. The remaining authors report no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 American Urogynecologic Society. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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29. Risk of bowel obstruction in patients with colon cancer responding to immunotherapy: an international case series.
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Platt JR, Allotey J, Alouani E, Glasbey J, Intini R, Lonardi S, Mazzoli G, Militello AM, Modest DP, Palle J, Pietrantonio F, Riyad K, Samuel L, Schulze AV, Shiu KK, Taieb J, Tolan DJM, West NP, Westwood AC, Williams CJM, and Seligmann JF
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Retrospective Studies, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized therapeutic use, Risk Factors, DNA Mismatch Repair, Adult, Intestinal Obstruction etiology, Colonic Neoplasms complications, Immunotherapy methods, Immunotherapy adverse effects
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Background: Immunotherapy is used routinely for treating deficient mismatch repair (dMMR) colon cancer (CC). This case series highlights an emerging safety issue, where patients develop bowel obstruction associated with immunotherapy response., Patients and Methods: Patients with dMMR CC who developed bowel obstruction while responding to immunotherapy were retrospectively identified. Data on patient, disease, treatment, and response-specific factors were explored for potential risk factors. Overall treatment numbers were used to estimate incidence., Results: Nine patients from eight European centres were included. Common features were hepatic flexure location (5/9), T4 radiological staging (6/9), annular shape (8/9), radiological stricturing (5/9), and endoscopic obstruction (6/9). All received pembrolizumab and obstructed between 45 and 652 days after starting treatment. Seven patients underwent surgical resection; one was managed with a defunctioning stoma; and one was managed conservatively. One patient died from obstruction. Radiological response was seen in eight patients, including two complete responses. Pathological response was seen in all seven who underwent resection, including four complete responses. The overall incidence of immunotherapy response-related obstruction in these centres was 1.51%., Conclusions: Bowel obstruction associated with immunotherapy response may represent a rare treatment-related complication in dMMR CC. Clinicians must recognise this safety signal and share experience to maintain patient safety., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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30. Does Urodynamic Stress Incontinence Increase After the Menopause?: Results from 2,994 Urodynamic Studies in Australian Women.
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Te West N, Harris K, Chapman M, and Moore KH
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Prevalence, Australia epidemiology, Premenopause physiology, Menopause physiology, Urinary Bladder, Overactive physiopathology, Urinary Bladder, Overactive epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Urinary Incontinence, Stress epidemiology, Urinary Incontinence, Stress physiopathology, Urodynamics, Postmenopause physiology
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Introduction and Hypothesis: Most studies attempting to estimate the age-related prevalence of urinary incontinence (UI) have used questionnaires. In the present study we analysed a consecutive series of urodynamic test results to determine the distribution of the different types of UI in pre- and post-menopausal women. We hypothesised that the prevalence of urodynamic stress incontinence (USI) would be significantly greater in pre-menopausal than in post-menopausal women., Methods: All women from a large tertiary urogynaecology department, who underwent urodynamic tests during the years 2000-2015 were included. Patient history and test results were collected. A sample size of 1,475 was calculated, based on the hypothesis that the prevalence of USI will be 20% larger in the pre- versus the post-menopausal group., Results: A total of 2,994 women with UI on urodynamics were available. There was a significant difference between pre- and post-menopausal status for each of the three diagnoses: USI 483 (59.3%) versus 912 (41.8%), detrusor overactivity (DO) 125 (15.4%) versus 399 (18.3%) and USI with concomitant DO 206 (25.3%) versus 869 (39.9%). A bimodal pattern of age was seen in women with USI, with a peak in the 46-50 and 61-65 age group, before decreasing with age. DO generally increased with age. USI with concomitant DO increased steadily after the menopause, becoming the predominant type after the age of 66., Conclusions: In this large cohort of women attending urodynamics, we have shown that USI is the predominant type of incontinence in pre-menopausal women; however, USI with concomitant DO increases after menopause, eventually predominating., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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31. Marine sponge microbe provides insights into evolution and virulence of the tubercle bacillus.
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Pidot SJ, Klatt S, Ates LS, Frigui W, Sayes F, Majlessi L, Izumi H, Monk IR, Porter JL, Bennett-Wood V, Seemann T, Otter A, Taiaroa G, Cook GM, West N, Tobias NJ, Fuerst JA, Stutz MD, Pellegrini M, McConville M, Brosch R, and Stinear TP
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- Animals, Mice, Virulence, Mycobacterium tuberculosis pathogenicity, Mycobacterium tuberculosis genetics, Tuberculosis microbiology, Virulence Factors genetics, Female, Biological Evolution, Humans, Phylogeny, Mycobacterium pathogenicity, Mycobacterium genetics, Porifera microbiology
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Reconstructing the evolutionary origins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis, has helped identify bacterial factors that have led to the tubercle bacillus becoming such a formidable human pathogen. Here we report the discovery and detailed characterization of an exceedingly slow growing mycobacterium that is closely related to M. tuberculosis for which we have proposed the species name Mycobacterium spongiae sp. nov., (strain ID: FSD4b-SM). The bacterium was isolated from a marine sponge, taken from the waters of the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland, Australia. Comparative genomics revealed that, after the opportunistic human pathogen Mycobacterium decipiens, M. spongiae is the most closely related species to the M. tuberculosis complex reported to date, with 80% shared average nucleotide identity and extensive conservation of key M. tuberculosis virulence factors, including intact ESX secretion systems and associated effectors. Proteomic and lipidomic analyses showed that these conserved systems are functional in FSD4b-SM, but that it also produces cell wall lipids not previously reported in mycobacteria. We investigated the virulence potential of FSD4b-SM in mice and found that, while the bacteria persist in lungs for 56 days after intranasal infection, no overt pathology was detected. The similarities with M. tuberculosis, together with its lack of virulence, motivated us to investigate the potential of FSD4b-SM as a vaccine strain and as a genetic donor of the ESX-1 genetic locus to improve BCG immunogenicity. However, neither of these approaches resulted in superior protection against M. tuberculosis challenge compared to BCG vaccination alone. The discovery of M. spongiae adds to our understanding of the emergence of the M. tuberculosis complex and it will be another useful resource to refine our understanding of the factors that shaped the evolution and pathogenesis of M. tuberculosis., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Pidot et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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32. myoActivation®, a Structured Assessment and Therapeutic Process for Adolescents With Myofascial Dysfunction and Chronic Low Back Pain: A Case Series.
