638 results on '"Yip L"'
Search Results
152. Experimental investigation of the high angle of attack characteristics of a high performance general aviation aircraft
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MEYER, H., primary, YIP, L., additional, PERKINS, J., additional, and VESS, R., additional
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- 1989
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153. ChemInform Abstract: SYNTHESIS AND PROPERTIES OF THE SULFONYL ANALOGS OF 4(5)‐AMINOIMIDAZOLE‐5(4)‐CARBOXAMIDE, 4(5)‐(FORMYLAMINO)IMIDAZOLE‐5(4)‐CARBOXAMIDE, GUANINE, AND XANTHINE
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HUANG, B. S., primary, CHELLO, P. L., additional, YIP, L., additional, and PARHAM, J. C., additional
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- 1980
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154. Some Effects of Serum on Peripheral Leukocyte Count and Mouse Thymus After Exposure to X-Ray
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Hodes, M. E., primary, Yip, L. C., additional, and Yu, P., additional
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- 1969
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155. Trypsin Esterase Binding and Its Relation to the Radiation-Leukemia Protection (RLP) Factor
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Yip, L. C., primary and Hodes, M. E., additional
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- 1970
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156. Unsaturated novolaks curable by addition polymerisation
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Hui, K. M., primary and Yip, L. C., additional
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- 1970
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157. Polymerisation of allyl phenyl ether: a polymerisation involving intramolecular rearrangement
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Hui, K. M., primary and Yip, L. C., additional
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- 1971
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- View/download PDF
158. Package warpage evaluation for high performance PQFP
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Yip, L., primary and Hamzehdoost, A., additional
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- View/download PDF
159. DSP implementation of a distributed acoustical beamformer on a wireless sensor platform
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Chen, J.C., primary, Yip, L., additional, Wang, H., additional, Maniezzo, D., additional, Hudson, R.E., additional, Elson, J., additional, Yao, K., additional, and Estrin, D., additional
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- View/download PDF
160. Hardware implementation of genetic algorithms using FPGA
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Tang, W., primary and Yip, L., additional
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- View/download PDF
161. Reduction of heart sounds from lung sound recordings by automated gain control and adaptive filtering techniques
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Yip, L., primary and Zhang, Y.T., additional
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- View/download PDF
162. A 20-hour treatment for acute acetaminophen overdose.
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Yip L and Dart RC
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- 2003
163. G465(P) Factors influencing renal transplant graft outcomes following transition: time to personalise services
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Gupta, A, Kerecuk, L, Lipkin, G, Milford, D, Hodson, J, Pankhurst, T, Edward, C, Manley, M, McLoughlin-Yip, L, and Thompson, M
- Abstract
AimsThere has been much focus on building effective transition programmes for patients with chronic illness including chronic kidney disease. The structure of current transition programmes can be variable with financial as well as human resource restraints. We aimed to review factors, which influence graft function following the introduction of a transition programme for within our region to identify those at risk of poor outcome.MethodsData was collected for two groups of patients: nontransition group (pre 2006) and transitioned group (post 2006). This included transplant details, donor type, age at transplant and diagnosis of intellectual disability (ID). In addition, further data was retrospectively collected at 6 monthly intervals for age, height, creatinine, blood pressure, tacrolimus levels, non-attendances and rejection episodes. GFR was estimated using the modified Schwartz formula and analysed using segmented linear regression analysis. These models contained two covariates which estimated overall GFR gradient and the magnitude of change in gradient post-transfer. Follow-up was truncated at 2 years pre- and 4 years post transfer to prevent patients with longer follow-up becoming influential outliers.ResultsFollowing implementation of a transition programme rate of GRF decline was significantly lower for transitioned (n=30) compared with non-transitioned patients (p=0.028).GFR declined significantly faster pre-transition in patients who received deceased donor organs (p=0.004), were transplanted at <13 years old (p=0.016), had a lower GFR at transfer (p<0.001), no ID (p=0002) had more than 0.5 non-attendances at adult unit/year or the tour (p<0.001).After transition, patients that attended the tour (p=0.001) or attended with >0.5 attendances at the adult (p=0.022) unit did significantly better.Subgroup analysis for transitioned patients was then performed (see table). Comparing those with GFR of <30 (n=8) and 30 (n=22) at transfer, we found that patients in the lower GFR group had a significantly faster decline pre-transition ( 11.9 vs 4.9 ml/min/1.73 m2/year, p<0.001). Post-transfer improvement in the GFR <30 group was significantly greater than in 30 group (p=0.003), resulting in gradients in two groups being similar after transfer ( 2.4 vs 3.4 ml/min/1.73 m2/year).ConclusionsIdentifying those at risk of poor prognosis following transfer to adult care is crucial to help modify and personalise transition services.
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- 2017
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164. DSP implementation of a distributed acoustical beamformer on a wireless sensor platform.
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Chen, J.C., Yip, L., Wang, H., Maniezzo, D., Hudson, R.E., Elson, J., Yao, K., and Estrin, D.
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- 2003
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165. Reduction of heart sounds from lung sound recordings by automated gain control and adaptive filtering techniques.
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Yip, L. and Zhang, Y.T.
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- 2001
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166. Polymerisation of allyl phenyl ether: a polymerisation involving intramolecular rearrangement.
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Hui, K. M. and Yip, L. C.
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- 1971
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- View/download PDF
167. Unsaturated novolaks curable by addition polymerisation.
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Hui, K. M. and Yip, L. C.
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- 1970
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- View/download PDF
168. Method of avoiding ampoule adhesion of ingots in Bridgman growth of CuInSe~2
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Yip, L. S., Shih, I., and Champness, C. H.
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- 1993
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169. A Global eDelphi Exercise to Identify Core Domains and Domain Items for the Development of a Global Registry of Alopecia Areata Disease Severity and Treatment Safety (GRASS)
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Jeff C. Donovan, Cheng Zhou, Valerie D. Callender, Dmitri Wall, Ncoza C. Dlova, Leonardo Spagnol Abraham, Laita Bokhari, Martin S Wade, Sergio Vano-Galvan, Bruna Duque-Estrada, Alan D. Irvine, Wilma F. Bergfeld, Antonella Tosti, Abby Ellison, David Saceda Corralo, Jen Chambers, Pooja Sharma, Seth J. Orlow, Andrew G. Messenger, Bianca Maria Piraccini, Ulrike Blume-Peytavi, Spartak Kaiumov, Brett A. King, Roisin Adams, Rodney Sinclair, Annika Vogt, Melissa Riley, Katherine York, Rachita Dhurat, Won Soo Lee, Brittany G. Craiglow, Bevin Bhoyrul, Aida Gadzhigoroeva, Leslie Jones, Chel Campbell, V. Jolliffe, Juan Ferrando Barberá, Gang Chen, Regina C. Betz, Adriana Rakowska, Elise A. Olsen, Amy J. McMichael, Samantha Eisman, Abraham Zlotogorski, Matthew Harries, George Cotsarelis, Jerry Shapiro, Paul Farrant, Vijaya Chitreddy, Paradi Mirmirani, Leona Yip, Lidia Rudnicka, Nino Lortkipanidze, Yuliya Ovcharenko, Ramon Grimalt, Pascal Reygagne, Maria K. Hordinsky, Tatiana Silyuk, Rodrigo Pirmez, Desmond J. Tobin, Nekma Meah, Wall D., Meah N., York K., Bhoyrul B., Bokhari L., Abraham L.S., Adams R., Bergfeld W., Betz R.C., Blume-Peytavi U., Callender V., Campbell C., Chambers J., Chen G., Chitreddy V., Cotsarelis G., Craiglow B., Dhurat R., Dlova N., Donovan J., Duque-Estrada B., Eisman S., Ellison A., Farrant P., Barbera J.F., Gadzhigoroeva A., Grimalt R., Harries M., Hordinsky M., Irvine A.D., Jolliffe V., Jones L., King B., Lee W.-S., Lortkipanidze N., McMichael A., Messenger A., Mirmirani P., Olsen E., Orlow S.J., Ovcharenko Y., Piraccini B.M., Pirmez R., Rakowska A., Reygagne P., Riley M., Rudnicka L., Saceda Corralo D., Shapiro J., Sharma P., Silyuk T., Kaiumov S., Tobin D.J., Tosti A., Vano-Galvan S., Vogt A., Wade M., Yip L., Zlotogorski A., Zhou C., and Sinclair R.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Internationality ,Alopecia Areata ,Delphi Technique ,Delphi method ,MEDLINE ,Redress ,Consensu ,Dermatology ,Disease ,Subspecialty ,Severity of Illness Index ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Global network ,medicine ,Humans ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,Registries ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Pharmaceutical industry ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Alopecia areata ,medicine.disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,business ,Human - Abstract
Importance A recent expert consensus exercise emphasized the importance of developing a global network of patient registries for alopecia areata to redress the paucity of comparable, real-world data regarding the effectiveness and safety of existing and emerging therapies for alopecia areata. Objective To generate core domains and domain items for a global network of alopecia areata patient registries. Evidence Review Sixty-six participants, representing physicians, patient organizations, scientists, the pharmaceutical industry, and pharmacoeconomic experts, participated in a 3-round eDelphi process, culminating in a face-to-face meeting at the World Congress of Dermatology, Milan, Italy, June 14, 2019. Findings Ninety-two core data items, across 25 domains, achieved consensus agreement. Twenty further noncore items were retained to facilitate data harmonization in centers that wish to record them. Broad representation across multiple stakeholder groups was sought; however, the opinion of physicians was overrepresented. Conclusions and Relevance This study identifies the domains and domain items required to develop a global network of alopecia areata registries. These domains will facilitate a standardized approach that will enable the recording of a comprehensive, comparable data set required to oversee the introduction of new therapies and harness real-world evidence from existing therapies at a time when the alopecia areata treatment paradigm is being radically and positively disrupted. Reuse of similar, existing frameworks in atopic dermatitis, produced by the Treatment of Atopic Eczema (TREAT) Registry Taskforce, increases the potential to reuse existing resources, creates opportunities for comparison of data across dermatology subspecialty disease areas, and supports the concept of data harmonization.
