914 results on '"Hewitt S"'
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2. J.M. Synge, modernism, and political protest
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Hewitt, S. E. and Arrington, L.
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822 - Abstract
This thesis explores the works of the Irish writer J.M. Synge (1871-1909). By first seeking to define and examine the tenets of Synge’s artistic, spiritual and political value system, and by considering his works in a broadly chronological order, this research shows that Synge’s writings (and his trajectory into modernism) were a reaction to both literary and social modernity. Over the course of his career, Synge’s foundational value system, or ‘creed’, was subjected to a number of shocks by his encounters with the modernisation of rural Ireland and the political climate of the cultural Revival, which led him to a continuous literary experimentation. Ultimately, this thesis argues that Synge’s work, as it moves towards an increasingly modernist aesthetic, can be understood as an act of both literary and political protest. One of the main innovations of this thesis is its methodology. Throughout, archival materials are used in order to uncover the processes of authorial revision undertaken prior to the publication of Synge’s texts, showing how he edited, glossed, and subverted his previous work in line with his changing views on modernisation and on his earlier, more overt Romanticism. In addition to this, each chapter of this thesis explores Synge’s composition alongside his contemporary reading materials, showing the influence of various writers and broader discourses on the works discussed. In doing so, the thesis uncovers Synge’s interest in occultism, his engagement with various socialist works, his reading in evolutionary theory, and his later reaction against early eugenic nationalisms, and demonstrates the close relationship between his published and performed works and these discourses. Furthermore, in showing the importance of socialist politics to Synge’s literary development, this thesis demonstrates how several concerns typical of modernism (such as occult spirituality, degeneration, and eugenics) are approached by a leftist writer, and how left-wing politics manifest in early modernist literature. By tracing Synge’s ongoing reaction to modernisation, and his trajectory into literary modernism, this thesis explores in detail the contested relationship between Revivalism and modernism in the Irish context, and thus, through a study of one of Ireland’s major dramatists, lays the groundwork for further scholarly exploration of the interplay between these two movements. Finally, by exploring Synge’s afterlife in modernist writings, both as a modernising impulse and as a figure of modernist protest, this thesis suggests ways in which the work of later modernists might be reassessed in light of Synge’s work.
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- 2017
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3. Image-based multiplex immune profiling of cancer tissues: translational implications. A report of the International Immuno-oncology Biomarker Working Group on Breast Cancer
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Jahangir, CA, Page, DB, Broeckx, G, Gonzalez, CA, Burke, C, Murphy, C, Reis-Filho, JS, Ly, A, Harms, PW, Gupta, RR, Vieth, M, Hida, A, Kahila, M, Kos, Z, van Diest, PJ, Verbandt, S, Thagaard, J, Khiroya, R, Abduljabbar, K, Haab, GA, Acs, B, Adams, S, Almeida, JS, Alvarado-Cabrero, I, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F, Badve, S, Baharun, NB, Bellolio, ER, Bheemaraju, V, Blenman, KRM, Fujimoto, LBM, Burgues, O, Chardas, A, Cheang, MCU, Ciompi, F, Cooper, LAD, Coosemans, A, Corredor, G, Portela, FLD, Deman, F, Demaria, S, Dudgeon, SN, Elghazawy, M, Fernandez-Martin, C, Fineberg, S, Fox, SB, Giltnane, JM, Gnjatic, S, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Grigoriadis, A, Halama, N, Hanna, MG, Harbhajanka, A, Hart, SN, Hartman, J, Hewitt, S, Horlings, HM, Husain, Z, Irshad, S, Janssen, EAM, Kataoka, TR, Kawaguchi, K, Khramtsov, A, Kiraz, U, Kirtani, P, Kodach, LL, Korski, K, Akturk, G, Scott, E, Kovacs, A, Laenkholm, A-V, Lang-Schwarz, C, Larsimont, D, Lennerz, JK, Lerousseau, M, Li, X, Madabhushi, A, Maley, SK, Narasimhamurthy, VM, Marks, DK, McDonald, ES, Mehrotra, R, Michiels, S, Kharidehal, D, Minhas, FUAA, Mittal, S, Moore, DA, Mushtaq, S, Nighat, H, Papathomas, T, Penault-Llorca, F, Perera, RD, Pinard, CJ, Pinto-Cardenas, JC, Pruneri, G, Pusztai, L, Rajpoot, NM, Rapoport, BL, Rau, TT, Ribeiro, JM, Rimm, D, Vincent-Salomon, A, Saltz, J, Sayed, S, Hytopoulos, E, Mahon, S, Siziopikou, KP, Sotiriou, C, Stenzinger, A, Sughayer, MA, Sur, D, Symmans, F, Tanaka, S, Taxter, T, Tejpar, S, Teuwen, J, Thompson, EA, Tramm, T, Tran, WT, van Der Laak, J, Verghese, GE, Viale, G, Wahab, N, Walter, T, Waumans, Y, Wen, HY, Yang, W, Yuan, Y, Bartlett, J, Loibl, S, Denkert, C, Savas, P, Loi, S, Stovgaard, ES, Salgado, R, Gallagher, WM, Rahman, A, Jahangir, CA, Page, DB, Broeckx, G, Gonzalez, CA, Burke, C, Murphy, C, Reis-Filho, JS, Ly, A, Harms, PW, Gupta, RR, Vieth, M, Hida, A, Kahila, M, Kos, Z, van Diest, PJ, Verbandt, S, Thagaard, J, Khiroya, R, Abduljabbar, K, Haab, GA, Acs, B, Adams, S, Almeida, JS, Alvarado-Cabrero, I, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F, Badve, S, Baharun, NB, Bellolio, ER, Bheemaraju, V, Blenman, KRM, Fujimoto, LBM, Burgues, O, Chardas, A, Cheang, MCU, Ciompi, F, Cooper, LAD, Coosemans, A, Corredor, G, Portela, FLD, Deman, F, Demaria, S, Dudgeon, SN, Elghazawy, M, Fernandez-Martin, C, Fineberg, S, Fox, SB, Giltnane, JM, Gnjatic, S, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Grigoriadis, A, Halama, N, Hanna, MG, Harbhajanka, A, Hart, SN, Hartman, J, Hewitt, S, Horlings, HM, Husain, Z, Irshad, S, Janssen, EAM, Kataoka, TR, Kawaguchi, K, Khramtsov, A, Kiraz, U, Kirtani, P, Kodach, LL, Korski, K, Akturk, G, Scott, E, Kovacs, A, Laenkholm, A-V, Lang-Schwarz, C, Larsimont, D, Lennerz, JK, Lerousseau, M, Li, X, Madabhushi, A, Maley, SK, Narasimhamurthy, VM, Marks, DK, McDonald, ES, Mehrotra, R, Michiels, S, Kharidehal, D, Minhas, FUAA, Mittal, S, Moore, DA, Mushtaq, S, Nighat, H, Papathomas, T, Penault-Llorca, F, Perera, RD, Pinard, CJ, Pinto-Cardenas, JC, Pruneri, G, Pusztai, L, Rajpoot, NM, Rapoport, BL, Rau, TT, Ribeiro, JM, Rimm, D, Vincent-Salomon, A, Saltz, J, Sayed, S, Hytopoulos, E, Mahon, S, Siziopikou, KP, Sotiriou, C, Stenzinger, A, Sughayer, MA, Sur, D, Symmans, F, Tanaka, S, Taxter, T, Tejpar, S, Teuwen, J, Thompson, EA, Tramm, T, Tran, WT, van Der Laak, J, Verghese, GE, Viale, G, Wahab, N, Walter, T, Waumans, Y, Wen, HY, Yang, W, Yuan, Y, Bartlett, J, Loibl, S, Denkert, C, Savas, P, Loi, S, Stovgaard, ES, Salgado, R, Gallagher, WM, and Rahman, A
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- 2024
4. MEASUREMENT OF HAND-TOOL VIBRATION EMISSION AND WORKPLACE RISK
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HEWITT, S, primary and BRERETON, P, additional
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- 2024
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5. ASSESSMENT OF HAND-ARM VIBRATION EXPOSURE
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HEWITT, S, primary and NELSON, C, additional
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- 2023
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6. Health benefits and risks during 10 years after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
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Chahal-Kummen, M., Salte, O. B. K., Hewitt, S., Blom-Høgestøl, I. K., Risstad, H., Kristinsson, J., and Mala, T.
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- 2020
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7. Genomic copy number alterations in clear cell renal carcinoma: associations with case characteristics and mechanisms of VHL gene inactivation.
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Moore, LE, Jaeger, E, Nickerson, ML, Brennan, P, De Vries, S, Roy, R, Toro, J, Li, H, Karami, S, Lenz, P, Zaridze, D, Janout, V, Bencko, V, Navratilova, M, Szeszenia-Dabrowska, N, Mates, D, Linehan, WM, Merino, M, Simko, J, Pfeiffer, R, Boffetta, P, Hewitt, S, Rothman, N, Chow, W-H, and Waldman, FM
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renal cancer ,epidemiology ,VHL ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Genetics ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Array comparative genomic hybridization was used to identify copy number alterations in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) patient tumors to identify associations with patient/clinical characteristics. Of 763 ccRCC patients, 412 (54%) provided frozen biopsies. Clones were analyzed for significant copy number differences, adjusting for multiple comparisons and covariates in multivariate analyses. Frequent alterations included losses on: 3p (92.2%), 14q (46.8%), 8p (38.1%), 4q (35.4%), 9p (32.3%), 9q (31.8%), 6q (30.8%), 3q (29.4%), 10q (25.7%), 13q (24.5%), 1p (23.5%) and gains on 5q (60.2%), 7q (39.6%), 7p (30.6%), 5p (26.5%), 20q (25.5%), 12q (24.8%), 12p (22.8%). Stage and grade were associated with 1p, 9p, 9q, 13q and 14q loss and 12q gain. Males had more alterations compared with females, independent of stage and grade. Significant differences in the number/types of alterations were observed by family cancer history, age at diagnosis and smoking status. Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) gene inactivation was associated with 3p loss (P
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- 2012
8. Description of a new western-European Tachydromia species (Diptera: Hybotidae) of the Tachydromia connexa-group
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Hewitt, S M, Chvala, M, and BioStor
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- 2002
9. Postnatal Sex Reversal of the Ovaries in Mice Lacking Estrogen Receptors α and β
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Couse, J. F., Hewitt, S. Curtis, Bunch, D. O., Sar, M., Walker, V. R., Davis, B. J., and Korach, K. S.
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- 1999
10. Pitfalls in machine learning-based assessment of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in breast cancer: a report of the international immuno-oncology biomarker working group
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Thagaard, J, Broeckx, G, Page, DB, Jahangir, CA, Verbandt, S, Kos, Z, Gupta, R, Khiroya, R, Abduljabbar, K, Acosta Haab, G, Acs, B, Akturk, G, Almeida, JS, Alvarado-Cabrero, I, Amgad, M, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F, Badve, S, Baharun, NB, Balslev, E, Bellolio, ER, Bheemaraju, V, Blenman, KRM, Botinelly Mendonca Fujimoto, L, Bouchmaa, N, Burgues, O, Chardas, A, Cheang, MU, Ciompi, F, Cooper, LAD, Coosemans, A, Corredor, G, Dahl, AB, Dantas Portela, FL, Deman, F, Demaria, S, Dore Hansen, J, Dudgeon, SN, Ebstrup, T, Elghazawy, M, Fernandez-Martin, C, Fox, SB, Gallagher, WM, Giltnane, JM, Gnjatic, S, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Grigoriadis, A, Halama, N, Hanna, MG, Harbhajanka, A, Hart, SN, Hartman, J, Hauberg, S, Hewitt, S, Hida, A, Horlings, HM, Husain, Z, Hytopoulos, E, Irshad, S, Janssen, EAM, Kahila, M, Kataoka, TR, Kawaguchi, K, Kharidehal, D, Khramtsov, A, Kiraz, U, Kirtani, P, Kodach, LL, Korski, K, Kovacs, A, Laenkholm, A-V, Lang-Schwarz, C, Larsimont, D, Lennerz, JK, Lerousseau, M, Li, X, Ly, A, Madabhushi, A, Maley, SK, Manur Narasimhamurthy, V, Marks, DK, McDonald, ES, Mehrotra, R, Michiels, S, Minhas, FUAA, Mittal, S, Moore, DA, Mushtaq, S, Nighat, H, Papathomas, T, Penault-Llorca, F, Perera, RD, Pinard, CJ, Pinto-Cardenas, JC, Pruneri, G, Pusztai, L, Rahman, A, Rajpoot, NM, Rapoport, BL, Rau, TT, Reis-Filho, JS, Ribeiro, JM, Rimm, D, Roslind, A, Vincent-Salomon, A, Salto-Tellez, M, Saltz, J, Sayed, S, Scott, E, Siziopikou, KP, Sotiriou, C, Stenzinger, A, Sughayer, MA, Sur, D, Fineberg, S, Symmans, F, Tanaka, S, Taxter, T, Tejpar, S, Teuwen, J, Thompson, EA, Tramm, T, Tran, WT, van Der Laak, J, van Diest, PJ, Verghese, GE, Viale, G, Vieth, M, Wahab, N, Walter, T, Waumans, Y, Wen, HY, Yang, W, Yuan, Y, Zin, RM, Adams, S, Bartlett, J, Loibl, S, Denkert, C, Savas, P, Loi, S, Salgado, R, Specht Stovgaard, E, Thagaard, J, Broeckx, G, Page, DB, Jahangir, CA, Verbandt, S, Kos, Z, Gupta, R, Khiroya, R, Abduljabbar, K, Acosta Haab, G, Acs, B, Akturk, G, Almeida, JS, Alvarado-Cabrero, I, Amgad, M, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F, Badve, S, Baharun, NB, Balslev, E, Bellolio, ER, Bheemaraju, V, Blenman, KRM, Botinelly Mendonca Fujimoto, L, Bouchmaa, N, Burgues, O, Chardas, A, Cheang, MU, Ciompi, F, Cooper, LAD, Coosemans, A, Corredor, G, Dahl, AB, Dantas Portela, FL, Deman, F, Demaria, S, Dore Hansen, J, Dudgeon, SN, Ebstrup, T, Elghazawy, M, Fernandez-Martin, C, Fox, SB, Gallagher, WM, Giltnane, JM, Gnjatic, S, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Grigoriadis, A, Halama, N, Hanna, MG, Harbhajanka, A, Hart, SN, Hartman, J, Hauberg, S, Hewitt, S, Hida, A, Horlings, HM, Husain, Z, Hytopoulos, E, Irshad, S, Janssen, EAM, Kahila, M, Kataoka, TR, Kawaguchi, K, Kharidehal, D, Khramtsov, A, Kiraz, U, Kirtani, P, Kodach, LL, Korski, K, Kovacs, A, Laenkholm, A-V, Lang-Schwarz, C, Larsimont, D, Lennerz, JK, Lerousseau, M, Li, X, Ly, A, Madabhushi, A, Maley, SK, Manur Narasimhamurthy, V, Marks, DK, McDonald, ES, Mehrotra, R, Michiels, S, Minhas, FUAA, Mittal, S, Moore, DA, Mushtaq, S, Nighat, H, Papathomas, T, Penault-Llorca, F, Perera, RD, Pinard, CJ, Pinto-Cardenas, JC, Pruneri, G, Pusztai, L, Rahman, A, Rajpoot, NM, Rapoport, BL, Rau, TT, Reis-Filho, JS, Ribeiro, JM, Rimm, D, Roslind, A, Vincent-Salomon, A, Salto-Tellez, M, Saltz, J, Sayed, S, Scott, E, Siziopikou, KP, Sotiriou, C, Stenzinger, A, Sughayer, MA, Sur, D, Fineberg, S, Symmans, F, Tanaka, S, Taxter, T, Tejpar, S, Teuwen, J, Thompson, EA, Tramm, T, Tran, WT, van Der Laak, J, van Diest, PJ, Verghese, GE, Viale, G, Vieth, M, Wahab, N, Walter, T, Waumans, Y, Wen, HY, Yang, W, Yuan, Y, Zin, RM, Adams, S, Bartlett, J, Loibl, S, Denkert, C, Savas, P, Loi, S, Salgado, R, and Specht Stovgaard, E
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- 2023
11. Spatial analyses of immune cell infiltration in cancer: current methods and future directions. A report of the International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group on Breast Cancer
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Page, DB, Broeckx, G, Jahangir, CA, Jahangir, C, Verbandt, S, Gupta, RR, Thagaard, J, Khiroya, R, Kos, Z, Abduljabbar, K, Acosta Haab, G, Acs, B, Almeida, JS, Alvarado-Cabrero, I, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F, Badve, S, Baharun, NB, Bellolio, ER, Bheemaraju, V, Blenman, KRM, Botinelly Mendonca Fujimoto, L, Burgues, O, Cheang, MCU, Ciompi, F, Cooper, LAD, Coosemans, A, Corredor, G, Dantas Portela, FL, Deman, F, Demaria, S, Dudgeon, SN, Elghazawy, M, Ely, S, Fernandez-Martin, C, Fineberg, S, Fox, SB, Gallagher, WM, Giltnane, JM, Gnjatic, S, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Grigoriadis, A, Halama, N, Hanna, MG, Harbhajanka, A, Hardas, A, Hart, SN, Hartman, J, Hewitt, S, Hida, A, Horlings, HM, Husain, Z, Hytopoulos, E, Irshad, S, Janssen, EAM, Kahila, M, Kataoka, TR, Kawaguchi, K, Kharidehal, D, Khramtsov, A, Kiraz, U, Kirtani, P, Kodach, LL, Korski, K, Kovacs, A, Laenkholm, A-V, Lang-Schwarz, C, Larsimont, D, Lennerz, JK, Lerousseau, M, Li, X, Ly, A, Madabhushi, A, Maley, SK, Manur Narasimhamurthy, V, Marks, DK, McDonald, ES, Mehrotra, R, Michiels, S, Minhas, FUAA, Mittal, S, Moore, DA, Mushtaq, S, Nighat, H, Papathomas, T, Penault-Llorca, F, Perera, RD, Pinard, CJ, Pinto-Cardenas, JC, Pruneri, G, Pusztai, L, Rahman, A, Rajpoot, NM, Rapoport, BL, Rau, TT, Reis-Filho, JS, Ribeiro, JM, Rimm, D, Salomon, A-V, Salto-Tellez, M, Saltz, J, Sayed, S, Siziopikou, KP, Sotiriou, C, Stenzinger, A, Sughayer, MA, Sur, D, Symmans, F, Tanaka, S, Taxter, T, Tejpar, S, Teuwen, J, Thompson, EA, Tramm, T, Tran, WT, van Der Laak, J, van Diest, PJ, Verghese, GE, Viale, G, Vieth, M, Wahab, N, Walter, T, Waumans, Y, Wen, HY, Yang, W, Yuan, Y, Adams, S, Bartlett, JMS, Loibl, S, Denkert, C, Savas, P, Loi, S, Salgado, R, Specht Stovgaard, E, Akturk, G, Bouchmaa, N, Page, DB, Broeckx, G, Jahangir, CA, Jahangir, C, Verbandt, S, Gupta, RR, Thagaard, J, Khiroya, R, Kos, Z, Abduljabbar, K, Acosta Haab, G, Acs, B, Almeida, JS, Alvarado-Cabrero, I, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F, Badve, S, Baharun, NB, Bellolio, ER, Bheemaraju, V, Blenman, KRM, Botinelly Mendonca Fujimoto, L, Burgues, O, Cheang, MCU, Ciompi, F, Cooper, LAD, Coosemans, A, Corredor, G, Dantas Portela, FL, Deman, F, Demaria, S, Dudgeon, SN, Elghazawy, M, Ely, S, Fernandez-Martin, C, Fineberg, S, Fox, SB, Gallagher, WM, Giltnane, JM, Gnjatic, S, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Grigoriadis, A, Halama, N, Hanna, MG, Harbhajanka, A, Hardas, A, Hart, SN, Hartman, J, Hewitt, S, Hida, A, Horlings, HM, Husain, Z, Hytopoulos, E, Irshad, S, Janssen, EAM, Kahila, M, Kataoka, TR, Kawaguchi, K, Kharidehal, D, Khramtsov, A, Kiraz, U, Kirtani, P, Kodach, LL, Korski, K, Kovacs, A, Laenkholm, A-V, Lang-Schwarz, C, Larsimont, D, Lennerz, JK, Lerousseau, M, Li, X, Ly, A, Madabhushi, A, Maley, SK, Manur Narasimhamurthy, V, Marks, DK, McDonald, ES, Mehrotra, R, Michiels, S, Minhas, FUAA, Mittal, S, Moore, DA, Mushtaq, S, Nighat, H, Papathomas, T, Penault-Llorca, F, Perera, RD, Pinard, CJ, Pinto-Cardenas, JC, Pruneri, G, Pusztai, L, Rahman, A, Rajpoot, NM, Rapoport, BL, Rau, TT, Reis-Filho, JS, Ribeiro, JM, Rimm, D, Salomon, A-V, Salto-Tellez, M, Saltz, J, Sayed, S, Siziopikou, KP, Sotiriou, C, Stenzinger, A, Sughayer, MA, Sur, D, Symmans, F, Tanaka, S, Taxter, T, Tejpar, S, Teuwen, J, Thompson, EA, Tramm, T, Tran, WT, van Der Laak, J, van Diest, PJ, Verghese, GE, Viale, G, Vieth, M, Wahab, N, Walter, T, Waumans, Y, Wen, HY, Yang, W, Yuan, Y, Adams, S, Bartlett, JMS, Loibl, S, Denkert, C, Savas, P, Loi, S, Salgado, R, Specht Stovgaard, E, Akturk, G, and Bouchmaa, N
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- 2023
12. Pitfalls in machine learning-based assessment of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in breast cancer: a report of the international immuno-oncology biomarker working group.