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Luo J, West N, and Lauder GR
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Introduction Myofascial dysfunction is a significant, but often unrecognized, contributor to chronic low back pain (CLBP). myoActivation is an innovative method that utilizes a structured assessment and therapeutic process to recognize and manage myofascial dysfunction and pain. Since 2017, the British Columbia Children's Hospital Complex Pain Service has used myoActivation as a tool in the interdisciplinary care of adolescents with chronic pain. This case series explores the journey to discharge of patients in whom myoActivation was incorporated as part of their CLBP management. Methods We retrospectively reviewed clinical records of adolescents reporting CLBP who underwent myoActivation between August 2022 and January 2023 and had subsequently been discharged. Information obtained for analysis included preclinical information (medical/injury/pain history, previous investigations, diagnoses, therapies, and quality of life indicators); clinic recommendations, assessment findings, management strategies, and specifics of the myoActivation process; and reported changes at discharge (quality-of-life measures and medication use). Results Eight cases were reviewed: all female, with a median age (range) of 16.5 (15.7-19.5) years. Before admission, patients had experienced chronic pain for a median duration of 4.3 (1-8) years, had self-reported average pain intensity of 7.5 (4-9) on the 0-10 numeric pain scale, with poor quality-of-life impacts including sleep disturbance (8/8, 100%), school absence (8/8, 100%), and low mood (6/8, 75%). Patients attended three (2-5) myoActivation sessions over two (1-10) weeks. The overall duration of their interdisciplinary care was 12 (7-25) months. At discharge, there were improvements in pain (7/8, 88%), physical functioning (5/8, 63%), sleep (6/8, 75%), school attendance (5/8, 63%), and mood (4/6, 67%) and reduced prescription and over-the-counter medication use in most cases. Conclusion This case series suggests that myoActivation may be a useful clinical tool in the assessment and management of adolescents with myofascial dysfunction and CLBP. Prospective longitudinal research is required to establish evidence that confirms the clinical efficacy of myoActivation within interdisciplinary care., Competing Interests: Human subjects: Consent was obtained or waived by all participants in this study. University of British Columbia – Children’s & Women’s Health Centre of BC Research Ethics Board issued approval H21-00951. Animal subjects: All authors have confirmed that this study did not involve animal subjects or tissue. Conflicts of interest: In compliance with the ICMJE uniform disclosure form, all authors declare the following: Payment/services info: All authors have declared that no financial support was received from any organization for the submitted work. Financial relationships: Gillian Lauder declare(s) employment from myoA for YOUth. GL operates a privately run myoActivation clinic for youth (myoA for YOUth). The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose. Intellectual property info: Greg Siren has trademarked myoActivation® to preserve intellectual property and the unique standardized innovative process within the auspices of a not-for-profit organization, the Anatomic Medicine Foundation (https://www.anatomicmedicine.org/). Other relationships: All authors have declared that there are no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work., (Copyright © 2024, Luo et al.)
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- 2024
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33. Tissue-Free Liquid Biopsies Combining Genomic and Methylation Signals for Minimal Residual Disease Detection in Patients with Early Colorectal Cancer from the UK TRACC Part B Study.