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- 2021
170. The Alopecia Areata Consensus of Experts (ACE) study: Results of an international expert opinion on treatments for alopecia areata
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Wilma F. Bergfeld, Valerie D. Callender, A.D. Irvine, Abraham Zlotogorski, Maria K. Hordinsky, Victoria Jolliffe, Daniel Asz Sigall, Jerry Shapiro, Jack Green, Lidia Rudnicka, Nekma Meah, Elise A. Olsen, Jeff C. Donovan, Adriana Rakowska, Dmitri Wall, Won Soo Lee, Ulrike Blume-Peytavi, Katherine York, Samantha Eisman, George Cotsarelis, Seth J. Orlow, Antonella Tosti, Satoshi Itami, Ramon Grimalt, Matthew Harries, Vijaya Chitreddy, Pooja Sharma, Pascal Reygagne, Leona Yip, Annika Vogt, Amy J. McMichael, Brittany G. Craiglow, Bevin Bhoyrul, Martin S Wade, Brett A. King, Paul Farrant, Laita Bokhari, Regina C. Betz, Paradi Mirmirani, Andrew G. Messenger, Andrea Combalia, Bianca Maria Piraccini, Janet L. Roberts, Rodney Sinclair, and Meah N, Wall D, York K, Bhoyrul B, Bokhari L, Sigall DA, Bergfeld WF, Betz RC, Blume-Peytavi U, Callender V, Chitreddy V, Combalia A, Cotsarelis G, Craiglow B, Donovan J, Eisman S, Farrant P, Green J, Grimalt R, Harries M, Hordinsky M, Irvine AD, Itami S, Jolliffe V, King B, Lee WS, McMichael A, Messenger A, Mirmirani P, Olsen E, Orlow SJ, Piraccini BM, Rakowska A, Reygagne P, Roberts JL, Rudnicka L, Shapiro J, Sharma P, Tosti A, Vogt A, Wade M, Yip L, Zlotogorski A, Sinclair R.
- Subjects
Complementary Therapies ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Alopecia Areata ,Delphi Technique ,Administration, Topical ,Delphi method ,Administration, Oral ,Topical treatment ,Dermatology ,Injections, Intralesional ,Severity of Illness Index ,Systemic therapy ,law.invention ,030207 dermatology & venereal diseases ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,law ,Humans ,Medicine ,Expert Testimony ,Patient registry ,business.industry ,Alopecia areata, Treatments for alopecia areata ,Age Factors ,alopecia areata, steroid, methotrexate, cyclosporin ,Expert consensus ,Phototherapy ,Alopecia areata ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Expert opinion ,Family medicine ,Dermatologic Agents ,business - Abstract
Background A systematic review failed to identify any systemic therapy used in alopecia areata (AA) where use is supported by robust evidence from high-quality randomized controlled trials. Objective To produce an international consensus statement on the use and utility of various treatments for AA. Methods Fifty hair experts from 5 continents were invited to participate in a 3-round Delphi process. Agreement of 66% or greater was considered consensus. Results In the first round, consensus was achieved in 22 of 423 (5%) questions. After a face-to-face meeting in round 3, overall, consensus was achieved for only 130 (33%) treatment-specific questions. There was greater consensus for intralesional treatment of AA (19 [68%]) followed by topical treatment (25 [43%]). Consensus was achieved in 45 (36%) questions pertaining to systemic therapies in AA. The categories with the least consensus were phototherapy and nonprescription therapies. Limitations The study included a comprehensive list of systemic treatments for AA but not all treatments used. Conclusion Despite divergent opinions among experts, consensus was achieved on a number of pertinent questions. The concluding statement also highlights areas where expert consensus is lacking and where an international patient registry could enable further research.
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- 2020
171. The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt) in 2010
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Elisabeth Gasteiger, Amos Bairoch, John Garavelli, Julius Jacobsen, Lionel Breuza, Rachael Huntley, Rolf Apweiler, Christian J. A. SIGRIST, Rebecca Foulger, Jerven Bolleman, Raja Mazumder, Ivo Pedruzzi, Florence Jungo, Anaïs Mottaz, Michael Tognolli, Emmanuel Boutet, Claire O'Donovan, Edward Turner, Sandra Orchard, Patrick Masson, Peter McGarvey, Nicole Redaschi, Sébastien Géhant, Michele Magrane, Anne Estreicher, Alan Bridge, Michel Schneider, Daniel Barrell, Benoit Bely, Anne Morgat, Sylvain Poux, Petra Langendijk-Genevaux, Maria-Jesus Martin, Catherine Rivoire, Elisabeth Coudert, Rasko Leinonen, Cecilia Arighi, UniProt Consortium, Apweiler, R., Martin, MJ., O'Donovan, C., Magrane, M., Alam-Faruque, Y., Antunes, R., Barrell, D., Bely, B., Bingley, M., Binns, D., Bower, L., Browne, P., Chan, WM., Dimmer, E., Eberhardt, R., Fedotov, A., Foulger, R., Garavelli, J., Huntley, R., Jacobsen, J., Kleen, M., Laiho, K., Leinonen, R., Legge, D., Lin, Q., Liu, W., Luo, J., Orchard, S., Patient, S., Poggioli, D., Pruess, M., Corbett, M., di Martino, G., Donnelly, M., van Rensburg, P., Bairoch, A., Bougueleret, L., Xenarios, I., Altairac, S., Auchincloss, A., Argoud-Puy, G., Axelsen, K., Baratin, D., Blatter, MC., Boeckmann, B., Bolleman, J., Bollondi, L., Boutet, E., Quintaje, SB., Breuza, L., Bridge, A., deCastro, E., Ciapina, L., Coral, D., Coudert, E., Cusin, I., Delbard, G., Doche, M., Dornevil, D., Roggli, PD., Duvaud, S., Estreicher, A., Famiglietti, L., Feuermann, M., Gehant, S., Farriol-Mathis, N., Ferro, S., Gasteiger, E., Gateau, A., Gerritsen, V., Gos, A., Gruaz-Gumowski, N., Hinz, U., Hulo, C., Hulo, N., James, J., Jimenez, S., Jungo, F., Kappler, T., Keller, G., Lachaize, C., Lane-Guermonprez, L., Langendijk-Genevaux, P., Lara, V., Lemercier, P., Lieberherr, D., de Oliveira Lima, T., Mangold, V., Martin, X., Masson, P., Moinat, M., Morgat, A., Mottaz, A., Paesano, S., Pedruzzi, I., Pilbout, S., Pillet, V., Poux, S., Pozzato, M., Redaschi, N., Rivoire, C., Roechert, B., Schneider, M., Sigrist, C., Sonesson, K., Staehli, S., Stanley, E., Stutz, A., Sundaram, S., Tognolli, M., Verbregue, L., Veuthey, AL., Yip, L., Zuletta, L., Wu, C., Arighi, C., Arminski, L., Barker, W., Chen, C., Chen, Y., Hu, ZZ., Huang, H., Mazumder, R., McGarvey, P., Natale, DA., Nchoutmboube, J., Petrova, N., Subramanian, N., Suzek, BE., Ugochukwu, U., Vasudevan, S., Vinayaka, CR., Yeh, LS., and Zhang, J.
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Proteomics ,Internet ,0303 health sciences ,Proteome ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Computational Biology ,Information Storage and Retrieval ,Genome, Viral ,Articles ,Europe ,03 medical and health sciences ,Algorithms ,Animals ,Computational Biology/methods ,Computational Biology/trends ,Databases, Nucleic Acid ,Databases, Protein ,Genome, Fungal ,Humans ,Information Storage and Retrieval/methods ,Protein Isoforms ,Software ,Genetics ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
The primary mission of UniProt is to support biological research by maintaining a stable, comprehensive, fully classified, richly and accurately annotated protein sequence knowledgebase, with extensive cross-references and querying interfaces freely accessible to the scientific community. UniProt is produced by the UniProt Consortium which consists of groups from the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI), the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB) and the Protein Information Resource (PIR). UniProt is comprised of four major components, each optimized for different uses: the UniProt Archive, the UniProt Knowledgebase, the UniProt Reference Clusters and the UniProt Metagenomic and Environmental Sequence Database. UniProt is updated and distributed every 3 weeks and can be accessed online for searches or download at http://www.uniprot.org.