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Thagaard, J., Broeckx, G., Page, D.B., Jahangir, C.A., Verbandt, S., Kos, Z., Gupta, R., Khiroya, R., AbdulJabbar, K., Haab, G.A., Acs, B., Akturk, G., Almeida, J.S., Alvarado-Cabrero, I., Amgad, M., Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Badve, S., Baharun, N.B., Balslev, E., Bellolio, E.R., Bheemaraju, V., Blenman, K.R., Botinelly Mendonça Fujimoto, L., Bouchmaa, N., Burgues, O., Chardas, A., Chon U Cheang, M., Ciompi, F., Cooper, L.A., Coosemans, A., Corredor, G., Dahl, A.B., Dantas Portela, F.L., Deman, F., Demaria, S., Doré Hansen, J., Dudgeon, S.N., Ebstrup, T., Elghazawy, M., Fernandez-Martín, C., Fox, S.B., Gallagher, W.M., Giltnane, J.M., Gnjatic, S., Gonzalez-Ericsson, P.I., Grigoriadis, A., Halama, N., Hanna, M.G., Harbhajanka, A., Hart, S.N., Hartman, J., Hauberg, S., Hewitt, S., Hida, A.I., Horlings, H.M., Husain, Z., Hytopoulos, E., Irshad, S., Janssen, E.a, Kahila, M., Kataoka, T.R., Kawaguchi, K., Kharidehal, D., Khramtsov, A.I., Kiraz, U., Kirtani, P., Kodach, L.L., Korski, K., Kovács, A., Laenkholm, A.V., Lang-Schwarz, C., Larsimont, D., Lennerz, J.K., Lerousseau, M., Li, Xiaoxian, Ly, Amy, Madabhushi, A., Maley, S.K., Manur Narasimhamurthy, V., Marks, D.K., McDonald, E.S., Mehrotra, R., Michiels, S., Minhas, F.U.A.A., Mittal, S., Moore, D.A., Mushtaq, S., Nighat, H., Papathomas, T., Penault-Llorca, F., Perera, R.D., Pinard, C.J., Pinto-Cardenas, J.C., Pruneri, G., Pusztai, L., Rahman, A., Rajpoot, N.M., Rapoport, B.L., Rau, T.T., Reis-Filho, J.S., Ribeiro, J.M., Rimm, D., Roslind, A., Vincent-Salomon, A., Salto-Tellez, M., Saltz, J., Sayed, S., Scott, E., Siziopikou, K.P., Sotiriou, C., Stenzinger, A., Sughayer, M.A., Sur, D., Fineberg, S., Symmans, F., Tanaka, S., Taxter, T., Tejpar, S., Teuwen, J., Thompson, E.A., Tramm, T., Tran, W.T., Laak, J.A.W.M. van der, Diest, P.J. van, Verghese, G.E., Viale, G., Vieth, M., Wahab, N., Walter, T., Waumans, Y., Wen, H.Y., Yang, W, Yuan, Y., Zin, R.M., Adams, S., Bartlett, J., Loibl, S., Denkert, C., Savas, P., Loi, S., Salgado, R., Specht Stovgaard, E., Thagaard, J., Broeckx, G., Page, D.B., Jahangir, C.A., Verbandt, S., Kos, Z., Gupta, R., Khiroya, R., AbdulJabbar, K., Haab, G.A., Acs, B., Akturk, G., Almeida, J.S., Alvarado-Cabrero, I., Amgad, M., Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Badve, S., Baharun, N.B., Balslev, E., Bellolio, E.R., Bheemaraju, V., Blenman, K.R., Botinelly Mendonça Fujimoto, L., Bouchmaa, N., Burgues, O., Chardas, A., Chon U Cheang, M., Ciompi, F., Cooper, L.A., Coosemans, A., Corredor, G., Dahl, A.B., Dantas Portela, F.L., Deman, F., Demaria, S., Doré Hansen, J., Dudgeon, S.N., Ebstrup, T., Elghazawy, M., Fernandez-Martín, C., Fox, S.B., Gallagher, W.M., Giltnane, J.M., Gnjatic, S., Gonzalez-Ericsson, P.I., Grigoriadis, A., Halama, N., Hanna, M.G., Harbhajanka, A., Hart, S.N., Hartman, J., Hauberg, S., Hewitt, S., Hida, A.I., Horlings, H.M., Husain, Z., Hytopoulos, E., Irshad, S., Janssen, E.a, Kahila, M., Kataoka, T.R., Kawaguchi, K., Kharidehal, D., Khramtsov, A.I., Kiraz, U., Kirtani, P., Kodach, L.L., Korski, K., Kovács, A., Laenkholm, A.V., Lang-Schwarz, C., Larsimont, D., Lennerz, J.K., Lerousseau, M., Li, Xiaoxian, Ly, Amy, Madabhushi, A., Maley, S.K., Manur Narasimhamurthy, V., Marks, D.K., McDonald, E.S., Mehrotra, R., Michiels, S., Minhas, F.U.A.A., Mittal, S., Moore, D.A., Mushtaq, S., Nighat, H., Papathomas, T., Penault-Llorca, F., Perera, R.D., Pinard, C.J., Pinto-Cardenas, J.C., Pruneri, G., Pusztai, L., Rahman, A., Rajpoot, N.M., Rapoport, B.L., Rau, T.T., Reis-Filho, J.S., Ribeiro, J.M., Rimm, D., Roslind, A., Vincent-Salomon, A., Salto-Tellez, M., Saltz, J., Sayed, S., Scott, E., Siziopikou, K.P., Sotiriou, C., Stenzinger, A., Sughayer, M.A., Sur, D., Fineberg, S., Symmans, F., Tanaka, S., Taxter, T., Tejpar, S., Teuwen, J., Thompson, E.A., Tramm, T., Tran, W.T., Laak, J.A.W.M. van der, Diest, P.J. van, Verghese, G.E., Viale, G., Vieth, M., Wahab, N., Walter, T., Waumans, Y., Wen, H.Y., Yang, W, Yuan, Y., Zin, R.M., Adams, S., Bartlett, J., Loibl, S., Denkert, C., Savas, P., Loi, S., Salgado, R., and Specht Stovgaard, E.
- Abstract
01 augustus 2023, Contains fulltext : 296181.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), The clinical significance of the tumor-immune interaction in breast cancer is now established, and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) have emerged as predictive and prognostic biomarkers for patients with triple-negative (estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER2-negative) breast cancer and HER2-positive breast cancer. How computational assessments of TILs might complement manual TIL assessment in trial and daily practices is currently debated. Recent efforts to use machine learning (ML) to automatically evaluate TILs have shown promising results. We review state-of-the-art approaches and identify pitfalls and challenges of automated TIL evaluation by studying the root cause of ML discordances in comparison to manual TIL quantification. We categorize our findings into four main topics: (1) technical slide issues, (2) ML and image analysis aspects, (3) data challenges, and (4) validation issues. The main reason for discordant assessments is the inclusion of false-positive areas or cells identified by performance on certain tissue patterns or design choices in the computational implementation. To aid the adoption of ML for TIL assessment, we provide an in-depth discussion of ML and image analysis, including validation issues that need to be considered before reliable computational reporting of TILs can be incorporated into the trial and routine clinical management of patients with triple-negative breast cancer. © 2023 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
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- 2023
13. Spatial analyses of immune cell infiltration in cancer: current methods and future directions. A report of the International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group on Breast Cancer.
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Page, D.B., Broeckx, G., Jahangir, C.A., Verbandt, S., Gupta, R.R., Thagaard, J., Khiroya, R., Kos, Z., AbdulJabbar, K., Acosta Haab, G., Acs, B., Akturk, G., Almeida, J.S., Alvarado-Cabrero, I., Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Badve, S., Baharun, N.B., Bellolio, E.R., Bheemaraju, V., Blenman, K.R., Botinelly Mendonça Fujimoto, L., Bouchmaa, N., Burgues, O., Cheang, M.C.U., Ciompi, F., Cooper, L.A., Coosemans, A., Corredor, G., Dantas Portela, F.L., Deman, F., Demaria, S., Dudgeon, S.N., Elghazawy, M., Ely, S., Fernandez-Martín, C., Fineberg, S., Fox, S.B., Gallagher, W.M., Giltnane, J.M., Gnjatic, S., Gonzalez-Ericsson, P.I., Grigoriadis, A., Halama, N., Hanna, M.G., Harbhajanka, A., Hardas, A., Hart, S.N., Hartman, J., Hewitt, S., Hida, A.I., Horlings, H.M., Husain, Z., Hytopoulos, E., Irshad, S., Janssen, E.a, Kahila, M., Kataoka, T.R., Kawaguchi, K., Kharidehal, D., Khramtsov, A.I., Kiraz, U., Kirtani, P., Kodach, L.L., Korski, K., Kovács, A., Laenkholm, A.V., Lang-Schwarz, C., Larsimont, D., Lennerz, J.K., Lerousseau, M., Li, Xiaoxian, Ly, Amy, Madabhushi, A., Maley, S.K., Manur Narasimhamurthy, V., Marks, D.K., McDonald, E.S., Mehrotra, R., Michiels, S., Minhas, F.U.A.A., Mittal, S., Moore, D.A., Mushtaq, S., Nighat, H., Papathomas, T., Penault-Llorca, F., Perera, R.D., Pinard, C.J., Pinto-Cardenas, J.C., Pruneri, G., Pusztai, L., Rahman, A., Rajpoot, N.M., Rapoport, B.L., Rau, T.T., Reis-Filho, J.S., Ribeiro, J.M., Rimm, D., Vincent-Salomon, A., Salto-Tellez, M., Saltz, J., Sayed, S., Siziopikou, K.P., Sotiriou, C., Stenzinger, A., Sughayer, M.A., Sur, D., Symmans, F., Tanaka, S., Taxter, T., Tejpar, S., Teuwen, J., Thompson, E.A., Tramm, T., Tran, W.T., Laak, J.A.W.M. van der, Diest, P.J. van, Verghese, G.E., Viale, G., Vieth, M., Wahab, N., Walter, T., Waumans, Y., Wen, H.Y., Yang, W, Yuan, Y., Adams, S., Bartlett, J.M.S., Loibl, S., Denkert, C., Savas, P., Loi, S., Salgado, R., Specht Stovgaard, E., Page, D.B., Broeckx, G., Jahangir, C.A., Verbandt, S., Gupta, R.R., Thagaard, J., Khiroya, R., Kos, Z., AbdulJabbar, K., Acosta Haab, G., Acs, B., Akturk, G., Almeida, J.S., Alvarado-Cabrero, I., Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Badve, S., Baharun, N.B., Bellolio, E.R., Bheemaraju, V., Blenman, K.R., Botinelly Mendonça Fujimoto, L., Bouchmaa, N., Burgues, O., Cheang, M.C.U., Ciompi, F., Cooper, L.A., Coosemans, A., Corredor, G., Dantas Portela, F.L., Deman, F., Demaria, S., Dudgeon, S.N., Elghazawy, M., Ely, S., Fernandez-Martín, C., Fineberg, S., Fox, S.B., Gallagher, W.M., Giltnane, J.M., Gnjatic, S., Gonzalez-Ericsson, P.I., Grigoriadis, A., Halama, N., Hanna, M.G., Harbhajanka, A., Hardas, A., Hart, S.N., Hartman, J., Hewitt, S., Hida, A.I., Horlings, H.M., Husain, Z., Hytopoulos, E., Irshad, S., Janssen, E.a, Kahila, M., Kataoka, T.R., Kawaguchi, K., Kharidehal, D., Khramtsov, A.I., Kiraz, U., Kirtani, P., Kodach, L.L., Korski, K., Kovács, A., Laenkholm, A.V., Lang-Schwarz, C., Larsimont, D., Lennerz, J.K., Lerousseau, M., Li, Xiaoxian, Ly, Amy, Madabhushi, A., Maley, S.K., Manur Narasimhamurthy, V., Marks, D.K., McDonald, E.S., Mehrotra, R., Michiels, S., Minhas, F.U.A.A., Mittal, S., Moore, D.A., Mushtaq, S., Nighat, H., Papathomas, T., Penault-Llorca, F., Perera, R.D., Pinard, C.J., Pinto-Cardenas, J.C., Pruneri, G., Pusztai, L., Rahman, A., Rajpoot, N.M., Rapoport, B.L., Rau, T.T., Reis-Filho, J.S., Ribeiro, J.M., Rimm, D., Vincent-Salomon, A., Salto-Tellez, M., Saltz, J., Sayed, S., Siziopikou, K.P., Sotiriou, C., Stenzinger, A., Sughayer, M.A., Sur, D., Symmans, F., Tanaka, S., Taxter, T., Tejpar, S., Teuwen, J., Thompson, E.A., Tramm, T., Tran, W.T., Laak, J.A.W.M. van der, Diest, P.J. van, Verghese, G.E., Viale, G., Vieth, M., Wahab, N., Walter, T., Waumans, Y., Wen, H.Y., Yang, W, Yuan, Y., Adams, S., Bartlett, J.M.S., Loibl, S., Denkert, C., Savas, P., Loi, S., Salgado, R., and Specht Stovgaard, E.
- Abstract
01 augustus 2023, Contains fulltext : 296131.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access), Modern histologic imaging platforms coupled with machine learning methods have provided new opportunities to map the spatial distribution of immune cells in the tumor microenvironment. However, there exists no standardized method for describing or analyzing spatial immune cell data, and most reported spatial analyses are rudimentary. In this review, we provide an overview of two approaches for reporting and analyzing spatial data (raster versus vector-based). We then provide a compendium of spatial immune cell metrics that have been reported in the literature, summarizing prognostic associations in the context of a variety of cancers. We conclude by discussing two well-described clinical biomarkers, the breast cancer stromal tumor infiltrating lymphocytes score and the colon cancer Immunoscore, and describe investigative opportunities to improve clinical utility of these spatial biomarkers. © 2023 The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
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- 2023
14. Altered TMPRSS2 usage by SARS-CoV-2 Omicron impacts infectivity and fusogenicity
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Meng, B., Abdullahi, A., Ferreira, I. A. T. M., Goonawardane, N., Saito, A., Kimura, I., Yamasoba, D., Gerber, P. P., Fatihi, S., Rathore, S., Zepeda, S. K., Papa, G., Kemp, S. A., Ikeda, T., Toyoda, M., Tan, T. S., Kuramochi, J., Mitsunaga, S., Ueno, T., Shirakawa, K., Takaori-Kondo, A., Brevini, T., Mallery, D. L., Charles, O. J., Baker, S., Dougan, G., Hess, C., Kingston, N., Lehner, P. J., Lyons, P. A., Matheson, N. J., Ouwehand, W. H., Saunders, C., Summers, C., Thaventhiran, J. E. D., Toshner, M., Weekes, M. P., Maxwell, P., Shaw, A., Bucke, A., Calder, J., Canna, L., Domingo, J., Elmer, A., Fuller, S., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Kennet, J., Jose, S., Kourampa, J., Meadows, A., O'Brien, C., Price, J., Publico, C., Rastall, R., Ribeiro, C., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Tordesillas, H., Bullman, B., Dunmore, B. J., Graf, S., Hodgson, J., Huang, C., Hunter, K., Jones, E., Legchenko, E., Matara, C., Martin, J., Mescia, F., O'Donnell, C., Pointon, L., Shih, J., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Treacy, C., Tong, Z., Wood, J., Wylot, M., Betancourt, A., Bower, G., Cossetti, C., De Sa, A., Epping, M., Fawke, S., Gleadall, N., Grenfell, R., Hinch, A., Jackson, S., Jarvis, I., Krishna, B., Nice, F., Omarjee, O., Perera, M., Potts, M., Richoz, N., Romashova, V., Stefanucci, L., Strezlecki, M., Turner, L., De Bie, E. M. D. D., Bunclark, K., Josipovic, M., Mackay, M., Butcher, H., Caputo, D., Chandler, M., Chinnery, P., Clapham-Riley, D., Dewhurst, E., Fernandez, C., Furlong, A., Graves, B., Gray, J., Hein, S., Ivers, T., Le Gresley, E., Linger, R., Kasanicki, M., King, R., Meloy, S., Moulton, A., Muldoon, F., Ovington, N., Papadia, S., Penkett, C. J., Phelan, I., Ranganath, V., Paraschiv, R., Sage, A., Sambrook, J., Scholtes, I., Schon, K., Stark, H., Stirrups, K. E., Townsend, P., Walker, N., Webster, J., Butlertanaka, E. P., Tanaka, Y. L., Ito, J., Uriu, K., Kosugi, Y., Suganami, M., Oide, A., Yokoyama, M., Chiba, M., Motozono, C., Nasser, H., Shimizu, R., Kitazato, K., Hasebe, H., Irie, T., Nakagawa, S., Wu, J., Takahashi, M., Fukuhara, T., Shimizu, K., Tsushima, K., Kubo, H., Kazuma, Y., Nomura, R., Horisawa, Y., Nagata, K., Kawai, Y., Yanagida, Y., Tashiro, Y., Tokunaga, K., Ozono, S., Kawabata, R., Morizako, N., Sadamasu, K., Asakura, H., Nagashima, M., Yoshimura, K., Cardenas, P., Munoz, E., Barragan, V., Marquez, S., Prado-Vivar, B., Becerra-Wong, M., Caravajal, M., Trueba, G., Rojas-Silva, P., Grunauer, M., Gutierrez, B., Guadalupe, J. J., Fernandez-Cadena, J. C., Andrade-Molina, D., Baldeon, M., Pinos, A., Bowen, J. E., Joshi, A., Walls, A. C., Jackson, L., Martin, D., Smith, K. G. C., Bradley, J., Briggs, J. A. G., Choi, J., Madissoon, E., Meyer, K. B., Mlcochova, P., Ceron-Gutierrez, L., Doffinger, R., Teichmann, S. A., Fisher, A. J., Pizzuto, M. S., de Marco, A., Corti, D., Hosmillo, M., Lee, J. H., James, L. C., Thukral, L., Veesler, D., Sigal, A., Sampaziotis, F., Goodfellow, I. G., Sato, K., and Gupta, R. K.
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Adult ,Male ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Virus Replication ,Membrane Fusion ,Antibodies ,Cell Line ,Tissue Culture Techniques ,Chlorocebus aethiops ,80 and over ,Animals ,Humans ,Viral ,Neutralizing ,Lung ,Aged ,Multidisciplinary ,Virulence ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Immune Sera ,Cell Membrane ,Serine Endopeptidases ,COVID-19 ,Convalescence ,Middle Aged ,Virus Internalization ,Spike Glycoprotein ,Intestines ,Coronavirus ,Nasal Mucosa ,Mutation ,Female ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 ,Aged, 80 and over ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Antibodies, Viral ,Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus - Abstract
The SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.1 variant emerged in 20211 and has multiple mutations in its spike protein2. Here we show that the spike protein of Omicron has a higher affinity for ACE2 compared with Delta, and a marked change in its antigenicity increases Omicron’s evasion of therapeutic monoclonal and vaccine-elicited polyclonal neutralizing antibodies after two doses. mRNA vaccination as a third vaccine dose rescues and broadens neutralization. Importantly, the antiviral drugs remdesivir and molnupiravir retain efficacy against Omicron BA.1. Replication was similar for Omicron and Delta virus isolates in human nasal epithelial cultures. However, in lung cells and gut cells, Omicron demonstrated lower replication. Omicron spike protein was less efficiently cleaved compared with Delta. The differences in replication were mapped to the entry efficiency of the virus on the basis of spike-pseudotyped virus assays. The defect in entry of Omicron pseudotyped virus to specific cell types effectively correlated with higher cellular RNA expression of TMPRSS2, and deletion of TMPRSS2 affected Delta entry to a greater extent than Omicron. Furthermore, drug inhibitors targeting specific entry pathways3 demonstrated that the Omicron spike inefficiently uses the cellular protease TMPRSS2, which promotes cell entry through plasma membrane fusion, with greater dependency on cell entry through the endocytic pathway. Consistent with suboptimal S1/S2 cleavage and inability to use TMPRSS2, syncytium formation by the Omicron spike was substantially impaired compared with the Delta spike. The less efficient spike cleavage of Omicron at S1/S2 is associated with a shift in cellular tropism away from TMPRSS2-expressing cells, with implications for altered pathogenesis.