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Slater S, Bryant A, Aresu M, Begum R, Chen HC, Peckitt C, Lazaro-Alcausi R, Carter P, Anandappa G, Khakoo S, Melcher L, Potter V, Marti FM, Huang J, Branagan G, George N, Abulafi M, Duff S, Raja A, Gupta A, West N, Bucheit L, Rich T, Chau I, Cunningham D, and Starling N
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- Humans, Male, Female, Liquid Biopsy methods, Aged, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Adult, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local genetics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local pathology, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local diagnosis, Neoplasm Staging, United Kingdom, Aged, 80 and over, Genomics methods, Mutation, Prognosis, Neoplasm, Residual genetics, Neoplasm, Residual diagnosis, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms diagnosis, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Colorectal Neoplasms blood, Colorectal Neoplasms surgery, DNA Methylation, Circulating Tumor DNA genetics, Circulating Tumor DNA blood, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics
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Purpose: The absence of postoperative circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) identifies patients with resected colorectal cancer (CRC) with low recurrence risk for adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) de-escalation. Our study presents the largest resected CRC cohort to date with tissue-free minimal residual disease (MRD) detection., Experimental Design: TRACC (tracking mutations in cell-free tumor DNA to predict relapse in early colorectal cancer) included patients with stage I to III resectable CRC. Prospective longitudinal plasma collection for ctDNA occurred pre- and postsurgery, post-ACT, every 3 months for year 1 and every 6 months in years 2 and 3 with imaging annually. The Guardant Reveal assay evaluated genomic and methylation signals. The primary endpoint was 2-year recurrence-free survival (RFS) by postoperative ctDNA detection (NCT04050345)., Results: Between December 2016 and August 2022, 1,203 were patients enrolled. Plasma samples (n = 997) from 214 patients were analyzed. One hundred forty-three patients were evaluable for the primary endpoint; 92 (64.3%) colon, 51 (35.7%) rectal; two (1.4%) stage I, 64 (44.8%) stage II, and 77 (53.8%) stage III. Median follow-up was 30.3 months (95% CI, 29.5-31.3). Two-year RFS was 91.1% in patients with ctDNA not detected postoperatively and 50.4% in those with ctDNA detected [HR, 6.5 (2.96-14.5); P < 0.0001]. Landmark negative predictive value (NPV) was 91.2% (95% CI, 83.9-95.9). Longitudinal sensitivity and specificity were 62.1% (95% CI, 42.2-79.3) and 85.9% (95% CI, 78.9-91.3), respectively. The median lead time from ctDNA detection to radiological recurrence was 7.3 months (IQR, 3.3-12.5; n = 9)., Conclusions: Tissue-free MRD detection with longitudinal sampling predicts recurrence in patients with stage I to III CRC without the need for tissue sequencing. The UK TRACC Part C study is currently investigating the potential for ACT de-escalation in patients with undetectable postoperative ctDNA, given the high NPV indicating a low likelihood of residual disease., (©2024 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2024
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34. "In the Village That She Comes from, Most of the People Don't Know Anything about Cervical Cancer": A Health Systems Appraisal of Cervical Cancer Prevention Services in Tanzania.
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Chelva M, Kaushal S, West N, Erwin E, Yuma S, Sleeth J, Yahya-Malima KI, Shelley D, Risso-Gill I, and Yeates K
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- Humans, Female, Tanzania, Adult, Middle Aged, Rural Population, Health Personnel psychology, Focus Groups, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms prevention & control, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis, Early Detection of Cancer, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
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Introduction: Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women globally. It is the most common cancer in Tanzania, resulting in about 9772 new cases and 6695 deaths each year. Research has shown an association between low levels of risk perception and knowledge of the prevention, risks, signs, etiology, and treatment of cervical cancer and low screening uptake, as contributing to high rates of cervical cancer-related mortality. However, there is scant literature on the perspectives of a wider group of stakeholders (e.g., policymakers, healthcare providers (HCPs), and women at risk), especially those living in rural and semi-rural settings. The main objective of this study is to understand knowledge and perspectives on cervical cancer risk and screening among these populations., Methods: We adapted Risso-Gill and colleagues' framework for a Health Systems Appraisal (HSA), to identify HCPs' perspective of the extent to which health system requirements for effective cervical cancer screening, prevention, and control are in place in Tanzania. We adapted interview topic guides for cervical cancer screening using the HSA framework approach. Study participants (69 in total) were interviewed between 2014 and 2018-participants included key stakeholders, HCPs, and women at risk for cervical cancer. The data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis methodology., Results: Seven themes emerged from our analysis of semi-structured interviews and focus groups: (1) knowledge of the role of screening and preventive care/services (e.g., prevention, risks, signs, etiology, and treatment), (2) training and knowledge of HCPs, (3) knowledge of cervical cancer screening among women at risk, (4) beliefs about cervical cancer screening, (5) role of traditional medicine, (6) risk factors, and (7) symptoms and signs., Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that there is a low level of knowledge of the role of screening and preventive services among stakeholders, HCPs, and women living in rural and semi-rural locations in Tanzania. There is a critical need to implement more initiatives and programs to increase the uptake of screening and related services and allow women to make more informed decisions on their health.
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- 2024
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35. Identification and validation of a machine learning model of complete response to radiation in rectal cancer reveals immune infiltrate and TGFβ as key predictors.