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- 2009
172. From protein sequences to 3D-structures and beyond: the example of the UniProt knowledgebase
- Author
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Elisabeth Gasteiger, Amos Bairoch, John Garavelli, Julius Jacobsen, Lionel Breuza, Rachael Huntley, Rolf Apweiler, Christian J. A. SIGRIST, Rebecca Foulger, Raja Mazumder, Ivo Pedruzzi, Florence Jungo, Anaïs Mottaz, Michael Tognolli, Emmanuel Boutet, Claire O'Donovan, Edward Turner, Sandra Orchard, Patrick Masson, Peter McGarvey, Nicole Redaschi, Sébastien Géhant, Michele Magrane, Anne Estreicher, Alan Bridge, Daniel Barrell, Benoit Bely, Anne Morgat, Sylvain Poux, Petra Langendijk-Genevaux, Maria-Jesus Martin, Catherine Rivoire, Elisabeth Coudert, Rasko Leinonen, Cecilia Arighi, UniProt Consortium, Apweiler, R., Martin, MJ., O'Donovan, C., Magrane, M., Alam-Faruque, Y., Antunes, R., Barrell, D., Bely, B., Bingley, M., Binns, D., Bower, L., Browne, P., Chan, WM., Dimmer, E., Eberhardt, R., Fedotov, A., Foulger, R., Garavelli, J., Huntley, R., Jacobsen, J., Kleen, M., Laiho, K., Leinonen, R., Legge, D., Lin, Q., Liu, W., Luo, J., Orchard, S., Patient, S., Poggioli, D., Pruess, M., Corbett, M., di Martino, G., Donnelly, M., van Rensburg, P., Bairoch, A., Bougueleret, L., Xenarios, I., Altairac, S., Auchincloss, A., Argoud-Puy, G., Axelsen, K., Baratin, D., Blatter, MC., Boeckmann, B., Bolleman, J., Bollondi, L., Boutet, E., Quintaje, SB., Breuza, L., Bridge, A., de Castro, E., Ciapina, L., Coral, D., Coudert, E., Cusin, I., David, F., Delbard, G., Doche, M., Dornevil, D., Roggli, PD., Duvaud, S., Estreicher, A., Famiglietti, L., Feuermann, M., Gehant, S., Farriol-Mathis, N., Ferro, S., Gasteiger, E., Gateau, A., Gerritsen, V., Gos, A., Gruaz-Gumowski, N., Hinz, U., Hulo, C., Hulo, N., James, J., Jimenez, S., Jungo, F., Kappler, T., Keller, G., Lachaize, C., Lane-Guermonprez, L., Langendijk-Genevaux, P., Lara, V., Lemercier, P., Lieberherr, D., Lima Tde, O., Mangold, V., Martin, X., Masson, P., Moinat, M., Morgat, A., Mottaz, A., Paesano, S., Pedruzzi, I., Pilbout, S., Pillet, V., Poux, S., Pozzato, M., Redaschi, N., Rivoire, C., Roechert, B., Schneider, M., Sigrist, C., Sonesson, K., Staehli, S., Stanley, E., Stutz, A., Sundaram, S., Tognolli, M., Verbregue, L., Veuthey, AL., Yip, L., Zuletta, L., Wu, C., Arighi, C., Arminski, L., Barker, W., Chen, C., Chen, Y., Hu, ZZ., Huang, H., Mazumder, R., McGarvey, P., Natale, DA., Nchoutmboube, J., Petrova, N., Subramanian, N., Suzek, BE., Ugochukwu, U., Vasudevan, S., Vinayaka, CR., Yeh, LS., and Zhang, J.
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Proteomics ,Binding Sites ,Catalytic Domain ,Databases, Protein ,Knowledge Bases ,Protein Conformation ,Proteins/chemistry ,Proteins/genetics ,Sequence Analysis, Protein ,Sequence analysis ,Computer science ,Annotation ,Structural genomics ,Context (language use) ,Review ,Computational biology ,Bioinformatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Protein 3D-structure ,Swiss-Prot ,Molecular Biology ,UniProtKB ,030304 developmental biology ,Pharmacology ,0303 health sciences ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Proteins ,Experimental data ,Data flood ,Cell Biology ,Knowledgebase ,Data access ,Molecular Medicine ,UniProt - Abstract
With the dramatic increase in the volume of experimental results in every domain of life sciences, assembling pertinent data and combining information from different fields has become a challenge. Information is dispersed over numerous specialized databases and is presented in many different formats. Rapid access to experiment-based information about well-characterized proteins helps predict the function of uncharacterized proteins identified by large-scale sequencing. In this context, universal knowledgebases play essential roles in providing access to data from complementary types of experiments and serving as hubs with cross-references to many specialized databases. This review outlines how the value of experimental data is optimized by combining high-quality protein sequences with complementary experimental results, including information derived from protein 3D-structures, using as an example the UniProt knowledgebase (UniProtKB) and the tools and links provided on its website ( http://www.uniprot.org/ ). It also evokes precautions that are necessary for successful predictions and extrapolations.
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- 2010
173. Reappraisal of BRAFK601E-positive thyroid tumors in the NIFTP era.
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Doerfler WR, Nikitski AV, Keating S, Spagnolo D, Kaya C, Morariu EM, Karslioglu French E, Yip L, Nikiforova MN, Wald AI, and Nikiforov YE
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular genetics, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular pathology, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular therapy, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular diagnosis, Aged, Mutation, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms therapy, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
BRAFK601E is an uncommon mutation typically found in encapsulated follicular-patterned thyroid tumors. Previous studies on BRAFK601E-positive thyroid tumors were conducted before the implementation of the non-invasive follicular neoplasm with papillary-like nuclear features (NIFTP) diagnosis. This study aimed to characterize BRAFK601E-positive tumors and evaluate changes in the diagnosis and management of these patients after the introduction of NIFTP. We evaluated 25 thyroid tumors that were positive for BRAFK601E and diagnosed considering the NIFTP criteria. Clinicopathologic characteristics and recurrence rates of these tumors were compared to 29 BRAFK601E-positive tumors diagnosed prior to the acceptance of the NIFTP diagnosis. RNA-seq analysis was performed on 10 BRAFK601E-positive tumors. In the current study, 72% of BRAFK601E-positive tumors were diagnosed as non-invasive tumors on resection, with NIFTP (48% of all tumors) being the most common diagnosis. BRAFK601E-positive tumors exhibited a RAS-like gene expression profile with a BRAF-RAS score (BRS) and thyroid differentiation score (TDS) distinct from BRAFV600E-positive tumors (P < 0.001). Since 2016, patients with BRAFK601E-positive tumors less frequently underwent total thyroidectomy (41% vs 100%, P < 0.001) and received radioiodine (7% vs 75%, P < 0.001). None of the tumors positive for an isolated BRAFK601E mutation from the current or 2016 studies showed recurrences on follow-up. Our study demonstrates that most BRAFK601E-positive tumors are low-risk, RAS-like tumors, which were diagnosed as NIFTP in half of all study cases. Since 2016, patients with BRAFK601E-positive nodules have received less aggressive treatment. The risk of recurrence of BRAFK601E-positive tumors without other high-risk features appears to be low, and lobectomy without radioiodine is likely a sufficient treatment for these patients.
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- 2024
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174. Entrustable Professional Activities in endocrine surgery: A national pilot study.
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Zmijewski P, McLeod MC, Akhund R, Allahwasaya A, Lafrinere T, Fazendin JM, Carty SE, Graham P, Hughes D, Lyden M, Miller B, Finnerty B, McManus C, Yip L, and Lindeman B
- Abstract
Introduction: The American Association of Endocrine Surgeons drafted Entrustable Professional Activities for Comprehensive Endocrine Surgery to assess trainees in core topics., Methods: Fourteen Entrustable Professional Activities were defined. There were 10 "core" Entrustable Professional Activities, with 6 having 3 phases (pre-, intra-, and postoperative) and 4 having a single phase. There were also 4 elective Entrustable Professional Activities, all of which had 3 phases. Beginning in July 2022, 10 institutions collected 3-item microassessments of trainee performance in Entrustable Professional Activities using a web-based platform. Entrustment was measured on a 5-point scale., Results: A total of 698 microassessments were submitted between July 2022 and September 2023, with a wide range between programs (3-449, median: 24). Four-hundred ninety-two microassessments were completed for endocrine surgery fellows, 6 for chief residents, 6 for postgraduate year 4 students, 166 for postgraduate year 3 students, and 28 for postgraduate year 2 students. Entrustment scores for fellows improved in the second half of the academic year, with 38.2% of microassessments with highest (4/5) entrustment scores in the first 6 months of the academic year and 80.1% with highest scores in the second half of the year (P < .001). Intraoperative entrustment scores were lowest in the adrenal category, with only 13 of 117 (11.1%) of microassessments with highest entrustment compared with 85 with 230 (37.0%) in the thyroid category, and 65 of 165 (39.4%) in the parathyroid category (P < .001). Trainees were more likely to achieve highest entrustment in the first 6 months for preoperative (36/70, 28.5%) and postoperative (15/28, 53.5%) phases of care, compared with the intraoperative phase of care (79/334, 23.6%) (P < .001)., Conclusion: Entrustment scores improved in the second half of the academic year, and trainees were likely to achieve entrustment earlier in nonoperative phases of care., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest/Disclosure The authors have no related conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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175. Counseling Intervention and Cardiovascular Events in People With Peripheral Artery Disease: A Post Hoc Analysis of the BIP Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Golledge J, Venn A, Yip L, Leicht AS, Jenkins JS, Fiatarone Singh MA, Reid CM, Parmenter BJ, Burton NW, and Moxon JV
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- Humans, Female, Male, Aged, Walking, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Australia, Intermittent Claudication therapy, Myocardial Infarction, Peripheral Arterial Disease complications, Counseling
- Abstract
Importance: It is unclear whether counseling to promote walking reduces the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in people with peripheral artery disease (PAD)., Objective: To test whether a counseling intervention designed to increase walking reduced the risk of MACE in patients with PAD., Design, Setting, and Participants: The BIP trial was a randomized clinical trial, with recruitment performed between January 2015 and July 2018 and follow-up concluded in August 2023. Participants with walking impairment due to PAD from vascular departments in the Australian cities of Brisbane, Sydney, and Townsville were randomly allocated 1:1 to the intervention or control group. Data were originally analyzed in March 2024., Intervention: Four brief counseling sessions aimed to help patients with the challenges of increasing physical activity., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was the between-group difference in risk of MACE, which included myocardial infarction (MI), stroke, and cardiovascular death. The relationship between Intermittent Claudication Questionnaire (ICQ) scores, PAD Quality of Life (PADQOL) scores, and MACE was examined with Cox proportional hazard regression analyses., Results: A total of 200 participants were included, with 102 allocated to the counseling intervention (51.0%) and 98 to the control group (49.0%).Participants were followed up for a mean (SD) duration of 3.5 (2.6) years. Median (IQR) participant age was 70 (63-76) years, and 56 of 200 participants (28.0%) were female. A total of 31 individuals had a MACE (composed of 19 MIs, 4 strokes, and 8 cardiovascular deaths). Participants allocated to the intervention were significantly less likely to have a MACE than participants in the control group (10 of 102 participants [9.8%] vs 21 of 98 [21.4%]; hazard ratio [HR], 0.43; 95% CI, 0.20-0.91; P = .03). Greater disease-specific quality of life (QOL) scores at 4 months (ICQ: HR per 1-percentage point increase, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.95-0.99; P < .001; PADQOL factor 3 [symptoms and limitations in physical functioning]: HR per 1-unit increase, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84-0.98; P = .01) and at 12 months (ICQ: HR per 1-percentage point increase, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.95-0.99; P = .003; PADQOL factor 3: HR per 1-unit increase, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84-0.98; P = .02) were associated with a lower risk of MACE. In analyses adjusted for ICQ or PADQOL factor 3 scores at either 4 or 12 months, allocation to the counseling intervention was no longer significantly associated with a lower risk of MACE., Conclusions and Relevance: This post hoc exploratory analysis of the BIP randomized clinical trial suggested that the brief counseling intervention designed to increase walking may reduce the risk of MACE, possibly due to improvement in QOL., Trial Registration: anzctr.org.au Identifier: ACTRN12614000592640.