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- 2022
15. PP 3.16 – 00209 Prolonged persistence of HIV-infected cells in tissues after allogeneic hematopoietic transplant
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Maldarelli, F., primary, Nguyen, T., additional, Adams, L., additional, Zipparo, M., additional, Gorelick, R., additional, Hewitt, S., additional, Rajan, S., additional, Rubinstein, P., additional, and Kanakry, J., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Hormone signaling and fatty liver in females: analysis of estrogen receptor α mutant mice
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Hart-Unger, S, Arao, Y, Hamilton, K J, Lierz, S L, Malarkey, D E, Hewitt, S C, Freemark, M, and Korach, K S
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- 2017
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17. Grounded Theory Method and Symbolic Interactionism: Freedom of Conceptualization and the Importance of Context in Research
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Hewitt, S, Mills, Jane, Hoare, K, and Sheridan, N
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symbolischer Interaktionismus ,Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie ,qualitative Methode ,pragmatism ,Pragmatismus ,methodology ,Methodologie ,Forschungsarten der Sozialforschung ,qualitative method ,Research Design ,Kontext ,Konzeptualisierung ,Kultur ,conceptualization ,context ,culture ,qualitative research ,Grounded Theory ,ddc:300 ,Social sciences, sociology, anthropology ,symbolic interactionism ,Uncategorized - Abstract
Symbolic interactionism (SI), a perspective used to understand human conduct, is commonly said to underpin grounded theory methodology (GTM). However, the purpose of GTM is to produce substantive explanatory social theory from data without reliance on prior assumptions. Therefore, some argue that SI is an unnecessary theoretical constraint on the principal aim of GTM—the free conceptualization of data. In this article we use examples from an ongoing constructionist grounded theory study into the negotiation of nurses' roles in general practice in New Zealand, to demonstrate how SI can inform GTM regarding conceptual development and context. We argue that by asking three questions from a symbolic interactionist perspective, at each stage of the research process, freedom of conceptualization may be enhanced and awareness of contextual matters promoted to better bridge world views., Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research, Vol. 23 No. 3 (2022)
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- 2022
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18. Age-related immune response heterogeneity to SARS-CoV-2 vaccine BNT162b2
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Collier, D. A., Ferreira, I. A. T. M., Kotagiri, P., Datir, R. P., Lim, E. Y., Touizer, E., Meng, B., Abdullahi, A., Baker, S., Dougan, G., Hess, C., Kingston, N., Lehner, P. J., Lyons, P. A., Matheson, N. J., Owehand, W. H., Saunders, C., Summers, C., Thaventhiran, J. E. D., Toshner, M., Weekes, M. P., Maxwell, P., Shaw, A., Bucke, A., Calder, J., Canna, L., Domingo, J., Elmer, A., Fuller, S., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Kennet, J., Jose, S., Kourampa, J., Meadows, A., O'Brien, C., Price, J., Publico, C., Rastall, R., Ribeiro, C., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Tordesillas, H., Bullman, B., Dunmore, B. J., Fawke, S., Graf, S., Hodgson, J., Huang, C., Hunter, K., Jones, E., Legchenko, E., Matara, C., Martin, J., Mescia, F., O'Donnell, C., Pointon, L., Pond, N., Shih, J., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Treacy, C., Tong, Z., Wood, J., Wylot, M., Bergamaschi, L., Betancourt, A., Bower, G., Cossetti, C., De Sa, A., Epping, M., Gleadall, N., Grenfell, R., Hinch, A., Huhn, O., Jackson, S., Jarvis, I., Krishna, B., Lewis, D., Marsden, J., Nice, F., Okecha, G., Omarjee, O., Perera, M., Potts, M., Richoz, N., Romashova, V., Yarkoni, N. S., Sharma, R., Stefanucci, L., Stephens, J., Strezlecki, M., Turner, L., D. D. De Bie E. M., Bunclark, K., Josipovic, M., Mackay, M., Michael, A., Rossi, S., Selvan, M., Spencer, S., Yong, C., Ansaripour, A., Mwaura, L., Patterson, C., Polwarth, G., Polgarova, P., di Stefano, G., Fahey, C., Michel, R., Bong, S. -H., Coudert, J. D., Holmes, E., Allison, J., Butcher, H., Caputo, D., Clapham-Riley, D., Dewhurst, E., Furlong, A., Graves, B., Gray, J., Ivers, T., Kasanicki, M., Le Gresley, E., Linger, R., Meloy, S., Muldoon, F., Ovington, N., Papadia, S., Phelan, I., Stark, H., Stirrups, K. E., Townsend, P., Walker, N., Webster, J., Smith, K. G. C., Bradley, J. R., Ceron-Gutierrez, L., Cortes-Acevedo, P., Barcenas-Morales, G., Linterman, M. A., Mccoy, L. E., Davis, C., Thomson, E., Mckinney, E., Doffinger, R., Wills, M., Gupta, R. K., Collier, Dami A [0000-0001-5446-4423], Datir, Rawlings P [0000-0003-0521-2144], Smith, Kenneth GC [0000-0003-3829-4326], Linterman, Michelle A [0000-0001-6047-1996], McCoy, Laura E [0000-0001-9503-7946], Thomson, Emma [0000-0003-1482-0889], Lyons, Paul A [0000-0001-7035-8997], Gupta, Ravindra K [0000-0001-9751-1808], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Aging ,Secondary ,T-Lymphocytes ,Antibodies, Viral ,Neutralization ,0302 clinical medicine ,80 and over ,Medicine ,Viral ,Neutralizing ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Autoantibodies ,B-Lymphocytes ,BNT162 Vaccine ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Female ,Health Personnel ,Humans ,Immunization, Secondary ,Immunoglobulin A ,Immunoglobulin Class Switching ,Immunoglobulin G ,Immunologic Memory ,Inflammation ,Interferon-gamma ,Interleukin-2 ,Middle Aged ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Somatic Hypermutation, Immunoglobulin ,Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus ,Vaccination ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Immunity ,Sars-Cov-2 ,Vaccines ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Spike Glycoprotein ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Antibody ,Population ,Article ,Antibodies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Immunoglobulin ,education ,business.industry ,Synthetic ,Somatic Hypermutation ,Vaccine efficacy ,Coronavirus ,030104 developmental biology ,Immunization ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,business - Abstract
Although two-dose mRNA vaccination provides excellent protection against SARS-CoV-2, there is little information about vaccine efficacy against variants of concern (VOC) in individuals above eighty years of age1. Here we analysed immune responses following vaccination with the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine2 in elderly participants and younger healthcare workers. Serum neutralization and levels of binding IgG or IgA after the first vaccine dose were lower in older individuals, with a marked drop in participants over eighty years old. Sera from participants above eighty showed lower neutralization potency against the B.1.1.7 (Alpha), B.1.351 (Beta) and P.1. (Gamma) VOC than against the wild-type virus and were more likely to lack any neutralization against VOC following the first dose. However, following the second dose, neutralization against VOC was detectable regardless of age. The frequency of SARS-CoV-2 spike-specific memory B cells was higher in elderly responders (whose serum showed neutralization activity) than in non-responders after the first dose. Elderly participants showed a clear reduction in somatic hypermutation of class-switched cells. The production of interferon-γ and interleukin-2 by SARS-CoV-2 spike-specific T cells was lower in older participants, and both cytokines were secreted primarily by CD4 T cells. We conclude that the elderly are a high-risk population and that specific measures to boost vaccine responses in this population are warranted, particularly where variants of concern are circulating., Nature, 596 (7872), ISSN:0028-0836, ISSN:1476-4687
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- 2021
19. Do patients gain as much knowledge around their condition from a web-based pulmonary rehabilitation programme?: S84
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Chaplin, E, Hewitt, S, and Singh, S
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- 2017
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20. SARS-CoV-2 evolution during treatment of chronic infection
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Kemp, S. A., Collier, D. A., Datir, R. P., Ferreira, I. A. T. M., Gayed, S., Jahun, A., Hosmillo, M., Rees-Spear, C., Mlcochova, P., Lumb, I. U., Roberts, D. J., Chandra, A., Temperton, N., Baker, S., Dougan, G., Hess, C., Kingston, N., Lehner, P. J., Lyons, P. A., Matheson, N. J., Owehand, W. H., Saunders, C., Summers, C., Thaventhiran, J. E. D., Toshner, M., Weekes, M. P., Bucke, A., Calder, J., Canna, L., Domingo, J., Elmer, A., Fuller, S., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Kennet, J., Jose, S., Kourampa, J., Meadows, A., O'Brien, C., Price, J., Publico, C., Rastall, R., Ribeiro, C., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Tordesillas, H., Bullman, B., Dunmore, B. J., Fawke, S., Graf, S., Hodgson, J., Huang, C., Hunter, K., Jones, E., Legchenko, E., Matara, C., Martin, J., Mescia, F., O'Donnell, C., Pointon, L., Pond, N., Shih, J., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Treacy, C., Tong, Z., Wood, J., Wylot, M., Bergamaschi, L., Betancourt, A., Bower, G., Cossetti, C., De Sa, A., Epping, M., Gleadall, N., Grenfell, R., Hinch, A., Huhn, O., Jackson, S., Jarvis, I., Lewis, D., Marsden, J., Nice, F., Okecha, G., Omarjee, O., Perera, M., Richoz, N., Romashova, V., Yarkoni, N. S., Sharma, R., Stefanucci, L., Stephens, J., Strezlecki, M., Turner, L., De Bie, E. M. D. D., Bunclark, K., Josipovic, M., Mackay, M., Rossi, S., Selvan, M., Spencer, S., Yong, C., Ansaripour, A., Michael, A., Mwaura, L., Patterson, C., Polwarth, G., Polgarova, P., di Stefano, G., Fahey, C., Michel, R., Bong, S. -H., Coudert, J. D., Holmes, E., Allison, J., Butcher, H., Caputo, D., Clapham-Riley, D., Dewhurst, E., Furlong, A., Graves, B., Gray, J., Ivers, T., Kasanicki, M., Le Gresley, E., Linger, R., Meloy, S., Muldoon, F., Ovington, N., Papadia, S., Phelan, I., Stark, H., Stirrups, K. E., Townsend, P., Walker, N., Webster, J., Robson, S. C., Loman, N. J., Connor, T. R., Golubchik, T., Martinez Nunez, R. T., Ludden, C., Corden, S., Johnston, I., Bonsall, D., Smith, C. P., Awan, A. R., Bucca, G., Estee Torok, M., Saeed, K., Prieto, J. A., Jackson, D. K., Hamilton, W. L., Snell, L. B., Moore, C., Harrison, E. M., Goncalves, S., Fairley, D. J., Loose, M. W., Watkins, J., Livett, R., Moses, S., Amato, R., Nicholls, S., Bull, M., Smith, D. L., Barrett, J., Aanensen, D. M., Curran, M. D., Parmar, S., Aggarwal, D., Shepherd, J. G., Parker, M. D., Glaysher, S., Bashton, M., Underwood, A. P., Pacchiarini, N., Loveson, K. F., Carabelli, A. M., Templeton, K. E., Langford, C. F., Sillitoe, J., de Silva, T. I., Wang, D., Kwiatkowski, D., Rambaut, A., O'Grady, J., Cottrell, S., Holden, M. T. G., Thomson, E. C., Osman, H., Andersson, M., Chauhan, A. J., Hassan-Ibrahim, M. O., Lawniczak, M., Alderton, A., Chand, M., Constantinidou, C., Unnikrishnan, M., Darby, A. C., Hiscox, J. A., Paterson, S., Martincorena, I., Robertson, D. L., Volz, E. M., Page, A. J., Pybus, O. G., Bassett, A. R., Ariani, C. V., Spencer Chapman, M. H., K. K., Li, Shah, R. N., Jesudason, N. G., Taha, Y., Mchugh, M. P., Dewar, R., Jahun, A. S., Mcmurray, C., Pandey, S., Mckenna, J. P., Nelson, A., Young, G. R., Mccann, C. M., Elliott, S., Lowe, H., Temperton, B., Roy, S., Price, A., Rey, S., Wyles, M., Rooke, S., Shaaban, S., de Cesare, M., Letchford, L., Silveira, S., Pelosi, E., Wilson-Davies, E., O'Toole, A., Hesketh, A. R., Stark, R., du Plessis, L., Ruis, C., Adams, H., Bourgeois, Y., Michell, S. L., Gramatopoulos, D., Edgeworth, J., Breuer, J., Todd, J. A., Fraser, C., Buck, D., John, M., Kay, G. L., Palmer, S., Peacock, S. J., Heyburn, D., Weldon, D., Robinson, E., Mcnally, A., Muir, P., Vipond, I. B., Boyes, J., Sivaprakasam, V., Salluja, T., Dervisevic, S., Meader, E. J., Park, N. R., Oliver, K., Jeffries, A. R., Ott, S., da Silva Filipe, A., Simpson, D. A., Williams, C., Masoli, J. A. H., Knight, B. A., Jones, C. R., Koshy, C., Ash, A., Casey, A., Bosworth, A., Ratcliffe, L., Xu-McCrae, L., Pymont, H. M., Hutchings, S., Berry, L., Jones, K., Halstead, F., Davis, T., Holmes, C., Iturriza-Gomara, M., Lucaci, A. O., Randell, P. A., Cox, A., Madona, P., Harris, K. A., Brown, J. R., Mahungu, T. W., Irish-Tavares, D., Haque, T., Hart, J., Witele, E., Fenton, M. L., Liggett, S., Graham, C., Swindells, E., Collins, J., Eltringham, G., Campbell, S., Mcclure, P. C., Clark, G., Sloan, T. J., Jones, C., Lynch, J., Warne, B., Leonard, S., Durham, J., Williams, T., Haldenby, S. T., Storey, N., Alikhan, N. -F., Holmes, N., Carlile, M., Perry, M., Craine, N., Lyons, R. A., Beckett, A. H., Goudarzi, S., Fearn, C., Cook, K., Dent, H., Paul, H., Davies, R., Blane, B., Girgis, S. T., Beale, M. A., Bellis, K. L., Dorman, M. J., Drury, E., Kane, L., Kay, S., Mcguigan, S., Nelson, R., Prestwood, L., Rajatileka, S., Batra, R., Williams, R. J., Kristiansen, M., Green, A., Justice, A., Mahanama, A. I. K., Samaraweera, B., Hadjirin, N. F., Quick, J., Poplawski, R., Kermack, L. M., Reynolds, N., Hall, G., Chaudhry, Y., Pinckert, M. L., Georgana, I., Moll, R. J., Thornton, A., Myers, R., Stockton, J., Williams, C. A., Yew, W. C., Trotter, A. J., Trebes, A., MacIntyre-Cockett, G., Birchley, A., Adams, A., Plimmer, A., Gatica-Wilcox, B., Mckerr, C., Hilvers, E., Jones, H., Asad, H., Coombes, J., Evans, J. M., Fina, L., Gilbert, L., Graham, L., Cronin, M., Kumziene-Summerhayes, S., Taylor, S., Jones, S., Groves, D. C., Zhang, P., Gallis, M., Louka, S. F., Starinskij, I., Jackson, C., Gourtovaia, M., Tonkin-Hill, G., Lewis, K., Tovar-Corona, J. M., James, K., Baxter, L., Alam, M. T., Orton, R. J., Hughes, J., Vattipally, S., Ragonnet-Cronin, M., Nascimento, F. F., Jorgensen, D., Boyd, O., Geidelberg, L., Zarebski, A. E., Raghwani, J., Kraemer, M. U. G., Southgate, J., Lindsey, B. B., Freeman, T. M., Keatley, J. -P., Singer, J. B., de Oliveira Martins, L., Yeats, C. A., Abudahab, K., Taylor, B. E. W., Menegazzo, M., Danesh, J., Hogsden, W., Eldirdiri, S., Kenyon, A., Mason, J., Robinson, T. I., Holmes, A., Hartley, J. A., Curran, T., Mather, A. E., Shankar, G., Jones, R., Howe, R., Morgan, S., Wastenge, E., Chapman, M. R., Mookerjee, S., Stanley, R., Smith, W., Peto, T., Eyre, D., Crook, D., Vernet, G., Kitchen, C., Gulliver, H., Merrick, I., Guest, M., Munn, R., Bradley, D. T., Wyatt, T., Beaver, C., Foulser, L., Churcher, C. M., Brooks, E., Smith, K. S., Galai, K., Mcmanus, G. M., Bolt, F., Coll, F., Meadows, L., Attwood, S. W., Davies, A., De Lacy, E., Downing, F., Edwards, S., Scarlett, G. P., Jeremiah, S., Smith, N., Leek, D., Sridhar, S., Forrest, S., Cormie, C., Gill, H. K., Dias, J., Higginson, E. E., Maes, M., Young, J., Wantoch, M., Jamrozy, D., Lo, S., Patel, M., Hill, V., Bewshea, C. M., Ellard, S., Auckland, C., Harrison, I., Bishop, C., Chalker, V., Richter, A., Beggs, A., Best, A., Percival, B., Mirza, J., Megram, O., Mayhew, M., Crawford, L., Ashcroft, F., Moles-Garcia, E., Cumley, N., Hopes, R., Asamaphan, P., Niebel, M. O., Gunson, R. N., Bradley, A., Maclean, A., Mollett, G., Blacow, R., Bird, P., Helmer, T., Fallon, K., Tang, J., Hale, A. D., Macfarlane-Smith, L. R., Harper, K. L., Carden, H., Machin, N. W., Jackson, K. A., Ahmad, S. S. Y., George, R. P., Turtle, L., O'Toole, E., Watts, J., Breen, C., Cowell, A., Alcolea-Medina, A., Charalampous, T., Patel, A., Levett, L. J., Heaney, J., Rowan, A., Taylor, G. P., Shah, D., Atkinson, L., Lee, J. C. D., Westhorpe, A. P., Jannoo, R., Lowe, H. L., Karamani, A., Ensell, L., Chatterton, W., Pusok, M., Dadrah, A., Symmonds, A., Sluga, G., Molnar, Z., Baker, P., Bonner, S., Essex, S., Barton, E., Padgett, D., Scott, G., Greenaway, J., Payne, B. A. I., Burton-Fanning, S., Waugh, S., Raviprakash, V., Sheriff, N., Blakey, V., Williams, L. -A., Moore, J., Stonehouse, S., Smith, L., Davidson, R. K., Bedford, L., Coupland, L., Wright, V., Chappell, J. G., Tsoleridis, T., Ball, J., Khakh, M., Fleming, V. M., Lister, M. M., Howson-Wells, H. C., Boswell, T., Joseph, A., Willingham, I., Duckworth, N., Walsh, S., Wise, E., Moore, N., Mori, M., Cortes, N., Kidd, S., Williams, R., Gifford, L., Bicknell, K., Wyllie, S., Lloyd, A., Impey, R., Malone, C. S., Cogger, B. J., Levene, N., Monaghan, L., Keeley, A. J., Partridge, D. G., Raza, M., Evans, C., Johnson, K., Abnizova, I., Aigrain, L., Ali, M., Allen, L., Anderson, R., Ariani, C., Austin-Guest, S., Bala, S., Bassett, A., Battleday, K., Beal, J., Beale, M., Bellany, S., Bellerby, T., Bellis, K., Berger, D., Berriman, M., Betteridge, E., Bevan, P., Binley, S., Bishop, J., Blackburn, K., Bonfield, J., Boughton, N., Bowker, S., Brendler-Spaeth, T., Bronner, I., Brooklyn, T., Buddenborg, S. K., Bush, R., Caetano, C., Cagan, A., Carter, N., Cartwright, J., Monteiro, T. C., Chapman, L., Chillingworth, T. -J., Clapham, P., Clark, R., Clarke, A., Clarke, C., Cole, D., Cook, E., Coppola, M., Cornell, L., Cornwell, C., Corton, C., Crackett, A., Cranage, A., Craven, H., Craw, S., Crawford, M., Cutts, T., Dabrowska, M., Davies, M., Dawson, J., Day, C., Densem, A., Dibling, T., Dockree, C., Dodd, D., Dogga, S., Dougherty, M., Dove, A., Drummond, L., Dudek, M., Durrant, L., Easthope, E., Eckert, S., Ellis, P., Farr, B., Fenton, M., Ferrero, M., Flack, N., Fordham, H., Forsythe, G., Francis, M., Fraser, A., Freeman, A., Galvin, A., Garcia-Casado, M., Gedny, A., Girgis, S., Glover, J., Goodwin, S., Gould, O., Gray, A., Gray, E., Griffiths, C., Gu, Y., Guerin, F., Hamilton, W., Hanks, H., Harrison, E., Harrott, A., Harry, E., Harvison, J., Heath, P., Hernandez-Koutoucheva, A., Hobbs, R., Holland, D., Holmes, S., Hornett, G., Hough, N., Huckle, L., Hughes-Hallet, L., Hunter, A., Inglis, S., Iqbal, S., Jackson, A., Jackson, D., Verdejo, C. J., Jones, M., Kallepally, K., Kay, K., Keatley, J., Keith, A., King, A., Kitchin, L., Kleanthous, M., Klimekova, M., Korlevic, P., Krasheninnkova, K., Lane, G., Langford, C., Laverack, A., Law, K., Lensing, S., Lewis-Wade, A., Liddle, J., Lin, Q., Lindsay, S., Linsdell, S., Long, R., Lovell, J., Mack, J., Maddison, M., Makunin, A., Mamun, I., Mansfield, J., Marriott, N., Martin, M., Mayho, M., Mccarthy, S., Mcclintock, J., Mchugh, S., Mcminn, L., Meadows, C., Mobley, E., Moll, R., Morra, M., Morrow, L., Murie, K., Nash, S., Nathwani, C., Naydenova, P., Neaverson, A., Nerou, E., Nicholson, J., Nimz, T., Noell, G. G., O'Meara, S., Ohan, V., Olney, C., Ormond, D., Oszlanczi, A., Pang, Y. F., Pardubska, B., Park, N., Parmar, A., Patel, G., Payne, M., Peacock, S., Petersen, A., Plowman, D., Preston, T., Puethe, C., Quail, M., Rajan, D., Rance, R., Rawlings, S., Redshaw, N., Reynolds, J., Reynolds, M., Rice, S., Richardson, M., Roberts, C., Robinson, K., Robinson, M., Robinson, D., Rogers, H., Rojo, E. M., Roopra, D., Rose, M., Rudd, L., Sadri, R., Salmon, N., Saul, D., Schwach, F., Scott, C., Seekings, P., Shirley, L., Simms, A., Sinnott, M., Sivadasan, S., Siwek, B., Sizer, D., Skeldon, K., Skelton, J., Slater-Tunstill, J., Sloper, L., Smerdon, N., Smith, C., Smith, J., Smith, K., Smith, M., Smith, S., Smith, T., Sneade, L., Soria, C. D., Sousa, C., Souster, E., Sparkes, A., Spencer-Chapman, M., Squares, J., Steed, C., Stickland, T., Still, I., Stratton, M., Strickland, M., Swann, A., Swiatkowska, A., Sycamore, N., Swift, E., Symons, E., Szluha, S., Taluy, E., Tao, N., Taylor, K., Thompson, S., Thompson, M., Thomson, M., Thomson, N., Thurston, S., Toombs, D., Topping, B., Tovar-Corona, J., Ungureanu, D., Uphill, J., Urbanova, J., Jansen