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Domingo E, Rathee S, Blake A, Samuel L, Murray G, Sebag-Montefiore D, Gollins S, West N, Begum R, Richman S, Quirke P, Redmond K, Chatzipli A, Barberis A, Hassanieh S, Mahmood U, Youdell M, McDermott U, Koelzer V, Leedham S, Tomlinson I, Dunne P, Buffa FM, and Maughan TS
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Prognosis, Transcriptome, Treatment Outcome, Machine Learning, Rectal Neoplasms genetics, Rectal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Rectal Neoplasms pathology, Rectal Neoplasms therapy, Rectal Neoplasms metabolism, Rectal Neoplasms immunology, Transforming Growth Factor beta metabolism, Transforming Growth Factor beta genetics
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Background: It is uncertain which biological features underpin the response of rectal cancer (RC) to radiotherapy. No biomarker is currently in clinical use to select patients for treatment modifications., Methods: We identified two cohorts of patients (total N = 249) with RC treated with neoadjuvant radiotherapy (45Gy/25) plus fluoropyrimidine. This discovery set included 57 cases with pathological complete response (pCR) to chemoradiotherapy (23%). Pre-treatment cancer biopsies were assessed using transcriptome-wide mRNA expression and targeted DNA sequencing for copy number and driver mutations. Biological candidate and machine learning (ML) approaches were used to identify predictors of pCR to radiotherapy independent of tumour stage. Findings were assessed in 107 cases from an independent validation set (GSE87211)., Findings: Three gene expression sets showed significant independent associations with pCR: Fibroblast-TGFβ Response Signature (F-TBRS) with radioresistance; and cytotoxic lymphocyte (CL) expression signature and consensus molecular subtype CMS1 with radiosensitivity. These associations were replicated in the validation cohort. In parallel, a gradient boosting machine model comprising the expression of 33 genes generated in the discovery cohort showed high performance in GSE87211 with 90% sensitivity, 86% specificity. Biological and ML signatures indicated similar mechanisms underlying radiation response, and showed better AUC and p-values than published transcriptomic signatures of radiation response in RC., Interpretation: RCs responding completely to chemoradiotherapy (CRT) have biological characteristics of immune response and absence of immune inhibitory TGFβ signalling. These tumours may be identified with a potential biomarker based on a 33 gene expression signature. This could help select patients likely to respond to treatment with a primary radiotherapy approach as for anal cancer. Conversely, those with predicted radioresistance may be candidates for clinical trials evaluating addition of immune-oncology agents and stromal TGFβ signalling inhibition., Funding: The Stratification in Colorectal Cancer Consortium (S:CORT) was funded by the Medical Research Council and Cancer Research UK (MR/M016587/1)., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests TSM is now employed by the University of Liverpool and acknowledges consultancy payments from Astrazeneca, Ground Truth Laboratories and Nordic Pharma. V.H.K. has served as an invited speaker on behalf of Indica Labs. U.M is now employed by and holds stocks in Astrazeneca. Other authors declare no conflict of interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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36. An Implementation Evaluation of the Smartphone-Enhanced Visual Inspection with Acetic Acid (SEVIA) Program for Cervical Cancer Prevention in Urban and Rural Tanzania.
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Ferguson AL, Erwin E, Sleeth J, Symonds N, Chard S, Yuma S, Oneko O, Macheku G, Andrews L, West N, Chelva M, Ginsburg O, and Yeates K
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- Humans, Female, Tanzania, Rural Population, Urban Population, Adult, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms prevention & control, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms diagnosis, Smartphone, Acetic Acid, Early Detection of Cancer methods
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Introduction: The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) for cervical cancer screening (CCS) in lower-resource settings; however, quality varies widely, and it is difficult to maintain a well-trained cadre of providers. The Smartphone-Enhanced Visual Inspection with Acetic acid (SEVIA) program was designed to offer secure sharing of cervical images and real-time supportive supervision to health care workers, in order to improve the quality and accuracy of visual assessment of the cervix for treatment. The purpose of this evaluation was to document early learnings from patients, providers, and higher-level program stakeholders, on barriers and enablers to program implementation., Methods: From 9 September to 8 December 2016, observational activities and open-ended interviews were conducted with image reviewers (n = 5), providers (n = 17), community mobilizers (n = 14), patients (n = 21), supervisors (n = 4) and implementation partners (n = 5) involved with SEVIA. Sixty-six interviews were conducted at 14 facilities, in all five of the program regions Results SEVIA was found to be a highly regarded tool for the enhancement of CCS services in Northern Tanzania. Acceptability, adoption, appropriateness, feasibility, and coverage of the intervention were highly recognized. It appeared to be an effective means of improving good clinical practice among providers and fit seamlessly into existing roles and processes. Barriers to implementation included network connectivity issues, and community misconceptions and the adoption of CCS more generally., Conclusions: SEVIA is a practical and feasible mobile health intervention and tool that is easily integrated into the National CCS program to enhance the quality of care.
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- 2024
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37. The impact of ethical implications intertwined with tuberculosis household contact investigation: a qualitative study.
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Mlambo LM, Milovanovic M, Hanrahan CF, Motsomi KW, Morolo MT, Mohlamonyane MP, Albaugh NW, Ahmed K, Martinson NA, Dowdy DW, and West NS
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Background: Household contact investigation (HCI) is an effective and widely used approach to identify persons with tuberculosis (TB) disease and infection, globally. Despite widespread recommendations for the use of HCI, there remains poor understanding of the impact on and value of contact investigation for participants. Further, how HCI as a practice impacts psychosocial factors, including stigma and possible unintended disclosure of illness among persons with TB, their families, and communities, is largely unknown., Methods: This exploratory qualitative study nested within a randomized trial (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04520113, 17 August 2020) was conducted in South Africa to understand the impacts of HCI on index patients living with TB and their household contact persons in two rural districts in the Limpopo province (Vhembe and Capricorn) and Soshanguve, a peri-urban township in Gauteng province. People with TB and household members of people with TB were recruited to participate in in-depth interviews and focus group discussions using semi-structured guides. We explored individual, interpersonal, and community-level perceptions of potential impacts of household contact investigation to elucidate their perceptions of HCI. Thematic analysis identified key themes., Results: Twenty-four individual interviews and six focus group discussions (n=39 participants) were conducted. Participants viewed HCI as an effective approach to finding TB cases, helpful in educating households about TB symptoms and reducing barriers to health-related services. At the interpersonal level, HCI aided people with TB in safely disclosing their TB status to family members and facilitated family and social support for accountability. The introduction of HIV testing during HCI was reported by some participants as making household members slightly uncomfortable, decreasing interest in household members being tested for TB. HCI negatively impacted community-level TB and HIV-related stigma due to healthcare worker visibility at home., Conclusion: Our data suggests varying impacts of HCI on people with TB, their families and interpersonal relationships, and communities, highlighting the importance of considering approaches that address concerns about community stigma and HIV testing to enhance acceptance of HCI., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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- 2024
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38. Extent of investigation and management of cases of 'unexplained' mismatch repair deficiency (u-dMMR): a UK Cancer Genetics Group consensus.