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- 2024
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176. Tumor size and molecular risk group are associated with differentiated thyroid cancer recurrence.
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Kurtom S, Liu JB, Doerfler WR, Calcaterra M, McCoy KL, Sada A, Ramonell KM, Carty SE, Nikiforova MN, Nikiforov YE, and Yip L
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Background: The threshold at which active surveillance can be considered is variable, with some algorithms proposing nonoperative treatment for differentiated thyroid carcinomas ≤2 cm and lobectomy alone for lesions 2.1-4 cm. To inform both decision for and extent of initial surgery, we aim to evaluate whether molecular results can complement tumor size to identify differentiated thyroid carcinomas associated with disease recurrence., Methods: Patients from 2007-2013 and 2017-2021 who had initial thyroidectomy (differentiated thyroid carcinoma size 1-4 cm, clinical N0M0) were included. When available, molecular testing results were categorized into 3 previously described molecular risk groups (low, intermediate, and high). Primary outcome was structural recurrence., Results: Recurrence was diagnosed in 3.8% of 1,739 patients with differentiated thyroid carcinomas. Preoperative variables including size (1-2 cm vs 2.1-4 cm, P = .43), age >55 years (P = .92), and male sex (P = .31) were not associated with recurrence. Molecular testing results were available for 1,020, and after excluding molecular risk group high-risk differentiated thyroid carcinoma, structural recurrences were associated with molecular risk group intermediate risk (7.2% vs molecular risk group low, 0.7%, P < .001), and most likely in differentiated thyroid carcinoma, which were both 2.1-4 cm and molecular risk group intermediate risk (11.3% vs size 1-2 cm 5.8%, P = .04)., Conclusion: Overall, structural recurrences for differentiated thyroid carcinomas ≤4 cm were low (<5%) and molecuar testing was the only preoperative variable associated with recurrence. However, when molecular risk group intermediate risk was present, larger tumor size (2.1-4 cm) had a 2-fold greater risk of recurrence compared with tumors 1-2 cm, and size may still be helpful to guide management. When considering de-escalated treatment for the proposed guidelines with a cutoff of 2 cm, initial decision-making may be further optimized with identification of preoperative molecular risk groups., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest/Disclosure Yuri E. Nikiforov and Marina N. Nikiforova own intellectual property for ThyroSeq, receive royalties from the University of Pittsburgh, and are also consultants for Sonic Healthcare USA. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest or disclosures., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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177. Characterisation of Kürsteiner canals of parathyroid: imparting relevance to a one-and-a-quarter-century-old concept.
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Corbin H, Yip L, Carty SE, Reyes-Múgica M, and Seethala RR
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Aims: Kürsteiner canals (KC) were described at least 125 years ago as pharyngeal pouch embryological remnants of parathyroid and thymic development. While considered precursors for a subset of parathyroid cysts and salivary heterotopias (SH), they remain enigmatic. We now define a comprehensive phenotype of KC remnants and investigate their role in a spectrum of parathyroid lesions., Methods and Results: `Sixty-two cystic and 22 non-cystic parathyroid lesions (73 patients) were retrieved from our institutional archive (2011-23) and evaluated for the presence of KC and prevalence of KC phenotype in parathyroid hormone (PTH)-positive and PTH-negative cysts. KC phenotype was defined as: cysts and tubules with surrounding sclerosis; bland, unilayered lining with frequent nuclear indentation of lumina; vesicular chromatin relative to chief cells; attenuated eosinophilic to 'hyper-cleared' cytoplasm; and staining pattern PTH-negative, SOX-10-positive, CK7-positive, GATA-3-positive and PAX-9 dim, a subset with oestrogen/progesterone receptor (ER/PR) positivity. Thirty PTH-negative cysts were identified in the neck/mediastinum; 14 of this group also showed SH. Thirty-two PTH-positive cysts included: 11 cystic parathyroid adenomas, 17 hyperplastic parathyroids, and four carcinomas. KC showed two distinct subtypes and were often found near PTH-negative cysts. PTH-negative cysts were associated with inferior parathyroids, SOX-10 positivity, fibrosclerosis, vesicular nuclei indenting cyst lumina and hyper-cleared or attenuated eosinophilic cytoplasm., Conclusions: KC are common in parathyroids and show a distinct histological and immunohistochemical profile, with an inferior predilection favouring branchial cleft III distribution. Diagnostically, the high prevalence of this phenotype in PTH-negative cysts and salivary heterotopia supports derivation of non-functioning cysts from KC. Conversely, PTH-positive cysts are more compatible with cystic change within hyperfunctioning glands., (© 2024 The Author(s). Histopathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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178. Parsing the thyroid cytopathology suspicious for malignancy diagnosis through molecular-derived risk of malignancy and other related parameters: Insights into nodule characteristics and practice patterns.
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Starr D, Tjendra Y, Velez Torres JM, Gomez-Fernandez C, Khader SN, Karslioglu-French E, Yip L, Carty SE, Skaugen JM, Nikiforov YE, Seethala RR, and Ohori NP
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Introduction: Thyroid cytopathology cases with suspicious for malignancy (SFM) diagnosis often result in resection. However, molecular testing offers details that may provide additional insights. In this study, the molecular profiles of SFM cases from two institutions that routinely used ThyroSeq v3 (TSV3) were examined., Materials and Methods: Following institutional review board approval, SFM thyroid cytopathology cases with TSV3 results were retrieved from the databases of two institutions. Molecular information including molecular-derived risk of malignancy (MDROM), cytologic-histologic correlation data, and other related parameters were calculated. Statistical comparisons were made with a p <.05 considered significant., Results: The core data set comprised 114 SFM cases that passed TSV3 quality assurance. All TSV3 results were reported as positive or negative for genomic alterations and all except five cases provided a probability of malignancy estimate. The overall combined baseline MDROM of 75.7% (95% CI, 70.0-81.4) was comparable to the risk of malignancy (74%) published in the Bethesda System. There was a statistically significant difference between the combined MDROMs of resected and unresected cohorts (79.0% vs 58.6%; p = .0153). Interestingly, the MDROMs of the resected cohorts from the two institutions were statistically different (75.0% vs 85.3%; p = .020). Cytologic-histologic correlation revealed malignant outcome in 88.5% of resected cases., Conclusions: Molecular analyses of SFM cases demonstrated higher risk genomic alterations that were associated with histologically overt neoplasms, resulting in increased malignancy outcome compared to baseline. MDROM analysis revealed differences in the cytopathologic practice patterns regarding follicular-patterned neoplasms at the two institutions., (© 2024 American Cancer Society.)
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- 2024
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179. The Role of Molecular Markers in Thyroid Cancer Diagnostics and Treatment.
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Sada A and Yip L
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- Humans, Thyroidectomy, Prognosis, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms therapy, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics
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Molecular testing for cytologically indeterminate thyroid nodules has demonstrated benefit by reducing the need for diagnostic thyroidectomies and reducing costs. Its use is currently recommended in practice guidelines from the American Thyroid Association and the American Association of Endocrine Surgeons when clinically appropriate. Moreover, there is growing evidence that molecular testing may provide prognostic information and can detect targetable genetic alterations which may expand treatment options for refractory advanced thyroid cancers., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors have nothing to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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180. Vitamin B12 Deficiency Manifesting As Pancytopenia, Lymphadenopathy, and Fever: A Clinical Mimic of Hematologic Malignancies.