Van, P., Vancollie, V., Voak, P., Walker, D., Walker, M., Waller, M., Ward, G., Weatherhogg, C., Webb, N., Wells, A., Wells, E., Westwood, L., Whipp, T., Whiteley, T., Whitton, G., Whitwham, A., Widaa, S., Williams, M., Wilson, M., Wright, S., Farr, B. W., Quail, M. A., Thurston, S. A. J., Bronner, I. F., Redshaw, N. M., Lensing, S. V., Balcazar, C. E., Gallagher, M. D., Williamson, K. A., Stanton, T. D., Michelsen, M. L., Warwick-Dugdale, J., Manley, R., Farbos, A., Harrison, J. W., Sambles, C. M., Studholme, D. J., Lackenby, A., Mbisa, T., Platt, S., Miah, S., Bibby, D., Manso, C., Hubb, J., Dabrera, G., Ramsay, M., Bradshaw, D., Schaefer, U., Groves, N., Gallagher, E., Lee, D., Williams, D., Ellaby, N., Hartman, H., Manesis, N., Patel, V., Ledesma, J., Twohig, K. A., Allara, E., Pearson, C., Cheng, J. K. J., Bridgewater, H. E., Frost, L. R., Taylor-Joyce, G., Brown, P. E., Tong, L., Broos, A., Mair, D., Nichols, J., Carmichael, S. N., Smollett, K. L., Nomikou, K., Aranday-Cortes, E., Johnson, N., Nickbakhsh, S., Vamos, E. E., Hughes, M., Rainbow, L., Eccles, R., Nelson, C., Whitehead, M., Gregory, R., Gemmell, M., Wierzbicki, C., Webster, H. J., Fisher, C. L., Signell, A. W., Betancor, G., Wilson, H. D., Nebbia, G., Flaviani, F., Cerda, A. C., Merrill, T. V., Wilson, R. E., Cotic, M., Bayzid, N., Thompson, T., Acheson, E., Rushton, S., O'Brien, S., Baker, D. J., Rudder, S., Aydin, A., Sang, F., Debebe, J., Francois, S., Vasylyeva, T. I., Zamudio, M. E., Gutierrez, B., Marchbank, A., Maksimovic, J., Spellman, K., Mccluggage, K., Morgan, M., Beer, R., Afifi, S., Workman, T., Fuller, W., Bresner, C., Angyal, A., Green, L. R., Parsons, P. J., Tucker, R. M., Brown, R., Whiteley, M., Rowe, W., Siveroni, I., Le-Viet, T., Gaskin, A., Johnson, R., Sharrocks, K., Blane, E., Modis, Y., Leigh, K. E., Briggs, J. A. G., van Gils, M. J., Smith, K. G. C., Bradley, J. R., Doffinger, R., Ceron-Gutierrez, L., Barcenas-Morales, G., Pollock, D. D., Goldstein, R. A., Smielewska, A., Skittrall, J. P., Gouliouris, T., Goodfellow, I. G., Gkrania-Klotsas, E., Illingworth, C. J. R., Mccoy, L. E., Gupta, R. K., Medical Microbiology and Infection Prevention, AII - Infectious diseases, Collier, Dami A [0000-0001-5446-4423], Jahun, Aminu [0000-0002-4585-1701], Temperton, Nigel [0000-0002-7978-3815], Modis, Yorgo [0000-0002-6084-0429], Briggs, John AG [0000-0003-3990-6910], Goldstein, Richard A [0000-0001-5148-4672], Skittrall, Jordan P [0000-0002-8228-3758], Gkrania-Klotsas, Effrossyni [0000-0002-0930-8330], McCoy, Laura E [0000-0001-9503-7946], Gupta, Ravindra K [0000-0001-9751-1808], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Time Factors ,viruses ,Passive ,Antibodies, Viral ,CITIID-NIHR BioResource COVID-19 Collaboration ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Viral ,Aetiology ,Neutralizing ,Lung ,Phylogeny ,neutralising antibodies ,Infectivity ,education.field_of_study ,Genome ,Multidisciplinary ,Alanine ,biology ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Viral Load ,Spike Glycoprotein ,Virus Shedding ,Adenosine Monophosphate ,Aged ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,COVID-19 ,Chronic Disease ,Genome, Viral ,Humans ,Immune Evasion ,Immune Tolerance ,Immunization, Passive ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,Mutagenesis ,Mutant Proteins ,Mutation ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus ,Evolution, Molecular ,Infectious Diseases ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Antibody ,Infection ,Viral load ,Biotechnology ,Evolution ,General Science & Technology ,antibody escape, Convalescent plasma ,030106 microbiology ,Population ,evasion ,Antibodies ,Virus ,Article ,Vaccine Related ,resistance ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,COVID-19 Genomics UK (COG-UK) Consortium ,Biodefense ,Genetics ,Viral shedding ,education ,COVID-19 Serotherapy ,QR355 ,Prevention ,Wild type ,Molecular ,Pneumonia ,Virology ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,Coronavirus ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,030104 developmental biology ,biology.protein ,Immunization ,immune suppression ,mutation - Abstract
The spike protein of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is critical for virus infection through the engagement of the human ACE2 protein1 and is a major antibody target. Here we show that chronic infection with SARS-CoV-2 leads to viral evolution and reduced sensitivity to neutralizing antibodies in an immunosuppressed individual treated with convalescent plasma, by generating whole-genome ultra-deep sequences for 23 time points that span 101 days and using in vitro techniques to characterize the mutations revealed by sequencing. There was little change in the overall structure of the viral population after two courses of remdesivir during the first 57 days. However, after convalescent plasma therapy, we observed large, dynamic shifts in the viral population, with the emergence of a dominant viral strain that contained a substitution (D796H) in the S2 subunit and a deletion (ΔH69/ΔV70) in the S1 N-terminal domain of the spike protein. As passively transferred serum antibodies diminished, viruses with the escape genotype were reduced in frequency, before returning during a final, unsuccessful course of convalescent plasma treatment. In vitro, the spike double mutant bearing both ΔH69/ΔV70 and D796H conferred modestly decreased sensitivity to convalescent plasma, while maintaining infectivity levels that were similar to the wild-type virus.The spike substitution mutant D796H appeared to be the main contributor to the decreased susceptibility to neutralizing antibodies, but this mutation resulted in an infectivity defect. The spike deletion mutant ΔH69/ΔV70 had a twofold higher level of infectivity than wild-type SARS-CoV-2, possibly compensating for the reduced infectivity of the D796H mutation. These data reveal strong selection on SARS-CoV-2 during convalescent plasma therapy, which is associated with the emergence of viral variants that show evidence of reduced susceptibility to neutralizing antibodies in immunosuppressed individuals.
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- 2021
21. Spatial mapping of protein composition and tissue organization : a primer for multiplexed antibody-based imaging
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Hickey, J. W., Neumann, E. K., Radtke, A. J., Camarillo, J. M., Beuschel, R. T., Albanese, A., McDonough, E., Hatler, J., Wiblin, A. E., Fisher, J., Croteau, J., Small, E. C., Sood, A., Caprioli, R. M., Angelo, R. M., Nolan, G. P., Chung, K., Hewitt, S. M., Germain, R. N., Spraggins, J. M., Lundberg, Emma, Snyder, M. P., Kelleher, N. L., Saka, S. K., Hickey, J. W., Neumann, E. K., Radtke, A. J., Camarillo, J. M., Beuschel, R. T., Albanese, A., McDonough, E., Hatler, J., Wiblin, A. E., Fisher, J., Croteau, J., Small, E. C., Sood, A., Caprioli, R. M., Angelo, R. M., Nolan, G. P., Chung, K., Hewitt, S. M., Germain, R. N., Spraggins, J. M., Lundberg, Emma, Snyder, M. P., Kelleher, N. L., and Saka, S. K.
- Abstract
Tissues and organs are composed of distinct cell types that must operate in concert to perform physiological functions. Efforts to create high-dimensional biomarker catalogs of these cells have been largely based on single-cell sequencing approaches, which lack the spatial context required to understand critical cellular communication and correlated structural organization. To probe in situ biology with sufficient depth, several multiplexed protein imaging methods have been recently developed. Though these technologies differ in strategy and mode of immunolabeling and detection tags, they commonly utilize antibodies directed against protein biomarkers to provide detailed spatial and functional maps of complex tissues. As these promising antibody-based multiplexing approaches become more widely adopted, new frameworks and considerations are critical for training future users, generating molecular tools, validating antibody panels, and harmonizing datasets. In this Perspective, we provide essential resources, key considerations for obtaining robust and reproducible imaging data, and specialized knowledge from domain experts and technology developers., QC 20220608
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- 2022
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22. Multicenter analysis of neutrophil extracellular trap dysregulation in adult and pediatric COVID-19
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Carmona-Rivera, C, Zhang, Y, Dobbs, K, Markowitz, T, Dalgard, C, Oler, A, Claybaugh, D, Draper, D, Truong, M, Delmonte, O, Licciardi, F, Ramenghi, U, Crescenzio, N, Imberti, L, Sottini, A, Quaresima, V, Fiorini, C, Discepolo, V, Lo Vecchio, A, Guarino, A, Pierri, L, Catzola, A, Biondi, A, Bonfanti, P, Poli Harlowe, M, Espinosa, Y, Astudillo, C, Rey-Jurado, E, Vial, C, De la Cruz, J, Gonzalez, R, Pinera, C, Mays, J, Ng, A, Platt, A, Drolet, B, Moon, J, Cowen, E, Kenney, H, Weber, S, Castagnoli, R, Magliocco, M, Stack, M, Montealegre Sanchez, G, Barron, K, Fink, D, Kuhns, D, Hewitt, S, Arkin, L, Chertow, D, Su, H, Notarangelo, L, Kaplan, M, Carmona-Rivera, Carmelo, Zhang, Yu, Dobbs, Kerry, Markowitz, Tovah E, Dalgard, Clifton L, Oler, Andrew J, Claybaugh, Dillon R, Draper, Deborah, Truong, Meng, Delmonte, Ottavia M, Licciardi, Francesco, Ramenghi, Ugo, Crescenzio, Nicoletta, Imberti, Luisa, Sottini, Alessandra, Quaresima, Virginia, Fiorini, Chiara, Discepolo, Valentina, Lo Vecchio, Andrea, Guarino, Alfredo, Pierri, Luca, Catzola, Andrea, Biondi, Andrea, Bonfanti, Paolo, Poli Harlowe, Maria Cecilia, Espinosa, Yazmin, Astudillo, Camila A, Rey-Jurado, Emma, Vial, Cecilia, De la Cruz, Javiera, Gonzalez, Ricardo, Pinera, Cecilia, Mays, Jacqueline W, Ng, Ashley, Platt, Andrew, Drolet, Beth A, Moon, John, Cowen, Edward W, Kenney, Heather, Weber, Sarah E, Castagnoli, Riccardo, Magliocco, Mary K, Stack, Michael Austin, Montealegre Sanchez, Gina A, Barron, Karyl, Fink, Danielle L, Kuhns, Douglas B, Hewitt, Stephen M, Arkin, Lisa M, Chertow, Daniel S, Su, Helen C, Notarangelo, Luigi D, Kaplan, Mariana J, Carmona-Rivera, C, Zhang, Y, Dobbs, K, Markowitz, T, Dalgard, C, Oler, A, Claybaugh, D, Draper, D, Truong, M, Delmonte, O, Licciardi, F, Ramenghi, U, Crescenzio, N, Imberti, L, Sottini, A, Quaresima, V, Fiorini, C, Discepolo, V, Lo Vecchio, A, Guarino, A, Pierri, L, Catzola, A, Biondi, A, Bonfanti, P, Poli Harlowe, M, Espinosa, Y, Astudillo, C, Rey-Jurado, E, Vial, C, De la Cruz, J, Gonzalez, R, Pinera, C, Mays, J, Ng, A, Platt, A, Drolet, B, Moon, J, Cowen, E, Kenney, H, Weber, S, Castagnoli, R, Magliocco, M, Stack, M, Montealegre Sanchez, G, Barron, K, Fink, D, Kuhns, D, Hewitt, S, Arkin, L, Chertow, D, Su, H, Notarangelo, L, Kaplan, M, Carmona-Rivera, Carmelo, Zhang, Yu, Dobbs, Kerry, Markowitz, Tovah E, Dalgard, Clifton L, Oler, Andrew J, Claybaugh, Dillon R, Draper, Deborah, Truong, Meng, Delmonte, Ottavia M, Licciardi, Francesco, Ramenghi, Ugo, Crescenzio, Nicoletta, Imberti, Luisa, Sottini, Alessandra, Quaresima, Virginia, Fiorini, Chiara, Discepolo, Valentina, Lo Vecchio, Andrea, Guarino, Alfredo, Pierri, Luca, Catzola, Andrea, Biondi, Andrea, Bonfanti, Paolo, Poli Harlowe, Maria Cecilia, Espinosa, Yazmin, Astudillo, Camila A, Rey-Jurado, Emma, Vial, Cecilia, De la Cruz, Javiera, Gonzalez, Ricardo, Pinera, Cecilia, Mays, Jacqueline W, Ng, Ashley, Platt, Andrew, Drolet, Beth A, Moon, John, Cowen, Edward W, Kenney, Heather, Weber, Sarah E, Castagnoli, Riccardo, Magliocco, Mary K, Stack, Michael Austin, Montealegre Sanchez, Gina A, Barron, Karyl, Fink, Danielle L, Kuhns, Douglas B, Hewitt, Stephen M, Arkin, Lisa M, Chertow, Daniel S, Su, Helen C, Notarangelo, Luigi D, and Kaplan, Mariana J
- Abstract
Dysregulation in neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation and degradation may play a role in the pathogenesis and severity of COVID-19; however, its role in the pediatric manifestations of this disease, including multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) and chilblain-like lesions (CLLs), otherwise known as "COVID toes,"remains unclear. Studying multinational cohorts, we found that, in CLLs, NETs were significantly increased in serum and skin. There was geographic variability in the prevalence of increased NETs in MIS-C, in association with disease severity. MIS-C and CLL serum samples displayed decreased NET degradation ability, in association with C1q and G-actin or anti-NET antibodies, respectively, but not with genetic variants of DNases. In adult COVID-19, persistent elevations in NETs after disease diagnosis were detected but did not occur in asymptomatic infection. COVID-19-affected adults displayed significant prevalence of impaired NET degradation, in association with anti-DNase1L3, G-actin, and specific disease manifestations, but not with genetic variants of DNases. NETs were detected in many organs of adult patients who died from COVID-19 complications. Infection with the Omicron variant was associated with decreased NET levels when compared with other SARS-CoV-2 strains. These data support a role for NETs in the pathogenesis and severity of COVID-19 in pediatric and adult patients.
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- 2022
23. Vitamin concentrations 5 years after gastric bypass
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Aaseth, E., Fagerland, M.W., Aas, A.-M., Hewitt, S., Risstad, H., Kristinsson, J., Bohmer, T., Mala, T., and Aasheim, E.T.
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Vitamins -- Analysis -- Physiological aspects ,Gastric bypass -- Health aspects -- Research ,Dietary supplements -- Health aspects -- Research ,Food/cooking/nutrition ,Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Few studies have investigated the effects of bariatric surgery on vitamin status in the long term. We examined changes in vitamin status up to 5 years after Roux-en-Y gastric [...]
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- 2015
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24. FRAX-based assessment and intervention thresholds—an exploration of thresholds in women aged 50 years and older in the UK
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McCloskey, E., Kanis, J. A., Johansson, H., Harvey, N., Odén, A., Cooper, A., Cooper, C., Francis, R. M., Reid, D. M., Marsh, D., Selby, P., Thompson, F., Hewitt, S., and Compston, J.
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- 2015
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25. Visual tests predict dementia risk in Parkinson disease
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Leyland, L.A., Bremmer, F.D., Mahmood, R., Hewitt, S., Durteste, M., Cartlidge, M.R.E., Lai, M.M.M., Miller, L.E.C., Saygin, A.P., Schrag, A.E., and Weil, R.S.
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Action, intention, and motor control - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 221839.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Objective: To assess the role of visual measures and retinal volume to predict the risk of Parkinson disease (PD) dementia. Methods: In this cohort study, we collected visual, cognitive, and motor data in people with PD. Participants underwent ophthalmic examination, retinal imaging using optical coherence tomography, and visual assessment including acuity and contrast sensitivity and high-level visuoperception measures of skew tolerance and biological motion. We assessed the risk of PD dementia using a recently described algorithm that combines age at onset, sex, depression, motor scores, and baseline cognition. Results: One hundred forty-six people were included in the study (112 with PD and 34 age-matched controls). The mean disease duration was 4.1 (±2·5) years. None of these participants had dementia. Higher risk of dementia was associated with poorer performance in visual measures (acuity: p = 0.29, p = 0.0024; contrast sensitivity: ρ = -0.37, p < 0.0001; skew tolerance: ρ = -0.25, p = 0.0073; and biological motion: p = -0.26, p = 0.0054). In addition, higher risk of PD dementia was associated with thinner retinal structure in layers containing dopaminergic cells, measured as ganglion cell layer (GCL) and inner plexiform layer (IPL) thinning (p = -0.29, p = 0.0021; p = -0.33, p = 0.00044). These relationships were not seen for the retinal nerve fiber layer that does not contain dopaminergic cells and were not seen in unaffected controls. Conclusion: Visual measures and retinal structure in dopaminergic layers were related to risk of PD dementia. Our findings suggest that visual measures and retinal GCL and IPL volumes may be useful to predict the risk of dementia in PD. 11 p.