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McVeigh TP, Monahan KJ, Christopher J, West N, Scott M, Murray J, and Hanson H
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- Humans, United Kingdom epidemiology, Consensus, Colorectal Neoplasms genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms diagnosis, Colorectal Neoplasms therapy, Microsatellite Instability, Genetic Testing, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary genetics, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary diagnosis, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary therapy, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Brain Neoplasms, DNA Mismatch Repair genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis genetics, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis diagnosis, Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis therapy
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Background: Mismatch repair deficiency (dMMR) is a characteristic feature of cancers linked to Lynch syndrome. However, in most cases, it results from sporadic somatic events rather than hereditary factors. The term 'Lynch-like syndrome' (LLS) has been used to guide colorectal cancer surveillance for relatives of individuals with a dMMR tumour when somatic and germline genomic testing is uninformative. As the assessment of mismatch repair through immunohistochemistry and/or microsatellite instability is increasingly applied across various tumour types for treatment planning, dMMR is increasingly detected in tumours where suspicion of hereditary aetiology is low. Our objective was to establish current practices and develop national guidance for investigating, and managing relatives of, patients with cancers demonstrating unexplained dMMR., Methods: This was achieved through a virtual consensus meeting involving key stakeholders from the UK, through premeeting surveys, structured discussions and in-meeting polling to formulate best practice guidance., Results: We identified variability in the availability of diagnostic technologies across specialist centres. It was agreed that equitable access to baseline testing is required, acknowledging the need for a pragmatic approach to investigating dMMR cancers not traditionally associated with Lynch syndrome. Factors such as family history, age, tumour type, protein loss pattern and extent of the investigation were deemed crucial in guiding family management. The term 'unexplained dMMR' was recommended over LLS., Conclusion: Decisions regarding investigations and future cancer risk management in patients and relatives should be nuanced, considering factors like clinical suspicion of hereditary predisposition to allocate limited resources efficiently and avoid unnecessary investigations in low-suspicion families., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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39. Circulating TMAO, the gut microbiome and cardiometabolic disease risk: an exploration in key precursor disorders.
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Naghipour S, Cox AJ, Fisher JJ, Plan M, Stark T, West N, Peart JN, Headrick JP, and Du Toit EF
- Abstract
Background: Elevations in the gut metabolite trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) have been linked to cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. Whether elevated TMAO levels reflect early mechanistic involvement or a sequela of evolving disease awaits elucidation. The purpose of this study was to further explore these potential associations., Methods: We investigated relationships between circulating levels of TMAO and its pre-cursor substrates, dietary factors, gut microbiome profiles and disease risk in individuals with a Healthy BMI (18.5 < BMI < 25, n = 41) or key precursor states for cardiometabolic disease: Overweight (25 < BMI < 30 kg/m
2 , n = 33), Obese (BMI > 30, n = 27) and Metabolic Syndrome (MetS; ≥ 3 ATPIII report criteria, n = 39)., Results: Unexpectedly, plasma [TMAO] did not vary substantially between groups (means of 3-4 µM; p > 0.05), although carnitine was elevated in participants with MetS. Gut microbial diversity and Firmicutes were also significantly reduced in the MetS group (p < 0.05). Exploratory analysis across diverse parameters reveals significant correlations between circulating [TMAO] and seafood intake (p = 0.007), gut microbial diversity (p = 0.017-0.048), and plasma [trimethylamine] (TMA; p = 0.001). No associations were evident with anthropometric parameters or cardiometabolic disease risk. Most variance in [TMAO] within and between groups remained unexplained., Conclusions: Data indicate that circulating [TMAO] may be significantly linked to seafood intake, levels of TMA substrate and gut microbial diversity across healthy and early disease phenotypes. However, mean concentrations remain < 5 µM, with little evidence of links between TMAO and cardiometabolic disease risk. These observations suggest circulating TMAO may not participate mechanistically in cardiometabolic disease development, with later elevations likely a detrimental sequela of extant disease., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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40. Stroma AReactive Invasion Front Areas (SARIFA): a novel histopathologic biomarker in colorectal cancer patients and its association with the luminal tumour proportion.
- Author
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Reitsam NG, Grosser B, Enke JS, Mueller W, Westwood A, West NP, Quirke P, Märkl B, and Grabsch HI
- Abstract
Background: Stroma AReactive Invasion Front Areas (SARIFA) is a novel prognostic histopathologic biomarker measured at the invasive front in haematoxylin & eosin (H&E) stained colon and gastric cancer resection specimens. The aim of the current study was to validate the prognostic relevance of SARIFA-status in colorectal cancer (CRC) patients and investigate its association with the luminal proportion of tumour (PoT)., Methods: We established the SARIFA-status in 164 CRC resection specimens. The relationship between SARIFA-status, clinicopathological characteristics, recurrence-free survival (RFS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), and PoT was investigated., Results: SARIFA-status was positive in 22.6% of all CRCs. SARIFA-positivity was related to higher pT, pN, pTNM stage and high grade of differentiation. SARIFA-positivity was associated with shorter RFS independent of known prognostic factors analysing all CRCs (RFS: hazard ratio (HR) 2.6, p = 0.032, CSS: HR 2.4, p = 0.05) and shorter RFS and CSS analysing only rectal cancers. SARIFA-positivity, which was measured at the invasive front, was associated with PoT-low (p = 0.009), e.g., higher stroma content, and lower vessel density (p = 0.0059) measured at the luminal tumour surface., Conclusion: Here, we validated the relationship between SARIFA-status and prognosis in CRC patients and provided first evidence for a potential prognostic relevance in the subgroup of rectal cancer patients. Interestingly, CRCs with different SARIFA-status also showed histological differences measurable at the luminal tumour surface. Further studies to better understand the relationship between high luminal intratumoural stroma content and absence of a stroma reaction at the invasive front (SARIFA-positivity) are warranted and may inform future treatment decisions in CRC patients., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest HG received honoraria from Astra Zeneca and Bristol Myers Squibb not related to the study. BM has received compensations of travel expenses and fees for advisory board activities by Astra Zeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, MERCK, MSD, BMS, Bayer and Novartis, not related to this study. NW has undertaken paid consultancy for Bristol Myers Squibb, GSK, Astellas and Amgen not related to this study. PQ declares research funding from Roche and honoraria for lectures by Roche, Bayer, Amgen, not related to the study., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2024
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41. Time to put our money where your mouth is: Economist Impact launch white paper on inequalities in oral health.