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Choi E, Galicia Garcia G, Kishore Anna K, Albuja Altamirano MF, Yip L, Oh J, and Lee JH
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Pancytopenia is a complex medical condition characterized by decreased levels of red blood cells (RBCs), white blood cells (WBCs), and platelets (PLTs). It can arise from impaired production, peripheral destruction, or a combination of both. The causes of pancytopenia range from reversible factors like infections and medication reactions to irreversible conditions. Vitamin B12 deficiency is a notable reversible cause that can take years to manifest in adults due to stored reserves. However, deficiencies caused by impaired absorption, especially due to the lack of intrinsic factors (IFs), can lead to rapid deterioration within two to five years. A healthy 39-year-old male with an athletic lifestyle presented with symptoms such as dizziness, nausea, vomiting, palpitations, and fainting over a few days. These symptoms were preceded by weeks of persistent body aches, headaches, weakness, daily fevers, chills, and night sweats. Vital signs were stable. The physical examination revealed conjunctival pallor and lymphadenopathy in the submandibular and superficial cervical regions. Initial blood tests showed normocytic anemia (Hgb 4.9, MCV 80), leukopenia (2.99), thrombocytopenia (142), and elevated liver enzymes (AST 199, ALT 96, and total bilirubin of 2.04). The peripheral smear showed tear-drop cells and hypochromic cells. The initial impression was hematologic malignancy, including but not limited to leukemia, lymphoma, or myelofibrosis given clinical findings such as B-symptoms like night sweats, neck lymphadenopathy, and subjective daily fever, along with pancytopenia. The patient received a bolus of normal saline and a transfusion of two units of packed RBCs. CT scans of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis showed no adenopathy or splenomegaly. Although initial clinical assessment pointed toward a potential hematologic malignancy, comprehensive testing, including SPEP, reticulocyte count/fraction, serum folate, and serum vitamin B12, revealed only severe vitamin B12 deficiency, with a level of less than 150, with the presence of IF antibodies. Treatment involved intensive in-patient vitamin B12 injections followed by a detailed outpatient regimen. The patient completed a daily dose of vitamin B12 injections for seven consecutive days, followed by weekly injections for the next four weeks. Subsequent laboratory results demonstrated an increase in WBC count to 8.39, Hgb level to 13.2, and PLT count of 249, indicating a continued positive response to the vitamin B12 replacement therapy. In summary, pancytopenia poses a diagnostic challenge that demands careful evaluation of patient data and comprehensive testing. Vitamin B12 deficiency, which encompasses pernicious anemia (PA), is among the reversible factors to consider. This aspect holds significance before opting for more invasive measures like a bone marrow biopsy. Nutritional deficiencies need to be considered first as differentials in pancytopenia, even in the absence of typical signs of vitamin B12 deficiency (like macrocytosis and hypersegmented neutrophils) and in the presence of compelling clinical indications pointing to a hematologic malignancy., Competing Interests: Human subjects: Consent was obtained or waived by all participants in this study. 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: All authors have declared that they have no financial relationships at present or within the previous three years with any organizations that might have an interest in the submitted work. 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, Choi et al.)
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- 2024
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181. Motivations to engage in collective action: A latent profile analysis of refugee supporters.
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Yip L, Thomas EF, Bliuc AM, Boza M, Kende A, Lizzio-Wilson M, Reese G, and Smith LGE
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What motivates people to participate in collective action? Some actions such as symbolic or online actions are often critiqued as performative allyship, motivated by personal gain rather than genuine concern for the cause. We aim to adjudicate this argument by examining the quality of motivations for acting, drawing on the insights of self-determination theory and the social identity approach. Using latent profile analysis, we examined whether there are different types of supporters of refugees based on their underlying motives. In Study 1, we surveyed supporters of Syrian refugees from six nations (N = 936) and measured autonomous and controlled motivation, pro-refugee identification and collective action. In Study 2 (N = 1994), we surveyed supporters of Ukrainian refugees in Romania, Hungary and the UK. We found 4-5 profiles in each sample and consistently found that supporters with high autonomous motivation take more action than disengaged or ambivalent supporters (low/neutral on all motives). However, contrary to the tenets of self-determination theory, those high in both autonomous and controlled motives were the most engaged. We conclude that the most committed supporters are those with multiple motives, but further research is needed on the role of controlled motivation., (© 2024 The Author(s). British Journal of Social Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.)
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- 2024
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182. Anti-aging trends in Australia.
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Yip L
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- Humans, Australia, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, Hyaluronic Acid therapeutic use, Dermal Fillers therapeutic use, Skin Aging, Cosmetic Techniques trends
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Anti-aging trends in Australia have changed considerably since the country emerged from the lockdowns associated with the SARS-Cov2 pandemic. People now rely on social media influencers for skin care advice and skin care products, including professional skin care treatments that can be purchased on Internet platforms. The quest for the perfect 'zoom face' led to a 300% rise in cosmetic procedures across Australia in the year to April 2021. People now want to use less products on their skin, while looking healthy and natural (termed 'skin minimalism'). The popularity of retinoid derivatives for preventing wrinkles has been superseded by non-irritating actives like hyaluronic acid (HA) and niacinamide that provide skin barrier protection, skin hydration, plumping and anti-inflammatory effects. Botulinum toxin injections remain the most popular non-surgical cosmetic procedure, followed by HA fillers, and biostimulators that promote the synthesis of collagen and give longer lasting but more gradual results than HA fillers. Laser resurfacing is widely used for epidermal resurfacing and skin tightening, as well as non-ablative lasers, intense pulsed light and radiofrequency or ultrasound skin tightening devices. Superficial chemical peels are still popular because they are relatively gentle, inexpensive, and require no downtime, whereas medium-to-deep chemical peels have largely been superseded by laser technology. However, the most efficient approach to prevent skin aging is adopting a healthy lifestyle and taking action against all factors of the skin aging exposome., (© 2024 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.)
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- 2024
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183. Do conspiracy beliefs fuel support for reactionary social movements? Effects of misbeliefs on actions to oppose lockdown and to "stop the steal".
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Thomas EF, Bird L, O'Donnell A, Osborne D, Buonaiuto E, Yip L, Lizzio-Wilson M, Wenzel M, and Skitka L
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- Humans, New Zealand, Male, Australia, Female, United States, Adult, Middle Aged, SARS-CoV-2, Quarantine psychology, COVID-19 psychology, Politics
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Pundits have speculated that the spread of conspiracies and misinformation (termed "misbeliefs") is leading to a resurgence of right-wing, reactionary movements. However, the current empirical picture regarding the relationship between misbeliefs and collective action is mixed. We help clarify these associations by using two waves of data collected during the COVID-19 Pandemic (in Australia, N = 519, and the United States, N = 510) and democratic elections (in New Zealand N = 603, and the United States N = 609) to examine the effects of misbeliefs on support for reactionary movements (e.g., anti-lockdown protests, Study 1; anti-election protests, Study 2). Results reveal that within-person changes in misbeliefs correlate positively with support for reactionary collective action both directly (Studies 1-2) and indirectly by shaping the legitimacy of the authority (Study 1b). The relationship between misbelief and legitimacy is, however, conditioned by the stance of the authority in question: the association is positive when authorities endorse misbeliefs (Study 1a) and negative when they do not (Study 1b). Thus, the relationship between conspiracy beliefs and action hinges upon the alignment of the content of the conspiracy and the goals of the collective action., (© 2024 The Authors. British Journal of Social Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society.)
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- 2024
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184. Chlorfenapyr poisoning: a systematic review.
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Comstock GT, Nguyen H, Bronstein A, and Yip L
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- Humans, Adult, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Poisoning therapy, Pyrethrins poisoning, Pyrethrins toxicity, Insecticides poisoning
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Introduction: Chlorfenapyr, a N-substituted halogenated pyrrole, is a broad-spectrum insecticide. The insecticidal activity of chlorfenapyr depends on its biotransformation by hepatic cytochrome P450 monooxygenases to tralopyril, which uncouples mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and disrupts adenosine triphosphate production. Neither the metabolism of chlorfenapyr nor the mechanism of tralopyril is completely elucidated. Acute human chlorfenapyr poisoning is not well characterized, and best practice in management following acute exposure is unclear. The purpose of this review is to characterize acute human chlorfenapyr poisoning by its clinical course, laboratory investigations, and imaging findings and propose a management plan for acute human chlorfenapyr exposure., Methods: We systematically searched PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and EMBASE from inception to April 2024 across all languages for human chlorfenapyr and tralopyril cases, with descriptions of exposure, clinical manifestations, and clinical course included. Only manuscripts and abstracts from scientific conferences with sufficient clinical data following acute human exposures were included. In vitro studies, animal studies, agricultural studies, environmental impact studies, and non-clinical human studies were excluded. We then reviewed citations of included studies for additional eligible publications. Non-English publications were translated using Google Translate or primarily translated by our authors. The study adhered to Preferred Reporting for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines for systematic reviews., Results: We identified 3,376 publications of which 48 met study inclusion criteria, describing 75 unique cases of human poisoning from ingestion, inhalation, dermal exposure, and intra-abdominal injection of chlorfenapyr. No cases of tralopyril exposure were identified. The median time from exposure to symptom onset was six hours (interquartile range 1-48 hours). The most frequent initial or presenting signs/symptoms included diaphoresis, nausea and/or vomiting, and altered mental status. While hyperthermia (≥38 degrees centigrade) was less common at presentation, hyperthermia developed in 61 percent of all patients and was temporally associated with clinical deterioration and death. Most common laboratory abnormalities included elevated blood creatine kinase activity, hepatic aminotransferase activities, and lactate concentration. Imaging studies of the central nervous system often showed extensive symmetrical white matter abnormalities with swelling. Case fatality was 76 percent, and survivors commonly experienced sustained neurological sequelae. Management strategies were highly varied, and the effectiveness of specific medical interventions was unclear., Discussion: Acute human chlorfenapyr poisoning is characterized by a latent period as long as 14 days, deterioration over hours to days, and can result in serious morbidity and mortality. Development of hyperthermia, likely driven by oxidative phosphorylation uncoupling by tralopyril, is an ominous clinical sign and is temporally associated with clinical decompensation and death. Laboratory abnormalities, particularly elevated creatine kinase activity, hepatic aminotransferase activities, and lactate concentration, were common, but only creatine kinase activity differed amongst survivors and fatalities. Best clinical practice in the management of patients exposed to chlorfenapyr is unclear, and we opine that a conservative approach with close clinical monitoring and supportive care is prudent., Limitations: The limitations of all reviews include their inherent retrospective and observational nature as well as publication bias that emphasizes severe outcomes, thus impacting the spectrum of illness and skewing mortality percentage. In addition, we interrogated a finite number of databases for publications on human chlorfenapyr exposure and there were limited cases with laboratory testing to confirm chlorfenapyr poisoning. Analysis of our systematic review was not powered to detect differences between groups, comparative statistics were not performed, and significance is not reported., Conclusions: Acute human chlorfenapyr toxicity is characterized by a latent period following exposure, development of new or progression of established signs/symptoms, potential for critical illness, rapid deterioration, serious morbidity, and mortality. A conservative approach to patient management is prudent.