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- 2020
26. The tale of TILs in breast cancer: A report from The International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group
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El Bairi, K., Haynes, H. R., Blackley, E., Fineberg, S., Shear, J., Turner, S., de Freitas, J. R., Sur, D., Amendola, L. C., Gharib, M., Kallala, A., Arun, I., Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Fujimoto, L., Sua, L. F., Liu, S. -W., Lien, H. -C., Kirtani, P., Balancin, M., El Attar, H., Guleria, P., Yang, W., Shash, E., Chen, I. -C., Bautista, V., Do Prado Moura, J. F., Rapoport, B. L., Castaneda, C., Spengler, E., Acosta-Haab, G., Frahm, I., Sanchez, J., Castillo, M., Bouchmaa, N., Md Zin, R. R., Shui, R., Onyuma, T., Husain, Z., Willard-Gallo, K., Coosemans, A., Perez, E. A., Provenzano, E., Ericsson, P. G., Richardet, E., Mehrotra, R., Sarancone, S., Ehinger, A., Rimm, D. L., Bartlett, J. M. S., Viale, G., Denkert, C., Hida, A. I., Sotiriou, C., Loibl, S., Hewitt, S. M., Badve, S., Symmans, W. F., Kim, R. S., Pruneri, G., Goel, S., Francis, P. A., Inurrigarro, G., Yamaguchi, R., Garcia-Rivello, H., Horlings, H., Afqir, S., Salgado, R., Adams, S., Kok, M., Dieci, M. V., Michiels, S., Demaria, S., Loi, S., Schelfhout, V., Arbzadeh, E., Bondanar, A., Reyes, S. A. G., Ruz, J. R., Kang, J., Xiang, L., Zimovjanova, M., Togores, P., Ozturk, T., Patil, A., Corpa, M., Whitehouse, A., Tan, B., de Paula, A., Rossetti, C., Lang-Schwarz, C., Mahon, S., Giacometti, C., Linderholm, B., Deman, F., Montagna, G., Gong, G., Pavcovich, M., Chaer, Y., Cabrero, I. A., de Brito, M. L., Ilieva, N., Fulop, A., Souza, M., Bilancia, D., Idowu, M., Johri, R., Szpor, J., Bachani, L., Schmitt, F., Giannotti, M., Kurebayashi, Y., Ramirez, B. E. A., Salido, E., Bortesi, L., Bonetto, S., Elomina, K., Lopez, P., Sharma, V., Edirisinghe, A., Mathur, D., Sahay, A., Mouloud, M. A., Giang, C. H., Mukolwe, E., Kiruka, E., Samberg, N., Abe, N., Brown, M., Millar, E., X. B., Li, Yuan, Z., Pasupathy, A., Miele, R., Luff, R., e Porfirio, M. M. A., Ajemba, O., Soni, R., Orvieto, E., Dimaio, M., Thomas, J., Merard, R., Subramaniam, M. M., Apolinario, T., Preda, O., Preda, R., Makanga, A., Maior, M. S., Li, L., Saghatchian, M., Saurine, T., Janssen, E., Cochran, J., Vlada, N., Cappellesso, R., Elfer, K., Hollick, M., Desai, S., Oner, G., Schreurs, A., Liu, S., Perera, R., Mercurio, P., Garcia, F., Hosny, K., Matsumoto, H., van Deurzen, C., Bianchini, G., Coban, I., Jahangir, A., Rahman, A., Stover, D., Luz, P., Martel, A., Waumans, Y., Stenzinger, A., Cortes, J., Dimitrova, P., Nauwelaers, I., Velasco, M., Fan, F., Akturk, G., Firer, M., Roxanis, I., Schneck, M., Wen, H., Cockenpot, V., Konstantinov, A., Calatrava, A., Vidya, M. N., Choi, H. J., Jank, P., Ciinen, A. H., Sabanathan, D., Floris, G., Hoeflmayer, D., Hamada, T., Laudus, N., Grigoriadis, A., Porcellato, I., Acs, B., Miglietta, F., Parrodi, J., Clunie, D., Calhoun, B., F. -I., Lu, Lefevre, A., Tabbarah, S., Tran, W., Garcia-murillas, I., Jelinic, P., Boeckx, C., Souza, S., Cebollero, M. C., Felip, E., Rendon, J. L. S., El Gabry, E., Saltz, J., Bria, E., Garufi, G., Hartman, J., Sebastian, M., Olofsson, H., Kooreman, L., Cucherousset, J., Mathieu, M. -C., Ballesteros-Merino, C., Siziopikou, P., Fong, J., Klein, M., Qulis, I. R. I., Wesseling, J., Bellolio, E., Araya, J. C., Naber, S., Cheang, M., Castellano, I., Ales, A., Laenkholm, A. -V., Kulka, J., Quinn, C., Sapino, A., Amendoeira, I., Marchio, C., Braybrooke, J., Vincent-Salomon, A., Korski, K. P., Sofopoulos, M., Stovgaard, E. I. S., Bianchi, S., Bago-Horvath, Z., Yu, C., Regitnig, P., Hall, S., Kos, Z., Sant, S., Tille, J. -C., Gallas, B., Bethmann, D., Savas, P., Mendes, L., Soler, T., van Seijen, M., Gruosso, T., Quintana, A., Giltnane, J., Van den Eynden, G., Duregon, E., de Cabo, R., Recamo, P. C., Gaboury, L., Zimmerman, J., Pop, C. S., Wernicke, A., Williams, D., Gill, A., Solomon, B., Thapa, B., Farshid, G., Gilham, L., Christie, M., O'Toole, S., Hendry, S., Fox, S. B., Luen, S. J., Lakhani, S. R., Fuchs, T., John, T., Brcic, I., Hainfellner, J., Sigurd, L., Preusser, M., Poortmans, P., Decaluwe, A., Carey, C., Colpaert, C., Larsimont, D., Peeters, D., Broeckx, G., van de Vijver, K., Buisseret, L., Dirix, L., Hertoghs, M., Piccart, M., Ignatiadis, M., Van Bockstal, M., Sirtaine, N., Vermeulen, P., de Wind, R., Declercq, S., Gevaert, T., Haibe-Kans, B., Nelson, B. H., Watson, P. H., Leung, S., Nielsen, T., Shi, L., Balslev, E., Thagaard, J., Almangush, A., Makitie, A., Joensuu, H., Lundin, J., Drubay, D., Roblin, E., Andre, F., Penault-Llorca, F., Lemonnier, J., Adam, J., Lacroix-Triki, M., Ternes, N., Radosevic-Robin, N., Klaushen, F., Weber, K., Harbeck, N., Gluz, O., Wienert, S., Cserni, G., Vingiani, A., Criscitiello, C., Solinas, C., Curigliano, G., Konishi, E., Suzuki, E., Yoshikawa, K., Kawaguchi, K., Takada, M., Toi, M., Ishida, M., Shibata, N., Saji, S., Kogawa, T., Sakatani, T., Okamoto, T., Moriya, T., Kataoka, T., Shimoi, T., Sugie, T., Mukohara, T., Shu, Y., Kikawa, Y., Kozuka, Y., Sayed, S., Rahayu, R., Ramsaroop, R., Senkus-Konefka, E., Chmielik, E., Cardoso, F., Ribeiro, J., Chan, J., Dent, R., Martin, M., Hagen, C., Guerrero, A., Rojo, F., Comerma, L., Nuciforo, P., Serrano, V. V., Camaea, V. P., Steenbruggen, T., Ciompi, F., Nederlof, I., Jan, Hudecek, van der Laak, J., van den Berg, J., Voorwerk, L., van de Vijver, M., de Maaker, M., Linn, S., Mckenzie, H., Somaiah, N., Tutt, A., Swanton, C., Hiley, C., Moore, D. A., Hall, J. A., Le Quesne, J., Jabbar, K. A., al Bakir, M., Hills, R., Irshad, S., Yuan, Y., Li, Z., Liu, M., Klein, J., Fadare, O., Thompson, A., Lazar, A. J., Gown, A., Lo, A., Garrido Castro, A. C., Madabhushi, A., Moreira, A., Richardson, A., Beck, A. H., Bellizzi, A. M., Wolff, A., Harbhajanka, A., Sharma, A., Cimino-Mathews, A., Srinivasan, A., Singh, B., Chennubhotla, C. S., Chauhan, C., Dillon, D. A., Zardavas, D., Johnson, D. B., Thompson, A. E., Brogi, E., Reisenbichler, E., Huang, E., Hirsch, F. R., Mcarthur, H., Ziai, J., Brock, J., Kerner, J., Zha, J., Lennerz, J. K., Carter, J. M., Reis-Filho, J., Sparano, J., Balko, J. M., Pogue-Geile, K., Steele, K. E., Blenman, K. R. M., Allison, K. H., Pusztai, L., Cooper, L., Estrada, V. M., Flowers, M., Robson, M., Rebelatto, M. C., Hanna, M. G., Goetz, M. P., Khojasteh, M., Sanders, M. E., Regan, M. M., Misialek, M., Amgad, M., Tung, N., Singh, R., Huang, R., Pierce, R. H., Leon-Ferre, R., Swain, S., Ely, S., Kim, S. -R., Bedri, S., Paik, S., Schnitt, S., D'Alfons, T., Kurkure, U., Bossuyt, V., Tong, W., Wang, Y., Dos Anjos, C. H., Gaire, F., Van Diest, P. J., El Bairi, Khalid [0000-0002-8414-4145], de Freitas, Juliana Ribeiro [0000-0003-4978-7273], Sur, Daniel [0000-0002-0926-4614], Amendola, Luis Claudio [0000-0002-6404-450X], Azmoudeh-Ardalan, Farid [0000-0003-4701-0532], Kirtani, Pawan [0000-0002-2343-7016], Yang, Wenxian [0000-0002-5349-9680], Castillo, Miluska [0000-0002-0111-3176], Provenzano, Elena [0000-0003-3345-3965], Mehrotra, Ravi [0000-0001-9453-1408], Ehinger, Anna [0000-0001-9225-7396], Rimm, David L [0000-0001-5820-4397], Bartlett, John MS [0000-0002-0347-3888], Denkert, Carsten [0000-0002-2249-0982], Hida, Akira I [0000-0002-4486-8819], Sotiriou, Christos [0000-0002-5745-9977], Hewitt, Stephen M [0000-0001-8283-1788], Badve, Sunil [0000-0001-8861-9980], Symmans, William Fraser [0000-0002-1526-184X], Goel, Shom [0000-0001-8329-9084], Francis, Prudence A [0000-0002-7207-9286], Horlings, Hugo [0000-0003-4782-8828], Salgado, Roberto [0000-0002-1110-3801], Demaria, Sandra [0000-0003-4426-0499], Loi, Sherene [0000-0001-6137-9171], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, UCL - SSS/IREC/SLUC - Pôle St.-Luc, UCL - (SLuc) Service d'anatomie pathologique, Imagerie Moléculaire et Stratégies Théranostiques (IMoST), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA), Centre Jean Perrin [Clermont-Ferrand] (UNICANCER/CJP), and UNICANCER
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,TRASTUZUMAB ,Improved survival ,MICROENVIRONMENT ,Review Article ,SUBTYPES ,NEOADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Ecology,Evolution & Ethology ,PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Pharmacology (medical) ,TUMOR-INFILTRATING LYMPHOCYTES ,Stage (cooking) ,RC254-282 ,Chemical Biology & High Throughput ,0303 health sciences ,Human Biology & Physiology ,Genome Integrity & Repair ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,ASSOCIATION ,3. Good health ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Genetics & Genomics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group ,Predictive markers ,03 medical and health sciences ,Signalling & Oncogenes ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Internal medicine ,692/53/2423 ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,030304 developmental biology ,Computational & Systems Biology ,Science & Technology ,IDENTIFICATION ,business.industry ,review-article ,Cancer ,03.01. Általános orvostudomány ,Immunotherapy ,Tumour Biology ,medicine.disease ,PREDICTIVE-VALUE ,692/4028/67/1347 ,Programmed death 1 ,business ,FREE SURVIVAL - Abstract
The advent of immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) in modern oncology has significantly improved survival in several cancer settings. A subgroup of women with breast cancer (BC) has immunogenic infiltration of lymphocytes with expression of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1). These patients may potentially benefit from ICI targeting the programmed death 1 (PD-1)/PD-L1 signaling axis. The use of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) as predictive and prognostic biomarkers has been under intense examination. Emerging data suggest that TILs are associated with response to both cytotoxic treatments and immunotherapy, particularly for patients with triple-negative BC. In this review from The International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group, we discuss (a) the biological understanding of TILs, (b) their analytical and clinical validity and efforts toward the clinical utility in BC, and (c) the current status of PD-L1 and TIL testing across different continents, including experiences from low-to-middle-income countries, incorporating also the view of a patient advocate. This information will help set the stage for future approaches to optimize the understanding and clinical utilization of TIL analysis in patients with BC. ispartof: NPJ BREAST CANCER vol:7 issue:1 ispartof: location:United States status: published
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- 2021
27. CD44 is prognostic for overall survival in the NCI randomized trial on breast conservation with 25 year follow-up
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Dan, T., Hewitt, S. M., Ohri, N., Ly, D., Soule, B. P., Smith, S. L., Matsuda, K., Council, C., Shankavaram, U., Lippman, M. E., Mitchell, J. B., Camphausen, K., and Simone, N. L.
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- 2014
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28. Formation of SiC for Microelectronic Applications by C Implantation into Doped a-Si
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Manning, B. M., Hewitt, S. B., Tarr, N. G., MacElwee, T. W., Lotsch, H. K. V., editor, Yang, Cary Y., editor, Rahman, M. Mahmudur, editor, and Harris, Gary L., editor
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- 1992
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29. Kidney Biopsy Features Most Predictive of Clinical Outcomes in the Spectrum of Minimal Change Disease and Focal Segmental Glomerulosclerosis
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Zee, Jarcy, Liu, Qian, Smith, Abigail R., Hodgin, Jeffrey B., Rosenberg, Avi, Gillespie, Brenda W., Holzman, Lawrence B., Barisoni, Laura, Mariani, Laura H., Adler, S., Alter, G., Athavale, A., Atkinson, M., Avila-Casado, C., Bagnasco, S., Baker, S., Barisoni, L., Bidot, C., Blake, J., Bray, M., Canetta, P., Chernitskiy, V., Cooper, A., Dell, K., Dell, T., Derebail, V., Desmond, H., Eddy, S., Fermin, D., Fervenza, F., Flynn, P., Fornoni, A., Froment, A., Gadegbeku, C., Gaut, J., Gibson, K., Gillespie, B., Gipson, D., Greenbaum, L., Hewitt, S., Hingorani, S., Hladunewich, M., Hodgin, J., Hogan, M., Holzman, L., Itteera, M., Jefferson, A., Kallem, K., Kaskel, F., Klida, C., Kretzler, M., Kopp, J., Kretzler, M., Kurtz, V., Lafayette, R., LaPage, J., Larkina, M., Lemley, K., Lieske, J., Li, S., Li, S., Lienczewski, C.C., Lin, J.J., Ling, P., Liu, J., Mainieri, T., Mariani, L., Meyers, K., Modersitzki, F., Morrison, S., Nast, C., Negrey, J., Ormond-Foster, J., Palmer, M., Pao, E., Pfaiff, M., Pradhan, A., Romano, M., Rosenberg, A., Royal, V., Quinn-Boyle, S., Reich, H., Rogers, M., Ross, M., Sambandam, K., Sampson, M., Schachere, M., Sedor, J., Sethna, C., Srivastava, T., Smith, A., Swenson, A., Tang, S., Thomas, D., Trachtman, H., Tuttle, K., Vento, S., Wang, C., Wang, Z., Williams, A., Yeung, B., Yun, E., Zee, J., Zhdanova, O., Adler, S., Alter, G., Athavale, A., Atkinson, M., Avila-Casado, C., Bagnasco, S., Baker, S., Barisoni, L., Bidot, C., Blake, J., Bray, M., Canetta, P., Cassol, C., Chernitskiy, V., Cooper, A., Dell, K., Dell, T., Demeke, D., Derebail, V., Desmond, H., Eddy, S., Fermin, D., Fervenza, F., Flynn, P., Fornoni, A., Froment, A., Gadegbeku, C., Gaut, J., Gibson, K., Gillespie, B., Gipson, D., Greenbaum, L., Hewitt, S., Hingorani, S., Hladunewich, M., Hodgin, J., Hogan, M., Holanda, D., Holzman, L., Itteera, M., Jefferson, A., Kallem, K., Kaskel, F., Klida, C., Kopp, J., Kretzler, M., Kurtz, V., Lafayette, R., LaPage, J., Larkina, M., Lemley, K., Lieske, J., Li, S., Li, S., Lienczewski, C.C., Lin, J.J., Ling, P., Liu, J., Mainieri, T., Mariani, L., Messias, N., Meyers, K., Michailov, A., Modersitzki, F., Morrison, S., Nast, C., Negrey, J., Ormond-Foster, J., Palmer, M., Pao, E., Pfaiff, M., Pradhan, A., Romano, M., Rosenberg, A., Royal, V., Quinn-Boyle, S., Reich, H., Rogers, M., Ross, M., Sambandam, K., Sampson, M., Schachere, M., Sedor, J., Sethna, C., Srivastava, T., Smith, A., Swenson, A., Tang, S., Thomas, D., Trachtman, H., Tuttle, K., Vento, S., Wang, C., Wang, Z., Williams, A., Yamashita, M., Yeung, B., Yun, E., Zee, J., Zhdanova, O., and Zuo, Y.
- Abstract
The classification of podocytopathies, including minimal change disease (MCD) and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), has historically been based on limited glomerular features. This study used supervised machine learning methods to identify the most important clinical and histopathologic predictors of disease progression, complete proteinuria remission, and treatment response in MCD/FSGS. The top predictors included conventional and novel glomerular and tubulointerstitial features. Biopsy reporting for podocytopathies should be standardized by including these prognostic morphologic features to inform risk stratification.
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- 2022
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30. Longitudinal analysis reveals that delayed bystander CD8+ T cell activation and early immune pathology distinguish severe COVID-19 from mild disease
- Author
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Bergamaschi, L., Mescia, F., Turner, L., Hanson, A. L., Kotagiri, P., Dunmore, B. J., Ruffieux, H., de Sa, A., Huhn, O., Morgan, M. D., Gerber, P. P., Wills, M. R., Baker, S., Calero-Nieto, F. J., Doffinger, R., Dougan, G., Elmer, A., Goodfellow, I. G., Gupta, R. K., Hosmillo, M., Hunter, K., Kingston, N., Lehner, P. J., Matheson, N. J., Nicholson, J. K., Petrunkina, A. M., Richardson, S., Saunders, C., Thaventhiran, J. E. D., Toonen, E. J. M., Weekes, M. P., Gottgens, B., Toshner, M., Hess, C., Bradley, J. R., Lyons, P. A., Smith, K. G. C., Allison, J., Ansaripour, A., Betancourt, A., Bong, S. -H., Bower, G., Bucke, A., Bullman, B., Bunclark, K., Butcher, H., Calder, J., Canna, L., Caputo, D., Clapham-Riley, D., Cossetti, C., Coudert, J. D., de Bie, E. M. D. D., Dewhurst, E., di Stefano, G., Domingo, J., Epping, M., Fahey, C., Fawke, S., Fuller, S., Furlong, A., Gleadall, N., Graf, S., Graves, B., Gray, J., Grenfell, R., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Hinch, A., Hodgson, J., Holmes, E., Huang, C., Ivers, T., Jackson, S., Jarvis, I., Jones, E., Kennet, J., Jose, S., Josipovic, M., Kasanicki, M., Kourampa, J., Laurenti, E., Legchenko, E., Le Gresley, E., Lewis, D., Linger, R., Mackay, M., Marioni, J. C., Marsden, J., Martin, J., Matara, C., Meadows, A., Meloy, S., Mende, N., Michael, A., Michel, R., Mwaura, L., Muldoon, F., Nice, F., O'Brien, C., O'Donnell, C., Okecha, G., Omarjee, O., Ovington, N., Owehand, W. H., Papadia, S., Patterson, C., Perera, M., Phelan, I., Pointon, L., Polgarova, P., Polwarth, G., Pond, N., Price, J., Publico, C., Rastall, R., Ribeiro, C., Richoz, N., Romashova, V., Rossi, S., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Yarkoni, N. S., Sharma, R., Shih, J., Selvan, M., Spencer, S., Stefanucci, L., Stark, H., Stephens, J., Stirrups, K. E., Strezlecki, M., Summers, C., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Tong, Z., Tordesillas, H., Treacy, C., Townsend, P., Walker, N., Webster, J., Wilson, N. K., Wood, J., Wylot, M., Yong, C., Mescia, Federica [0000-0002-2759-4027], Hanson, Aimee [0000-0002-0231-8771], Ruffieux, Helene [0000-0002-7113-2540], Morgan, Michael [0000-0003-0757-0711], Wills, Mark [0000-0001-8548-5729], Baker, Stephen [0000-0003-1308-5755], Dougan, Gordon [0000-0003-0022-965X], Gupta, Ravindra [0000-0001-9751-1808], Hosmillo, Myra [0000-0002-3514-7681], Kingston, Nathalie [0000-0002-9190-2231], Lehner, Paul [0000-0001-9383-1054], Matheson, Nicholas [0000-0002-3318-1851], Richardson, Sylvia [0000-0003-1998-492X], Thaventhiran, James [0000-0001-8616-074X], Weekes, Michael [0000-0003-3196-5545], Gottgens, Berthold [0000-0001-6302-5705], Toshner, Mark [0000-0002-3969-6143], Bradley, John [0000-0002-7774-8805], Lyons, Paul [0000-0001-7035-8997], Smith, Kenneth [0000-0003-3829-4326], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, and Collaboration, Cambridge Institute of Therapeutic Immunology and Infectious Disease-National Institute of Health Research (CITIID-NIHR) COVID BioResource
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Immunology ,Disease ,macromolecular substances ,immune pathology ,Biology ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Systemic inflammation ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Oxidative Phosphorylation ,03 medical and health sciences ,recovery ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immunophenotyping ,Immune system ,Immunopathology ,Bystander effect ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,complement ,Longitudinal Studies ,systemic inflammation ,bystander CD8+ T cell ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Interleukin ,COVID-19 ,interferon ,Prognosis ,TNF-α ,Biomarkers ,Cytokines ,Disease Susceptibility ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Inflammation Mediators ,Phenotype ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Transcriptome ,030104 developmental biology ,Infectious Diseases ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
The kinetics of the immune changes in COVID-19 across severity groups have not been rigorously assessed. Using immunophenotyping, RNA sequencing, and serum cytokine analysis, we analyzed serial samples from 207 SARS-CoV2-infected individuals with a range of disease severities over 12 weeks from symptom onset. An early robust bystander CD8+ T cell immune response, without systemic inflammation, characterized asymptomatic or mild disease. Hospitalized individuals had delayed bystander responses and systemic inflammation that was already evident near symptom onset, indicating that immunopathology may be inevitable in some individuals. Viral load did not correlate with this early pathological response but did correlate with subsequent disease severity. Immune recovery is complex, with profound persistent cellular abnormalities in severe disease correlating with altered inflammatory responses, with signatures associated with increased oxidative phosphorylation replacing those driven by cytokines tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin (IL)-6. These late immunometabolic and immune defects may have clinical implications., Graphical abstract, The immune changes that underlie COVID-19 severity have not been fully defined. By analyzing a longitudinal cohort of COVID-19 patients and integrating inflammatory factors, immunophenotyping, and transcriptome data, Bergamaschi et al. identify both early and persistent immune changes that distinguish mild and/or asymptomatic from more severe disease.
- Published
- 2021
31. Elucidating the Eucharist
- Author
-
Hewitt, S
- Subjects
060303 religions & theology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Doctrine ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,060302 philosophy ,Eucharist ,Theology ,Transubstantiation ,Philosophy of religion ,media_common - Abstract
The doctrine of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist presents a particular challenge to its defenders: how is it so much as intelligible? This paper explores Dummett’s response to this question, centred on the notion of deeming. Whilst instructive, Dummett’s position is unsustainable as it stands, since it fails to secure the meaningfulness of the doctrine. Once deeming is brought together with an account of bodiliness and an appreciation of the nature of the Eucharist as a meal, however, the way is open to demonstrating the intelligibility of the doctrine. This is a prerequisite even for its rejection as false.
- Published
- 2019
32. Grammatical thomism
- Author
-
Hewitt, S
- Subjects
060303 religions & theology ,Philosophy ,060302 philosophy ,Religious studies ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion - Abstract
Centred on figures like Herbert McCabe, David Burrell, and Brian Davies the loose tradition known as grammatical thomism is undervalued within analytic philosophy of religion. This is particularly unfortunate, since a grammatical thomist approach offers the prospect of both a reorientation towards a more apophatic conception of God, consonant with the theology and practice of many religious traditions, and of moving beyond certain debates in the philosophy of religion. In this article, a grammatical thomist approach to the word ‘God’ is laid out: the conditions for introducing the word constrain its grammar, such that it cannot be understood as designating anything within our world. Accordingly inferential moves which we might otherwise find tempting are blocked. The result is an apophatic theology grounded in linguistic considerations. Objections against linguistic approaches to philosophy and theology, owing to Williamson and Murphy respectively, are considered and counter-arguments presented. The potential for therapeutic approaches to both the problem of evil and questions around theology and politics is then flagged.