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Chapple I, West N, Kebschull M, and Pitts N
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- Humans, United Kingdom, Healthcare Disparities, Oral Health
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- 2024
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42. Intralabyrinthine Schwannoma Mimicking Posterior Canalithiasis.
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Olsgård Hansen J, Cramer West N, and Cayé-Thomasen P
- Subjects
- Humans, Diagnosis, Differential, Ear, Inner pathology, Ear, Inner diagnostic imaging, Male, Dizziness etiology, Dizziness diagnosis, Female, Middle Aged, Ear Neoplasms diagnosis, Ear Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Ear Neoplasms pathology, Labyrinth Diseases diagnosis, Diagnostic Errors, Neurilemmoma diagnosis, Neurilemmoma pathology, Neurilemmoma diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neuroma, Acoustic diagnosis, Neuroma, Acoustic diagnostic imaging, Vertigo etiology, Vertigo diagnosis
- Abstract
Intralabyrinthine schwannomas are a rare subgroup of vestibular schwannomas located within the membranous labyrinth of the inner ear and are known for their variable clinical presentations and symptoms. In the present study, we report on a patient with a persistent history of dizziness and positional vertigo, who was misdiagnosed with posterior canalithiasis. As hearing loss was not developed until late in the disease course, the patient was not properly diagnosed until magnetic resonance imaging revealed an intralabyrinthine schwannoma, which was not discovered on earlier imaging. In addition to the unusual clinical presentation, we describe the audio-vestibular profile of our patient. We suggest that a thorough vestibular evaluation, including caloric testing and a careful examination of the inner ear on imaging, is warranted in cases of treatment of refractory vertigo, even in patients where a diagnosis seems certain.
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- 2024
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43. A 3D In-vitro model of the human dentine interface shows long-range osteoinduction from the dentine surface.
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Macalester W, Boussahel A, Moreno-Tortolero RO, Shannon MR, West N, Hill D, and Perriman A
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- Humans, Calcium Phosphates, Hydrogels, In Vitro Techniques, Bioprinting, Tissue Scaffolds, Surface Properties, Extracellular Matrix, Cells, Cultured, Dentin, Osteogenesis physiology, Cell Differentiation, Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Tissue Engineering methods
- Abstract
Emerging regenerative cell therapies for alveolar bone loss have begun to explore the use of cell laden hydrogels for minimally invasive surgery to treat small and spatially complex maxilla-oral defects. However, the oral cavity presents a unique and challenging environment for in vivo bone tissue engineering, exhibiting both hard and soft periodontal tissue as well as acting as key biocenosis for many distinct microbial communities that interact with both the external environment and internal body systems, which will impact on cell fate and subsequent treatment efficacy. Herein, we design and bioprint a facile 3D in vitro model of a human dentine interface to probe the effect of the dentine surface on human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) encapsulated in a microporous hydrogel bioink. We demonstrate that the dentine substrate induces osteogenic differentiation of encapsulated hMSCs, and that both dentine and β-tricalcium phosphate substrates stimulate extracellular matrix production and maturation at the gel-media interface, which is distal to the gel-substrate interface. Our findings demonstrate the potential for long-range effects on stem cells by mineralized surfaces during bone tissue engineering and provide a framework for the rapid development of 3D dentine-bone interface models., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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44. Prediction models for post-discharge mortality among under-five children with suspected sepsis in Uganda: A multicohort analysis.