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- 2024
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185. Autonomous Motives Foster Sustained Commitment to Action: Integrating Self-Determination Theory and the Social Identity Approach.
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Yip L, Thomas EF, Amiot C, Louis WR, and McGarty C
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- Humans, Personal Autonomy, Self Report, Social Change, Social Identification, Motivation
- Abstract
Social change movements may take years or decades to achieve their goals and thus require ongoing efforts from their supporters. We apply the insights of self-determination theory to examine sustained collective action over time. We expected that autonomous motivation, but not controlled motivation, would predict sustained action. We also examine whether autonomous motivation shapes and is shaped by social identification as a supporter of the cause. Longitudinal data were collected from supporters of global poverty reduction ( N = 263) at two timepoints 1 year apart. Using latent change score modeling, we found that increases in autonomous motivation positively predicted increases in opinion-based group identification, which in turn predicted increases in self-reported collective action. Controlled motivation (Time 1) negatively predicted changes in action. We concluded that autonomous motivation predicts sustained action over time, while promoting controlled motives for action may backfire because it may undermine identification with the cause., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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186. Impact of grade on workup of rectal neuroendocrine tumors: a retrospective cohort study : Grade impact on workup of rectal NETs.
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Watanabe A, Rai S, Yip L, Brown CJ, Loree JM, and Stuart HC
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- Humans, Female, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Retrospective Studies, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Neuroendocrine Tumors pathology, Rectal Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Background: Rectal neuroendocrine tumors (RNETs) are often discovered on screening colonoscopy. Indications for staging and definitive resection are inconsistent in current guidelines. We evaluated the role of grade in guiding staging and procedural decision-making., Methods: Patients with biopsy confirmed RNETs between 2004 and 2015 were reviewed. Baseline characteristics, staging investigations (biochemical and imaging), and endoscopic/surgical treatment were recorded. Associations between grade, preoperative staging, interventions, and survival were determined using Fisher-Freeman-Halton Exact, log-rank, and Kaplan-Meier analysis., Results: Amongst 139 patients with RNETs, 9% were aged ≥ 75 years and 44% female. Tumor grade was: 73% grade 1 (G1), 18%, grade 2 (G2) and 9% grade 3 (G3). Staging investigations were performed in 52% of patients. All serum chromogranin A and 97% of 24-hour urine 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid tests were normal. The large majority of staging computed tomography (CT) scans were negative (76%) with subgroup analysis showing no G1 patients with CT identified distant disease compared with 38% of G2 and 50% of G3 patients (p < 0.001). G1 patients were more likely to achieve R0/R1 resections compared to G2 (95% vs. 50%, p < 0.001) and G1 patients had significantly better 5-year overall survival (G1: 98%, G2: 67%, G3: 10%, p < 0.001)., Conclusion: Tumor grade is important in preoperative workup and surgical decision-making. Biochemical staging may be omitted but staging CT should be considered for patients with grade ≥ 2 lesions. Anatomic resections should be considered for patients with grade 2 disease., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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187. Outcomes of subtotal parathyroidectomy for renal hyperparathyroidism.
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Baugh KA, Yip L, Ramonell KM, Carty SE, and McCoy KL
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Parathyroidectomy adverse effects, Parathyroidectomy methods, Retrospective Studies, Parathyroid Glands, Parathyroid Hormone, Recurrence, Hyperparathyroidism surgery, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary etiology, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary surgery
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Background: Renal hyperparathyroidism due to end-stage kidney disease is associated with considerable morbidity, and when refractory is treated with parathyroidectomy. Recurrent renal hyperparathyroidism is a major surgical complication, yet initial target parathyroid remnant size and outcomes, including rates of recurrence are not well elucidated., Methods: This is a single-institution retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent initial subtotal parathyroidectomy for renal hyperparathyroidism on dialysis, from 1990-2022. The subtotal parathyroidectomy was defined as resection of 3 parathyroid glands ± partial resection of the fourth gland leaving a remnant of ∼75-100 mg, and postresection intraoperative parathyroid hormone goal was 150-250 pg/mL. Clinical data were examined for outcomes., Results: Among 204 patients who met inclusion criteria, 139 (68%) had follow-up data; 58% (80/139) were women and median age was 45 years. Surgical complications included 2 hematomas (1.4%), 1 recurrent laryngeal nerve injury (<1%), and no patient required readmission for intravenous calcium. Using a target remnant size of 75-100 mg, recurrent renal hyperparathyroidism was uncommon (14/139, 10%) and arose at a median interval of 58.6 months (range, 8-180). In cases of recurrence, the postresection intraoperative parathyroid hormone level was less likely to drop <250 pg/mL (40%, 4/10 vs nonrecurrence 65%, 80/123; P = .11) with a slightly lower median decrease (70% vs 81% in nonrecurrence, P = .8); however, neither were significant. Recurrence did not occur in the 19 patients who later received kidney transplantation (P = .2)., Conclusion: In subtotal parathyroidectomy for renal hyperparathyroidism, use of a target 75-100 mg remnant size results in low complication rates. Durable cure appears to be more likely with renal transplantation., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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188. The Alopecia Areata Severity and Morbidity Index (ASAMI) Study: Results From a Global Expert Consensus Exercise on Determinants of Alopecia Areata Severity.
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Moussa A, Bennett M, Wall D, Meah N, York K, Bokhari L, Asfour L, Rees H, Abraham LS, Asz-Sigall D, Basmanav FB, Bergfeld W, Betz RC, Bhoyrul B, Blume-Peytavi U, Callender V, Chitreddy V, Combalia A, Cotsarelis G, Craiglow B, Dhurat R, Donovan J, Doroshkevich A, Eisman S, Farrant P, Ferrando J, Gadzhigoroeva A, Green J, Grimalt R, Harries M, Hordinsky M, Irvine A, Jolliffe V, Kaiumov S, King B, Lee J, Lee WS, Li J, Lortkipanidze N, McMichael A, Mesinkovska NA, Messenger A, Mirmirani P, Olsen E, Orlow SJ, Ovcharenko Y, Piraccini BM, Pirmez R, Rakowska A, Reygagne P, Rudnicka L, Corralo DS, Senna M, Shapiro J, Sharma P, Siliuk T, Starace M, Suchonwanit P, Takwale A, Tosti A, Vañó-Galván S, Visser WI, Vogt A, Wade M, Yip L, Zhou C, and Sinclair R
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- Humans, Alopecia diagnosis, Consensus, Morbidity, Quality of Life, Alopecia Areata diagnosis
- Abstract
Importance: Current measures of alopecia areata (AA) severity, such as the Severity of Alopecia Tool score, do not adequately capture overall disease impact., Objective: To explore factors associated with AA severity beyond scalp hair loss, and to support the development of the Alopecia Areata Severity and Morbidity Index (ASAMI)., Evidence Review: A total of 74 hair and scalp disorder specialists from multiple continents were invited to participate in an eDelphi project consisting of 3 survey rounds. The first 2 sessions took place via a text-based web application following the Delphi study design. The final round took place virtually among participants via video conferencing software on April 30, 2022., Findings: Of all invited experts, 64 completed the first survey round (global representation: Africa [4.7%], Asia [9.4%], Australia [14.1%], Europe [43.8%], North America [23.4%], and South America [4.7%]; health care setting: public [20.3%], private [28.1%], and both [51.6%]). A total of 58 specialists completed the second round, and 42 participated in the final video conference meeting. Overall, consensus was achieved in 96 of 107 questions. Several factors, independent of the Severity of Alopecia Tool score, were identified as potentially worsening AA severity outcomes. These factors included a disease duration of 12 months or more, 3 or more relapses, inadequate response to topical or systemic treatments, rapid disease progression, difficulty in cosmetically concealing hair loss, facial hair involvement (eyebrows, eyelashes, and/or beard), nail involvement, impaired quality of life, and a history of anxiety, depression, or suicidal ideation due to or exacerbated by AA. Consensus was reached that the Alopecia Areata Investigator Global Assessment scale adequately classified the severity of scalp hair loss., Conclusions and Relevance: This eDelphi survey study, with consensus among global experts, identified various determinants of AA severity, encompassing not only scalp hair loss but also other outcomes. These findings are expected to facilitate the development of a multicomponent severity tool that endeavors to competently measure disease impact. The findings are also anticipated to aid in identifying candidates for current and emerging systemic treatments. Future research must incorporate the perspectives of patients and the public to assign weight to the domains recognized in this project as associated with AA severity.
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- 2024
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189. Molecular-derived risk of malignancy and the related positive call rate of indeterminate thyroid cytology diagnoses as quality metrics for individual cytopathologists.
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Ohori NP, Cuda JM, Bastacky SI, Yip L, Karslioglu-French E, Morariu EM, Ullal J, Ramonell KM, Carty SE, Nikiforov YE, Schoedel KE, and Seethala RR
- Subjects
- Humans, Biopsy, Fine-Needle methods, Oxyphil Cells pathology, Retrospective Studies, Cytodiagnosis, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology, Thyroid Nodule pathology, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular diagnosis, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular genetics, Adenocarcinoma, Follicular pathology
- Abstract
Background: Indeterminate thyroid cytopathology diagnoses represent differing degrees of risk that are corroborated by follow-up studies. However, traditional cytologic-histologic correlation may overestimate the risk of malignancy (ROM) because only a subset of cases undergo resection. Alternatively, some molecular tests provide probability of malignancy data to calculate the molecular-derived risk of malignancy (MDROM) and the positive call rate (PCR). The authors investigated MDROMs and PCRs of indeterminate diagnoses for individual cytopathologists as quality metrics., Methods: This study was approved by the Department of Pathology Quality Improvement Program. Thyroid cytopathology diagnoses and ThyroSeq v3 results were retrieved for each cytopathologist for a 2-year period with at least 3 years of follow-up for the atypia of undetermined significance (AUS), follicular neoplasia (FN), and follicular neoplasia, oncocytic-type (ONC) cytopathologic diagnoses. MDROMs and PCRs were compared with reference ROMs and cytologic-histologic correlation outcomes., Results: The overall MDROMs (and ranges for cytopathologists) for the AUS, FN, and ONC categories were 13.4% (range, 5.8%-20.8%), 28.1% (range, 22.1%-36.7%), and 27.0% (range, 19.5%-41.5%), respectively, and most individual cytopathologists' MDROMs were within reference ROM ranges. However, PCRs more effectively parsed the differences in cytopathologists' ROM performance. Although the overall PCRs were not significantly different across cytopathologists (p = .06), the AUS PCRs were quite different (p = .002). By cytologic-histologic correlation, six of 55 resected cases (10.9%) were falsely negative, and there were no false-positive cases., Conclusions: MDROMs and PCRs evaluate concordance with reference ROMs and with one another and provide individual feedback, which potentially facilitates quality improvement., (© 2023 American Cancer Society.)