- Published
- 2019
33. Theism and Realism: A Match Made in Heaven?
- Author
-
Hewitt, S
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Philosophy ,Religious studies ,Metaphysics ,06 humanities and the arts ,Possession (law) ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,01 natural sciences ,Logical consequence ,Epistemology ,060302 philosophy ,Heaven ,Theism ,Principle of bivalence ,Realism ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Philosophy of religion ,media_common - Abstract
There is no interesting entailment either way between theism and various forms of realism. Taking its cue from Dummett’s characterisation of realism and his discussion of it with respect to theistic belief, this paper argues both that theism does not follow from realism, and that God cannot be appealed to in order to secure bivalence for an otherwise indeterminate subject matter. In both cases, significant appeal is made to the position that God is not a language user, which in turn is motivated by an account of understanding as aptitude possession. The resulting picture sits comfortably with the apophatism common within living religious traditions and with the view that the philosophy of religion ought to reorientate itself away from metaphysics towards more practical questions.
- Published
- 2018
34. Steroidal Oestrogens and Plant Growth and Development
- Author
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Hewitt, S., Hillman, J. R., and Knights, B. A.
- Published
- 1980
35. The Effect of Temperature on Loss of Dry Matter and Carbohydrate from Leaves by Respiration and Translocation
- Author
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Hewitt, S. P. and Curtis, O. F.
- Published
- 1948
36. Sensitivity of SARS-CoV-2 B.1.1.7 to mRNA vaccine-elicited antibodies
- Author
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Collier, D. A., De Marco, A., Ferreira, I. A. T. M., Meng, B., Datir, R. P., Walls, A. C., Kemp, S. A., Bassi, J., Pinto, D., Silacci-Fregni, C., Bianchi, S., Tortorici, M. A., Bowen, J., Culap, K., Jaconi, S., Cameroni, E., Snell, G., Pizzuto, M. S., Pellanda, A. F., Garzoni, C., Riva, A., Baker, S., Dougan, G., Hess, C., Kingston, N., Lehner, P. J., Lyons, P. A., Matheson, N. J., Owehand, W. H., Saunders, C., Summers, C., Thaventhiran, J. E. D., Toshner, M., Weekes, M. P., Bucke, A., Calder, J., Canna, L., Domingo, J., Elmer, A., Fuller, S., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Kennet, J., Jose, S., Kourampa, J., Meadows, A., O'Brien, C., Price, J., Publico, C., Rastall, R., Ribeiro, C., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Tordesillas, H., Bullman, B., Dunmore, B. J., Fawke, S., Graf, S., Hodgson, J., Huang, C., Hunter, K., Jones, E., Legchenko, E., Matara, C., Martin, J., Mescia, F., O'Donnell, C., Pointon, L., Pond, N., Shih, J., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Treacy, C., Tong, Z., Wood, J., Wylot, M., Bergamaschi, L., Betancourt, A., Bower, G., Cossetti, C., De Sa, A., Epping, M., Grenfell, R., Hinch, A., Huhn, O., Jackson, S., Jarvis, I., Lewis, D., Marsden, J., Nice, F., Okecha, G., Omarjee, O., Perera, M., Richoz, N., Romashova, V., Yarkoni, N. S., Sharma, R., Stefanucci, L., Stephens, J., Strezlecki, M., Turner, L., De Bie, E. M. D. D., Bunclark, K., Josipovic, M., Mackay, M., Rossi, S., Selvan, M., Spencer, S., Yong, C., Ansaripour, A., Michael, A., Mwaura, L., Patterson, C., Polwarth, G., Polgarova, P., di Stefano, G., Fahey, C., Michel, R., Bong, S. -H., Coudert, J. D., Holmes, E., Allison, J., Butcher, H., Caputo, D., Clapham-Riley, D., Dewhurst, E., Furlong, A., Graves, B., Gray, J., Ivers, T., Kasanicki, M., Le Gresley, E., Linger, R., Meloy, S., Muldoon, F., Ovington, N., Papadia, S., Phelan, I., Stark, H., Stirrups, K. E., Townsend, P., Walker, N., Webster, J., Mccoy, L. E., Smith, K. G. C., Bradley, J. R., Temperton, N., Ceron-Gutierrez, L., Barcenas-Morales, G., Robson, S. C., Loman, N. J., Connor, T. R., Golubchik, T., Martinez Nunez, R. T., Ludden, C., Corden, S., Johnston, I., Bonsall, D., Smith, C. P., Awan, A. R., Bucca, G., Torok, M. E., Saeed, K., Prieto, J. A., Jackson, D. K., Hamilton, W. L., Snell, L. B., Moore, C., Harrison, E. M., Goncalves, S., Fairley, D. J., Loose, M. W., Watkins, J., Livett, R., Moses, S., Amato, R., Nicholls, S., Bull, M., Smith, D. L., Barrett, J., Aanensen, D. M., Curran, M. D., Parmar, S., Aggarwal, D., Shepherd, J. G., Parker, M. D., Glaysher, S., Bashton, M., Underwood, A. P., Pacchiarini, N., Loveson, K. F., Carabelli, A. M., Templeton, K. E., Langford, C. F., Sillitoe, J., de Silva, T. I., Wang, D., Kwiatkowski, D., Rambaut, A., O'Grady, J., Cottrell, S., Holden, M. T. G., Thomson, E. C., Osman, H., Andersson, M., Chauhan, A. J., Hassan-Ibrahim, M. O., Lawniczak, M., Alderton, A., Chand, M., Constantinidou, C., Unnikrishnan, M., Darby, A. C., Hiscox, J. A., Paterson, S., Martincorena, I., Robertson, D. L., Volz, E. M., Page, A. J., Pybus, O. G., Bassett, A. R., Ariani, C. V., Spencer Chapman, M. H., K. K., Li, Shah, R. N., Jesudason, N. G., Taha, Y., Mchugh, M. P., Dewar, R., Jahun, A. S., Mcmurray, C., Pandey, S., Mckenna, J. P., Nelson, A., Young, G. R., Mccann, C. M., Elliott, S., Lowe, H., Temperton, B., Roy, S., Price, A., Rey, S., Wyles, M., Rooke, S., Shaaban, S., de Cesare, M., Letchford, L., Silveira, S., Pelosi, E., Wilson-Davies, E., Hosmillo, M., O'Toole, A., Hesketh, A. R., Stark, R., du Plessis, L., Ruis, C., Adams, H., Bourgeois, Y., Michell, S. L., Gramatopoulos, D., Edgeworth, J., Breuer, J., Todd, J. A., Fraser, C., Buck, D., John, M., Kay, G. L., Palmer, S., Peacock, S. J., Heyburn, D., Weldon, D., Robinson, E., Mcnally, A., Muir, P., Vipond, I. B., Boyes, J., Sivaprakasam, V., Salluja, T., Dervisevic, S., Meader, E. J., Park, N. R., Oliver, K., Jeffries, A. R., Ott, S., da Silva Filipe, A., Simpson, D. A., Williams, C., Masoli, J. A. H., Knight, B. A., Jones, C. R., Koshy, C., Ash, A., Casey, A., Bosworth, A., Ratcliffe, L., Xu-McCrae, L., Pymont, H. M., Hutchings, S., Berry, L., Jones, K., Halstead, F., Davis, T., Holmes, C., Iturriza-Gomara, M., Lucaci, A. O., Randell, P. A., Cox, A., Madona, P., Harris, K. A., Brown, J. R., Mahungu, T. W., Irish-Tavares, D., Haque, T., Hart, J., Witele, E., Fenton, M. L., Liggett, S., Graham, C., Swindells, E., Collins, J., Eltringham, G., Campbell, S., Mcclure, P. C., Clark, G., Sloan, T. J., Jones, C., Lynch, J., Warne, B., Leonard, S., Durham, J., Williams, T., Haldenby, S. T., Storey, N., Alikhan, N. -F., Holmes, N., Carlile, M., Perry, M., Craine, N., Lyons, R. A., Beckett, A. H., Goudarzi, S., Fearn, C., Cook, K., Dent, H., Paul, H., Davies, R., Blane, B., Girgis, S. T., Beale, M. A., Bellis, K. L., Dorman, M. J., Drury, E., Kane, L., Kay, S., Mcguigan, S., Nelson, R., Prestwood, L., Rajatileka, S., Batra, R., Williams, R. J., Kristiansen, M., Green, A., Justice, A., Mahanama, A. I. K., Samaraweera, B., Hadjirin, N. F., Quick, J., Poplawski, R., Kermack, L. M., Reynolds, N., Hall, G., Chaudhry, Y., Pinckert, M. L., Georgana, I., Moll, R. J., Thornton, A., Myers, R., Stockton, J., Williams, C. A., Yew, W. C., Trotter, A. J., Trebes, A., MacIntyre-Cockett, G., Birchley, A., Adams, A., Plimmer, A., Gatica-Wilcox, B., Mckerr, C., Hilvers, E., Jones, H., Asad, H., Coombes, J., Evans, J. M., Fina, L., Gilbert, L., Graham, L., Cronin, M., Kumziene-Summerhayes, S., Taylor, S., Jones, S., Groves, D. C., Zhang, P., Gallis, M., Louka, S. F., Starinskij, I., Jackson, C., Gourtovaia, M., Tonkin-Hill, G., Lewis, K., Tovar-Corona, J. M., James, K., Baxter, L., Alam, M. T., Orton, R. J., Hughes, J., Vattipally, S., Ragonnet-Cronin, M., Nascimento, F. F., Jorgensen, D., Boyd, O., Geidelberg, L., Zarebski, A. E., Raghwani, J., Kraemer, M. U. G., Southgate, J., Lindsey, B. B., Freeman, T. M., Keatley, J. -P., Singer, J. B., de Oliveira Martins, L., Yeats, C. A., Abudahab, K., Taylor, B. E. W., Menegazzo, M., Danesh, J., Hogsden, W., Eldirdiri, S., Kenyon, A., Mason, J., Robinson, T. I., Holmes, A., Hartley, J. A., Curran, T., Mather, A. E., Shankar, G., Jones, R., Howe, R., Morgan, S., Wastenge, E., Chapman, M. R., Mookerjee, S., Stanley, R., Smith, W., Peto, T., Eyre, D., Crook, D., Vernet, G., Kitchen, C., Gulliver, H., Merrick, I., Guest, M., Munn, R., Bradley, D. T., Wyatt, T., Beaver, C., Foulser, L., Churcher, C. M., Brooks, E., Smith, K. S., Galai, K., Mcmanus, G. M., Bolt, F., Coll, F., Meadows, L., Attwood, S. W., Davies, A., De Lacy, E., Downing, F., Edwards, S., Scarlett, G. P., Jeremiah, S., Smith, N., Leek, D., Sridhar, S., Forrest, S., Cormie, C., Gill, H. K., Dias, J., Higginson, E. E., Maes, M., Young, J., Wantoch, M., Jamrozy, D., Lo, S., Patel, M., Hill, V., Bewshea, C. M., Ellard, S., Auckland, C., Harrison, I., Bishop, C., Chalker, V., Richter, A., Beggs, A., Best, A., Percival, B., Mirza, J., Megram, O., Mayhew, M., Crawford, L., Ashcroft, F., Moles-Garcia, E., Cumley, N., Hopes, R., Asamaphan, P., Niebel, M. O., Gunson, R. N., Bradley, A., Maclean, A., Mollett, G., Blacow, R., Bird, P., Helmer, T., Fallon, K., Tang, J., Hale, A. D., Macfarlane-Smith, L. R., Harper, K. L., Carden, H., Machin, N. W., Jackson, K. A., Ahmad, S. S. Y., George, R. P., Turtle, L., O'Toole, E., Watts, J., Breen, C., Cowell, A., Alcolea-Medina, A., Charalampous, T., Patel, A., Levett, L. J., Heaney, J., Rowan, A., Taylor, G. P., Shah, D., Atkinson, L., Lee, J. C. D., Westhorpe, A. P., Jannoo, R., Lowe, H. L., Karamani, A., Ensell, L., Chatterton, W., Pusok, M., Dadrah, A., Symmonds, A., Sluga, G., Molnar, Z., Baker, P., Bonner, S., Essex, S., Barton, E., Padgett, D., Scott, G., Greenaway, J., Payne, B. A. I., Burton-Fanning, S., Waugh, S., Raviprakash, V., Sheriff, N., Blakey, V., Williams, L. -A., Moore, J., Stonehouse, S., Smith, L., Davidson, R. K., Bedford, L., Coupland, L., Wright, V., Chappell, J. G., Tsoleridis, T., Ball, J., Khakh, M., Fleming, V. M., Lister, M. M., Howson-Wells, H. C., Boswell, T., Joseph, A., Willingham, I., Duckworth, N., Walsh, S., Wise, E., Moore, N., Mori, M., Cortes, N., Kidd, S., Williams, R., Gifford, L., Bicknell, K., Wyllie, S., Lloyd, A., Impey, R., Malone, C. S., Cogger, B. J., Levene, N., Monaghan, L., Keeley, A. J., Partridge, D. G., Raza, M., Evans, C., Johnson, K., Betteridge, E., Farr, B. W., Goodwin, S., Quail, M. A., Scott, C., Shirley, L., Thurston, S. A. J., Rajan, D., Bronner, I. F., Aigrain, L., Redshaw, N. M., Lensing, S. V., Mccarthy, S., Makunin, A., Balcazar, C. E., Gallagher, M. D., Williamson, K. A., Stanton, T. D., Michelsen, M. L., Warwick-Dugdale, J., Manley, R., Farbos, A., Harrison, J. W., Sambles, C. M., Studholme, D. J., Lackenby, A., Mbisa, T., Platt, S., Miah, S., Bibby, D., Manso, C., Hubb, J., Dabrera, G., Ramsay, M., Bradshaw, D., Schaefer, U., Groves, N., Gallagher, E., Lee, D., Williams, D., Ellaby, N., Hartman, H., Manesis, N., Patel, V., Ledesma, J., Twohig, K. A., Allara, E., Pearson, C., Cheng, J. K. J., Bridgewater, H. E., Frost, L. R., Taylor-Joyce, G., Brown, P. E., Tong, L., Broos, A., Mair, D., Nichols, J., Carmichael, S. N., Smollett, K. L., Nomikou, K., Aranday-Cortes, E., Johnson, N., Nickbakhsh, S., Vamos, E. E., Hughes, M., Rainbow, L., Eccles, R., Nelson, C., Whitehead, M., Gregory, R., Gemmell, M., Wierzbicki, C., Webster, H. J., Fisher, C. L., Signell, A. W., Betancor, G., Wilson, H. D., Nebbia, G., Flaviani, F., Cerda, A. C., Merrill, T. V., Wilson, R. E., Cotic, M., Bayzid, N., Thompson, T., Acheson, E., Rushton, S., O'Brien, S., Baker, D. J., Rudder, S., Aydin, A., Sang, F., Debebe, J., Francois, S., Vasylyeva, T. I., Zamudio, M. E., Gutierrez, B., Marchbank, A., Maksimovic, J., Spellman, K., Mccluggage, K., Morgan, M., Beer, R., Afifi, S., Workman, T., Fuller, W., Bresner, C., Angyal, A., Green, L. R., Parsons, P. J., Tucker, R. M., Brown, R., Whiteley, M., Bonfield, J., Puethe, C., Whitwham, A., Liddle, J., Rowe, W., Siveroni, I., Le-Viet, T., Gaskin, A., Johnson, R., Abnizova, I., Ali, M., Allen, L., Anderson, R., Ariani, C., Austin-Guest, S., Bala, S., Bassett, A., Battleday, K., Beal, J., Beale, M., Bellany, S., Bellerby, T., Bellis, K., Berger, D., Berriman, M., Bevan, P., Binley, S., Bishop, J., Blackburn, K., Boughton, N., Bowker, S., Brendler-Spaeth, T., Bronner, I., Brooklyn, T., Buddenborg, S. K., Bush, R., Caetano, C., Cagan, A., Carter, N., Cartwright, J., Monteiro, T. C., Chapman, L., Chillingworth, T. -J., Clapham, P., Clark, R., Clarke, A., Clarke, C., Cole, D., Cook, E., Coppola, M., Cornell, L., Cornwell, C., Corton, C., Crackett, A., Cranage, A., Craven, H., Craw, S., Crawford, M., Cutts, T., Dabrowska, M., Davies, M., Dawson, J., Day, C., Densem, A., Dibling, T., Dockree, C., Dodd, D., Dogga, S., Dougherty, M., Dove, A., Drummond, L., Dudek, M., Durrant, L., Easthope, E., Eckert, S., Ellis, P., Farr, B., Fenton, M., Ferrero, M., Flack, N., Fordham, H., Forsythe, G., Francis, M., Fraser, A., Freeman, A., Galvin, A., Garcia-Casado, M., Gedny, A., Girgis, S., Glover, J., Gould, O., Gray, A., Gray, E., Griffiths, C., Gu, Y., Guerin, F., Hamilton, W., Hanks, H., Harrison, E., Harrott, A., Harry, E., Harvison, J., Heath, P., Hernandez-Koutoucheva, A., Hobbs, R., Holland, D., Holmes, S., Hornett, G., Hough, N., Huckle, L., Hughes-Hallet, L., Hunter, A., Inglis, S., Iqbal, S., Jackson, A., Jackson, D., Verdejo, C. J., Jones, M., Kallepally, K., Kay, K., Keatley, J., Keith, A., King, A., Kitchin, L., Kleanthous, M., Klimekova, M., Korlevic, P., Krasheninnkova, K., Lane, G., Langford, C., Laverack, A., Law, K., Lensing, S., Lewis-Wade, A., Lin, Q., Lindsay, S., Linsdell, S., Long, R., Lovell, J., Mack, J., Maddison, M., Mamun, I., Mansfield, J., Marriott, N., Martin, M., Mayho, M., Mcclintock, J., Mchugh, S., Mcminn, L., Meadows, C., Mobley, E., Moll, R., Morra, M., Morrow, L., Murie, K., Nash, S., Nathwani, C., Naydenova, P., Neaverson, A., Nerou, E., Nicholson, J., Nimz, T., Noell, G. G., O'Meara, S., Ohan, V., Olney, C., Ormond, D., Oszlanczi, A., Pang, Y. F., Pardubska, B., Park, N., Parmar, A., Patel, G., Payne, M., Peacock, S., Petersen, A., Plowman, D., Preston, T., Quail, M., Rance, R., Rawlings, S., Redshaw, N., Reynolds, J., Reynolds, M., Rice, S., Richardson, M., Roberts, C., Robinson, K., Robinson, M., Robinson, D., Rogers, H., Rojo, E. M., Roopra, D., Rose, M., Rudd, L., Sadri, R., Salmon, N., Saul, D., Schwach, F., Seekings, P., Simms, A., Sinnott, M., Sivadasan, S., Siwek, B., Sizer, D., Skeldon, K., Skelton, J., Slater-Tunstill, J., Sloper, L., Smerdon, N., Smith, C., Smith, J., Smith, K., Smith, M., Smith, S., Smith, T., Sneade, L., Soria, C. D., Sousa, C., Souster, E., Sparkes, A., Spencer-Chapman, M., Squares, J., Steed, C., Stickland, T., Still, I., Stratton, M., Strickland, M., Swann, A., Swiatkowska, A., Sycamore, N., Swift, E., Symons, E., Szluha, S., Taluy, E., Tao, N., Taylor, K., Thompson, S., Thompson, M., Thomson, M., Thomson, N., Thurston, S., Toombs, D., Topping, B., Tovar-Corona, J., Ungureanu, D., Uphill, J., Urbanova, J., Van, P. J., Vancollie, V., Voak, P., Walker, D., Walker, M., Waller, M., Ward, G., Weatherhogg, C., Webb, N., Wells, A., Wells, E., Westwood, L., Whipp, T., Whiteley, T., Whitton, G., Widaa, S., Williams, M., Wilson, M., Wright, S., Harvey, W., Virgin, H. W., Lanzavecchia, A., Piccoli, L., Doffinger, R., Wills, M., Veesler, D., Corti, D., and Gupta, R. K.
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Models, Molecular ,Passive ,Antibodies, Viral ,Neutralization ,0302 clinical medicine ,Models ,Monoclonal ,80 and over ,Viral ,Neutralizing antibody ,Neutralizing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Vaccines ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,C500 ,Middle Aged ,C700 ,Spike Glycoprotein ,Vaccination ,Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus ,Female ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 ,Antibody ,Aged ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,HEK293 Cells ,Humans ,Immune Evasion ,Immunization, Passive ,Mutation ,Neutralization Tests ,SARS-CoV-2 ,medicine.drug_class ,B100 ,Monoclonal antibody ,Antibodies ,Virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,medicine ,COVID-19 Serotherapy ,QR355 ,Synthetic ,Molecular ,Virology ,Coronavirus ,030104 developmental biology ,Immunization ,biology.protein ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is uncontrolled in many parts of the world; control is compounded in some areas by the higher transmission potential of the B.1.1.7 variant1, which has now been reported in 94 countries. It is unclear whether the response of the virus to vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 on the basis of the prototypic strain will be affected by the mutations found in B.1.1.7. Here we assess the immune responses of individuals after vaccination with the mRNA-based vaccine BNT162b22. We measured neutralizing antibody responses after the first and second immunizations using pseudoviruses that expressed the wild-type spike protein or a mutated spike protein that contained the eight amino acid changes found in the B.1.1.7 variant. The sera from individuals who received the vaccine exhibited a broad range of neutralizing titres against the wild-type pseudoviruses that were modestly reduced against the B.1.1.7 variant. This reduction was also evident in sera from some patients who had recovered from COVID-19. Decreased neutralization of the B.1.1.7 variant was also observed for monoclonal antibodies that target the N-terminal domain (9 out of 10) and the receptor-binding motif (5 out of 31), but not for monoclonal antibodies that recognize the receptor-binding domain that bind outside the receptor-binding motif. Introduction of the mutation that encodes the E484K substitution in the B.1.1.7 background to reflect a newly emerged variant of concern (VOC 202102/02) led to a more-substantial loss of neutralizing activity by vaccine-elicited antibodies and monoclonal antibodies (19 out of 31) compared with the loss of neutralizing activity conferred by the mutations in B.1.1.7 alone. The emergence of the E484K substitution in a B.1.1.7 background represents a threat to the efficacy of the BNT162b2 vaccine.
