54 results on '"Miriam Cortes"'
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52. Neonatal Livers: A Source for the Isolation of Good-Performing Hepatocytes for Cell Transplantation
- Author
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Laia Tolosa, Eugenia Pareja-Ibars, M. Teresa Donato, Miriam Cortés, Silvia López, Nuria Jiménez, José Mir, José V. Castell, and M. José Gómez-Lechón
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Hepatocyte transplantation is an alternative therapy to orthotopic liver transplantation for the treatment of liver diseases. However, the supply of hepatocytes is limited given the shortage of organs available to isolate good-functioning quality cells. Neonatal livers may be a potential source alternative to adult livers to obtain good-performing hepatic cells for hepatocyte transplantation, which has not yet been explored profoundly. High-yield preparations of viable hepatocytes were isolated from 1- to 23-day-old liver donors, cryopreserved, and banked. Cell integrity and functional quality assessment were performed after thawing. Neonatal hepatocytes showed better postthawing recovery compared with adult hepatocytes, as shown by the viability values that did not differ significantly from freshly isolated cells, a higher expression of adhesion molecules (β1-integrin, β-catenin, and E-cadherin), better attachment efficiency, cell survival, and a lower number of apoptotic cells. The metabolic performance of thawed hepatocytes has been assessed by ureogenesis and drug-metabolizing capability (cytochrome P450 and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase enzymes). CYP2A6, CYP2C9, CYP2E1, and CYP3A4 activities were found in all cell preparations, while CYP1A2, CYP2B6, CYP2C19, and CYP2D6 activities were detected only in hepatocytes from a few neonatal donors. The expression of UGT1A1 and UGT1A9 (transcripts and protein) was detected in all hepatocyte preparations, while activity was measured only in some preparations, probably due to lack of maturity of the enzymes. However, isoforms UGT1A6 and UGT2B7 showed considerable activity in all preparations. Compared to adult liver, the hepatocyte isolation procedure in neonatal livers also provides thawed cell suspensions with a higher proportion of hepatic progenitor cells (EpCAM + staining), which could also participate in regeneration of liver parenchyma after transplantation. These results could imply important advantages of neonatal hepatocytes as a source of high-quality cells to improve human hepatocyte transplantation applicability.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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53. Engineering Personalized Medicine.
- Author
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Miriam Cortes-Caminero
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,MEDICAL technology ,SCIENTIFIC discoveries ,HUMAN chromosome abnormality diagnosis - Abstract
The article offers information regarding the personalized medicine brought by the emerging technologies and new discoveries. It mentions several personalized medicine such as molecular analysis and pharmcogenomics. It says that personalized medicine is a great tool to diagnose the diseases at the early stage. However, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration raised their concerns that genetic-tests should be first tested as safe and effective because these are considered as medical devices.
- Published
- 2010
54. Hypothermic Machine Perfusion in Liver Transplantation - A Randomized Trial.
- Author
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Rijn, Rianne van, Schurink, Ivo J., Vries, Yvonne de, van den Berg, Aad P., Cerisuelo, Miriam Cortes, Murad, Sarwa Darwish, Erdmann, Joris I., Gilbo, Nicholas, de Haas, Robbert J., Heaton, Nigel, Hoek, Bart van, Huurman, Volkert A. L., Jochmans, Ina, van Leeuwen, Otto B., de Meijer, Vincent E., Monbaliu, Diethard, Polak, Wojciech G., Slangen, Jules J. G., Troisi, Roberto I., and Vanlander, Aude
- Subjects
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LIVER transplantation , *PERFUSION , *COLD storage , *MACHINERY , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *RESEARCH , *STENOSIS , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *PRESERVATION of organs, tissues, etc. , *COMPARATIVE studies , *BILIARY tract , *RESEARCH funding , *REPERFUSION injury , *COLD (Temperature) - Abstract
Background: Transplantation of livers obtained from donors after circulatory death is associated with an increased risk of nonanastomotic biliary strictures. Hypothermic oxygenated machine perfusion of livers may reduce the incidence of biliary complications, but data from prospective, controlled studies are limited.Methods: In this multicenter, controlled trial, we randomly assigned patients who were undergoing transplantation of a liver obtained from a donor after circulatory death to receive that liver either after hypothermic oxygenated machine perfusion (machine-perfusion group) or after conventional static cold storage alone (control group). The primary end point was the incidence of nonanastomotic biliary strictures within 6 months after transplantation. Secondary end points included other graft-related and general complications.Results: A total of 160 patients were enrolled, of whom 78 received a machine-perfused liver and 78 received a liver after static cold storage only (4 patients did not receive a liver in this trial). Nonanastomotic biliary strictures occurred in 6% of the patients in the machine-perfusion group and in 18% of those in the control group (risk ratio, 0.36; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.14 to 0.94; P = 0.03). Postreperfusion syndrome occurred in 12% of the recipients of a machine-perfused liver and in 27% of those in the control group (risk ratio, 0.43; 95% CI, 0.20 to 0.91). Early allograft dysfunction occurred in 26% of the machine-perfused livers, as compared with 40% of control livers (risk ratio, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.39 to 0.96). The cumulative number of treatments for nonanastomotic biliary strictures was lower by a factor of almost 4 after machine perfusion, as compared with control. The incidence of adverse events was similar in the two groups.Conclusions: Hypothermic oxygenated machine perfusion led to a lower risk of nonanastomotic biliary strictures following the transplantation of livers obtained from donors after circulatory death than conventional static cold storage. (Funded by Fonds NutsOhra; DHOPE-DCD ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02584283.). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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