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- 2024
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190. Sex differences in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism.
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Baugh KA, Liu JB, Yip L, McCoy KL, Carty SE, and Ramonell KM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Quality of Life, Sex Characteristics, Prospective Studies, Parathyroidectomy, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary surgery
- Abstract
Background: Differences in presenting symptoms of primary hyperparathyroidism and outcomes of parathyroidectomy between sexes have been described, but whether these can be assessed by perioperative use of a validated tool, such as the Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score, is unknown., Method: All patients with primary hyperparathyroidism were asked to complete symptom assessment at the preoperative and postoperative visits. The assessment included a query for 13 Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score parameters evaluated using a visual analog scale as described by Pasieka (summative score 0-1,300), and general quality of life and wellness. A review of a prospectively maintained database of primary hyperparathyroidism patients (January 2016-December 2019) was performed, and those who had a 6-month cure after initial parathyroidectomy were included., Results: The study cohort was mostly women (77%, 541/701). The median preoperative Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score was higher in women (155, 0-1,190) than in men (80.5, 0-855, P < .001), although there were similar rates of asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score = 0, 12.5% vs 7%, P = .042). After curative parathyroidectomy, women reported a substantial reduction in symptomatology, with Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score declining by 35% at initial postoperative visit (median, 155 vs 100, P < .001), further decreasing to 48% by 6 months (155 vs 80, P < .001). The Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score in men did change but to a much smaller degree at both the initial postoperative visit (80.5 vs 70; P = .036) and at 6 months (80.5 vs 57.5; P = .048)., Conclusion: When assessed with the Pasieka Parathyroidectomy Assessment Score, improvement in symptoms was clearly demonstrated for women after curative parathyroidectomy. Whether symptom improvement also occurs in men is less apparent but may be due to disparities in the development and validation of outcomes tools in general., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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191. Radiofrequency Ablation of Small Thyroid Cancer-A Solution Looking for a Problem?
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Liu JB, Carty SE, and Yip L
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- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Thyroid Neoplasms surgery, Radiofrequency Ablation, Catheter Ablation
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- 2024
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192. Normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism: Intervention to differentiate primary from secondary hyperparathyroidism.
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Baugh KA, McCoy KL, Leung JH, Carty SE, Ramonell KM, and Yip L
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- Humans, Calcium, Parathyroid Hormone, Parathyroid Glands, Parathyroidectomy, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary complications, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary diagnosis, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary surgery, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary diagnosis, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary etiology, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary surgery
- Abstract
Background: Normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism can occur, but surgery should not be considered until common etiologies for secondary hyperparathyroidism are comprehensively excluded. Calcium deficiency is an underrecognized cause of normocalcemic parathyroid hormone elevation, and we aim to determine if the implementation of a preoperative calcium challenge can be used to reduce unnecessary parathyroidectomy., Methods: Consecutive patients referred for parathyroidectomy (1/21-6/22) with normocalcemia (serum calcium <10 mg/dL) and concurrently elevated parathyroid hormone levels were routinely treated with supplemental calcium and vitamin D3, and follow-up laboratory studies were assessed., Results: A total of 29/314 (9%) patients had normocalcemic parathyroid hormone elevation with mean calcium, parathyroid hormone, and vitamin D 25OH levels of 9.5 ± 0.3 mg/dL, 109.9 ± 34.9 pg/mL, and 42.7 ± 23.8 ng/mL respectively. Confounding factors included estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 in 2, loop diuretic use in 4, and prior gastric bypass or gastric sleeve surgery in 4. Follow-up biochemical evaluation was available in 27 (92%); results were unchanged in 7 patients (26%); normalization of parathyroid hormone levels with persistently normal calcium levels occurred in 15 (55%), thus confirming secondary hyperparathyroidism and hypercalcemia with elevated parathyroid hormone levels (classic primary hyperparathyroidism) was diagnosed in 5 (19%). Parathyroid exploration has been completed for 3 of 5 patients with classic primary hyperparathyroidism to date., Conclusion: A preoperative calcium challenge was prospectively initiated in normocalcemic patients with parathyroid hormone elevation, and there was high compliance (92%). Short-interval calcium supplementation revealed ∼50% to have resolved secondary hyperparathyroidism due to insufficient calcium intake, which avoided unnecessary surgery. In contrast, classic patients were unveiled in 20%, allowing for prompt and correct surgical intervention., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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193. Genomic and transcriptomic characterization of delta SARS-CoV-2 infection in free-ranging white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus ).
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Kotwa JD, Lobb B, Massé A, Gagnier M, Aftanas P, Banerjee A, Banete A, Blais-Savoie J, Bowman J, Buchanan T, Chee HY, Kruczkiewicz P, Nirmalarajah K, Soos C, Vernygora O, Yip L, Lindsay LR, McGeer AJ, Maguire F, Lung O, Doxey AC, Pickering B, and Mubareka S
- Abstract
White-tailed deer (WTD) are susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 and represent an important species for surveillance. Samples from WTD (n = 258) collected in November 2021 from Québec, Canada were analyzed for SARS-CoV-2 RNA. We employed viral genomics and host transcriptomics to further characterize infection and investigate host response. We detected Delta SARS-CoV-2 (B.1.617.2) in WTD from the Estrie region; sequences clustered with human sequences from October 2021 from Vermont, USA, which borders this region. Mutations in the S-gene and a deletion in ORF8 were detected. Host expression patterns in SARS-CoV-2 infected WTD were associated with the innate immune response, including signaling pathways related to anti-viral, pro- and anti-inflammatory signaling, and host damage. We found limited correlation between genes associated with innate immune response from human and WTD nasal samples, suggesting differences in responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection. Our findings provide preliminary insights into host response to SARS-CoV-2 infection in naturally infected WTD., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts relevant to this article., (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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194. Molecular Profiling of 50 734 Bethesda III-VI Thyroid Nodules by ThyroSeq v3: Implications for Personalized Management.
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Chiosea S, Hodak SP, Yip L, Abraham D, Baldwin C, Baloch Z, Gulec SA, Hannoush ZC, Haugen BR, Joseph L, Kargi AY, Khanafshar E, Livhits MJ, McIver B, Patel K, Patel SG, Randolph GW, Shaha AR, Sharma J, Stathatos N, van Zante A, Carty SE, Nikiforov YE, and Nikiforova MN
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics, Mutation, Thyroid Nodule diagnosis, Thyroid Nodule genetics, Thyroid Nodule pathology, Thyroid Neoplasms diagnosis, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Thyroid Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Context: Comprehensive genomic analysis of thyroid nodules for multiple classes of molecular alterations detected in a large series of fine needle aspiration (FNA) samples has not been reported., Objective: To determine the prevalence of clinically relevant molecular alterations in Bethesda categories III-VI (BCIII-VI) thyroid nodules., Methods: This retrospective analysis of FNA samples, tested by ThyroSeq v3 using Genomic Classifier and Cancer Risk Classifier at UPMC Molecular and Genomic Pathology laboratory, analyzed the prevalence of diagnostic, prognostic, and targetable genetic alterations in a total of 50 734 BCIII-VI nodules from 48 225 patients., Results: Among 50 734 informative FNA samples, 65.3% were test-negative, 33.9% positive, 0.2% positive for medullary carcinoma, and 0.6% positive for parathyroid. The benign call rate in BCIII-IV nodules was 68%. Among test-positive samples, 73.3% had mutations, 11.3% gene fusions, and 10.8% isolated copy number alterations. Comparing BCIII-IV nodules with BCV-VI nodules revealed a shift from predominantly RAS-like alterations to BRAF V600E-like alterations and fusions involving receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK). Using ThyroSeq Cancer Risk Classifier, a high-risk profile, which typically included TERT or TP53 mutations, was found in 6% of samples, more frequently BCV-VI. RNA-Seq confirmed ThyroSeq detection of novel RTK fusions in 98.9% of cases., Conclusion: In this series, 68% of BCIII-IV nodules were classified as negative by ThyroSeq, potentially preventing diagnostic surgery in this subset of patients. Specific genetic alterations were detected in most BCV-VI nodules, with a higher prevalence of BRAF and TERT mutations and targetable gene fusions compared to BCIII-IV nodules, offering prognostic and therapeutic information for patient management., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)
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- 2023
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195. Thrombocytopenia Associated with Elemental Mercury Poisoning in Two Siblings - Connecticut, July 2022.