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- 2021
37. The cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript mediates ligand-independent activation of ERα, and is an independent prognostic factor in node-negative breast cancer
- Author
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Brennan, D J, O'Connor, D P, Laursen, H, McGee, S F, McCarthy, S, Zagozdzon, R, Rexhepaj, E, Culhane, A C, Martin, F M, Duffy, M J, Landberg, G, Ryden, L, Hewitt, S M, Kuhar, M J, Bernards, R, Millikan, R C, Crown, J P, Jirström, K, and Gallagher, W M
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- 2012
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38. The orphan tyrosine kinase receptor, ROR2, mediates Wnt5A signaling in metastatic melanoma
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O’Connell, M P, Fiori, J L, Xu, M, Carter, A D, Frank, B P, Camilli, T C, French, A D, Dissanayake, S K, Indig, F E, Bernier, M, Taub, D D, Hewitt, S M, and Weeraratna, A T
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- 2010
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39. The actin-cytoskeleton linker protein ezrin is regulated during osteosarcoma metastasis by PKC
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Ren, L, Hong, S H, Cassavaugh, J, Osborne, T, Chou, A J, Kim, S Y, Gorlick, R, Hewitt, S M, and Khanna, C
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- 2009
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40. Aberrant nucleocytoplasmic localization of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein in human cancer correlates with moderate/poor tumor differentiation
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Jiao, W, Lin, H-M, Datta, J, Braunschweig, T, Chung, J-Y, Hewitt, S M, and Rane, S G
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- 2008
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41. POS0207 REAL-WORLD RETENTION OF JAK INHIBITORS IS LONGER THAN BDMARDS IN RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS
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Machlab, K., primary, Iskandar, S. M., additional, Nevskaya, T., additional, Vanderhoek, L., additional, Bylsma, J., additional, Hewitt, S., additional, and Pope, J., additional
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- 2021
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- View/download PDF
42. Effective control of SARS-CoV-2 transmission between healthcare workers during a period of diminished community prevalence of COVID-19
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Jones, N. K., Rivett, L., Sparkes, D., Forrest, S., Sridhar, S., Young, J., Pereira-Dias, J., Cormie, C., Gill, H., Reynolds, N., Wantoch, M., Routledge, M., Warne, B., Levy, J., Jimenez, W. D. C., Samad, F. N. B., Mcnicholas, C., Ferris, M., Gray, J., Gill, M., Curran, M. D., Fuller, S., Chaudhry, A., Shaw, A., Bradley, J. R., Hannon, G. J., Goodfellow, I. G., Dougan, G., Smith, K. G. C., Lehner, P. J., Wright, G., Matheson, N. J., Baker, S., Weekes, M. P., Bradley, J., Goodfellow, I., Gupta, R., Lyons, P. A., Torok, M. E., Toshner, M., Kean, I., Caddy, S., Caller, L., Feltwell, T., Hall, G., Hamilton, W., Hosmillo, M., Houldcroft, C., Jahun, A., Khokhar, F., Meredith, L., Yakovleva, A., Butcher, H., Caputo, D., Clapham-Riley, D., Dolling, H., Furlong, A., Graves, B., Gresley, E. L., Kingston, N., Papadia, S., Stark, H., Stirrups, K. E., Webster, J., Calder, J., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Kennet, J., Meadows, A., Rastall, R., Brien, C. O., Price, J., Publico, C., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Tordesillas, H., Hannon, G., Brookes, K., Canna, L., Cruz, I., Dempsey, K., Elmer, A., Escoffery, N., Jones, H., Ribeiro, C., Saunders, C., Wright, A., Nyagumbo, R., Roberts, A., Bucke, A., Hargreaves, S., Johnson, D., Narcorda, A., Read, D., Sparke, C., Worboys, L., Lagadu, K., Mactavous, L., Gould, T., Raine, T., Mather, C., Ramenatte, N., Vallier, A. -L., Kasanicki, M., Eames, P. -J., Thake, L., Bartholomew, N., Brown, N., Curran, M., Parmar, S., Zhang, H., Bowring, A., Martell, G., Quinnell, N., Wright, J., Murphy, H., Dunmore, B. J., Legchenko, E., Graf, S., Huang, C., Hodgson, J., Hunter, K., Martin, J., Mescia, F., Odonnell, C., Pointon, L., Shih, J., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Tong, Z., Treacy, C., Wood, J., Bergamaschi, L., Betancourt, A., Bowyer, G., De Sa, A., Epping, M., Hinch, A., Huhn, O., Jarvis, I., Lewis, D., Marsden, J., Mccallum, S., Nice, F., Omarjee, O., Perera, M., Romashova, N., Strezlecki, M., Yarkoni, N. S., Turner, L., Bailey, B., Doughton, R., Workman, C., Trotter, C., David, W., Jimenez, C., Jones, Nick K [0000-0003-4475-7761], Sridhar, Sushmita [0000-0001-7453-7482], Hannon, Gregory J [0000-0003-4021-3898], Goodfellow, Ian G [0000-0002-9483-510X], Lehner, Paul J [0000-0001-9383-1054], Matheson, Nicholas J [0000-0002-3318-1851], Weekes, Michael P [0000-0003-3196-5545], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Infectious Disease Transmission ,global health ,Occupational safety and health ,Hospitals, University ,Patient-to-Professional ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID-19 Testing ,Patient Admission ,Nasopharynx ,Pandemic ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Infection control ,Mass Screening ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Viral ,Biology (General) ,Family Characteristics ,General Neuroscience ,Infectious ,human biology ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Hospitals ,3. Good health ,virology ,Community-Acquired Infections ,Occupational Diseases ,England ,epidemiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Symptom Assessment ,Coronavirus Infections ,Hospital Units ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional ,QH301-705.5 ,Health Personnel ,infectious disease ,Science ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Asymptomatic ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Betacoronavirus ,Disease Transmission ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Humans ,human ,Human Biology and Medicine ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Pandemics ,Mass screening ,Asymptomatic Diseases ,emerging pathogens ,University ,Infection Control ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Teaching ,COVID-19 ,Pneumonia ,medicine ,occupational health ,Contact Tracing ,Program Evaluation ,030104 developmental biology ,Epidemiology and Global Health ,Emergency medicine ,business ,Research Advance ,Contact tracing - Abstract
Previously, we showed that 3% (31/1032)of asymptomatic healthcare workers (HCWs) from a large teaching hospital in Cambridge, UK, tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 in April 2020. About 15% (26/169) HCWs with symptoms of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) also tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 (Rivett et al., 2020). Here, we show that the proportion of both asymptomatic and symptomatic HCWs testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 rapidly declined to near-zero between 25th April and 24th May 2020, corresponding to a decline in patient admissions with COVID-19 during the ongoing UK ‘lockdown’. These data demonstrate how infection prevention and control measures including staff testing may help prevent hospitals from becoming independent ‘hubs’ of SARS-CoV-2 transmission, and illustrate how, with appropriate precautions, organizations in other sectors may be able to resume on-site work safely.
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- 2020
43. Pitfalls in assessing stromal tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) in breast cancer
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Kos, Z., Roblin, E., Kim, R. S., Michiels, S., Gallas, B. D., Chen, W., van de Vijver, K. K., Goel, S., Adams, S., Demaria, S., Viale, G., Nielsen, T. O., Badve, S. S., Symmans, W. F., Sotiriou, C., Rimm, D. L., Hewitt, S., Denkert, C., Loibl, S., Luen, S. J., Bartlett, J. M. S., Savas, P., Pruneri, G., Dillon, D. A., Cheang, M. C. U., Tutt, A., Hall, J. A., Kok, M., Horlings, H. M., Madabhushi, A., van der Laak, J., Ciompi, F., Laenkholm, A. -V., Bellolio, E., Gruosso, T., Fox, S. B., Araya, J. C., Floris, G., Hudecek, J., Voorwerk, L., Beck, A. H., Kerner, J., Larsimont, D., Declercq, S., Van den Eynden, G., Pusztai, L., Ehinger, A., Yang, W., Abduljabbar, K., Yuan, Y., Singh, R., Hiley, C., Bakir, M., Lazar, A. J., Naber, S., Wienert, S., Castillo, M., Curigliano, G., Dieci, M. -V., Andre, F., Swanton, C., Reis-Filho, J., Sparano, J., Balslev, E., Chen, I. -C., Stovgaard, E. I. S., Pogue-Geile, K., Blenman, K. R. M., Penault-Llorca, F., Schnitt, S., Lakhani, S. R., Vincent-Salomon, A., Rojo, F., Braybrooke, J. P., Hanna, M. G., Soler-Monso, M. T., Bethmann, D., Castaneda, C. A., Willard-Gallo, K., Sharma, A., Lien, H. -C., Fineberg, S., Thagaard, J., Comerma, L., Gonzalez-Ericsson, P., Brogi, E., Loi, S., Saltz, J., Klaushen, F., Cooper, L., Amgad, M., Moore, D. A., Salgado, R., Hyytiainen, A., Hida, A. I., Thompson, A., Lefevre, A., Gown, A., Lo, A., Sapino, A., Moreira, A. M., Richardson, A., Vingiani, A., Bellizzi, A. M., Guerrero, A., Grigoriadis, A., Garrido-Castro, A. C., Cimino-Mathews, A., Srinivasan, A., Acs, B., Singh, B., Calhoun, B., Haibe-Kans, B., Solomon, B., Thapa, B., Nelson, B. H., Ballesteroes-Merino, C., Criscitiello, C., Boeckx, C., Colpaert, C., Quinn, C., Chennubhotla, C. S., Solinas, C., Drubay, D., Sabanathan, D., Peeters, D., Zardavas, D., Hoflmayer, D., Johnson, D. B., Thompson, E. A., Perez, E., Elgabry, E. A., Blackley, E. F., Reisenbichler, E., Chmielik, E., Gaire, F., F. -I., Lu, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Peale, F., Hirsch, F. R., Acosta-Haab, G., Farshid, G., Broeckx, G., Koeppen, H., Haynes, H. R., Mcarthur, H., Joensuu, H., Olofsson, H., Cree, I., Nederlof, I., Frahm, I., Brcic, I., Chan, J., Ziai, J., Brock, J., Weseling, J., Giltnane, J., Lemonnier, J., Zha, J., Ribeiro, J., Lennerz, J. K., Carter, J. M., Hartman, J., Hainfellner, J., Le Quesne, J., Juco, J. W., van den Berg, J., Sanchez, J., Cucherousset, J., Adam, J., Balko, J. M., Saeger, K., Siziopikou, K., Sikorska, K., Weber, K., Steele, K. E., Emancipator, K., El Bairi, K., Allison, K. H., Korski, K., Buisseret, L., Shi, L., Kooreman, L. F. S., Molinero, L., Estrada, M. V., Van Seijen, M., Lacroix-Triki, M., Sebastian, M. M., Balancin, M. L., Mathieu, M. -C., van de Vijver, M., Rebelatto, M. C., Piccart, M., Goetz, M. P., Preusser, M., Khojasteh, M., Sanders, M. E., Regan, M. M., Barnes, M., Christie, M., Misialek, M., Ignatiadis, M., de Maaker, M., Van Bockstal, M., Harbeck, N., Tung, N., Laudus, N., Sirtaine, N., Burchardi, N., Ternes, N., Radosevic-Robin, N., Gluz, O., Grimm, O., Nuciforo, P., Jank, P., Kirtani, P., Watson, P. H., Jelinic, P., Francis, P. A., Russell, P. A., Pierce, R. H., Hills, R., Leon-Ferre, R., de Wind, R., Shui, R., Leung, S., Tabbarah, S., Souza, S. C., O'Toole, S., Swain, S., Dudgeon, S., Willis, S., Ely, S., Bedri, S., Irshad, S., Liu, S., Hendry, S., Bianchi, S., Braganca, S., Paik, S., Luz, S., Gevaert, T., D'Alfons, T., John, T., Sugie, T., Kurkure, U., Bossuyt, V., Manem, V., Camaea, V. P., Tong, W., Tran, W. T., Wang, Y., Allory, Y., Husain, Z., Bago-Horvath, Z., Service de biostatistique et d'épidémiologie (SBE), Direction de la recherche clinique [Gustave Roussy], Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR)-Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR), Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR), Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Università degli Studi di Milano [Milano] (UNIMI)-European Institute of Oncology [Milan] (ESMO), Institut Jules Bordet [Bruxelles], Faculté de Médecine [Bruxelles] (ULB), Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)-Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Charité, Institute of Pathology, Translational Tumorpathology Unit, German Breast Group, University of the Sunshine Coast (USC), European Institute of Oncology [Milan] (ESMO), Breakthrough Breast Cancer Centre, London Institute of Cancer, Department of Pathology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Division of Experimental Therapy, The Netherlands Cancer Institute NKI/AvL, Odense University Hospital, Unité de génétique et biologie des cancers (U830), Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Institut Curie [Paris]-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Department of Breast Medical Oncology [Houston], The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center [Houston], Helsingborg Hospital, Division of Experimental Therapeutics [Milan, Italy], Département de médecine oncologique [Gustave Roussy], Cancer Research UK Lung Cancer Centre of Excellence [Londres, Royaume-Uni], University College of London [London] (UCL), Memorial Sloane Kettering Cancer Center [New York], Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, Centre Jean Perrin [Clermont-Ferrand] (UNICANCER/CJP), UNICANCER, Imagerie Moléculaire et Stratégies Théranostiques (IMoST), Université Clermont Auvergne [2017-2020] (UCA [2017-2020])-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), University of Southern Queensland (USQ), Pharmacogenomics Unit [Paris], Department of Genetics [Paris], Institut Curie [Paris]-Institut Curie [Paris], Instituto de Física Teórica UAM/CSIC (IFT), Universidad Autonoma de Madrid (UAM)-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [Madrid] (CSIC), Ctr Biomol Struct & Org, University of Maryland [College Park], University of Maryland System-University of Maryland System, The University of Sydney, Breast Cancer Translational Research Laboratory, Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)-Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)-Faculté de Médecine [Bruxelles] (ULB), Innovation North - Faculty of Information and Technology, Leeds Metropolitan University, Int Immuno-Oncology Biomarker, Graduate School, CCA - Cancer biology and immunology, Pathology, Centre de recherche en épidémiologie et santé des populations (CESP), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay, Oncostat (U1018 (Équipe 2)), Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR)-Centre de recherche en épidémiologie et santé des populations (CESP), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay-Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay, Università degli Studi di Milano = University of Milan (UNIMI)-European Institute of Oncology [Milan] (ESMO), German Breast Group (GBG), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Clermont Auvergne [2017-2020] (UCA [2017-2020]), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM)-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas [Madrid] (CSIC), Gallas, Brandon D [0000-0001-7332-1620], van de Vijver, Koen K [0000-0002-2026-9790], Demaria, Sandra [0000-0003-4426-0499], Badve, Sunil S [0000-0001-8861-9980], Symmans, W Fraser [0000-0002-1526-184X], Rimm, David L [0000-0001-5820-4397], Savas, Peter [0000-0001-5999-428X], Hall, Jacqueline A [0000-0003-0708-1360], Horlings, Hugo M [0000-0003-4782-8828], van der Laak, Jeroen [0000-0001-7982-0754], Bellolio, Enrique [0000-0003-0079-5264], Araya, Juan Carlos [0000-0003-3501-8203], Floris, Giuseppe [0000-0003-2391-5425], Hudeček, Jan [0000-0003-1071-5686], Ehinger, Anna [0000-0001-9225-7396], Lazar, Alexander J [0000-0002-6395-4499], Castillo, Miluska [0000-0002-0111-3176], Curigliano, Giuseppe [0000-0003-1781-2518], Sparano, Joseph [0000-0002-9031-2010], Braybrooke, Jeremy P [0000-0003-1943-7360], Hanna, Matthew G [0000-0002-7536-1746], Willard-Gallo, Karen [0000-0002-1150-1295], Sharma, Ashish [0000-0002-1011-6504], Comerma, Laura [0000-0002-0249-4636], Gonzalez-Ericsson, Paula [0000-0002-6292-6963], Loi, Sherene [0000-0001-6137-9171], Cooper, Lee [0000-0002-3504-4965], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Research Programs Unit, Heikki Joensuu / Principal Investigator, HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center, Department of Oncology, Medicum, Gallas, Brandon D. [0000-0001-7332-1620], van de Vijver, Koen K. [0000-0002-2026-9790], Badve, Sunil S. [0000-0001-8861-9980], Symmans, W. Fraser [0000-0002-1526-184X], Rimm, David L. [0000-0001-5820-4397], Hall, Jacqueline A. [0000-0003-0708-1360], Horlings, Hugo M. [0000-0003-4782-8828], Lazar, Alexander J. [0000-0002-6395-4499], Braybrooke, Jeremy P. [0000-0003-1943-7360], and Hanna, Matthew G. [0000-0002-7536-1746]
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Oncology ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,THERAPY ,Tumours of the digestive tract Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 14] ,Prognostic markers ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Lymphocytes ,Stromal tumor ,health care economics and organizations ,0303 health sciences ,CHEMOTHERAPY ,Sciences bio-médicales et agricoles ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,3. Good health ,Women's cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 17] ,PROGNOSTIC VALUE ,Clinical Practice ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Educational resources ,Immunosurveillance ,medicine.medical_specialty ,3122 Cancers ,[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cancer ,IMMUNITY ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Article ,Limfòcits ,Càncer de mama ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gastrointestinal cancer ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Internal medicine ,692/53/2422 ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Càncer gastrointestinal ,030304 developmental biology ,Predictive biomarker ,Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes ,business.industry ,Médecine pathologie humaine ,medicine.disease ,Cancérologie ,Human medicine ,business ,SYSTEM ,631/67/580/1884 - Abstract
Stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) are important prognostic and predictive biomarkers in triple-negative (TNBC) and HER2-positive breast cancer. Incorporating sTILs into clinical practice necessitates reproducible assessment. Previously developed standardized scoring guidelines have been widely embraced by the clinical and research communities. We evaluated sources of variability in sTIL assessment by pathologists in three previous sTIL ring studies. We identify common challenges and evaluate impact of discrepancies on outcome estimates in early TNBC using a newly-developed prognostic tool. Discordant sTIL assessment is driven by heterogeneity in lymphocyte distribution. Additional factors include: technical slide-related issues; scoring outside the tumor boundary; tumors with minimal assessable stroma; including lymphocytes associated with other structures; and including other inflammatory cells. Small variations in sTIL assessment modestly alter risk estimation in early TNBC but have the potential to affect treatment selection if cutpoints are employed. Scoring and averaging multiple areas, as well as use of reference images, improve consistency of sTIL evaluation. Moreover, to assist in avoiding the pitfalls identified in this analysis, we developed an educational resource available at www.tilsinbreastcancer.org/pitfalls., info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2020
44. Screening of healthcare workers for SARS-CoV-2 highlights the role of asymptomatic carriage in COVID-19 transmission
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Rivett, L., Sridhar, S., Sparkes, D., Routledge, M., Jones, N. K., Forrest, S., Young, J., Pereira-Dias, J., Hamilton, W. L., Ferris, M., Torok, M. E., Meredith, L., Curran, M. D., Fuller, S., Chaudhry, A., Shaw, A., Samworth, R. J., Bradley, J. R., Dougan, G., Smith, K. G. C., Lehner, P. J., Matheson, N. J., Wright, G., Goodfellow, I. G., Baker, S., Weekes, M. P., Lyons, P. A., Toshner, M., Warne, B., Scott, J. B., Cormie, C., Gill, H., Kean, I., Maes, M., Reynolds, N., Wantoch, M., Caddy, S., Caller, L., Feltwell, T., Hall, G., Hosmillo, M., Houldcroft, C., Jahun, A., Khokhar, F., Yakovleva, A., Butcher, H., Caputo, D., Clapham-Riley, D., Dolling, H., Furlong, A., Graves, B., Gresley, E. L., Kingston, N., Papadia, S., Stark, H., Stirrups, K. E., Webster, J., Calder, J., Harris, J., Hewitt, S., Kennet, J., Meadows, A., Rastall, R., Brien, C. O., Price, J., Publico, C., Rowlands, J., Ruffolo, V., Tordesillas, H., Brookes, K., Canna, L., Cruz, I., Dempsey, K., Elmer, A., Escoffery, N., Jones, H., Ribeiro, C., Saunders, C., Wright, A., Nyagumbo, R., Roberts, A., Bucke, A., Hargreaves, S., Johnson, D., Narcorda, A., Read, D., Sparke, C., Warboys, L., Lagadu, K., Mactavous, L., Gould, T., Raine, T., Mather, C., Ramenatte, N., Vallier, A. -L., Kasanicki, M., Eames, P. -J., Mcnicholas, C., Thake, L., Bartholomew, N., Brown, N., Parmar, S., Zhang, H., Bowring, A., Martell, G., Quinnell, N., Wright, J., Murphy, H., Dunmore, B. J., Legchenko, E., Graf, S., Huang, C., Hodgson, J., Hunter, K., Martin, J., Mescia, F., O'Donnell, C., Pointon, L., Shih, J., Sutcliffe, R., Tilly, T., Tong, Z., Treacy, C., Wood, J., Bergamaschi, L., Betancourt, A., Bowyer, G., A. D., Sa, Epping, M., Hinch, A., Huhn, O., Jarvis, I., Lewis, D., Marsden, J., Mccallum, S., Nice, F., Rivett, Lucy [0000-0002-2781-9345], Lehner, Paul J [0000-0001-9383-1054], Matheson, Nicholas J [0000-0002-3318-1851], Goodfellow, Ian G [0000-0002-9483-510X], Weekes, Michael P [0000-0003-3196-5545], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,medicine ,global health ,0302 clinical medicine ,COVID-19 Testing ,Epidemiology ,Pandemic ,Health care ,Infection control ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Viral ,Biology (General) ,Asymptomatic Infections ,Nose ,0303 health sciences ,Transmission (medicine) ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,emerging pathogens ,epidemiology ,human ,human biology ,infectious disease ,occupational health ,virology ,virus ,Betacoronavirus ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Coronavirus Infections ,Female ,Humans ,Infection Control ,Pandemics ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,United Kingdom ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,Health Personnel ,General Neuroscience ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,3. Good health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,QH301-705.5 ,Science ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,education ,Asymptomatic ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Throat ,Infectious disease (athletes) ,Human Biology and Medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Pneumonia ,030104 developmental biology ,Epidemiology and Global Health ,Carriage ,business - Abstract
Significant differences exist in the availability of healthcare worker (HCW) SARS-CoV-2 testing between countries, and existing programmes focus on screening symptomatic rather than asymptomatic staff. Over a 3 week period (April 2020), 1032 asymptomatic HCWs were screened for SARS-CoV-2 in a large UK teaching hospital. Symptomatic staff and symptomatic household contacts were additionally tested. Real-time RT-PCR was used to detect viral RNA from a throat+nose self-swab. 3% of HCWs in the asymptomatic screening group tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. 17/30 (57%) were truly asymptomatic/pauci-symptomatic. 12/30 (40%) had experienced symptoms compatible with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)>7 days prior to testing, most self-isolating, returning well. Clusters of HCW infection were discovered on two independent wards. Viral genome sequencing showed that the majority of HCWs had the dominant lineage B∙1. Our data demonstrates the utility of comprehensive screening of HCWs with minimal or no symptoms. This approach will be critical for protecting patients and hospital staff., eLife digest Patients admitted to NHS hospitals are now routinely screened for SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19), and isolated from other patients if necessary. Yet healthcare workers, including frontline patient-facing staff such as doctors, nurses and physiotherapists, are only tested and excluded from work if they develop symptoms of the illness. However, there is emerging evidence that many people infected with SARS-CoV-2 never develop significant symptoms: these people will therefore be missed by ‘symptomatic-only’ testing. There is also important data showing that around half of all transmissions of SARS-CoV-2 happen before the infected individual even develops symptoms. This means that much broader testing programs are required to spot people when they are most infectious. Rivett, Sridhar, Sparkes, Routledge et al. set out to determine what proportion of healthcare workers was infected with SARS-CoV-2 while also feeling generally healthy at the time of testing. Over 1,000 staff members at a large UK hospital who felt they were well enough to work, and did not fit the government criteria for COVID-19 infection, were tested. Amongst these, 3% were positive for SARS-CoV-2. On closer questioning, around one in five reported no symptoms, two in five very mild symptoms that they had dismissed as inconsequential, and a further two in five reported COVID-19 symptoms that had stopped more than a week previously. In parallel, healthcare workers with symptoms of COVID-19 (and their household contacts) who were self-isolating were also tested, in order to allow those without the virus to quickly return to work and bolster a stretched workforce. Finally, the rates of infection were examined to probe how the virus could have spread through the hospital and among staff – and in particular, to understand whether rates of infection were greater among staff working in areas devoted to COVID-19 patients. Despite wearing appropriate personal protective equipment, healthcare workers in these areas were almost three times more likely to test positive than those working in areas without COVID-19 patients. However, it is not clear whether this genuinely reflects greater rates of patients passing the infection to staff. Staff may give the virus to each other, or even acquire it at home. Overall, this work implies that hospitals need to be vigilant and introduce broad screening programmes across their workforces. It will be vital to establish such approaches before ‘lockdown’ is fully lifted, so healthcare institutions are prepared for any second peak of infections.