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Wiens MO, Nguyen V, Bone JN, Kumbakumba E, Businge S, Tagoola A, Sherine SO, Byaruhanga E, Ssemwanga E, Barigye C, Nsungwa J, Olaro C, Ansermino JM, Kissoon N, Singer J, Larson CP, Lavoie PM, Dunsmuir D, Moschovis PP, Novakowski S, Komugisha C, Tayebwa M, Mwesigwa D, Knappett M, West N, Mugisha NK, and Kabakyenga J
- Abstract
In many low-income countries, over five percent of hospitalized children die following hospital discharge. The lack of available tools to identify those at risk of post-discharge mortality has limited the ability to make progress towards improving outcomes. We aimed to develop algorithms designed to predict post-discharge mortality among children admitted with suspected sepsis. Four prospective cohort studies of children in two age groups (0-6 and 6-60 months) were conducted between 2012-2021 in six Ugandan hospitals. Prediction models were derived for six-months post-discharge mortality, based on candidate predictors collected at admission, each with a maximum of eight variables, and internally validated using 10-fold cross-validation. 8,810 children were enrolled: 470 (5.3%) died in hospital; 257 (7.7%) and 233 (4.8%) post-discharge deaths occurred in the 0-6-month and 6-60-month age groups, respectively. The primary models had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) of 0.77 (95%CI 0.74-0.80) for 0-6-month-olds and 0.75 (95%CI 0.72-0.79) for 6-60-month-olds; mean AUROCs among the 10 cross-validation folds were 0.75 and 0.73, respectively. Calibration across risk strata was good: Brier scores were 0.07 and 0.04, respectively. The most important variables included anthropometry and oxygen saturation. Additional variables included: illness duration, jaundice-age interaction, and a bulging fontanelle among 0-6-month-olds; and prior admissions, coma score, temperature, age-respiratory rate interaction, and HIV status among 6-60-month-olds. Simple prediction models at admission with suspected sepsis can identify children at risk of post-discharge mortality. Further external validation is recommended for different contexts. Models can be digitally integrated into existing processes to improve peri-discharge care as children transition from the hospital to the community., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Wiens et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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45. Metastatic spinal cord compression: the Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score and early surgical intervention.
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Kovarik PDE, Fadulelmola A, Hashmi A, Kelly C, West N, Patil R, and Iqbal MS
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the value of Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) in patients with spine metastasis who subsequently developed or did not develop metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC)., Methods: In this single institutional retrospective descriptive observational study, of 589 patients with MSCC who were referred for radiotherapy, 34 patients (with 41 compression sites) met the inclusion criteria: availability of diagnostic MRI spine pre-development of MSCC (MRI-1) and at the time of MSCC development (MRI-2) (CordGroup).For comparison, NoCordGroup consisted of 152 patients (160 sites) treated with radiotherapy to spinal metastases. SINS was compared between the two groups., Results: In CordGroup, the median interval between MRI-1 and MRI-2 was 11 weeks. The median SINS was 8 (range: 4-14) and 9 (range: 7-14) on MRI-1 and MRI-2, respectively. In NoCordGroup, the median SINS was 6 (range: 4-10)., Conclusions: Our study showed a trend in difference in SINS value between the two groups. This difference should be a subject of future prospective research in this patient population with poor survival., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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46. Change in microbiota profile after vaginal estriol cream in postmenopausal women with stress incontinence.
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Moore KH, Ognenovska S, Chua XY, Chen Z, Hicks C, El-Assaad F, Te West N, and El-Omar E
- Abstract
Introduction: Vaginal estrogen is a treatment for genitourinary symptoms of menopause (GSM), which comprises vaginal atrophy and urinary dysfunction, including incontinence. Previous studies show that estrogen therapy promotes lactobacilli abundance and is associated with reduced GSM symptoms, including reduction of stress incontinence. However, detailed longitudinal studies that characterize how the microbiome changes in response to estrogen are scarce. We aimed to compare the vaginal microbiota of postmenopausal women, before and 12 weeks after vaginal estrogen cream., Methods: A total of 44 paired samples from 22 postmenopausal women with vaginal atrophy and stress incontinence were collected pre-vaginal estrogens and were compared to 12 weeks post-vaginal estrogen. Microbiota was characterized by 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and biodiversity was investigated by comparing the alpha- and beta-diversity and potential markers were identified using differential abundance analysis., Results: Vaginal estrogen treatment was associated with a reduction in vaginal pH and corresponded with a significant reduction in alpha diversity of the microbiota. Healthy vaginal community state type was associated with lower mean pH 4.89 (SD = 0.6), in contrast to dysbiotic state which had a higher mean pH 6.4 (SD = 0.74). Women with lactobacilli dominant community pre-treatment, showed stable microbiota and minimal change in their pH. Women with lactobacilli deficient microbiome pre-treatment improved markedly ( p = 0.004) with decrease in pH -1.31 and change to heathier community state types., Conclusion: In postmenopausal women with stress incontinence, vaginal estrogen promotes Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium growth and lowers vaginal pH. Maximum response is seen in those with a dysbiotic vaginal microbiota pre-treatment., 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 © 2024 Moore, Ognenovska, Chua, Chen, Hicks, El-Assaad, te West and El-Omar.)
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- 2024
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47. Digital spatial profiling identifies molecular changes involved in development of colitis-associated colorectal cancer.
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Glyn T, Williams S, Whitehead M, Eglinton T, West N, and Purcell RV
- Abstract
Objective: Chronic colonic inflammation seen in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a risk factor for colorectal cancer (CRC). Colitis-associated cancers (CAC) are molecularly different from sporadic CRC. This study aimed to evaluate spatially defined molecular changes associated with neoplastic progression to identify mechanisms of action and potential biomarkers for prognostication., Design: IBD patients who had undergone colectomy for treatment of their IBD or dysplasia were identified from an institutional database. Formalin-fixed paraffin embedded samples from areas of normal, inflamed, dysplastic and adenocarcinoma tissue were identified for digital spatial profiling using the Nanostring GeoMx™ Cancer Transcriptome Atlas. RNA expression and quantification of 1812 genes was measured and analysed in a spatial context to compare differences in gene expression., Results: Sixteen patients were included, nine patients had CAC, two had dysplasia only and five had colitis only. Significant, step-wise differences in gene expression were seen between tissue types, mainly involving progressive over-expression of collagen genes associated with stromal remodelling. Similarly, MYC over-expression was associated with neoplastic progression. Comparison of normal and inflamed tissue from patients who progressed to those who did not also showed significant differences in immune-related genes, including under-expression of thte chemokines CCL18, CCL25 and IL-R7, as well as CD3, CD6 and lysozyme. The known oncogene CD24 was significantly overexpressed., Conclusion: Both tissue types and patient groups are molecularly distinguishable on the basis of their gene expression patterns. Further prospective work is necessary to confirm these differences and establish their clinical significance and potential utility as biomarkers., 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 © 2024 Glyn, Williams, Whitehead, Eglinton, West and Purcell.)