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Hogeland EW, Somers TS, Yip L, Doyon S, Redlich CA, Orsey AD, Woda CB, Swan ST, and Feder HM Jr
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Siblings, Connecticut, Immunoglobulins, Intravenous, Mercury Poisoning diagnosis, Thrombocytopenia, Mercury
- Abstract
Two siblings aged 5 and 15 years from Connecticut were hospitalized with petechial rash, oral mucositis, and severe thrombocytopenia approximately 10 days after they played with a jar of elemental mercury they found in their home. Before the mercury exposure was disclosed, the siblings were treated with platelet transfusions, intravenous immune globulin (IVIG) for possible immune thrombocytopenic purpura, and antibiotics for possible infectious causes. When their conditions did not improve after 6 days, poison control facilitated further questioning about toxic exposures including mercury, testing for mercury, and chelation with dimercaptosuccinic acid. The older sibling soon recovered, but the younger child required a prolonged hospitalization for severe thrombocytopenia, ultimately receiving repeated doses of IVIG, steroids, and romiplostim, a thrombopoietin receptor agonist. Close collaboration among multiple agencies was required to identify the extent of mercury contamination, evaluate and treat the other family members, and decontaminate the home. These cases demonstrate the importance of ongoing public health outreach to promote early detection of elemental mercury toxicity, and the need to evaluate for environmental exposures when multiple close contacts experience similar signs and symptoms., Competing Interests: All authors have completed and submitted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.
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- 2023
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196. Role of cultural brokering in advancing holistic primary care for diabetes and obesity: a participatory qualitative study.
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Luig T, Ofosu NN, Chiu Y, Wang N, Omar N, Yip L, Aleba S, Maragang K, Ali M, Dormitorio I, Lee KK, Yeung RO, and Campbell-Scherer D
- Subjects
- Humans, Canada, Obesity therapy, Communication, Primary Health Care, Diabetes Mellitus therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Diabetes and obesity care for ethnocultural migrant communities is hampered by a lack of understanding of premigration and postmigration stressors and their impact on social and clinical determinants of health within unique cultural contexts. We sought to understand the role of cultural brokering in primary healthcare to enhance chronic disease care for ethnocultural migrant communities., Design and Setting: Participatory qualitative descriptive-interpretive study with the Multicultural Health Brokers Cooperative in a Canadian urban centre. Cultural brokers are linguistic and culturally diverse community health workers who bridge cultural distance, support relationships and understanding between providers and patients to improve care outcomes. From 2019 to 2021, we met 16 times to collaborate on research design, analysis and writing., Participants: Purposive sampling of 10 cultural brokers representing eight different major local ethnocultural communities. Data include 10 in-depth interviews and two observation sessions analysed deductively and inductively to collaboratively construct themes., Results: Findings highlight six thematic domains illustrating how cultural brokering enhances holistic primary healthcare. Through family-based relational supports and a trauma-informed care, brokering supports provider-patient interactions. This is achieved through brokers' (1) embeddedness in community relationships with deep knowledge of culture and life realities of ethnocultural immigrant populations; (2) holistic, contextual knowledge; (3) navigation and support of access to care; (4) cultural interpretation to support health assessment and communication; (5) addressing psychosocial needs and social determinants of health and (6) dedication to follow-up and at-home management practices., Conclusions: Cultural brokers can be key partners in the primary care team to support people living with diabetes and/or obesity from ethnocultural immigrant and refugee communities. They enhance and support provider-patient relationships and communication and respond to the complex psychosocial and economic barriers to improve health. Consideration of how to better enable and expand cultural brokering to support chronic disease management in primary care is warranted., Competing Interests: Competing interests: DCS: personal fees from a Pfizer Advisory Board Meeting on Diabetes and Obesity. KKL: industry funding for other work from Christenson Group of Companies, UN Studio and Doubleday Canada. RY: consultation fees from Novo Nordisk., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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197. Use of whole genome sequencing to identify low-frequency mutations in SARS-CoV-2 patients treated with remdesivir.
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Nirmalarajah K, Yim W, Aftanas P, Li AX, Shigayeva A, Yip L, Zhong Z, McGeer AJ, Maguire F, Mubareka S, and Kozak R
- Subjects
- Humans, COVID-19 Drug Treatment, Mutation, Whole Genome Sequencing, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, COVID-19
- Abstract
Background: Remdesivir (RDV) has been shown to reduce hospitalization and mortality in COVID-19 patients. Resistance mutations caused by RDV are rare and have been predominantly reported in patients who are on prolonged therapy and immunocompromised. We investigate the effects of RDV treatment on intra-host SARS-CoV-2 diversity and low-frequency mutations in moderately ill hospitalized COVID-19 patients and compare them to patients without RDV treatment., Methods: From March 2020 to April 2022, sequential collections of nasopharyngeal and mid-turbinate swabs were obtained from 14 patients with and 30 patients without RDV treatment. Demographic and clinical data on all patients were reviewed. A total of 109 samples were sequenced and mutation analyses were performed., Results: Previously reported drug resistant mutations in nsp12 were not identified during short courses of RDV therapy. In genes encoding and surrounding the replication complex (nsp6-nsp14), low-frequency minority variants were detected in 7/14 (50%) and 18/30 (60%) patients with and without RDV treatment, respectively. We did not detect significant differences in within-host diversity and positive selection between the RDV-treated and untreated groups., Conclusions: Minimal intra-host variability and stochastic low-frequency variants detected in moderately ill patients suggests little selective pressure in patients receiving short courses of RDV. The barrier to RDV resistance is high in patients with moderate disease. Patients undergoing short regimens of RDV therapy should continue to be monitored., (© 2023 The Authors. Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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198. Validity of the American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System in Children.
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Daniels KE, Shaffer AD, Garbin S, Squires JH, Vaughan KG, Viswanathan P, Witchel SF, Mollen KP, Yip L, Monaco SE, Duvvuri U, and Simons JP
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Child, United States, Infant, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Female, Ultrasonography methods, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Thyroid Nodule diagnostic imaging, Thyroid Nodule pathology, Radiology
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the validity of the American College of Radiology Thyroid Imaging Reporting and Data System (ACR TI-RADS) for evaluating thyroid nodules in children., Methods: Patients aged <19 years with thyroid nodule(s) evaluated by ultrasound (US) from 2007-2018 at a tertiary children's hospital were included. Two radiologists scored de-identified thyroid US images using ACR TI-RADS (from 1, "benign" to 5, "highly suspicious"). The radiologists recorded size and rated vascularity for each nodule. Ultrasound findings were compared to pathology results (operative cases, n = 91) and clinical follow-up without disease progression (non-operative cases, n = 15)., Results: Thyroid images from 115 patients were reviewed. Nine patients were excluded due to the absence of an evaluable nodule. Forty-seven benign and 59 malignant nodules were included. Median age at ultrasound was 15 years (range 0.9-18 years). Twenty (18.9%) patients were male. There was moderate agreement between TI-RADS levels assigned by the two raters (kappa = 0.57, p < 0.001). When the raters' levels were averaged, >3 as the threshold for malignancy correctly categorized the greatest percentage of nodules (68.9%). Eleven (18.6%) malignant nodules received a TI-RADS level of 2 (n = 3) or 3 (n = 8). Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values were 81.4%, 53.2%, 68.6%, and 69.4%, respectively. Although not part of TI-RADS, vascularity was similar between benign and malignant nodules (p = 0.56)., Conclusion: In a pediatric population, TI-RADS can help distinguish between benign and malignant nodules with comparable sensitivity and specificity to adults. However, the positive and negative predictive values suggest TI-RADS alone cannot eliminate the need for FNA., Level of Evidence: 3 Laryngoscope, 133:2394-2401, 2023., (© 2022 The American Laryngological, Rhinological and Otological Society, Inc.)
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- 2023
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199. Expert Recommendations on Facilitating Personalized Approaches to Long-term Management of Actinic Keratosis: The Personalizing Actinic Keratosis Treatment (PAKT) Project.
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Morton C, Baharlou S, Basset-Seguin N, Calzavara-Pinton P, Dirschka T, Gilaberte Y, Haedersdal M, Hofbauer G, Sapra S, Waalboer-Spuij R, Yip L, and Szeimies RM
- Subjects
- Humans, Keratosis, Actinic therapy, Keratosis, Actinic drug therapy, Precision Medicine
- Abstract
Actinic keratoses are pre-malignant skin lesions that require personalized care, a lack of which may result in poor treatment adherence and suboptimal outcomes. Current guidance on personalizing care is limited, notably in terms of tailoring treatment to individual patient priorities and goals and supporting shared decision-making between healthcare professionals and patients. The aim of the Personalizing Actinic Keratosis Treatment panel, comprised of 12 dermatologists, was to identify current unmet needs in care and, using a modified Delphi approach, develop recommendations to support personalized, long-term management of actinic keratoses lesions. Panellists generated recommendations by voting on consensus statements. Voting was blinded and consensus was defined as ≥ 75% voting 'agree' or 'strongly agree'. Statements that reached consensus were used to develop a clinical tool, of which, the goal was to improve understanding of disease chronicity, and the need for long-term, repeated treatment cycles. The tool highlights key decision stages across the patient journey and captures the panellist's ratings of treatment options for attributes prioritized by patients. The expert recommendations and the clinical tool can be used to facilitate patient-centric management of actinic keratoses in daily practice, encompassing patient priorities and goals to set realistic treatment expectations and improve care outcomes.
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- 2023
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200. Similar duration of viral shedding of the severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) delta variant between vaccinated and incompletely vaccinated individuals.
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Kandel CE, Banete A, Taylor M, Llanes A, McCready J, Crowl G, Young M, Li AX, Chien E, Yim W, Yip L, Kozak R, McGeer AJ, Mubareka S, and Powis JE
- Subjects
- Humans, Virus Shedding, Outpatients, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Among outpatients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) due to the severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) δ (delta) variant who did and did not receive 2 vaccine doses at 7 days after symptom onset, there was no difference in viral shedding (cycle threshold difference 0.59, 95% CI, -4.68 to 3.50; P = .77) with SARS-CoV-2 cultured from 2 (7%) of 28 and 1 (4%) of 26 outpatients, respectively.
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- 2023
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