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- 2020
45. Application of a risk-management framework for integration of stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in clinical trials
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Hudecek, J., Voorwerk, L., van Seijen, M., Nederlof, I., de Maaker, M., van den Berg, J., van de Vijver, K. K., Sikorska, K., Adams, S., Demaria, S., Viale, G., Nielsen, T. O., Badve, S. S., Michiels, S., Symmans, W. F., Sotiriou, C., Rimm, D. L., Hewitt, S. M., Denkert, C., Loibl, S., Loi, S., Bartlett, J. M. S., Pruneri, G., Dillon, D. A., Cheang, M. C. U., Tutt, A., Hall, J. A., Kos, Z., Salgado, R., Kok, M., Horlings, H. M., Hyytiainen, A., Hida, A. I., Thompson, A., Lefevre, A., Lazar, A. J., Gown, A., Lo, A., Sapino, A., Madabhushi, A., Moreira, A., Richardson, A., Vingiani, A., Beck, A. H., Bellizzi, A. M., Guerrero, A., Grigoriadis, A., Ehinger, A., Garrido-Castro, A., Vincent-Salomon, A., Laenkholm, A. -V., Sharma, A., Cimino-Mathews, A., Srinivasan, A., Acs, B., Singh, B., Calhoun, B., Haibe-Kans, B., Solomon, B., Thapa, B., Nelson, B. H., Gallas, B. D., Castaneda, C., Ballesteros-Merino, C., Criscitiello, C., Boeckx, C., Colpaert, C., Quinn, C., Chennubhotla, C. S., Swanton, C., Solinas, C., Hiley, C., Drubay, D., Bethmann, D., Moore, D. A., Larsimont, D., Sabanathan, D., Peeters, D., Zardavas, D., Hoflmayer, D., Johnson, D. B., Thompson, E. A., Brogi, E., Perez, E., Elgabry, E. A., Stovgaard, E. S., Blackley, E. F., Roblin, E., Reisenbichler, E., Bellolio, E., Balslev, E., Chmielik, E., Gaire, F., Andre, F., F. -I., Lu, Azmoudeh-Ardalan, F., Rojo, F., Gruosso, T., Ciompi, F., Peale, F., Hirsch, F. R., Klauschen, F., Penault-Llorca, F., Acosta Haab, G., Farshid, G., van den Eynden, G., Curigliano, G., Floris, G., Broeckx, G., Gonzalez-Ericsson, Koeppen, H., Haynes, H. R., Mcarthur, H., Joensuu, H., Olofsson, H., Lien, H. -C., Chen, I. -C., Cree, I., Frahm, I., Brcic, I., Chan, J., Ziai, J., Brock, J., Wesseling, J., Giltnane, J., Kerner, J. K., Thagaard, J., Braybrooke, J. P., van der Laak, J. A. W. M., Lemonnier, J., Zha, J., Ribeiro, J., Lennerz, J. K., Carter, J. M., Saltz, J., Hartman, J., Hainfellner, J., Quesne, J. L., Juco, J. W., Reis-Filho, J., Sanchez, J., Sparano, J., Cucherousset, J., Araya, J. C., Adam, J., Balko, J. M., Saeger, K., Siziopikou, K., Willard-Gallo, K., Weber, K., Pogue-Geile, K. L., Steele, K. E., Emancipator, K., Abduljabbar, K., El Bairi, K., Blenman, K. R. M., Allison, K. H., Korski, K., Pusztai, L., Comerma, L., Buisseret, L., Cooper, L. A. D., Shi, L., Kooreman, L. F. S., Molinero, L., Estrada, M. V., Lacroix-Triki, M., Al Bakir, M., Sebastian, M. M., van de Vijver, M., Balancin, M. L., Dieci, M. V., Mathieu, M. -C., Rebelatto, M. C., Piccart, M., Hanna, M. G., Goetz, M. P., Preusser, M., Khojasteh, M., Sanders, M. E., Regan, M. M., Barnes, M., Christie, M., Misialek, M., Ignatiadis, M., van Bockstal, M., Castillo, M., Amgad, M., Harbeck, N., Tung, N., Laudus, N., Sirtaine, N., Burchardi, N., Ternes, N., Radosevic-Robin, N., Gluz, O., Grimm, O., Nuciforo, P., Jank, P., Gonzalez-Ericsson, P., Kirtani, P., Jelinic, P., Watson, P. H., Savas, P., Francis, P. A., Russell, P. A., Singh, R., Kim, R. S., Pierce, R. H., Hills, R., Leon-Ferre, R., de Wind, R., Shui, R., De Clercq, S., Leung, S., Tabbarah, S., Souza, S. C., O'Toole, S., Swain, S., Dudgeon, S., Willis, S., Ely, S., Kim, S. -R., Bedri, S., Irshad, S., Liu, S. -W., Goel, S., Hendry, S., Bianchi, S., Braganca, S., Paik, S., Wienert, S., Fox, S. B., Luen, S. J., Naber, S., Schnitt, S. J., Sua, L. F., Lakhani, S. R., Fineberg, S., Soler, T., Gevaert, T., D'Alfonso, T., John, T., Sugie, T., Kurkure, U., Bossuyt, V., Manem, V., Camara, V. P., Tong, W., Chen, W., Yang, W., Tran, W. T., Wang, Y., Yuan, Y., Allory, Y., Husain, Z., Bago-Horvath, Z., Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Università degli Studi di Milano [Milano] (UNIMI)-European Institute of Oncology [Milan] (ESMO), Service de biostatistique et d'épidémiologie (SBE), Direction de la recherche clinique [Gustave Roussy], Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR)-Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR), Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR), Institut Jules Bordet [Bruxelles], Faculté de Médecine [Bruxelles] (ULB), Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)-Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Charité, Institute of Pathology, Translational Tumorpathology Unit, German Breast Group, Breast Cancer Translational Research Laboratory, Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)-Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB)-Faculté de Médecine [Bruxelles] (ULB), University of the Sunshine Coast (USC), European Institute of Oncology [Milan] (ESMO), Breakthrough Breast Cancer Centre, London Institute of Cancer, Department of Pathology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Division of Experimental Therapy, The Netherlands Cancer Institute NKI/AvL, Imagerie Moléculaire et Stratégies Théranostiques (IMoST), Université Clermont Auvergne [2017-2020] (UCA [2017-2020])-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), Centre Jean Perrin [Clermont-Ferrand] (UNICANCER/CJP), UNICANCER, Hudeček, Jan [0000-0003-1071-5686], van de Vijver, Koen K [0000-0002-2026-9790], Demaria, Sandra [0000-0003-4426-0499], Badve, Sunil S [0000-0001-8861-9980], Symmans, William Fraser [0000-0002-1526-184X], Rimm, David L [0000-0001-5820-4397], Loi, Sherene [0000-0001-6137-9171], Hall, Jacqueline A [0000-0003-0708-1360], Horlings, Hugo M [0000-0003-4782-8828], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, van de Vijver, Koen K. [0000-0002-2026-9790], Badve, Sunil S. [0000-0001-8861-9980], Rimm, David L. [0000-0001-5820-4397], Hall, Jacqueline A. [0000-0003-0708-1360], Horlings, Hugo M. [0000-0003-4782-8828], Università degli Studi di Milano = University of Milan (UNIMI)-European Institute of Oncology [Milan] (ESMO), Centre de recherche en épidémiologie et santé des populations (CESP), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay, Oncostat (U1018 (Équipe 2)), Institut Gustave Roussy (IGR)-Centre de recherche en épidémiologie et santé des populations (CESP), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay-Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ)-Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP)-Hôpital Paul Brousse-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris-Saclay, German Breast Group (GBG), and Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Clermont Auvergne [2017-2020] (UCA [2017-2020])
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,medicine.medical_treatment ,MEDLINE ,[SDV.CAN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Cancer ,Review Article ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,631/67/1857 ,Tumour biomarkers ,Tumours of the digestive tract Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 14] ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,692/53 ,Internal medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,692/4028/67/580 ,Stromal tumor ,Biomarkers ,Tumour immunology ,business.industry ,Risk management framework ,review-article ,Médecine pathologie humaine ,631/67/1347 ,Immunotherapy ,Sciences bio-médicales et agricoles ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Women's cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 17] ,3. Good health ,Review article ,Clinical trial ,Cancérologie ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Biomarker (medicine) ,business - Abstract
Stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) are a potential predictive biomarker for immunotherapy response in metastatic triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). To incorporate sTILs into clinical trials and diagnostics, reliable assessment is essential. In this review, we propose a new concept, namely the implementation of a risk-management framework that enables the use of sTILs as a stratification factor in clinical trials. We present the design of a biomarker risk-mitigation workflow that can be applied to any biomarker incorporation in clinical trials. We demonstrate the implementation of this concept using sTILs as an integral biomarker in a single-center phase II immunotherapy trial for metastatic TNBC (TONIC trial, NCT02499367), using this workflow to mitigate risks of suboptimal inclusion of sTILs in this specific trial. In this review, we demonstrate that a web-based scoring platform can mitigate potential risk factors when including sTILs in clinical trials, and we argue that this framework can be applied for any future biomarker-driven clinical trial setting., info:eu-repo/semantics/published
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- 2020
46. The path to a better biomarker: application of a risk management framework for the implementation of PD-L1 and TILs as immuno-oncology biomarkers in breast cancer clinical trials and daily practice
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Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Stovgaard, ES, Sua, LF, Reisenbichler, E, Kos, Z, Carter, JM, Michiels, S, Le Quesne, J, Nielsen, TO, Laenkholm, A-V, Fox, SB, Adam, J, Bartlett, JMS, Rimm, DL, Quinn, C, Peeters, D, Dieci, M, Vincent-Salomon, A, Cree, I, Hida, A, Balko, JM, Haynes, HR, Frahm, I, Acosta-Haab, G, Balancin, M, Bellolio, E, Yang, W, Kirtani, P, Sugie, T, Ehinger, A, Castaneda, CA, Kok, M, McArthur, H, Siziopikou, K, Badve, S, Fineberg, S, Gown, A, Viale, G, Schnitt, SJ, Pruneri, G, Penault-Llorca, F, Hewitt, S, Thompson, EA, Allison, KH, Symmans, WF, Bellizzi, AM, Brogi, E, Moore, DA, Larsimont, D, Dillon, DA, Lazar, A, Lien, H, Goetz, MP, Broeckx, G, El Bairi, K, Harbeck, N, Cimino-Mathews, A, Sotiriou, C, Adams, S, Liu, S-W, Loibl, S, Chen, I-C, Lakhani, SR, Juco, JW, Denkert, C, Blackley, EF, Demaria, S, Leon-Ferre, R, Gluz, O, Zardavas, D, Emancipator, K, Ely, S, Loi, S, Salgado, R, Sanders, M, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Stovgaard, ES, Sua, LF, Reisenbichler, E, Kos, Z, Carter, JM, Michiels, S, Le Quesne, J, Nielsen, TO, Laenkholm, A-V, Fox, SB, Adam, J, Bartlett, JMS, Rimm, DL, Quinn, C, Peeters, D, Dieci, M, Vincent-Salomon, A, Cree, I, Hida, A, Balko, JM, Haynes, HR, Frahm, I, Acosta-Haab, G, Balancin, M, Bellolio, E, Yang, W, Kirtani, P, Sugie, T, Ehinger, A, Castaneda, CA, Kok, M, McArthur, H, Siziopikou, K, Badve, S, Fineberg, S, Gown, A, Viale, G, Schnitt, SJ, Pruneri, G, Penault-Llorca, F, Hewitt, S, Thompson, EA, Allison, KH, Symmans, WF, Bellizzi, AM, Brogi, E, Moore, DA, Larsimont, D, Dillon, DA, Lazar, A, Lien, H, Goetz, MP, Broeckx, G, El Bairi, K, Harbeck, N, Cimino-Mathews, A, Sotiriou, C, Adams, S, Liu, S-W, Loibl, S, Chen, I-C, Lakhani, SR, Juco, JW, Denkert, C, Blackley, EF, Demaria, S, Leon-Ferre, R, Gluz, O, Zardavas, D, Emancipator, K, Ely, S, Loi, S, Salgado, R, and Sanders, M
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- 2020
47. Pitfalls in assessing stromal tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) in breast cancer
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Kos, Z, Roblin, E, Kim, RS, Michiels, S, Gallas, BD, Chen, W, van de Vijver, KK, Goel, S, Adams, S, Demaria, S, Viale, G, Nielsen, TO, Badve, SS, Symmans, WF, Sotiriou, C, Rimm, DL, Hewitt, S, Denkert, C, Loibl, S, Luen, SJ, Bartlett, JMS, Savas, P, Pruneri, G, Dillon, DA, Cheang, MCU, Tutt, A, Hall, JA, Kok, M, Horlings, HM, Madabhushi, A, van der Laak, J, Ciompi, F, Laenkholm, A-V, Bellolio, E, Gruosso, T, Fox, SB, Araya, JC, Floris, G, Hudecek, J, Voorwerk, L, Beck, AH, Kerner, J, Larsimont, D, Declercq, S, Van den Eynden, G, Pusztai, L, Ehinger, A, Yang, W, AbdulJabbar, K, Yuan, Y, Singh, R, Hiley, C, al Bakir, M, Lazar, AJ, Naber, S, Wienert, S, Castillo, M, Curigliano, G, Dieci, M-V, Andre, F, Swanton, C, Reis-Filho, J, Sparano, J, Balslev, E, Chen, I-C, Stovgaard, EIS, Pogue-Geile, K, Blenman, KRM, Penault-Llorca, F, Schnitt, S, Lakhani, SR, Vincent-Salomon, A, Rojo, F, Braybrooke, JP, Hanna, MG, Soler-Monso, MT, Bethmann, D, Castaneda, CA, Willard-Gallo, K, Sharma, A, Lien, H-C, Fineberg, S, Thagaard, J, Comerma, L, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Brogi, E, Loi, S, Saltz, J, Klaushen, F, Cooper, L, Amgad, M, Moore, DA, Salgado, R, Kos, Z, Roblin, E, Kim, RS, Michiels, S, Gallas, BD, Chen, W, van de Vijver, KK, Goel, S, Adams, S, Demaria, S, Viale, G, Nielsen, TO, Badve, SS, Symmans, WF, Sotiriou, C, Rimm, DL, Hewitt, S, Denkert, C, Loibl, S, Luen, SJ, Bartlett, JMS, Savas, P, Pruneri, G, Dillon, DA, Cheang, MCU, Tutt, A, Hall, JA, Kok, M, Horlings, HM, Madabhushi, A, van der Laak, J, Ciompi, F, Laenkholm, A-V, Bellolio, E, Gruosso, T, Fox, SB, Araya, JC, Floris, G, Hudecek, J, Voorwerk, L, Beck, AH, Kerner, J, Larsimont, D, Declercq, S, Van den Eynden, G, Pusztai, L, Ehinger, A, Yang, W, AbdulJabbar, K, Yuan, Y, Singh, R, Hiley, C, al Bakir, M, Lazar, AJ, Naber, S, Wienert, S, Castillo, M, Curigliano, G, Dieci, M-V, Andre, F, Swanton, C, Reis-Filho, J, Sparano, J, Balslev, E, Chen, I-C, Stovgaard, EIS, Pogue-Geile, K, Blenman, KRM, Penault-Llorca, F, Schnitt, S, Lakhani, SR, Vincent-Salomon, A, Rojo, F, Braybrooke, JP, Hanna, MG, Soler-Monso, MT, Bethmann, D, Castaneda, CA, Willard-Gallo, K, Sharma, A, Lien, H-C, Fineberg, S, Thagaard, J, Comerma, L, Gonzalez-Ericsson, P, Brogi, E, Loi, S, Saltz, J, Klaushen, F, Cooper, L, Amgad, M, Moore, DA, and Salgado, R
- Abstract
Stromal tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (sTILs) are important prognostic and predictive biomarkers in triple-negative (TNBC) and HER2-positive breast cancer. Incorporating sTILs into clinical practice necessitates reproducible assessment. Previously developed standardized scoring guidelines have been widely embraced by the clinical and research communities. We evaluated sources of variability in sTIL assessment by pathologists in three previous sTIL ring studies. We identify common challenges and evaluate impact of discrepancies on outcome estimates in early TNBC using a newly-developed prognostic tool. Discordant sTIL assessment is driven by heterogeneity in lymphocyte distribution. Additional factors include: technical slide-related issues; scoring outside the tumor boundary; tumors with minimal assessable stroma; including lymphocytes associated with other structures; and including other inflammatory cells. Small variations in sTIL assessment modestly alter risk estimation in early TNBC but have the potential to affect treatment selection if cutpoints are employed. Scoring and averaging multiple areas, as well as use of reference images, improve consistency of sTIL evaluation. Moreover, to assist in avoiding the pitfalls identified in this analysis, we developed an educational resource available at www.tilsinbreastcancer.org/pitfalls.
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- 2020
48. Loss-of-function screen in rhabdomyosarcoma identifies CRKL-YES as a critical signal for tumor growth
- Author
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Yeung, C L, Ngo, V N, Grohar, P J, Arnaldez, F I, Asante, A, Wan, X, Khan, J, Hewitt, S M, Khanna, C, Staudt, L M, and Helman, L J
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
49. Health-related quality of life measured by the UW-QoL—reference values from a general dental practice
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Rogers, S.N., O’Donnell, J.P., Williams-Hewitt, S., Christensen, J.C., and Lowe, D.
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- 2006
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- View/download PDF
50. Malignant ascites as only manifestation of metastatic prostate cancer
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Saif, MW, Figg, WD, Hewitt, S, Brosky, K, Reed, E, and Dahut, W
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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