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- 2024
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48. Cochlear Implantation in Sporadic Intralabyrinthine Schwannomas with Single-Sided Deafness: Implications for Binaural Hearing.
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West N, Sørensen RS, Kressner AA, Bille M, Marozeau J, and Cayé-Thomasen P
- Subjects
- Humans, Hearing, Cochlear Implantation, Cochlear Implants, Neurilemmoma, Deafness
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Intralabyrinthine schwannomas (ILSs) may have detrimental effects on ipsilateral hearing, commonly leading to single-sided deafness (SSD). Cochlear implantation in patients with ILSs is an option to partly restore ipsilateral hearing; however, the available literature fails to account for the binaural hearing benefits of a cochlear implant (CI) for ILSs., Methods: We prospectively evaluated SSD patients with sporadic ILS undergoing cochlear implantation with simultaneous tumor resection (n = 10) or with tumor observation (n = 1). Patients completed the Speech, Spatial and Qualities Questionnaire (SSQ12) and the Nijmegen Cochlear Implant Questionnaire (NCIQ) pre- and postoperatively, as well as the Bern Benefit in Single-Sided Deafness (BBSSD) questionnaire postoperatively. Patients were also tested postoperatively with and without their CI to measure the effect on localization ability and binaural summation, squelch, and head shadow., Results: Evaluation was completed for nine and six patients (subjective and objective data, respectively). The CI significantly improved the speech reception threshold (SRT) in the head shadow condition where the target signal was presented to the CI side and the noise to the front (SCIN0). On the other hand, the SRTs in the colocated condition (S0N0) and the condition where the target signal was presented to the front and the noise to the CI side (S0NCI) were unaffected by the CI. The mean localization error decreased significantly from 102° to 61° (p = 0.0031) with the addition of a CI. The scores from SSQ12 demonstrated nonsignificant changes. For NCIQ, the self-esteem and the social interaction domains increased significantly but insignificantly for the remaining domains. The BBSSD responses ranged from +0.5 to +3.5 points., Conclusion: After implantation, patients achieved significantly better scores across some of the patient-reported and objective parameters. In addition to reporting on a number of ILS cases where implantation was performed, the study is the first of its kind to document patient-reported and objective binaural hearing improvement after cochlear implantation in patients with ILS and, thereby, lends support to the active management of ILS., (Copyright © 2024, Otology & Neurotology, Inc.)
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- 2024
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49. Why don't dental teams routinely discuss dentine hypersensitivity during consultations? A qualitative study informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework.
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Asimakopoulou K, West N, Davies M, Gupta A, Parkinson C, and Scambler S
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- Humans, Qualitative Research, Referral and Consultation, Quality of Life, Dentin Sensitivity diagnosis
- Abstract
Aim: Although dentine hypersensitivity is widespread, can cause substantial pain and impact quality of life, it is not routinely discussed during dental consultations. This qualitative study aimed to develop an understanding of the barriers and facilitators to these discussions., Materials and Methods: Using the Theoretical Domains Framework to shape the topic guide, N = 7 online focus groups were organized with a total N = 40 participants comprising experienced dentists, dental foundation trainees and dental care professionals. Inductive and deductive thematic analyses of the anonymized, transcribed focus group conversations were undertaken., Results: An attitude-behaviour gap was observed in dental teams' accounts. Although they saw it as part of their professional role to routinely discuss sensitivity, and believed that such conversations were 'an easy win', in practice they experienced several behavioural barriers that hindered these conversations from taking place. These included competing priorities, a perceived lack of seriousness and assessment of dentine hypersensitivity and practical issues such as time., Conclusions: Systemic (e.g., lack of time and training, professional culture) and behavioural (e.g., dental teams' belief that conversations should take place only with patients likely to be adherent) barriers to dentine hypersensitivity conversations explain why these conversations do not routinely take place., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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50. Activation of the Interleukin-18 Signaling Pathway via Direct Receptor Dimerization in the Absence of Interleukin-18.
- Author
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Mortazavi Y, Herrera R, Masureel M, Maculins T, Lehoux I, Sockolosky J, West N, Bulutoglu B, and Zhao Y
- Subjects
- Dimerization, Cytokines metabolism, Protein Binding, Interleukin-18, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
Interleukin 18 (IL-18) is a key cytokine involved in the activation of T and NK cells, which are major effector cells in tumor killing. However, recombinant IL-18 showed limited efficacy in clinical trials. A recent study showed the lack of efficacy was largely due to the existence of IL-18BP, a soluble decoy receptor for IL-18. It was shown that engineered IL-18 variants that maintained pathway activation, but avoided IL-18BP binding, could exert potent antitumor effects. In this study, we demonstrated an alternative strategy to activate IL-18 signaling through direct receptor dimerization. These results provide evidences that the IL-18 pathway can be activated by directly bridging the receptors and, therefore, bypassing the IL-18BP-mediated inhibition.
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- 2024
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